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For Skeptics

Before dismissing me as delusional, it is helpful to think about the following questions in a society where psychiatry is weaponized under the guise of medical authority:​

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Mental Health vs. Reality Perception​

  1. How would you distinguish between someone who is delusional and someone who is experiencing a phenomenon so bizarre that it sounds like a mental health problem?

  2. If a person has intelligence and logical reasoning skills, is it fair to assume that they would not recognize their own supposed delusions and blame their disagreement with their diagnosis as a lack of insight into their psychiatric condition?

  3. How can you tell when a psychiatric diagnosis is being weaponized against someone rather than used to help them?

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Institutional Suppression and Blacklisting

  1. If a person is being blacklisted from employment and discredited with a psychiatric diagnosis, how would you know whether the discrediting is legitimate or part of the suppression itself?

  2. If you were the target of a covert operation to blacklist you from employment and give you a false psychiatric diagnosis so no one believed you when you talk about it, how would you prove it to others? Would you expect people to believe you?

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Gaslighting and Disbelief

  1. If someone’s experiences sound like a “conspiracy theory,” does that automatically mean they aren’t true, or just that they are difficult to verify?

  2. What does it mean when documentation and evidence corroborate someone’s story, yet they are still dismissed because their claim sounds outlandish?

  3. If someone was telling the truth about a complex and unethical scheme, what kind of gaslighting or institutional pushback would you expect them to face? 

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Psychological Denial and Cognitive Dissonance

  1. Would you rather believe someone is mentally ill than accept that something deeply unethical is happening around you? Why?

  2. Why are some people so quick to diagnose others with mental illness rather than investigating their claims seriously?

  3. If an institution has the power to define what is real and what isn’t, how does that shape public perception of truth?

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Selective Belief in Systemic Oppression

  1. Why is it that people believe in systemic and institutional oppression when it comes to race, class, and gender, but struggle to believe that it can happen against innocent individuals that are targeted by those with power and influence?​

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