Reaganomics of Violence, Homeless, and Mental illness in California

As a governor, and then president of the United States, Reagan left a legacy unknown or swept under the rug by his followers. From suffering Alzheimer’s during his last years in the white house, to his lack of care for the veterans some of them turned into homeless.

Ronald Reagan’s shameful legacy: Violence, the homeless, mental illness

As president and governor of California, the GOP icon led the worst policies on mental illness in generations.
Dr. E. Fuller Torrey

Excerpted from “American Psychosis”

In November 1980, Republican Ronald Reagan overwhelmingly defeated Jimmy Carter, who received less than 42% of the popular vote, for president. Republicans took control of the Senate (53 to 46), the first time they had dominated either chamber since 1954. Although the House remained under Democratic control (243 to 192), their margin was actually much slimmer, because many southern “boll weevil” Democrats voted with the Republicans.

One month prior to the election, President Carter had signed the Mental Health Systems Act, which had proposed to continue the federal community mental health centers program, although with some additional state involvement. Consistent with the report of the Carter Commission, the act also included a provision for federal grants “for projects for the prevention of mental illness and the promotion of positive mental health,” an indication of how little learning had taken place among the Carter Commission members and professionals at NIMH. With President Reagan and the Republicans taking over, the Mental Health Systems Act was discarded before the ink had dried and the CMHC funds were simply block granted to the states. The CMHC program had not only died but been buried as well. An autopsy could have listed the cause of death as naiveté complicated by grandiosity.

President Reagan never understood mental illness. Like Richard Nixon, he was a product of the Southern California culture that associated psychiatry with Communism. Two months after taking office, Reagan was shot by John Hinckley, a young man with untreated schizophrenia. Two years later, Reagan called Dr. Roger Peele, then director of St. Elizabeths Hospital, where Hinckley was being treated, and tried to arrange to meet with Hinckley, so that Reagan could forgive him. Peele tactfully told the president that this was not a good idea. Reagan was also exposed to the consequences of untreated mental illness through the two sons of Roy Miller, his personal tax advisor. Both sons developed schizophrenia; one committed suicide in 1981, and the other killed his mother in 1983. Despite such personal exposure, Reagan never exhibited any interest in the need for research or better treatment for serious mental illness.

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The problem with mental illness is that psychiatrists are not effective at healing. …They have a poor track record…Drugs work, but patients often don’t take them …The old method of locking them up in institutions is no longer PC, but it did protect the general public…To blame Reagan is unfair…In fact he was a victim of policies in affect before he became President. …

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At the time of Reagan films like “The Snake Pit” had already turned the public against institutionalization. This continued after he left with 'One flew over the cuckoos nest."
And as elt said we still don;t know how to effectively treat most mental illness - or drug abuse.

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We should find out about mental illnesses, we have a patient in the white house needing help. Hurry up!

Will the liar in the white house again…let me repeat it…again…will go against what he has been preaching so he could get some voters to give him some love?

Playing gold…LOL
The wall…LOL
Draining the swamp…LOL
Only Made in the US…but not his clothing…LOL

And now…Afghanistan!

If he goes to send more of out troops to die in vain there…he will be again, the liar president nobody can beat.