And it's explicitly so, by definition. The common diagnostic criteria in so many DSM definitions is if you're 'dysfunctional' in society, which boils down to if you can hold down a job or not. All your other symptoms can be the same, but if you're still getting handed money for busy-work, then they don't like to call it mental illness. That's how they were able to get tranny issues and dysphoria destigmatised as mental illnesses - not by therapising the trannies, but by sickening society to the extent that these people are normalised in the workplace and much harder to fire. Meanwhile they make absolute bank for the medical industry with all their body maiming treatments. We can SEE that they're broken parodies of healthy individuals, but employers are encouraged to be fine with them and the DSM intentionally doesn't have your back.
The determining factor in whether or not you're 'mentally ill' is your ability to keep propping up this sick shambles of a so-called civilisation. Imagine if a cancer diagnosis depended on your ability to put on a suit and sit at a workstation. It's a joke.
I do agree that the mental health crisis is a feature of this culture, not a bug. They want people despondent and lonely. Humans are not meant to live this way.
I don't necessarily disagree, but this massively ignores the complexity of this issue.
I assure you, if it were as simple as that, suicide simply wouldn't be as common as it is. Let alone the absolute ubiquity of anxiety and depression among Western societies these days...
Yeah, those things are factors. But there's more going on than just that.
You can "fix" most of those things, and it still won't "fix" a broken life or a broken mind.
A lot of the "mental health" problems people have boil down to a combination of:
Awful diet
No close relationships
Bad sleep schedule
Spending way too much time online
Alcohol
Lack of spirituality
You forgot lack of physical exercise, but otherwise a very good cheat sheet of how to fix society.
Most "mental health" problems are actually simply CORRECT RESPONSES to how absolute shit our society is.
And it's explicitly so, by definition. The common diagnostic criteria in so many DSM definitions is if you're 'dysfunctional' in society, which boils down to if you can hold down a job or not. All your other symptoms can be the same, but if you're still getting handed money for busy-work, then they don't like to call it mental illness. That's how they were able to get tranny issues and dysphoria destigmatised as mental illnesses - not by therapising the trannies, but by sickening society to the extent that these people are normalised in the workplace and much harder to fire. Meanwhile they make absolute bank for the medical industry with all their body maiming treatments. We can SEE that they're broken parodies of healthy individuals, but employers are encouraged to be fine with them and the DSM intentionally doesn't have your back.
The determining factor in whether or not you're 'mentally ill' is your ability to keep propping up this sick shambles of a so-called civilisation. Imagine if a cancer diagnosis depended on your ability to put on a suit and sit at a workstation. It's a joke.
I do agree that the mental health crisis is a feature of this culture, not a bug. They want people despondent and lonely. Humans are not meant to live this way.
You aren't wrong. I had a friend who got way way too into that psychadelic crap and ended up committing suicide by cop. That was a rough funeral.
Leftism and jewish influence isn't helping.
I don't necessarily disagree, but this massively ignores the complexity of this issue.
I assure you, if it were as simple as that, suicide simply wouldn't be as common as it is. Let alone the absolute ubiquity of anxiety and depression among Western societies these days...
Yeah, those things are factors. But there's more going on than just that.
You can "fix" most of those things, and it still won't "fix" a broken life or a broken mind.