I remember fighting for "mental health parity" here in Oregon ten years ago. We still don't have it. It's more like "mental health parody".
The conundrum is that the mentally ill don't choose to be ill, they often won't take their meds or accept treatment, and they are at high risk of harming themselves or others. It's not evilness. It's illness. Punitive measures ie a prison cell never cure a sick person. We've closed most publicly funded treatment facilities. These very sick and extremely volatile people are walking our streets, dazed and confused. WS is filled with literally thousands of threads which literally scream "mental illness". Isn't it time we start taking a much closer look at these tremendously ill people? Hockeymom is right. We run to help the physically sick but run from the mentally sick. Why?
IMO, it's back to the drawing board concerning laws, restrictions, and services. We've failed. Miserably.
I am quoting Missizzy's post NOT because I disagree with her, but just to provide context for what I am going to say. In fact, Missizzy has been incredibly informative and moving on the subject of our laws and how they fail to deal with the mentally ill.
THAT BEING SAID, it was only a few decades ago when people could be committed for life on the mere say so of their relatives.
This was especially true if a male (usually a husband or father, but sometimes even a brother) claimed that his female relative was "not normal." Once in the system, people diagnosed as mentally ill found themselves victimized by all sorts of invasive procedures (lobotomies, electric shock, harsh drugs) and sometimes trapped for life.
Some of these treatments may have been necessary, but a perfectly normal person might well be tortured simply for being non-conformist. Tennessee Williams' sister was lobotomized because she was outspoken and said things that embarrassed their mother. The sister required institutional care for the next 50+ years.
So it may be true that we have swung too far in the opposite way, to the point where desperately (and dangerously) ill people aren't getting the help they deserve. But we should also keep in mind the abuses of the past.