Sunday, June 26, 2016

"Fifty years ago, Lee Chiero might have been treated--and locked away--in one of the public psychiatric hospitals that dotted Massachusetts."

June 27, 2016


That's a quote from a June 23, 2016 Boston Globe article for which this is the address: 




Another quote is:

"He suspected everyone.  Lately, Lee had disconnected computers and even the electric power in the house to prevent his imagined enemies from spying."


The Boston Globe is trying to use code to lie that I'm crazy and that I'm imagining being spied on all the time, and that I'm homicidally dangerous.  While the Boston Globe is doing that, it has code at the first page of its website that's promoting child molestation and voyeurism.

The article about mental illness also has a misleading statistic at the beginning, which is:


"But the toll of violence reaches far beyond family.  From 2005 to 2015, 116 people in Massachusetts were accused of killing 139 victims.

By almost any measure, Massachusetts has lost the leadership role it once had in mental health care."



The statistic is misleading because it implies that the only murders in Massachusetts from 2005 to 2015 were committed by people who were mentally ill.





That's the address for a table at DisasterCenter.com about crime in Massachusetts from 1960 to 2014.  It says that, in 2005 alone, there were 178 murders.  In 1995, there were 217 murders.  In 1985, there were 202 murders.  In 1975, there were 242 murders.


There were more than 100 murders in Massachusetts every year from 2005 to 2015, which means that the total number of murders from 2005 to 2015 is a lot higher than 139.


Another quote from the Boston Globe article about mental illness is:


"Since 2005, more than 10 percent of all Massachusetts homicides in which a suspect is known were allegedly committed by people with a history of mental illness or its clear symptoms."

I'm sure that it will be a relief to the world to know that the majority, from somewhere between 80 and 90 percent, of homicides committed in Massachusetts since 2005 were committed by people whom the Boston Globe believes were in excellent mental health.  The last thing that anyone needs is to be shot by a crazy person, and the Boston Globe is helping everyone to feel better, knowing that we're much more likely to be shot by someone who's thinking clearly.





That's the address for the pages of search results for a Google search of the term "political psychiatry," which is an abuse tactic frequently used against dissidents by totalitarian regimes.  


Copyright, with noted exceptions, L. Kochman, June 27, 2016 @ 3:23 a.m.