What Insane Asylums Taught Us[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]Patterson, PaulUsa Today Magazine
Every year, at the time of the Spring and Fall Equinox, on both sides of the north stairway of what is also called “El Castillo,” or “The Castle” of Chichen Itza, there is a solar projection of a Serpent of Light, consisting of seven inverted triangles of light. There are two ...
Support for closing asylums and transitioning to community-based care facilities, or outpatient treatment centers, began to grow in the 1950s. By then, the ...
By the early 20th century hundreds of thousands of “lunatics” were institutionalized in asylums, often against their will. The conditions of these facilities were akin to that of a prison. Patients were crammed into over crowded rooms, and lived under physical restraint. Experimental “therapies”...
immigration an invasion, claimed it was killing hundreds of thousands of people a year, and that immigrants are pouring into American cities. (Fact checks have found these claims to be false or exaggerated.) He alsorepeated false claimsthat immigrants were coming from prisons and insane asylums....
the EU centres and since over 100 million people in Africa are from nationalities that usually get asylums in EU countries millions would get asylum in Europe from the EU centres in Africa thereby causing million to come to Europe and further inflaming the political situation in many EU ...
Cit., p. xvf] It is no coincidence that, in America, the first manufacturing complex in Lowell was designed to symbolise its goals and its hierarchical structure nor that its design was emulated by many of the penitentiaries, insane asylums, orphanages and reformatories of the period. [...
Right-wingers are raging over Trump’s performance Ja'han Jones My colleague Allison Detzel posted somequick reactions to tonight’s debatefrom GOP insiders. But the collective conniption that right-wingers are having online right now is one sign that thingsmightnot have gon...
to is in the 1970s perhaps you’ve heard of this experiment. There was a Stanford psychologist who sent a handful of people into asylums and they checked in because they said they were insane, and then they tried to say wait, hang on, I’m actually just fine. Can I leave now?
The sad thing (in my mind) is that 50 years ago, people like this were placed in "insane" asylums, where they received 3 warm meals, medical care, and a place to stay. <BR><BR>Now that it is considered politically incorrect to keep people like this in mental health institutions,...