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[deleted] t1_jcomcbg wrote

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Chippopotanuse t1_jcooysd wrote

This the same Kennedy family that gave one of their kids a lobotomy for no good reason other than she was a teenager and “liked boys”?

We need far better mental health care and far more facilities. Sure.

But we don’t need loony bins where folks get brutalized until they die.

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IntelligentMeal40 t1_jcp9qjd wrote

No it was actually Reagan, Ronald Reagan who shut down the mental health facilities and put people on the streets. He said that crazy people had a right to be crazy. So now they’re homeless on the streets

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Plants_Golf_Cooking t1_jcorilp wrote

The facilities we had were not Bedlam. They were closed largely because of cost, not because they were bad places.

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monicarperkins t1_jcp88z9 wrote

Have you known anyone that was in one of those facilities before they shut down? Because I do. I've interviewed several of them, and put together a documentary for training purposes when I was managing group homes for DD adults. They were, in fact, VERY bad places. Look up the documentary Titicut Follies. A reporter snuck a belt camera into Bridgewater State (the psych side, not the prison side). Very eye opening.

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Plants_Golf_Cooking t1_jcp99sm wrote

I will check it out. I will also argue that the act of closing them down was far more detrimental to both those in need of care and the community at large, considering now the people that needed those facilities are likely either in prison or on the streets.

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monicarperkins t1_jcp8q0q wrote

Monson state hospital had a partially buried old bunker they would put people that weren't behaving. It was horrific.

Edit spelling of monson

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Plants_Golf_Cooking t1_jcp9bqo wrote

So they needed reform, not elimination.

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Jew-betcha t1_jcqywvu wrote

Mental health facilities literally still exist, just not called asylums anymore bc asylums historically were horrific and unethical, and the term "asylum" cannot ever be divorced from brutality in the public consciousness. I know this because I've been a patient in a mental health unit before. They still have some major problems with human rights abuses, but up until covid hit there were some pretty drastic improvements, (after covid, at least at the unit I'm familiar with, they took away most of what made it bearable & got rid of all the trained counselors in favor of nurses who don't give a shit) and it's nowhere near as bad as the forced lobotomies and direct physical & mental abuse you seem to want to return to.

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Unique-Public-8594 t1_jcozljf wrote

Yes we need more mental health facilities.

Could more facilities/beds have prevented this? Hard to say.

The term “nutter” is derogatory and insulting.

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thepasttenseofdraw t1_jcpk13k wrote

> The term “nutter” is derogatory and insulting.

And more aptly applied to op themselves.

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IntelligentMeal40 t1_jcp9mwk wrote

Lol WHAT?! Reagan shut down the institutions and put people on the streets.

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Plants_Golf_Cooking t1_jcpa57g wrote

It was not, it was the Community Mental Health Act of 1963. Reagan was not the only president to slash public services, and Kennedy was a prick.

Edit: I’d say to be more fair that it was a combined effort, spread across multiple administrations, but largely acted upon by both Kennedy and Reagan. The effects of the act (overall) was detrimental for mental health services in the US.

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End3rWi99in t1_jcpnlh6 wrote

That act actually just opened community health centers in lieu of state run facilities. It didn't really shutter mental health support in the way Lanterman-Petris-Short did.

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BryanCalens2ndFamily t1_jcos03k wrote

YeAh it’s All HiS FauLt!!!

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DawctorDawgs t1_jcp0bkx wrote

How dare Kennedy push this woman off a bridge!!

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HazyDavey68 t1_jcpcjb5 wrote

I think you need to study up on your boy Ronald Reagan and see what he did to throw mentally I’ll on the streets.

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[deleted] t1_jcpco2j wrote

[removed]

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HazyDavey68 t1_jcqh8ub wrote

Kudos for not liking Reagan. Ever hear of “Titticut Follies”? There was good reason to close some of the snake pits, but inexcusable to do it without better substitutes.

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