OVERKILL
$100 Site Donor 2021
Steward Brand, who was involved in the California government during the period where policy regarding institutionalization for mental care was turned on its ear, has recently done a 180 on the policy he supported, now recognizing that it was in error.
The graph:
And the thread he quotes:
But we need look no further than beyond our front doors, discarding the rose coloured glasses if so equipped, to see that the abandonment of inpatient mental health care, combined with substance abuse, has led to the devastation of our city centres and a decline in quality of life for those impacted. Slowly killing themselves with drugs, turning their brains into tapioca, where no chance of rehabilitation becomes possible. This slow motion suicide by compassion is preferable to the firm hand of institutionalization.
This is part of the West's "suicidal empathy" (credit: Gad Saad), where we are so obsessed with virtue signaling and an oppressed/oppressor dichotomy that we reimage villains as saints and victims as villains because they possess the tools to defend themselves. We feed our downtrodden and destitute to a system of perennial tolerance and victimhood, excusing crimes and handing out free drugs because it makes us feel better about ourselves, creating a cottage industry of homelessness, rather than giving them what they need, which is isolated treatment and care away from their vices, with proper medication to stem the voices, cease the delusions and degauss the shivering screen of reality.
As somebody who watched this happen in real time; As controlled demolition took the institution away, now close to 400 homeless roam our streets, suffering perpetual mental health crisis, high out of their minds of substances, wandering into traffic, dying on the church steps, assaulting the elderly, crapping on the sidewalk, and this is the "life" we are giving them with "clean needles" and overflowing shelters? Where they steal and beat the hell out of each other, slipping back and forth between some post-apocalyptic reality and drug-induced delusion. That's not living, and it's sure as hell not more humane, no matter what we tell ourselves.
The graph:
And the thread he quotes:
But we need look no further than beyond our front doors, discarding the rose coloured glasses if so equipped, to see that the abandonment of inpatient mental health care, combined with substance abuse, has led to the devastation of our city centres and a decline in quality of life for those impacted. Slowly killing themselves with drugs, turning their brains into tapioca, where no chance of rehabilitation becomes possible. This slow motion suicide by compassion is preferable to the firm hand of institutionalization.
This is part of the West's "suicidal empathy" (credit: Gad Saad), where we are so obsessed with virtue signaling and an oppressed/oppressor dichotomy that we reimage villains as saints and victims as villains because they possess the tools to defend themselves. We feed our downtrodden and destitute to a system of perennial tolerance and victimhood, excusing crimes and handing out free drugs because it makes us feel better about ourselves, creating a cottage industry of homelessness, rather than giving them what they need, which is isolated treatment and care away from their vices, with proper medication to stem the voices, cease the delusions and degauss the shivering screen of reality.
As somebody who watched this happen in real time; As controlled demolition took the institution away, now close to 400 homeless roam our streets, suffering perpetual mental health crisis, high out of their minds of substances, wandering into traffic, dying on the church steps, assaulting the elderly, crapping on the sidewalk, and this is the "life" we are giving them with "clean needles" and overflowing shelters? Where they steal and beat the hell out of each other, slipping back and forth between some post-apocalyptic reality and drug-induced delusion. That's not living, and it's sure as hell not more humane, no matter what we tell ourselves.