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FionnM's avatar

>But it’s a particularly cute little rhetorical move by Breggin: whenever a patient claims that medications have helped them and that they’re content with taking them, he simply asserts that those patients have been misled by the effects of medication spellbinding.

Weird how every modern political movement has some equivalent of Marxist false consciousness. For feminists it's internalised misogyny, for anti-racists it's internalised racism, for this guy it's medication spellbinding.

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yay's avatar

A common cudgel used by the anti-psych movement (for one, the Church of Scientology) is pointing out that electroconvulsive therapy is still being clinically practiced -- which is true -- and painting it as an inhumane and painful operation, which is false. ECT is today done under general anesthetic and after truckloads of informed consent paperwork.

Progressives often conflate ECT with electrical aversion therapy, which is most notorious for its association with gay conversion therapy and has nothing to do with ECT. The popular term "electro-shock therapy" fails to distinguish them and aids in the confusion, and the anti-psychiatry movement has been happy to exploit this fact. A quick search tells me that Breggin has been abetting that, and wrote a whole book on it. Wonderful.

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