People are operating drones to kill other people, and some of them go literally insane? Isn't the very job insanity itself? Wearing a muzzle for a nonexistent illness? Sometimes the "experts" are right about its "being all in the head."
Others are training AI for $18 an hour to make sure they won't have a job in less than two years and join the dead mass of "useless eaters," only condemned to be put out of their misery, possibly with the help of their cell phones.
Out of what I've seen was psychologists and psychiatrists who had chosen their "profession" because they were severely disturbed and wanted to figure themselves out. The cognitive security they acquire during their conditioning ("training") shields them from their own selves and the detachment led to the ability to hurt others, possibly only to wonder how that works, much like children, who experiment with tearing out a spider's legs one by one...
Moreover, one's primary conditioning probably cannot be fixed: it provides the cognitive space for the person for the rest of their lives. "Cognitive therapy" reconditions, but it has to keep going; otherwise, the subject returns to their original state of mind. Moreover, who is the one to say what the "best" or, at least, a decent way to condition people who otherwise feel clueless and miserable?
What I have also noticed is that hopeless-looking people recovered in full after a few years in a loving spousal relationship, where the other party was accepting them. Of course, that doesn't always work, but what does?
It is an abomination that psychiatry can apply brain-altering toxins that can cause irreversible damages. Outside the "profession," that would be considered criminal... Yet they wield enormous power that can destroy people's lives, while two of them can hardly ever arrive at the same "diagnosis" of the same patient, if asked separately...
People are operating drones to kill other people, and some of them go literally insane? Isn't the very job insanity itself? Wearing a muzzle for a nonexistent illness? Sometimes the "experts" are right about its "being all in the head."
Others are training AI for $18 an hour to make sure they won't have a job in less than two years and join the dead mass of "useless eaters," only condemned to be put out of their misery, possibly with the help of their cell phones.
Out of what I've seen was psychologists and psychiatrists who had chosen their "profession" because they were severely disturbed and wanted to figure themselves out. The cognitive security they acquire during their conditioning ("training") shields them from their own selves and the detachment led to the ability to hurt others, possibly only to wonder how that works, much like children, who experiment with tearing out a spider's legs one by one...
Moreover, one's primary conditioning probably cannot be fixed: it provides the cognitive space for the person for the rest of their lives. "Cognitive therapy" reconditions, but it has to keep going; otherwise, the subject returns to their original state of mind. Moreover, who is the one to say what the "best" or, at least, a decent way to condition people who otherwise feel clueless and miserable?
What I have also noticed is that hopeless-looking people recovered in full after a few years in a loving spousal relationship, where the other party was accepting them. Of course, that doesn't always work, but what does?
It is an abomination that psychiatry can apply brain-altering toxins that can cause irreversible damages. Outside the "profession," that would be considered criminal... Yet they wield enormous power that can destroy people's lives, while two of them can hardly ever arrive at the same "diagnosis" of the same patient, if asked separately...