Phariseeism:
The hypocrisy of silence on child sexual abuse caused by the epidemic of
sexual perversions and sexual addictions associated with psychiatry and
pornography. Is highly linked to misogyny and with the proponents of
the symbolism of females as both subjects and objects of male sexual
aggression. The only distinction between Phariseeism and the evil of
the Personality Disorders (Narcissism, Psychopathy, Sociopathy) is that
the Pharisees have not in the past, included themselves in their own
DSM. Therefore, the disincludement of the authors of the DSM in their
own diabolical Blame-the-Victimology is the distinguishing feature of
the disorder.
Pharisical Tourette’s: The
inability of the Pharisees to refrain from compounding their own perjury
when the entire Pharisical (fa-riss-ik-əl)
DSM Game is noticeably under threat by the DSM rule that one is supposed
to rule-out medical problems before making a diagnosis of “crazy.”
It’s like a compounded or a Double-Tourette’s, because while the likes
of Yale has a PANDA (pediatric neuroimmune disorders associated with
Group A streptococcus) agenda, and an Autism clinic, no one with
Pharisical Tourette’s can overcome this mental disorder and state in a
courtroom, that indeed, medical problems affect thinking. When a person
makes a crabby-face on a TV commercial for a headache treatment, the
sufferers of this specific kind of Tourette’s are unable to distinguish
the association between pain and frown. Pharisical Tourette’s Disorder
has parallels to Asperger’s in that regard.
Dietz’ Psychosis:
Similar to Pharisical Tourette's, self proclaimed psychiatric experts who
diagnose psychosis in others, have again, an Aspergery-like blind side
when they commit the same. This nomenclature is based on the
Andrea Yates case, where Park Dietz
was not charged with either perjury or psychosis for inventing the
theory that Yates had seen an episode of “Law and Order” that not only
was never produced, but was never conceived. Associated with the
Personality Disorders, within these Axis 6 disorders, there is a lack of
empathy or compassion despite the “MD” degree.
Zemelian
Murder:
This is a kind of Psychosis/PD usually demonstrated by self-alleged
pediatricians who know that Lyme Borreliosis is associated with the
production of all the Great Imitator outcomes (it has been long known
that syphilis or other spirochetal infection results in Lupus), but who,
when under threat of exposure, hits out at the most innocent of victims –
pediatric immigrants whose parents would not know how to defend against
the Orwellian Child “Protective Services” - engages the CPS to
execute the murders:
http://www.cga.ct.gov/kid/docs/HS_DCF/121808/Kimberly%20Castro%20December%2018%202008.pdf
Sexual
Hospitalers:
This is a condition
wherein the perpetrators, becoming so confused, depressed, and demented
over their own crimes and perversions, go so far as to recommend that
since salutary broads cure all diseases, any new hospital should
advertise itself as a brothel. They claim that
sex cures alcoholism as well as
all the New Great Imitators,
despite the lack of evidence for such a hypothesis (much less the
scientifically valid proof), and the evidence that sex, in fact, causes
more diseases than it has ever cured. Yale University routinely assigns
the proponents of such mechanisms of cure with an “MD” degree. This is
despite the FDA holding ground rules on what is a drug and
how to qualify them.
==============================================
http://www.sffaith.com/ed/articles/1998/1098cz2.htm ← "INSANE
PSYCHIATRY"- Dr. George Maloof.
Ah, yes. Psychiatry is a religion of perversion:
"The seminaries that are
now rife with Freudian concepts and Jungian concepts are unable
to select out people who are prone to sexual disorders because
there's an acceptance of perversion. Freud said as much -- we're
all perverted, basically, and we become neurotic if we suppress
our perversion. So if you release your inhibitions, you won't be
neurotic; you will be healthy, in his view, but you will be a
pervert. So we're educating society and even people in the
Church. When you see all the priestly sexual abuses and the
millions of dollars spent trying to cover their abuse, I think
you see the devastation that's been wreaked by Freud, which, I
think, was his intention all along."
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The prevalence of mental illness
across the globe has reached alarming proportions. It's time that we
addressed this problem within our own ranks.
Psychiatrists are particularly
vulnerable to mental illness. For example, the General Medical
Council--a statutory body that regulates the licensing of doctors in
the United Kingdom--has estimated that among hospital-based
physicians, psychiatrists have one of the highest rates of
psychiatric morbidity.
When depression and suicide rates
among physicians are analyzed, those of psychiatrists are among the
highest. Particular issues needing attention among psychiatrists are
those of adjustment and relationship problems, unresolved grief,
dysfunctional family legacies, and chronic medical illnesses,
according to "The Handbook of Physician Health: The Essential Guide
to Understanding the Health Care Needs of the Physician" (Chicago:
American Medical Association, 2000).
Self-treatment is high because of
stigma, fear of dismissal from training programs and of losing
referrals, loss of hospital privileges, condescension from peers,
and problems of ego/self-esteem (Psychother. Psychosom.
2007;76:306-10).
The issue of mental illness among us is particularly pertinent
because we are responsible for treating patients with mental
illness. In other words, how can we efficiently and competently
treat psychiatric illness among patients when we are battling these
illnesses ourselves? We know better than anyone that depression, for
example, causes slowness, impaired concentration, and diminished
interest.
Failing to address this issue has broad implications for our
health systems. Mental illness among psychiatrists, left untreated,
can lead to absenteeism and medical errors--which can be devastating
and can lead to liability issues.
It seems to me that the reason we are excessively vulnerable to
mental illness is probably tied to the selection factor, i.e., the
physician's choice to enter this field. Another possibility is that
selection committees allow candidates with mental illness to enter
specialty training.
Physicians who are considering
psychiatry should take a look at their own developmental
backgrounds, where faulty psychodynamics may play a crucial role in
making them highly vulnerable. While listening to patients, some
treating psychiatrists find circumstances akin to their own, and
those connections can cause great disturbance to the psyche.
Paranoid types of disorders have
been reported more often among psychiatrists, followed by
obsessional and borderline types of disorders, compared with general
physicians. As I have
written in the past, many psychiatrists have caused trouble to
colleagues in the form of bullying and harassment, and such
behavior may be a result of personality
issues ("Bullying in Psychiatry Must Stop," CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY
NEWS, May 2007, p. 11).
We must either prevent or manage
this problem, and the place to start is with medical education.
Selection committees for medical schools should choose candidates
who demonstrate not only academic achievement but emotional and
psychological stability.
Medical schools should emphasize
the dangers of drugs and alcohol, and encourage students to develop
constructive interests outside of medicine and to devote appropriate
time to family life.
Practicing psychiatrists should
continue to benefit from continued medical education programs,
monitor their own mental and emotional health, seek psychiatric help
for any mental health problem, and remain aware of their
vulnerability. We must also refer ourselves to counseling services,
modify lifestyles, and overcome the stigma associated with mental
illness so that we seek needed treatment.
Concerned organizations or
employers must avoid stigmatizing or writing unfavorable references
for psychiatrists who become mentally ill and seek treatment.
Finally, health system policy
makers must be aware that nobody is immune to mental illness in this
era of competition and chaos.
DR. GADIT is professor of
psychiatry at Memorial University of Newfoundland in St. John's.
BY AMIN A. MUHAMMAD GADIT, M.D.
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