Seriously Mentally Ill

Guest Post by John Stossel

Seriously Mentally Ill

They live on the street, often foraging through dumpsters. Some threaten us. Occasionally, they assault people.

Thousands of mentally ill people cycle in and out of hospital emergency rooms. They strain our medical system, scare the public and sometimes harm themselves.

Most, says DJ Jaffe, are schizophrenic or bipolar and have stopped taking their medication.

Jaffe gave up a successful advertising career to try to improve the way America deals with such people.

“John Hinckley shot President Reagan because he knew, not thought, knew that was the best way to get a date with Jodie Foster,” Jaffe tells me in my latest internet video collaboration with City Journal.

Years ago, such people were locked up in mental hospitals. That protected the public, but the asylums were horrible, overcrowded places, where sick people rarely got good treatment.

“We decided we would largely replace that system with mental health care in the community,” says Stephen Eide, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute.

Community treatment made sense. Care would be easier and cheaper in the patients’ own neighborhoods. Patients would be closer to their families, who could visit.

But community treatment never really happened. Politicians didn’t fund it. Neighborhood mental health facilities were not popular with their constituents.

Many mentally ill people now end up in prison. “Prison is no place for somebody with schizophrenia,” says Eide. “However, that’s where they’re going to remain.

Today, more seriously mentally ill people are locked up in Los Angeles County Jail, Cook County Jail and New York’s Rikers Island jail than in any mental hospital.

In jail, they barely get treatment. As a result, they stay in jail longer than other inmates.

“They get abused and victimized and thrown in solitary, and they can’t visit their families,” says Jaffe. “It’s a horrific place to be.”

America has some high-quality mental hospitals, but they don’t have enough money to give the extended treatment that most seriously ill people need.

Jaffe says, “It’s become harder to get into Bellevue (a New York City mental hospital) than Harvard. If you’re well enough to walk into a hospital and ask for care, they’re going to say you’re not sick enough to need it.”

Hospitals often practice what Jaffe calls “treating and streeting.” The police call it “catch and release.”

Jaffe says that a big part of the problem is that governments, instead of treating the sickest people, often offer “something for everyone.”

That’s a line from Chirlane McCray, wife of New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio. De Blasio named his wife director of the city’s program to combat mental illness. McCray promised to spend “almost a billion dollars” on “54 initiatives.”

Unfortunately, most of those initiatives address people who are not very sick. “They wrap anything that makes you sad — bad grades, poverty, coming from a single-parent household — in a mental health narrative,” says Jaffe.

“Blurring the lines between mild mental disorders such as anxiety or mild depression — and schizophrenia — is not a bug; it’s a feature of the program,” says Eide. “They believe the only way New Yorkers will support improvements to mental illness policy is if they are convinced that everybody has a mental illness.”

So most funds don’t go to helping the people diving into dumpsters or to protecting us from threatening people on the street.

“If we’re going to spend all our money on people who are anxious or can’t sleep, what’s left for the seriously ill?” asks Jaffe. “Ask any cop what we need, he’s going to say: more hospitals, easier civil commitment, so that when I bring somebody they’re admitted. We need to keep them on their medications so they don’t deteriorate.”

Why then do authorities focus on comparatively minor problems? “They don’t cost as much to help! Serving the seriously mentally ill is a really difficult task,” he adds.

So the seriously mentally ill live on the street or get locked up in jails.

“We tend to think of ourselves as a very compassionate society,” says Eide, “but a century from now, when people look at the situation with the seriously mentally ill, they’re going to look back on us and wonder how compassionate we really were.”

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
31 Comments
Ammo
Ammo
October 3, 2018 9:21 am

I’m sorry but I missed the solution…is it focus on the seriously mentally ill and ignore the remaining group of just mentally ill? Please enlighten….thanks.

Ammo
Ammo
  Ammo
October 3, 2018 9:29 am

Who are you talking to, Ammo?

grace country pastor
grace country pastor
  Ammo
October 3, 2018 9:41 am

That was funny… 🙂

Anonymous
Anonymous
October 3, 2018 10:27 am

Yes, but how do you react, when you see, or cross paths with a mentally unstable person in day to day life?
Or, worse, convince the bleeding heart sympathetic women in your life to avoid interaction risks with them?
Can you even quickly identify a whack job in your midst?
Can you with 100% accuracy gauge their level of mentality and risk level potential before interacting?
Some of them? Maybe. But probably not.

A coldhearted avoidance is safest.
As I did, with the guy hitchkiking, with a gas can in his hand, next to a ratty looking family van, on the side of the road, looking scruffy, and wearing what looked like pajama bottom pants.
I raced past him, and his dramatic pleading to passersby, with a thought of: “Not gonna help you. Stupid. Should have bought a full tank of gas, and not let it run empty. Walk your ass to a fuel station. Your problem. Your solution.”

Much like the abuse of the Me Too bowel movement, evil doers and scam artists have preyed on sympathizers to the point that authentic victims are the babies that get thrown out with the scummy bathwater.
On an earlier thread, a reader comment posted a tweet copy to the effect that shrink Dr. Crazy-Ford and old hag Frankenstein, with their vitriolic followers, have completely eradicated any shred of sympathy for female abuse victims, with their narrative push to label conservative old whitey as the modern day boogie man, to be hated, despised, and eliminated.
All of them.

So, with that trend accelerating, many of the hated have no shits left to give, for those demanding sympathy or support.

Iconoclast421
Iconoclast421
October 3, 2018 10:46 am

John Hinckley shot President Reagan most likely because he was coerced into doing so by some seriously evil people who went on to capture multiple presidencies, take down the twin towers, capture the worlds largest poppy fields, and set the entire middle east on fire. If they can frickin do all that, you seriously think they cant make this guy babble about Jodie Foster?

Cricket
Cricket
  Iconoclast421
October 3, 2018 10:59 am

Yes, strange how it’s rarely mentioned members of the Bush family were scheduled to dine with members of the Hinckley family the week President Reagan got shot. I’m sure it’s just a coincidence that the family of the Vice-President was friends with the family who’s son tried to murder the President.

Iwasntbornwithenufmiddlefingers
Iwasntbornwithenufmiddlefingers
  Cricket
October 3, 2018 2:13 pm

Hinckleys brother ate with the bushes the night before the shooting. Only reported in 2 newspapers at the time. I have a copy.

Stucky
Stucky
October 3, 2018 11:23 am

This was a terrific article about Congress.

miforest
miforest
  Stucky
October 3, 2018 11:40 am

not the case stucky. they are not dumb or mental, they are very shrewed and corrupt . the dumb part is an act.
It works very well too.

robert h siddell jr
robert h siddell jr
  miforest
October 3, 2018 12:04 pm

Except the Democrats exhibit Demonic Dumbness, Evil beyond their feeble IQs.

robert h siddell jr
robert h siddell jr
  Stucky
October 3, 2018 12:25 pm

But a few seem to be fighting for US, and the MSM screws up in rare moments and we get a glimpse on TV of Trey Gowdy, Louie Gohmert, Chuck Grassley, John Cornyn, Tom Tillis, etc. When the Swamp has been drained and all the NPR/PBS traitors have been exiled to Cuba and replaced by Patriots, the change in attitudes of Congressmen and Journalist will be wonderful.

Harrington Richardson
Harrington Richardson
October 3, 2018 12:12 pm

Yesterday I went to send a package at the Post Office. Across the street is a seedy old house divided into two or three apartments I imagine. There are card tables and lawn chairs in the yard. A couple of people in wheel chairs, a few others marching around. A loudmouthed 40-60 female possibly hostess/pump of some sort. A few other assorted degenerates. A mono del portico standing right there taking a leak in the yard for all to see before another beer. I am guessing these folks were one time candidates for long closed mental health care facilities.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Harrington Richardson
October 4, 2018 3:44 am

And my cousin, who lives next door, said we have two half-way houses, owned by New Yorkers, in our neighborhood ( in South Carolina no less). One is almost directly behind me and the other around the corner. So we have recovering drug addicts in close proximity but nobody knew because the city council didn’t notify people like they’re supposed to do. Why? Because they knew we wouldn’t allow it. It was only found out because a neighbor was looking at house taxes in the area and found out about it. I expect fireworks to hit city council over this. But in the meantime, if those druggies get crazy and cause trouble around here, they’ll wish they were still on those drugs by the time it’s over. We’re a close-knit neighborhood and the majority are armed.

NickelthroweR
NickelthroweR
October 3, 2018 12:33 pm

Greetings,
I live at the beach in SoCal. Because of our good weather, parks and tourists, we have an unbelievable amount of insane homeless zombies walking about. A few months back, one snapped and ran into a restaurant on our boardwalk and slit a man’s throat while he was holding his daughter and enjoying his dinner. People on the boardwalk had called the police numerous times to report that there was a man on the boardwalk acting entirely out of control but no police ever came as they are just too busy.

I like to walk so I walk at least 6 miles a day so I’ve got a good idea as to which ones are crazy, dangerous or both. That said, I have no clue as to the solution other than citizens taking matters into their own hands and running these folks out of town. I doubt that will ever happen though as the liberals around me keep giving these people money so as to virtue signal to everyone how super hip they are.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  NickelthroweR
October 4, 2018 3:51 am

These homeless crazy people in the past either died or had a horrible life of deprivation and then died. People generally didn’t give money to lunatics. When taxes were collected for that purpose, insane asylums were constructed, but they weren’t the best place to be (remember Bedlam.) But times have changed. New insane asylums need to be brought back into practice to protect the public, preferably by donations and charities.

thetruthonly
thetruthonly
October 3, 2018 1:23 pm

Living in the Leftist City in America (Santa Cruz,CA), with 50% socialist city council spending lots on the homeless in different ways, being famous for being leftist, being at the physical cross roads of several highways and as physically left as you can go West, it attracts TONS of homeless. We have government (expensive tax) sponsored tent encampments, other housing, and a plenty of street homeless (and it gets worse every year).
I walk my dog every day along the same routes through one small city park, and see many of the same people as well as newbies every day. Some are showering in the rest room sinks, some are passed out on the grass, some live in cars/broken down RV’s temporarily parked on surrounding streets that are a bit less bothersome to the public.
The more affluent among these are the car homeless who actually bar-b-que every day at the park to get a hot meal and feed quite a few others while they are at it. They are very nice to me and know my dog by name. I have talked to them, but haven’t quite wanted to actually find out their sad story. I suspect there is little I could or want to do to help them as it looks pretty hopeless. I just wave and say mindless greetings to the ones who have half a mind. Every park in town is the same at various times of day, the downtown, all the time. Better than being in jail? You would think so. I’ve never been bothered by any of them, except how it makes me sad. It not a cause I can afford to take up because it is a bottomless pit. It does go the the heart of what it means to be a good person, to reduce human suffering in yourself and others. Maybe I’m not a good, or good enough person? Maybe there just are people who cannot cope with life successfully without suffering. We all suffer at times.

Harrington Richardson
Harrington Richardson
  thetruthonly
October 3, 2018 4:04 pm

It is heartbreaking regardless of how they got there. Small town midwest America has little tent enclaves too. They are all boozers or druggies with a few simply insane. They get those little pop up tents that can be completely enclosed. There is one guy I have given money in the past. He got so fuqueing drunk he passed out and his campfire burned his legs off. I shit you not. He is a veteran and they have tried to give him prosthetic legs etc. but all he wants to do is get wasted and sometimes go to a VA hospital during bad weather. You would see him wheeling around with a couple of 40’s under his wheelchair seat. Pathetic doesn’t begin to describe it.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Harrington Richardson
October 4, 2018 3:57 am

Unfortunately, many homeless are war vets who were made crazy by the wars themselves. Those I definitely feel sorry for. What can you do for people who can no longer live in civilized society functionally?

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  thetruthonly
October 4, 2018 3:56 am

Many homeless, like the ones in RVs and living in cars, simply have no job. Though the MSM says jobs are increasing, I don’t believe it. Many just need a job.

pyrrhus
pyrrhus
October 3, 2018 2:08 pm

As if treatment is going to work….the solution, to the extent it exists, is pills..And they won’t take them consistently.

lgr
lgr
  pyrrhus
October 3, 2018 2:18 pm
Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  pyrrhus
October 4, 2018 3:57 am

Unfortunately, pyrrhus, that’s the only treatment available by the medical “professionals.”

Iwasntbornwithenufmiddlefingers
Iwasntbornwithenufmiddlefingers
October 3, 2018 2:11 pm

Hinckleys brother ate at jeb bushes house the night before reagan was shot. Pick someone who wasnt mkultra’d

Scott halloween
Scott halloween
October 3, 2018 5:05 pm

The solution is isolation. A nice pleasant island, somewhere warm, with lots of nice little concrete houses,( about ten thousand. )A central water stations and sanitation spots, and a great big King Kong concrete wall through the middle. Go up to any of the multiple locked gates to receive your medication . Take your medication and receive freshly washed overalls, a sack of toilet paper,and food. Enjoy the sun and surf, fight with the other inmates or don’t.
Free WiFi.
bingo Thursday.
All the free booze and drugs you can do.
Don’t lie to yourself, these sad fuckers are not gonna get “better”.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Scott halloween
October 4, 2018 4:06 am

Accurate outcome, Scott.

BL
BL
October 3, 2018 7:26 pm

One should ask the question as to why the government emptied the mentally ill out of the mental hospitals and on to the streets. I personally believe that the population control crowd knew that the life span of those “useless eaters” as they call them would be greatly reduced. The cost for housing the patients would no longer be on the backs of the states and also left the hospitals empty. If you look at the Russian revolution (1905), the patients were thrown to the streets and political prisoners were held in the empty facilities where they were subject to all manner of abuse.

Will the dissenters here be imprisoned in America’s empty mental hospitals? Russian prisoners were also released out of the prisons to make room to lock up citizens who did not agree with the communist party doctrine. Will history repeat?

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  BL
October 4, 2018 4:10 am

States still don’t want to house the mentally ill, too costly, but the hospitals have mostly been repurposed or torn down. Guess dissenters will have to go to the new FEMA camps. But as far as I can tell, they’re currently being used to house illegal aliens. So that will have to be later on.

Thunderbird
Thunderbird
October 3, 2018 9:27 pm

It is the system that created this condition and administrative law can’t fix it. We made our bed by going along with this administrative system so now we have to sleep with it.

Did I ask the government to make a system to control everything I do? No. So what you are seeing is the drop outs.

Remember the drug culture of the sixties and free love? Well we are reaping the results of it.

We are witnessing the breakdown of our culture. The weakest ones are going first.

22winmag - Unreconstructedsouthernerbygraceofgod
22winmag - Unreconstructedsouthernerbygraceofgod
October 3, 2018 10:18 pm

Meanwhile, San Francisco-style human feces locater apps get downloaded another 10 million times.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
October 4, 2018 3:33 am

We need to go back to state mental hospitals. If it’s a large state like Texas or California, possibly two. It should be an untouchable part of the budget, like Medicare and Social Security in the federal budget. If they’re going to tax us anyway, make it worth something and cut the other crap out. But we need to get them off the streets.

Wingless
Wingless
  Vixen Vic
October 4, 2018 8:41 am

” It should be an untouchable part of the budget, like Medicare and Social Security in the federal budget.”

HA, HA, HA ha ha (gasp) haaaa haaa haaaa. Oh wait, you are serious?