By expanding the parameters for mental illness, they can diagnose more people and get them on drugs that they really don't need. More drugs = more profit.
Big question. Big topic. I think mental illness is growing more and more common because of external influences-- 1) toxins from our food, water, vaccines, medicines, building materials, mattresses, and air + 2) changes in lifestyle-- sedentary, obesity, fast food, no breaks, multi-tasking, no vacation, etc. + 3) the looming realization that something is wrong with society--epidemic of loneliness and isolation, changing communities and families, government authoritarianism, etc.
Is it really a mental illness if it is the natural response to the outside world? I mean aren't mental illness suppose to say this person is behaving abnormally? In a world where a majority of people have to work two jobs to pay for basic things like food and rent and no free time for hobbies then yeah they will be struggling mentally.
Is it really a mental illness if it is the natural response to the outside world? I mean aren't mental illness suppose to say this person is behaving abnormally?
Yes, vomiting after drinking poison is a natural response to an external negative agent, but it does not make it a normal behavior. The abnormality is relative to your own expected normal behavior.
They just invented new mental disorders to write prescriptions for. People need meaningful human interaction and it's harder and harder to come by for most folks, so big pharma will happily fill that as will so many other businesses eager to fill that hole inside of you.
That's not correct. As much as it pains me to admit so, we're all broken mentally. We all had and have issues. We simply coped. Sports obsession. Drinking. Dangerous hobbies. Consumerism. Drugs. We coped with our issues by distracting ourselves from them.
Big question. Big topic. I think mental illness is growing more and more common because of external influences-- 1) toxins from our food, water, vaccines, medicines, building materials, mattresses, and air + 2) changes in lifestyle-- sedentary, obesity, fast food, no breaks, multi-tasking, no vacation, etc. + 3) the looming realization that something is wrong with society--epidemic of loneliness and isolation, changing communities and families, government authoritarianism, etc.
This is correct.
Is it really a mental illness if it is the natural response to the outside world? I mean aren't mental illness suppose to say this person is behaving abnormally? In a world where a majority of people have to work two jobs to pay for basic things like food and rent and no free time for hobbies then yeah they will be struggling mentally.
This is an interesting and plausible theory.
Thanks! Just a compilation of my thoughts.
Aside the actual rise in numbers of ill people,
let's add the rise in numbers of "diseases" discovered, each with their treatments with not so known consequences.
I mean there are so many mental illnesses "discovered" that you are almost certain to be able to be diagnosed in one way or another.
And then make a super addictive medicine that can be used to ensure that they will stay hooked.
Yes.
It's addiction vs non addiction who creates the problems after:
If you have a problem, and you cope with weed, once the problem is gone you will have no problem giving up weed.
If you do so with nicotine, it will create it's own void to fill with itself after.
Most drugs present the second pattern. Cashflow is law n.1 of business. Medicine not exempt.
They just invented new mental disorders to write prescriptions for. People need meaningful human interaction and it's harder and harder to come by for most folks, so big pharma will happily fill that as will so many other businesses eager to fill that hole inside of you.
I think they plan on depopulation though perpetual cannibalism.
It's called the Great Reset.
That's not correct. As much as it pains me to admit so, we're all broken mentally. We all had and have issues. We simply coped. Sports obsession. Drinking. Dangerous hobbies. Consumerism. Drugs. We coped with our issues by distracting ourselves from them.