TAW122
Emissary of the right to die.
- Aug 30, 2018
- 6,849
This article discusses about the process of involuntary commitment and the way the author describes it shows that he is oversimplifying and ignoring the severity of abuse (and often lack of oversight and accountability for violation of due process) towards the patient. Sure while he is explaining the process of involuntary commitment, there are MANY more details that he left out, some of which, but not limited to: having a commitment documented on your medical record (which affects what you do later on, including being able to own a firearm), hospital bills from treatment you never consented/agreed to, more stigma from people who find out (which they will one way or the other), losing your job, lost time, etc.
If you skipped/skimmed through the article, at least read some of the comments.
Some of the comments in the article actually highlight the real damage done via involuntary commitment, including additional psychological harm that is unwarranted. There is even one comment that denounces the field as "junk science". I really liked the comment in regards to how the state can not be held legally responsible for doing this unconstitutional action against a citizen and how little recourse a patient has against abuse and what not. It is very Orwellian in nature and just one of the ways the state as well as society imposes extrajudicial punishments and sanctions against an individual that does not comply to societal norms, rules, or stuff.
In conclusion, I agree more with the comments than the author itself and imho, most people ignore all the real details of what happens during and after someone has been involuntarily committed against their will. If anything, it is unconstitutional as it violates due process, cruel and unusual punishment (maltreatment of patients and people in the hospital under the guise of help and medical treatment), and of course freedom of speech (e.g. thought crimes and unacceptable or unpopular opinions).
If you skipped/skimmed through the article, at least read some of the comments.
Some of the comments in the article actually highlight the real damage done via involuntary commitment, including additional psychological harm that is unwarranted. There is even one comment that denounces the field as "junk science". I really liked the comment in regards to how the state can not be held legally responsible for doing this unconstitutional action against a citizen and how little recourse a patient has against abuse and what not. It is very Orwellian in nature and just one of the ways the state as well as society imposes extrajudicial punishments and sanctions against an individual that does not comply to societal norms, rules, or stuff.
In conclusion, I agree more with the comments than the author itself and imho, most people ignore all the real details of what happens during and after someone has been involuntarily committed against their will. If anything, it is unconstitutional as it violates due process, cruel and unusual punishment (maltreatment of patients and people in the hospital under the guise of help and medical treatment), and of course freedom of speech (e.g. thought crimes and unacceptable or unpopular opinions).
Last edited: