In the
old days, hobos gathered around campfires next to railroad tracks at the edge
of town to drink alcohol, eat what they could find, solicit day-labor jobs and
continue to die from alcohol related illnesses. In the old days, the mentally
ill were confined to government and private hospitals, sometimes for life.
Now the
alcoholics, drug addicts and mentally ill are no longer isolated; they are
living on main street. Atlanta has
continued to enforce loitering laws and non-profits and churches operate homeless
shelters and food banks, but pandering and shopper nuisances are quietly
removed.
The
current plague of urban campers in large liberal cities like San Francisco and
Los Angeles can be treated by building lock-down mental health facilities to
get the homeless off drugs and alcohol and get medicine to manage their other
maladies.
Some of
these drug addicted folks will need to spend decades in these facilities and
should earn their own keep by working while they are locked up. Work is the
primary cure for drug addiction and is useful for other maladies. Some of these patients will have mental
illnesses that require that they be locked up permanently. We used to call these facilities “Insane
Asylums” and they were funded by States, Counties and individual Social
Security Disability Benefit checks.
In St.
Louis Mo., in the 1960s, we had 2 facilities, each with several hundred
patients. One was the Insane Asylum for those who were a danger to themselves
and others. The other facility was St. Louis State School and Hospital for the
retarded. I worked as a Therapist with the retarded as a summer job when I was
in college. We had a dairy farm, a school and a swimming pool. Families visited every Sunday. The Downs’
Syndrome patients were being prepared to work outside and many were released to
live at home.
Other
hospitals in the 1960s were owned and operated by Catholic Nuns, other churches
and charities like Shriners’. Costs were low. These same charities operated old
folks’ homes. Alzheimer’s was called
“dementia” and was as common as it is today.
After the
closure of US mental hospitals in the 1980s, drug addicts were held in jails,
but drugs were smuggled in and jail terms were reduced. Those with serious mental conditions were
expected to have health insurance. Alcoholics struggled to recover without
effective treatment and DUI arrests soared.
Welfare immigrants were vulnerable to all of the above. The
effectiveness of mental health treatment was rendered ineffective due to
restrictive coverage that lowered costs. In the 1980s, drug and alcohol
addiction treatment took a year, but was covered in many medical plans. This is
no longer the case. These treatments are not limited to 30 days and recovery
often involves homelessness.
Now the
problem has come full circle. We need to allow families to take care of their
disabled if they can, but we also need to restore the institutions we once had
to deal with a wider range of mental health problems at higher costs. These
facilities need to be owned and operated by private charities if possible.
The
definitions of mental illness have been modified by political correctness and
the names have been replaced. Manic Depressives are now called Bi-Polar. Some
have drug and alcohol addiction as well. Political correctness has redefined
sexual orientation as a “right” when it used to be categorized as a mental
illness or a felony. Liberals have infiltrated mental health. Gender dystopia
is a current fad being promoted by Liberals in education, activist groups and local
government. Obamacare opened up transgender surgery as a “medically necessary”
coverage.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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