Tom
United States of America#2Consumer Comment
Sat, December 29, 2012
If you loved one complains of abuse by psychiatry at Stonybrook Univeristy Hospital Cpep belive every word they tell you, its all true.
The drugs :
Psychotropic druggingits big business.
Here is the story of the high income partnership between psychiatry and drug companies that has created an $80 billion psychotropic drug profit center.
But appearances are deceiving.
How valid are psychiatrists diagnosesand how safe are their drugs?
Digging deep beneath the corporate veneer, this three-part documentary exposes the truth behind the slick marketing schemes and scientific deceit that conceal a dangerous and often deadly sales campaign.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=41_8hZoVKjE Or here http://topdocumentaryfilms.com/marketing-of-madness-are-we-all-insane/
As a recovering victim of psychiatric drugging and abuse I like this website www.cchr.org
The abuse:
It is well documented that many people experience involuntary psychiatric treatment and unwanted forced drugging as an assault. Some describe it as similar to rape where the assault strikes to the core of your body, mind and soul. As with sexual assaults, our mental health system needs to respect the very basic human requirement at such times that ?No means ?No . It is also well documented that many suicidal people are struggling with complex personal histories of trauma. For these people, involuntary psychiatric treatment further traumatises them, often worsening or indeed sometimes triggering suicidal feelings. More generally, if we understand suicidality as a crisis of the self i.e. rather than the consequence of some "mental illness" then it simply does not make sense to further attack an already fragile sense of self. It is hard to imagine anything less helpful for the suicidal person than to be assaulted by those you seek help from at a time of such crisis.
Abused at CPEP ? you are not alone .
anonymous
Nationwide,#3Author of original report
Tue, December 20, 2011
You dont actually get arrested at CPEP because its not technically unlawful (yet) to be mentally ill. Although practically speaking, from those who have been through it, it does seem as though it is unlawful to be an apparently symptomatic and untreated mentally ill person in NewYork.
If you refuse to come willingly, you can and will be threatened with violence. And depending on your reaction to that, they may, if you are lucky, only taze you. If you are unlucky, they may taze and beat and or choke/arm lock/wrist lock you and pepper spray you into submission.
With your mood now set properly for an accurate mental health assessment, completely outraged and trembling with indignation and possibly, even probably, crying, you now get your ride to the psych hospitala CPEP Receiving Facility.
Your tears will probably stop by the time you get there, to be replaced with rage and anxiety of what is to come. Upon your arrival and intake the psych nurses are going to take one quick look at you and take in your agitation and irritation and they will make notes about you and you will be considered to be manic or having a manic episode.
The standard treatment for a person experiencing mania is brain-damaging neuroleptics, although you probably know of the drugs as being called antipsychotics. Since you are not looking very cooperative right now, they probably wont waste time dilly dallying, trying to be nice to you. A psych nurse will summon several psych techs who will stand next to you like guards or bouncers and if you do not willingly accept their poison amicably right then and there, she will make a nod or other gesture and the psych techs will try to manually restrain you. Should you turn out to be a handful, many psych techs and nurses will be called and you will get padded leather restraints, a seclusion cell and the brain poison injected into you anyway, despite your wishes and protestations.
That is the CPEP explained.
You are a sub-human at this place or at best human trash with less rights than a common criminal.