Posted on 08/07/2019 5:06:27 PM PDT by ransomnote
Q is the result of the sacrifices and commitment of countless patriots to win back our captured country from the Deep State and achieve the transformation President Trump promised in this campaign video. President Trump has said the awakening of the public is key to this transformation.
Q describes this awakening as follows:
"The Great Awakening ('Freedom of Thought), was designed and created not only as a backchannel to the public (away from the longstanding mind control of the corrupt & heavily biased media) to endure future events through transparency and regeneration of individual thought (breaking the chains of group-think), but, more importantly, aid in the construction of a vehicle (a ship) that provides the scattered (free thinkers) with a starter new social-networking platform which allows for freedom of thought, expression, and patriotism or national pride (the feeling of love, devotion and sense of attachment to a homeland and alliance with other citizens who share the same sentiment).
When non-dogmatic information becomes FREE & TRANSPARENT it becomes a threat to those who attempt to control the narrative and/or the stable.
When you are awake, you stand on the outside of the stable (group-think collective), and have free thought.
"Free thought" is a philosophical viewpoint which holds that positions regarding truth should be formed on the basis of logic, reason, and empiricism, rather than authority, tradition, revelation, or dogma.
When you are awake, you are able to clearly see.
The choice is yours, and yours alone.
Trust and put faith in yourself.
You are not alone and you are not in the minority.
Difficult truths will soon see the light of day.
WWG1WGA!!!" ~ Q (#3038)
We discuss Q drop content on our threads to learn the truth about the capture of our country, after a lifetime of reading, watching and listening to lies and distortions used to control us and tame the American spirit. The truth shall set us free.
For summaries of Q drops (i.e., posts) discussed on our threads, I invite you to read the latest editions of The Oracle, which include helpful links and quotes to explain Q drop content.
Q drops can be found here in their original format.
Links to our Q threads, and Q drops posted on our threads, are listed in this table.
The video, Qanon is 100% coming from the Trump Administration, is just one of many excellent responses to the all-important question, "Whom does Q serve?" Another excellent source for identifying Q's involvement with President Trump is found at the website titled Qproofs.com.
Q Boot Camp is a quick, condensed way to learn the background and basics about the Q movement.
Q has reminded us repeatedly that together, we are strong. As the false "narrative" is destroyed and the divisive machinery put in place by the Deep State fails, the fact that patriotism has no skin color or political party is exposed for all to see.
In the battle between Good and Evil, we can't afford to let false divisions separate us any longer. The changes heading our way and the information revealed will, at times, be very difficult to face, but we will face it together. We, and our country, will be forever made stronger for having reclaimed the truth and freedom of thought.
Where We Go 1, We Go All
Note: Links in the post above are included in a resource table linked in Post #1 below, along with many additional excellent links to the best Q analysts and informations sources we've identified.
Florida ALREADY has the Baker Act.
Ask yourself WHY that wasn’t used in the Florida shooter’s case?
Hmmm?
Because some of us are beginning to think the whole PURPOSE in allowing obviously insane people to be loose is to justify these sorts of laws...
Do you REALLY think Julian Castro’s presidency can be trusted with this sort of thing? Cuz demographically it’s an inevitability he or someone just like him will be president by 2030...
If you don’t think there are already ‘lock up the crazy person’ laws...I double dog dare you to threaten your neighbor with a chainsaw...
Let us know what happens to you...
we need some info on “the Mom”.
arg...”her son’s” not his son’s
cripes...
Ouch,
at CNN town hall
Do you believe a woman should have the right to choose her method of self defense?
“Congress shall make no laws”
I am beginning to think they should have left it at that. ;)
Im a slow writer but I think I could have finished the letter to foundation before twelve years had elapsed.
Say it again!!!
#VirtueSignallingHurtsMyBrain
Re: sermons -
Leonard Ravenhill is good.
Also Milton Green.
Hard words, but good. I came to the Lord through Milton Green sermons.
The USA did away with committing the mentally ill to institutional confinement back in the dark days of “Snake Pit” asylums. This now has the mentally ill and the impoverished all on the streets together, today, with no help at all to ever be in therapies, we’re told.
The average Joe would need a *history* of threatening remarks and actions, indicating a desire or intent for harming others are going to fall under scrutiny. Terrifying people is not comforting. Terrifying them while owning a gun is less so.
The average Joe who finds himself unjustifiably threatened by Aunt Gladys (on the grounds of mental illness) who alleges he therefore should be prohibited from gun ownership, in most counties, will never run up a legal bill any more costly than defending ourselves against most any other local controversy, as in maybe using the Lemon Law to redress a bad car deal.
I get the slippery slope, but these cases of mass death and destruction, as the POTUS points out, are related to Insanity, and the astonishing Record for Ignoring these shooter histories of insanity are going to get a hearing. The evidence of some proclivity for the demonic is particularly going to trump the Nuts Get Guns defense, I believe.
More is coming out about LIFT3.
Non-lift3 from last thread, (h/t little Jeremiah & generally)
About f_i bulletin.
https://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/3769348/posts?page=1506#1506
https://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/3769348/posts?page=1509#1509
https://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/3769348/posts?page=1510#1510
https://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/3769348/posts?page=1513#1513
https://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/3769348/posts?page=1518#1518
https://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/3769348/posts?page=1519#1519
https://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/3769348/posts?page=1521#1521
https://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/3769348/posts?page=1534#1534
President Trump calls for the re-establishment of mental asylums: A discussion of deinstitutionalization.
Following the school shooting in Florida at the end of February, President Trump advocated for the re-establishment of mental asylums, also known as psychiatric hospitals, citing a much-needed improvement of the mental health system and as a solution to gun violence in America. In order to contextualize the Presidents claims, in this blog post, Ill delineate a movement in the 1950s known as deinstitutionalization and discuss the impact that had on our current mental health and criminal justice systems and policies.
Deinstitutionalization
Deinstitutionalization was the process of replacing long-stay psychiatric hospitals with community behavioral mental health services for individuals diagnosed with a mental disorder or developmental disability [1, 2, 3]. The movement took over a decade and can be broken down into a series of events: development of new psychotropic medications to treat symptoms of mental illness, the reallocation of federal dollars from state psychiatric hospitals to community mental health facilities, and President Kennedys 1963 call for mental health reform. Psychiatric hospitals were often poorly kept, understaffed, overcrowded, and lacked necessary resources to appropriately treat all patients. Deinstitutionalization occurred as a way to improve the treatment of institutionalized individuals suffering from mental illness.
The Criminal Justice System
As a result of deinstitutionalization, most individuals with mental illness were required to utilize private providers for services [4]. Those who could not afford private health insurance were forced out of hospitals and many ended up living on the street or were incarcerated [5], the rate of homelessness in the population of mentally ill is approximately 25%, compared to only 6% of the general population [6]. The burden of care was therefore shifted from hospitals to the criminal justice practitioners and has subsequently led to increased exposure of the mentally ill community to law enforcement officers [7]. A study conducted in 1978 found that severely mentally ill persons who were hospitalized prior to deinstitutionalization were arrested three times more often compared to the general population, and five times more often in the case of violent crimes [8]. As a result of decades of disproportionately arresting mentally ill offenders, the criminal justice system incarcerates more individuals with mental illness than there are in state mental health hospitals. Some ways the criminal justice system has tried to correct the disproportionate incarceration of mentally ill offenders, has been through training of police officers and the increasing number of mental health courts. First, police departments around the country have implemented Crisis Intervention Teams (CIT) in an effort to train law enforcement officials to differentiate between criminal behavior and mental illness. programs are hypothesized to improve officers abilities to effectively, respectfully, and safely interact with person with mental illness and subsequently divert them away from the criminal justice system and to mental health services [9]. Second, Mental health courts are meant to identify offenders after arrest, and divert them to special courts that are designed to address underlying mental health issues to foster desistance from crime.
The Mental Health System
Currently, individuals typically seek mental health care through private or community mental health facilities. Private care is where an individual can seek out mental health treatment on their own, but may or may not accept insurance. Community mental health agencies are public locations where individuals can also seek treatment on their own. However, typically this is a location for individuals without health insurance or with no/low income. State mental health hospitals are the closest type of treatment facility to what was previously known as mental asylums. As a result of deinstitutionalization, and the creation of involuntary commitment to state mental health hospitals, the law requires that for admission an individual must be a danger to themselves, others, and/or are considered gravely disabled. The re-establishment of mental asylums would most likely make it easier to be institutionalized.
Deinstitutionalization was a movement that was multifaceted and had an effect across many sectors, from the criminal justice to mental health sectors. The current dilemma that the country faces is complex. The implementation of psychiatric hospitals, modeled after early twentieth century institutions would most likely take decades to accomplish, require changes to existing laws, and the reallocation of federal dollars across mental health and criminal justice system budgets. While there may be issues across criminal justice and mental health sectors, in identifying and treatment of mental illness, we have come a long way from the years of institutionalization of mentally ill individuals. Not only would more easily accessible in-patient state mental health treatment require many changes, it is not a panacea.
References
[1] Fakhoury, W., & Priebe, S. (2007). Deinstitutionalization and reinstitutionalization: major changes in the provision of mental healthcare. Psychiatry, 6(8), 313-316.
[2] Frank, R. G., & Glied, S. A. (2006). Better but not well: Mental health policy in the United States since 1950. JHU Press.
[3] Grob, G. N. (1994). The mad among us: A history of the care of Americas mentally ill. Free Press.
[4] Kennedy-Hendricks, A., Huskamp, H. A., Rutkow, L., & Barry, C. L. (2016). Improving access to care and reducing involvement in the criminal justice system for people with mental illness. Health Affairs, 35(6), 1076-1083.
[5] Daniel, A. (2007). Care of the mentally ill in prisons: Challenges and solutions. Journal American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law, 35(4), 406-410.
[6] National Coalition for Homeless. (2009). Mental illness and homelessness. Retrieved from: http://www.nationalhomeless.org/factsheets/Mental_Illness.pdf
[7] Lamb, H. R., & Grant, R. (1982). The mentally ill in an urban county jail. Archives of General Psychiatry, 39(1), 17-32.
[8] Sosowrsky, L. (1978). Crime and violence among mental patients reconsidered in view of the new legal relationship between the state and the mentally ill. American Journal of Psychiatry, 135(1), 33-42
[9] Watson, A. C., Morabito, M. S., Draine, J., & Ottati, V. (2008). Improving police response to persons with mental illness: A multi-level conceptualization of CIT. International Journal of Law and Psychiatry, 31(4), 359-368.
https://blogs.iu.edu/sciu/2018/03/20/mental-asylums-and-deinstitutionalization/
“will never run up a legal bill any more costly than defending ourselves against most any other local controversy, as in maybe using the Lemon Law to redress a bad car deal.”
*guffaw*
You’re not really serious, are you?
Your opponent won’t be Aunt Gladys in civil court.
it will be the government in criminal court.
You will NEVER find out who accused you. These will be anonymous calls.
Do you really not remember who Richard Jewel was?
Departments of corrections have become mental health systems. The largest mental health system in the world is the California Department of Corrections.
A significant % of homeless are mental ill. Parollees and homeless don’t take the drugs that were intended to allow them to lead a “normal unincarcerated life.”
Homeless should be screened and those healthy subjected to law violations for sleeping on public or private property and public health violations. The mentally ill should be in small community facilities where they take meds under supervision. They could also put some on day status where they can leave during the day and come back at night if they qualify and earn it, modeled after prison release in half-way houses.
Red Flags should also be triaged., Example the kid in Florida and the FBI. The FBI should develop standards and training so larger police and sheriff’s department can screen and help smaller departments.
GREAT article here:
http://www.spokesman.com/stories/1996/oct/28/fbi-accused-of-trying-to-trap-jewell-lawyers-say/
Thanks for posting links, and about the LIFT3.
FWIW,I keep finding info that says its the Zeronet peer to peer version of 8ch, which codemonkey does not endorse, which has the tab for Kiddie porn, not the original site that is down right now.
Yeah, we don’t need gun control laws, nor knife control laws...
We need PSYCHO control laws.
(but “she” is “concerned” about that)
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