American Dream wrote:C2w, my primary concern is not specifically with Bruce Levine's blog post on Scientology' & Psychiatry in relation to the range of criticism that does indeed exist.
Rather it is with the broader points that his blog post raises. You repeatedly conflate all criticism of PsychoPharm with the discourse coming out of Scientology and its fronts and I know you know better than that.
No, I really do not. I've said (twice, once on this thread and once on a thread about, IIRC, suicides in the military) that virtually all of the standard, party-line popular criticisms of psychopharmaceutical medications were originated by people on the CCHR payroll. Which isn't, like, just some random thing I like to say once every year and a half or so for the sheer pleasure of it. It's a thoroughly considered statement based on the overwhelming preponderance of the evidence. Which would, kind of obviously, be very burdensome to present in full, with all "i"'s dotted and all "t"'s crossed.
Which is why I don't usually make it. It's rhetorically unfair. In any event. If you can find any instances of my having repeatedly conflated all criticism of PsychoPharm with the discourse coming out of Scientology and it fronts -- as opposed either to arguing my position on the merits or pointing out that the specific criticism being cited had been made by an apparatchik for one of Scientology's fronts -- feel free to show me up as a deluded fool and/or liar. I'd be happy to admit to being the former if I was confronted with the evidence of it. In fact, I'd want to know it.
There are a lot of groups and individuals that you unfairly smear with this sort of broad brushstroke argument, and I have named them to you several times before but you persist with your conflation.
To the best of my recollection, that has never happened. In part because I do not and have not repeatedly made that conflation. Or hadn't until yesterday. I have now made it twice.
It's as if the Mad Liberation Movement does not exist, neither Mad Pride, nor the many writers and social critics not part of Scientology who do express criticism of psychophamaceuticals.
As I believe I've said to you before (and as I indicated earlier in this thread, in a way) I stopped posting to the threads you started on those topics a long time ago. Because all that ever happened was that I would say whatever I had to say and then get swarmed by a bunch of (imo) well-meaning posters calling me an inhumane, vicious corporate shill and enemy of human rights, although I'm really not and really hadn't said anything that justified that view. I can totally remember the first time that happened, because I was so shocked and taken aback by it that I wasn't sure how to respond in a manner that was both soothing to the poster I'd pretty clearly upset and an honest representation of my (by my lights, non-offensive, non-partisan) position.
I might be able to remember all of them, as a matter of fact. There haven't been that many. For the reasons just stated.
As far as I can recall, I've never expressed any opinion one way or the other on the Mad Liberation movement, or on Mad Pride. I don't know very much about either, really. But I may very well have missed some threads expressing criticisms of psychopharmaceuticals, since I wasn't posting to them. FWIW, in principle, I'm definitely a very strong advocate for the proud liberation of people who have been stigmatized as mad, though.
And, as it happens, one of my criticisms of psychiatry as it's actually practiced in the real world by clinicians who are human beings with a wide range of aptitude for the work that they do is that, institutionally speaking, it's way, way too complacent in its belief that it already addressed and resolved that issue some decades ago. Like I said: The whole system needs an overhaul. Revisions and improvements to the extant foundations are just never going to cut it, the structure is simply too creaky and ancient to be saved by thoughtful restoration and, like, brand new modern plumbing and electricity or whatever.
But for what it's worth, at least to the best of my recollection, I've never seen any such criticisms here that didn't proceed from the categorical premises that (a) psychiatry was an ideologically monolithic, very powerful, wittingly evil and/or inhumanly unfeeling oppressive force; and (b) that all psychopharmaceuticals were extremely dangerous and ineffective at best, and very probably part of an intentional plot by the psychiatric-pharmaceutical complex to create a nation of compliant and drugged-out zombies. It's my considered opinion that such a position so grossly misstates the problem as to put solving it even further out of the question than it would be if there were no criticisms at all.
For one thing, it's all anti- and no pro-. That's never good news for the powerless. Ever. It really never has been one single time in all of history. Opposition is, obviously, a part of activism. And a very, very important part. But you do have to know who (or what) your enemy is, and not just casually. You have to have an informed and sophisticated understanding of who you're fighting, what their weapons are, what their strengths and weaknesses are, and -- seriously, a too little mentioned factor -- what the potential areas of common ground you might share with them are. Just raging at big omnipotent vaguely defined forces is not, therefore, activism. If you ask me. It's rabble-rousing and it benefits fascism.
I can't tell whether you ignore what to me is legitimate dissent from the Psychiatric Orthodoxy due to a personal blind spot and/or as rhetorical device.
Either way, I quite honestly think you can do much better than that in articulating your own position wrt psychopharmaceuticals.
Well. I don't know that I can really help you with that. I do not ignore what to me is legitimate dissent from the Psychiatric Orthodoxy. And I don't really see how you or anyone else is in a position to demand that I do more than that. I do have a much more elaborated and detailed critical take on psychopharmaceuticals than I've ever expressed here. And when I first started posting, I did set out to express it a couple of times. But the atmosphere was too volatile for me to get very far, so I mostly just stayed out of it. As I indicated in an earlier post, that's hardly an issue that's unique to this board, in my experience. The battle-lines have been drawn too firmly for discussion on any other terms to be at all easy, and maybe to be at all possible. I don't really know. They're pretty entrenched, though. To the point that even the vocabulary of the debate is so highly charged with what are, strictly speaking, the externally imposed party values of one side or the other that you frequently have to tie yourself in knots of careful qualification just to make a simply, introductory remark.
Anyway. I await the examples of conflation and irrational rejection of valid criticism on my part. Although I can't really say I look forward to them, obviously. But l will try to bear them honestly and in good will and without animosity. So go for it.
Sincerely and with genuine good will, as I think you can be a truly awesome thinker and writer,
A.D.
ON EDIT: Sorry! I meant to say:
Thank you and back atcha.