Every human emotion now classified as a mental disorder in new DSM-5

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  • ELVIS
    Banned
    • Dec 2003
    • 44120

    Every human emotion now classified as a mental disorder in new DSM-5

    Mike Adams
    Natural News


    The industry of modern psychiatry has officially gone insane. Virtually every emotion experienced by a human being — sadness, grief, anxiety, frustration, impatience, excitement — is now being classified as a “mental disorder” demanding chemical treatment (with prescription medications, of course).

    The new, upcoming DSM-5 “psychiatry bible,” expected to be released in a few months, has transformed itself from a medical reference manual to a testament to the insanity of the industry itself.
    “Mental disorders” named in the DSM-5 include “General Anxiety Disorder” or GAD for short. GAD can be diagnosed in a person who feels a little anxious doing something like, say, talking to a psychiatrist. Thus, the mere act of a psychiatrist engaging in the possibility of making a diagnoses causes the “symptoms” of that diagnoses to magically appear.

    This is called quack science and circular reasoning, yet it’s indicative of the entire industry of psychiatry which has become such a laughing stock among scientific circles that even the science skeptics are starting to turn their backs in disgust. Psychiatry is no more “scientific” than astrology or palm reading, yet its practitioners call themselves “doctors” of psychiatry in order to try to make quackery sound credible.
    How modern psychiatry really works

    Here’s how modern psychiatry really operates: A bunch of self-important, overpaid intellectuals who want to make more money invent a fabricated disease that I’ll call “Hoogala Boogala Disorder” or HBD.

    By a show of hands, they then vote into existence whatever “symptoms” they wish to associated with Hoogala Boogala Disorder. In this case, the symptoms might be spontaneous singing or wanting to pick your nose from time to time.

    They then convince teachers, journalists and government regulators that Hoogala Boogala Disorder is real — and more importantly that millions of children suffer from it! It wouldn’t be compassionate not to offer all those children treatment, would it?

    Thus begins the call for “treatment” for a completely fabricated disease. From there, it’s a cinch to get Big Pharma to fabricate whatever scientific data they need in order to “prove” that speed, amphetamines, pharmaceutical crack or whatever poison they want to sell “reduces the risk of Hoogala Boogala Disorder.”
    Serious-sounding psychiatrists — who are all laughing their asses off in the back room — then “diagnose” children with Hoogala Boogala Disorder and “prescribe” the prescription drugs that claim to treat it. For this action, these psychiatrists — who are, let’s just admit it, dangerous child predators — earn financial kickbacks from Big Pharma.

    In order to maximize their kickbacks and Big Pharma freebies, groups of these psychiatrists get together every few years and invent more fictitious disorders, expanding their fictional tome called the DSM.
    The DSM is now larger than ever, and it includes disorders such as “Obedience Defiance Disorder” (ODD), defined as refusing to lick boots and follow false authority. Rapists who feel sexual arousal during their raping activities are given the excuse that they have “Paraphilic coercive disorder” and therefore are not responsible for their actions. (But they will need medication, of course!)

    You can also get diagnosed with “Hoarding Disorder” if you happen to stockpile food, water and ammunition, among other things. Yep, being prepared for possible natural disasters now makes you a mental patient in the eyes of modern psychiatry (and the government, too).

    Former DSM chairperson apologizes for creating “false epidemics”

    Allen Frances chaired the DSM-IV that was released in 1994. He now admits it was a huge mistake that has resulted in the mass overdiagnosis of people who are actually quite normal. The DSM-IV “…inadvertently contributed to three false epidemics — attention deficit disorder, autism and childhood bipolar disorder,” writes Allen in an LA Times opinion piece.

    He goes on to say:
    The first draft of the next edition of the DSM … is filled with suggestions that would multiply our mistakes and extend the reach of psychiatry dramatically deeper into the ever-shrinking domain of the normal. This wholesale medical imperialization of normality could potentially create tens of millions of innocent bystanders who would be mislabeled as having a mental disorder. The pharmaceutical industry would have a field day — despite the lack of solid evidence of any effective treatments for these newly proposed diagnoses.

    All these fabricated disorders, of course, result in a ballooning number of false positive. As Allen writes:
    The “psychosis risk syndrome” would use the presence of strange thinking to predict who would later have a full-blown psychotic episode. But the prediction would be wrong at least three or four times for every time it is correct — and many misidentified teenagers would receive medications that can cause enormous weight gain, diabetes and shortened life expectancy.

    But that’s the whole point of psychiatry: To prescribe drugs to people who don’t need them. This is accomplished almost entirely by diagnosing people with disorders that don’t exist.
    And it culminates in psychiatrists being paid money they never earned (and certainly don’t deserve.)
    Imagine: An entire industry invented out of nothing! And yes, you do have to imagine it because nothing inside the industry is actually real.

    What’s “normal” in psychiatry? Being an emotionless zombie

    The only way to be “normal” when being observed or “diagnosed” by a psychiatrist — a process that is entirely subjective and completely devoid of anything resembling actual science — is to exhibit absolutely no emotions or behavior whatsoever.

    A person in a coma is a “normal” person, according to the DSM, because they don’t exhibit any symptoms that might indicate the presence of those God-awful things called emotions or behavior.
    A person in a grave is also “normal” according to psychiatry, mostly because dead people do not qualify for Medicare reimbursement and therefore aren’t worth diagnosing or medicating. (But if Medicare did cover deceased patients, then by God you’d see psychiatrists lining up at all the cemeteries to medicate corpses!)
    It’s all a cruel, complete hoax. Psychiatry should be utterly abolished right now and all children being put on mind-altering drugs should be taken off of them and given good nutrition instead.

    When the collapse of America comes and the new society rises up out of it, I am going to push hard for the complete abolition of psychiatric “medicine” if you can even call it that. Virtually the entire industry is run by truly mad, power-hungry maniacs who use their power to victimize children (and adults, too). There is NO place in society for distorted psychiatry based on fabricated disorders. The whole operation needs to be shut down, disbanded and outlawed.

    The lost notion of normalcy

    Here are some simple truths that need to be reasserted when we abolish the quack science industry of psychiatry:
    Normalcy is not achieved through medication. Normalcy is not the absence of a range of emotion. Life necessarily involves emotions, experiences and behaviors which, from time to time, step outside the bounds of the mundane. This does not mean people have a “mental disorder.” It only means they are not biological robots.

    Nutrition, not medication, is the answer

    Nutritional deficiencies, by the way, are the root cause of nearly all “mental illness.” Blood sugar imbalances cause brain malfunctions because the brain runs on blood sugar as its primary energy source. Deficiencies in zinc, selenium, chromium, magnesium and other elements cause blood sugar imbalances that result in seemingly “wild” emotions or behaviors.

    Nearly everyone who has been diagnosed with a mental disorder in our modern world is actually suffering from nothing more than nutritional imbalances. Too much processed, poisonous junk food and not enough healthy superfood and nutrition. At times, they also have metals poisoning from taking too many vaccines (aluminum and mercury) or eating too much toxic food (mercury in fish, cadmium, arsenic, etc.) Vitamin D deficiency is ridiculously widespread, especially across the UK and Canada where sunlight is more difficult to achieve on a steady basis.

    But the reason nutrition is never highlighted as the solution to mental disorders and illness is because the pharmaceutical industry only makes money selling chemical “treatments” for conditions that are given complicated, technical-sounding names to make them seem more real. If food and nutritional supplements can keep your brain healthy — and believe me, they can! — then who needs high-priced pharmaceuticals? Who needs high-priced psychiatrists? Who needs drug reps? Pill-pushing doctors? And Obamacare’s mandatory health insurance money confiscation programs?

    Nobody needs them! This is the simple, self-evident truth of the matter: Our society would be much happier, healthier and more productive tomorrow if the entire pharmaceutical industry and psychiatry industry simply vanished overnight.

    With the DSM-5, modern-day psychiatry has made a mockery of itself. What was once viewed as maybe having some basis in science is now widely seen as hilarious quackery.
    Psychiatry itself now appears to be completely insane. And that might be the first accurate diagnosis to come out of the entire group.


  • FORD
    ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

    • Jan 2004
    • 58787

    #2

    Emotions are illogical, Mr. Presley
    Eat Us And Smile

    Cenk For America 2024!!

    Justice Democrats


    "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

    Comment

    • philouze
      Banned
      • Mar 2004
      • 2171

      #3
      "Emotion" is the word that man used to explain his mistakes.

      Comment

      • Angel
        ROTH ARMY SUPREME
        • Jan 2004
        • 7481

        #4
        Dead on about the nutrition factor. Went to see a New doc because my depression was coming back. Seems I am severely deficient in vitamin D. That explains my depression, fatigue, mood swings, muscle aches. Pretty much covers it all...
        "Ya know what they say about angels... An angel is a supernatural being or spirit, usually humanoid in form, found in various religions and mythologies. Plus Roth fan boards..."- ZahZoo April 2013

        Comment

        • FORD
          ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

          • Jan 2004
          • 58787

          #5
          Originally posted by Angel
          Dead on about the nutrition factor. Went to see a New doc because my depression was coming back. Seems I am severely deficient in vitamin D. That explains my depression, fatigue, mood swings, muscle aches. Pretty much covers it all...
          That much is definitely true. I think Vitamin D supplements have done as much for me as 5 HTP did. I would move to Arizona for a year round Vitamin D fix if they would get rid of all the Jan Brewer/Joe Arpaio type of racist teabagging morons.
          Eat Us And Smile

          Cenk For America 2024!!

          Justice Democrats


          "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

          Comment

          • Nitro Express
            DIAMOND STATUS
            • Aug 2004
            • 32798

            #6
            You can take Vitamin D supplements, eat some fish oil, or use a tanning bed with moderation. We do need some UV but not too much. 800 IU of vitamin D a day is what the average adult needs. Also people tend to be low on magnesium as well. It doesn't hurt to take a good daily vitamin a day and boost the vitamin C; especially in the winter.
            No! You can't have the keys to the wine cellar!

            Comment

            • ashstralia
              ROTH ARMY ELITE
              • Feb 2004
              • 6566

              #7
              As an Aussie, i get plenty of vit D. i did take a berocca today, because i haven't had one for a while. right now i'm tucking into a homemade kebab with fresh hommus, tabouleh, tomato and red onion. i know i've said it before; i'm incredibly lucky to live where i live.

              on topic; the psych and pharma industries have a LOT to answer for. two whole generations of buzzed out kids.

              Comment

              • Nitro Express
                DIAMOND STATUS
                • Aug 2004
                • 32798

                #8
                Originally posted by ashstralia
                As an Aussie, i get plenty of vit D. i did take a berocca today, because i haven't had one for a while. right now i'm tucking into a homemade kebab with fresh hommus, tabouleh, tomato and red onion. i know i've said it before; i'm incredibly lucky to live where i live.

                on topic; the psych and pharma industries have a LOT to answer for. two whole generations of buzzed out kids.
                I like to scuba dive and surf. One of these days I'm going to have to check it out down there.
                No! You can't have the keys to the wine cellar!

                Comment

                • Angel
                  ROTH ARMY SUPREME
                  • Jan 2004
                  • 7481

                  #9
                  Originally posted by Nitro Express
                  You can take Vitamin D supplements, eat some fish oil, or use a tanning bed with moderation. We do need some UV but not too much. 800 IU of vitamin D a day is what the average adult needs. Also people tend to be low on magnesium as well. It doesn't hurt to take a good daily vitamin a day and boost the vitamin C; especially in the winter.
                  I'm now on 2000 IU a day to get my levels up. I'm not just deficient, I'm severely deficient. Probably been that way forr years. I don't eat fish and avoid the sun like the plague.
                  "Ya know what they say about angels... An angel is a supernatural being or spirit, usually humanoid in form, found in various religions and mythologies. Plus Roth fan boards..."- ZahZoo April 2013

                  Comment

                  • ashstralia
                    ROTH ARMY ELITE
                    • Feb 2004
                    • 6566

                    #10
                    aah, a 30 second search reveals my love of sushi helps, too.

                    no doubt you already know this, angel. i do know when i eat shit food i feel shit.

                    Comment

                    • jhale667
                      DIAMOND STATUS
                      • Aug 2004
                      • 20929

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Angel
                      I'm now on 2000 IU a day to get my levels up. I'm not just deficient, I'm severely deficient. Probably been that way forr years. I don't eat fish and avoid the sun like the plague.
                      Can't speak for Canada, but according to my doc more US residents are D-deficient than not. I'm taking about 2000 IU a day (amongst the ton of other vitamins and supplements I take), too.
                      Originally posted by conmee
                      If anyone even thinks about deleting the Muff Thread they are banned.... no questions asked.

                      That is all.

                      Icon.
                      Originally posted by GO-SPURS-GO
                      I've seen prominent hypocrite liberal on this site Jhale667


                      Originally posted by Isaac R.
                      Then it's really true??:eek:

                      The Muff Thread is really just GONE ???

                      OMFG...who in their right mind...???
                      Originally posted by eddie78
                      I was wrong about you, brother. You're good.

                      Comment

                      • Angel
                        ROTH ARMY SUPREME
                        • Jan 2004
                        • 7481

                        #12
                        Originally posted by jhale667
                        Can't speak for Canada, but according to my doc more US residents are D-deficient than not. I'm taking about 2000 IU a day (amongst the ton of other vitamins and supplements I take), too.
                        Same for us, I think even more so though. It's one of those things they never used to test for. My doc is from the UK where they have the same issues. He decided to do the test because of my recurring depression. I'm starting daily vitamins now too. Too many years of not eating right eventually catch up to you.
                        "Ya know what they say about angels... An angel is a supernatural being or spirit, usually humanoid in form, found in various religions and mythologies. Plus Roth fan boards..."- ZahZoo April 2013

                        Comment

                        • FORD
                          ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

                          • Jan 2004
                          • 58787

                          #13
                          My Vitamin D supplement has 5000 IU's in a single dose. So I guess it must be the top of the line shit?

                          I definitely do better on it than without it. Especially this time of the year, when the sun is pretty much non-existent for 6 months (if we're lucky.... I swear last summer didn't actually start until August)
                          Eat Us And Smile

                          Cenk For America 2024!!

                          Justice Democrats


                          "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

                          Comment

                          • Nitro Express
                            DIAMOND STATUS
                            • Aug 2004
                            • 32798

                            #14
                            Originally posted by jhale667
                            Can't speak for Canada, but according to my doc more US residents are D-deficient than not. I'm taking about 2000 IU a day (amongst the ton of other vitamins and supplements I take), too.
                            I had undiagnosed sleep apnea and got a bad case of bronchitis and just about died from it. As a result my immune system got hammered and I've spent the last couple of years trying to build it back up. I've always made sure my vitamin D levels are up wether that's getting in the sun with no shirt on or taking a supplement. I have an oxygen generator that puts out 20% oxygen and I spend a half hour on that a day. I make sure I get plenty of vitamin C and I take coral calcium which I don't know why but I don't get aches and pains if I take it. I pretty much replaced glucosamine with coral calcium and Norwegian fish oil. My father in law gets heart palpitations but if he takes coral calcium they stop. There must be some trace elements in it that help.

                            I was so beat down it took six month to recover and then it's taken a couple years to get my immune system back up. You appreciate being healthy and don't take it for granted when you have been hammered down to nothing.
                            No! You can't have the keys to the wine cellar!

                            Comment

                            • Nitro Express
                              DIAMOND STATUS
                              • Aug 2004
                              • 32798

                              #15
                              Originally posted by FORD
                              My Vitamin D supplement has 5000 IU's in a single dose. So I guess it must be the top of the line shit?

                              I definitely do better on it than without it. Especially this time of the year, when the sun is pretty much non-existent for 6 months (if we're lucky.... I swear last summer didn't actually start until August)
                              I have a bottle of Nature's Bounty vitamin D3 that's 10,000 IU. I stopped taking it because I was breaking out in a rash. It turned out to be the vitamin D3 supplement. If I take too much it breaks me out. I'm just taking around 2000 IU right now and I do take a supplement in the winter. In the summer I don't. I'm out in the sun enough. The thing is the more exposed skin the better but then of course not too much. I'm just from the school of the more natural you can get it the better. I will take foods over capsules and pills because I think your body absorbs the nutrients better. Frankly I think people have gone a bit supplement crazy these days but they do have their place. I think the bottom line is make sure you are eating so you get all the essential nutrients and vitamins and if something extra makes you feel better or helps you by all means use it.
                              Last edited by Nitro Express; 12-14-2012, 02:34 AM.
                              No! You can't have the keys to the wine cellar!

                              Comment

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