Another Liberal-Created Failure

Guest Post by Walter E. Williams

A liberal-created failure that goes entirely ignored is the left’s harmful agenda for society’s most vulnerable people — the mentally ill. Eastern State Hospital, built in 1773 in Williamsburg, Virginia, was the first public hospital in America for the care and treatment of the mentally ill. Many more followed. Much of the motivation to build more mental institutions was to provide a remedy for the maltreatment of mentally ill people in our prisons. According to professor William Gronfein at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, by 1955 there were nearly 560,000 patients housed in state mental institutions across the nation. By 1977, the population of mental institutions had dropped to about 160,000 patients.

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Starting in the 1970s, advocates for closing mental hospitals argued that because of the availability of new psychotropic drugs, people with mental illness could live among the rest of the population in an unrestrained natural setting. According to a 2013 Wall Street Journal article by Dr. E. Fuller Torrey, founder of the Treatment Advocacy Center, titled “Fifty Years of Failing America’s Mentally Ill“, shutting down mental hospitals didn’t turn out the way advocates promised. Several studies summarized by the Treatment Advocacy Center show that untreated mentally ill are responsible for 10 percent of homicides (and a higher percentage of the mass killings). They are 20 percent of jail and prison inmates and more than 30 percent of the homeless.

We often encounter these severely mentally ill individuals camped out in libraries, parks, hospital emergency rooms and train stations and sleeping in cardboard boxes. They annoy passers-by with their sometimes intimidating panhandling. The disgusting quality of life of many of the mentally ill makes a mockery of the lofty predictions made by the advocates of shutting down mental institutions and transferring their function to community mental health centers, or CMHCs. Torrey writes: “The evidence is overwhelming that this federal experiment has failed, as seen most recently in the mass shootings by mentally ill individuals in Newtown, Conn., Aurora, Colo., and Tucson, Ariz. It is time for the federal government to get out of this business and return the responsibility, and funds, to the states.”

Getting the federal government out of the mental health business may be easier said than done. A 1999 U.S. Supreme Court ruling in the case of Olmstead v. L.C. held that under the Americans with Disabilities Act, individuals with mental disabilities have the right to live in an integrated community setting rather than in institutions. The U.S. Department of Justice defined an integrated setting as one “that enables individuals with disabilities to interact with non-disabled persons to the fullest extent possible.” Though some mentally ill people may have benefited from this ruling, many others were harmed — not to mention the public, which must put up with the behavior of the mentally ill.

Torrey says it has now become politically correct to claim that this federal program failed because not enough centers were funded and not enough money was spent. But that’s not true. Torrey says: “Altogether, the annual total public funds for the support and treatment of mentally ill individuals is now more than $140 billion. The equivalent expenditure in 1963 when President John F. Kennedy proposed the CMHC program was $1 billion, or about $10 billion in today’s dollars. Even allowing for the increase in U.S. population, what we are getting for this 14-fold increase in spending is a disgrace.”

The dollar cost of this liberal vision of deinstitutionalization of mentally ill people is a relatively small part of the burden placed on society. Many innocent people have been assaulted, robbed and murdered by mentally ill people. Businesspeople and their customers have had to cope with the nuisance created by the mentally ill. The police response to misbehavior and crime committed by the mentally ill is to arrest them. Thus, they are put in jeopardy of mistreatment by hardened criminals in the nation’s jails and prisons. Worst of all is the fact that the liberals who engineered the shutting down of mental institutions have never been held accountable for their folly.

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20 Comments
Dutchman
Dutchman
February 28, 2018 10:28 am

Everybody has rights: illegal aliens, mentally ill, welfare queens, mass murders… except the average joe who has to put up with this crap.

C1ue
C1ue
February 28, 2018 10:41 am

I am totally in the dark why “liberals” are blamed for shutting down mental institutions.
Weren’t liberals responsible for creating them?
Also, it is far from clear if pharma incented activism against mental institutions is liberal vs just profiteering.
In general, less government is a conservative objective.
Seems like a very poorly thought out rant.

Hollywood Rob
Hollywood Rob
  C1ue
February 28, 2018 12:07 pm

Yes, Clue is correct. The greatest conservative of all time, Ronald Rayguns, is the one who signed the bill to close all of the insane asylums. The flood of insane cascaded across the nation as the poor soles who were cast out into the cold either migrated to Florida or died on the streets. Either outcome was acceptable for the conservatives in washington.

I don’t like liberals any more than any of you but you can’t hang this one on liberals. It was the conservatives who shut down the loony bins.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  C1ue
February 28, 2018 12:16 pm

Liberals pushed the legal actions that ended up with mental illness becoming a civil right, unless being dangerous to others can be proven, and putting the mentally ill out of the institutions and onto the streets.

I think it got started in California, but other States may have been involved as well.

Dutchman
Dutchman
  Anonymous
February 28, 2018 12:20 pm

I’m here in Minnesota. These people may be mentally ill – but they’re not stupid – there’s none of them here (they would freeze solid).

California is a good place for them. Where they can piss and shit on the streets, leave their needles everywhere.

TPC
TPC
  Dutchman
February 28, 2018 3:48 pm

Not sure about the rest of Minnesota, but the Minneapolis was wall to wall homeless the last few times I was there over the last decade. Their downtown was leaps and bounds worse than Des Moines, Kansas City, or Oklahoma City.

Not as bad as Chicago though.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
February 28, 2018 2:53 pm

That was Uncle Ronnie that did that, it saved a lot of money.
Of course when it fails, they blame it on liberals.

unit472/
unit472/
February 28, 2018 11:17 am

I wonder how many of the ‘mentally ill’ are naturally ill versus how many of them just short circuited their brains with LSD, meth, flakka and whatever else is out there on the streets.

I remember a speed freak from many years ago. Last time I saw him he was kicking a bag of garbage down the street muttering ‘pick it up’ over and over again!

i forget
i forget
February 28, 2018 11:57 am

Babes in utero are the most vulnerable. Outside the womb, that’ all asylum-institution. Womb to wham! Wake thee up, before you go-go McMurphy.

LaGeR
LaGeR
February 28, 2018 12:14 pm

“Piece of gum, Chief?”

“Mmm. Juicyfruit.”

“You sly bastard! Ya fooled ’em.”
“Can you hear me, too?”

“Oh yeah.”

Robert (QSLV)
Robert (QSLV)
February 28, 2018 12:46 pm

[imgcomment image[/img]

BB
BB
February 28, 2018 12:50 pm

Instead of the mentally ill flooding the state of Minnesota now you got the lowest of the low IQ Africans as neighbors . Maybe the nut cases are not so bad after all.

Dutchman
Dutchman
  BB
February 28, 2018 2:09 pm

Honestly, when they arrived here they didn’t know how to use a sink or a faucet. They would fuck up all the landlord’s plumbing and kitchen appliances – I heard some of them did real stupid shit with dishwashers..

There’s one thing they are really good at: Talking constantly on an cell phone.

Hollywood Rob
Hollywood Rob
February 28, 2018 1:13 pm

Just a quick google search and I don’t vouch for the veracity of this group, but I believe that the facts are indeed correct. You may not like it, but it was Reagan who turned out the insane.

http://www.povertyinsights.org/2013/10/14/did-reagans-crazy-mental-health-policies-cause-todays-homelessness/

I saw it first hand down in Key West…the last place that the insane could walk to. People all over the place talking to their reflections in windows. If you kick them out of their homes, where people are paid to take care of them then you have no way of knowing if they have their meds, or if they took their meds, or if their meds had so fucked up their minds that they were pretty sure that going into a school and shooting people sounded like a good idea.

If the florida shooter had been in an institution then he couldn’t have killed anybody. There are no institutions and it is, by and large, Reagan’s fault.

Ken
Ken
  Hollywood Rob
February 28, 2018 2:06 pm

It is a little bit more complicated than that. In 1981, under President Ronald Reagan, the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act repealed Carter’s community health legislation and establishes block grants for the states, ending the federal government’s role in providing services to the mentally ill. Federal mental-health spending decreases by 30 percent. What Reagan did was to place mental health care back in the states laps where it belongs, and by establishing block grants to help with the cost. Prior to that, JFK and Jimmy Carter both had a hand in the community health legislation that de-institutionalized mental health. Think of it like this. Prior to JFK and Carter, mental institutions were focused on the mentally ill only, but due to liberal efforts the focus changed to make sure that the law prevented the mentally ill from being incarcerated – instead they wanted community mental health centers that mixed the mentally ill with non-deranged health patients and almost never included incarceration even if the patient was pretty much insane. Ergo, by the time Reagan got involved the non-incarceration policy was already well in place at the federal level – all he did was push it down to the states with block grants for funding. At least that is my take on it from a little bit of research today. Your opinion of course may vary.

unit472/
unit472/
  Ken
February 28, 2018 3:35 pm

Reagan closed the mental hospitals in California when he was Governor. It is a state matter so what happened in the other 49 states had nothing to do with him.

Involuntary commitment to an insane asylum has always been a legal and ethical problem. Allowing a psychiatrist to lock someone up for years is prone to abuse

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Hollywood Rob
February 28, 2018 2:56 pm

I guess I should have scrolled down before commenting above. Kids today are being brainwashed into thinking that it’s a black and white world where Republicans all wear white hats.

MarshRabbit
MarshRabbit
February 28, 2018 5:30 pm

You haven’t made clear how should we determine who is mentally ill.

Bilco
Bilco
February 28, 2018 5:45 pm

Another great piece by Mr. Williams. However he did fail to mention the significant increase in the mentally ill who now run the country. (sarc. Intended )

Bill D
Bill D
February 28, 2018 5:56 pm

I work as a program director in one of these residential treatment homes in Oregon. Before that I ran transitional housing for military Veterans for the VA. We get individuals from the state hospital and move them into one of our houses in the community. Needless to say our neighbors are not/have not ever been happy about this situation. As a father of 7, I understand how they feel. Most of my residents come directly from the state hospital. They stay with us for 3-6 months, while we attempt to teach them activities of daily living and try to prepare them for an independent living situation. About 75% of my residents do get into their own place (through federal and state subsidized housing programs), but about 90% of those end up back in the state hospital within a year. Rinse and repeat. The cost is absolutely enormous, not just to the individuals in question but the taxpayers, the supporting staff, and the individuals who have to live near them. I have been with my current agency for two years and have had most of my residents recycle back to us, usually sicker than when they left. Often I have to exit them into homelessness due to the lack of affordable housing and hope that they are picked up by law enforcement and 5150’ed back to the state hospital. I do understand the community integration piece but it would be much cheaper and probably much kinder to have some localized state facilities for their care. I am also a 3 tour combat Vet so keep you snarky comments to yourself please. I am no libtard. Airborne.