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The psychological, cultural & societal disintegration of America under post-industrial capitalism

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Richard Clark
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If we can pretend that people's behaviors and dysfunctions are regulated, controlled and determined by genes, and not the social and emotional environment, we don't have to look at child welfare policies, we don't have to look at the kind of support that our society provides to pregnant women, and we don't have to look at the kind of non-support that is, pitifully, extended to families.   The reality is that most children in North America now have to be away from their parents from an early age, because of the dire economic situation and associated considerations that have sprung up over the past 30 years, since Reaganomics first began to take its terrible toll.   Because of current welfare laws, most mothers are now forced to go find low-paying jobs far away from home, and cannot see their kids for most of the day.   The tragic reality is that under these conditions, kids' brains don't develop the way they need to.   Myriad problems result, both for the children and for the society.

 

However, to the extent that we can pretend that all the resulting damage is caused by genetics, we don't have to look at the social and economic policies at the root of these misfortunes;   we don't have to look at the politics that disadvantage certain minority groups, thereby causing them more stress, causing them more pain -- and more predisposition to addiction.   Bottom line, we don't have to look at economic inequalities.   If it's all genes (which of course it isn't), we're all innocent, and society doesn't then have to take a hard look at its commonplace attitudes and policies.   So most of us pretend, as required.

 

Criminalization versus harm reduction

 

How should addicts be treated, and how are they treated in the United States and Canada?

 

If people who become severe addicts (as shown by all the studies) were for the most part severely abused and neglected as children (as they certainly are), then we must realize that the war on drugs is actually being waged against people that were abused from an early age onward, throughout their childhood years.   In other words, we're punishing people for having been abused.   That's the first point.

 

Now imagine a situation where we really were trying to figure out how to help addicts and others who are dysfunctional.   Would we come up with a system that stresses them to the max?   Who on earth would design a system that ostracizes, marginalizes, impoverishes and ensures the disease of the addict -- and then foolishly hope, through such a crazy system, to rehabilitate large numbers of them?   It can't be done.   In other words, the so-called "war on drugs," which, as the new drug czar points out, is really a war on people, actually entrenches addiction deeply.   Furthermore, it institutionalizes people in facilities where there's nothing in the way of the care they so desperately need.   We call it a "correctional" system, but it doesn't correct anything.   In actuality it's a punitive system that makes its victims more dysfunctional than ever.   So people suffer more, and when they come out, they're more entrenched in their addictions and dysfunctionality than they were when they went in.

 

The chemical control of children's behavior

 

There are about half-a-million kids in this country receiving heavy-duty anti-psychotic medications -- medications that are usually given to adult schizophrenics to regulate their hallucinations.   But in this case, children are getting it so that adults can control their behavior.   So what we have here is a massive social experiment in the chemical control of children's behavior, with no idea of the long-term consequences of these heavy-duty anti-psychotics, on our kids.   How sweet.

 

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Several years after receiving my M.A. in social science (interdisciplinary studies) I was an instructor at S.F. State University for a year, but then went back to designing automated machinery, and then tech writing, in Silicon Valley. I've (more...)
 

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