LAURA KNIGHT-JADCZYK AND JOE QUINN
Since the 9/11 attacks, no book has provided a satisfactory answer as to WHY the attacks occurred and who was ultimately responsible for carrying them out - until now.
· Riding the Wave: The Truth and Lies About 2012 and Global Transformation by Laura Knight-Jadczyk
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The field of Psychology is an interesting one, but there is a lot to be believed. Anyone can mask the symptoms of a mentally ill person and fool professionals. There are a lot of folks out there that would rather mask symptoms than face reality. I use to see it a lot in the hospital where I worked. So it doesn't surprise me that Psych. Professionals mis-diagnose the sane ones, they are use to seeing what isn't there.
movie "One flew over the cuckoo's nest" with Jack Nicholson. It shows and explains a lot and I can tell you from which actual situation it was inspired from. Psychiatry is probably the most difficult specialty a physician can choose. A statistic was made a long time ago and showed that psychiatrists have the highest premature
mortality rate than the rest of their colleagues.
'All were forced to admit to having a mental illness and agree to take antipsychotic drugs as a condition of their release. '
Sounds similar to men being force to admit to being abusive in domestic violence cases when they are not and then having to pay for their own treatment.
Very interesting that some of the patients were suspicious of impostors
crazy people have more chance to walk free but sane people have more chance to stay in mental institutions, nothing new for today's black is white and white is black society. When those psychiatrists would not cure people with those medications that fry your brain further many would become more sane but that's not profitable and there's a chance they would loose their jobs!
I always wondered what Kevin meant by the title of his amazing record. F105 Thunderchiefs were known as "thuds" because of the the sound they made when they hit the dirt.
"So this is a drive-in restaraunt in Hollywood"
Captain Beefheart
It reminds me of Ponerology and the idea that a psychopath would be able to recognise other psychopaths out of a crowd, no matter what masks or delllusions they were spinning. Could this also apply to other illnesses, and people of similar disorders being able to empathise more with those who share the same disorders, hence giving them the ability to see when another is not ill, but merley pretending to be? It poses some interesting food for thought.