Crazy Significant Mental Health Correlations
- Apr 11, 2017
- 2 min read
An amazing breakthrough was made when Dr. Robert O. Becker noticed the crazy but significant correlation between mental health and radiation. Because radiation is increasing with the amount of sun storms every year combined with the radiation from man-made sources, the incidence of mental health will also dramatically increase in the future unless something changes. The National Centers for Environmental Information who follow sun storms says, “It is interesting to note that the overall level of magnetic disturbance from year to year has increased substantially from a low around 1900” (accessed on April 7, 2017 https://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/stp/geomag/aastar.html ) This means to me that if psychiatric behavior is correlated with magnetic sun storms the amount of psychiatric disorders would have increased over time and it has. According to the book Anatomy of an Epidemic “The percentage of Americans disabled by mental illness has increased five-fold since 1955…” (Whitaker, (2010), p. 23). Mental health drugs are not designed to help with the electromagnetic situation at hand. According to the book Anatomy of an Epidemic by Robert Whitaker, “A review of the scientific literature reveals that it is our drug-based paradigm of care that is fueling this epidemic. The drugs increase the likelihood that a person will become chronically ill, and induce new and more severe psychiatric symptoms in a significant percentage of patients” Whitaker, (2010), p. 23). Dr. Peter Breggin and Dr. Anne Blake Tracy have written books that explain the “cure” of mental health drugs is worse than the problem because many mental health drugs can cause people to be psychotic, suicidal, and homicidal. Dr. Anne Blake Tracy has a website that contains a list of school shootings that have happened in the United States over time due to prescription drugs. http://www.drugawareness.org/ssri-nightmares/school-shootings/ The book The Anatomy of an Epidemic by Robert Whitaker cites studies that show that exercise is far better than mental health drugs at helping people through depression. Exercise also does not have the side effect of making people suicidal or homicidal, so it is a much better antidote. (The author, Lily Gardner, is The North Star Radio Show Host on blog talk radio every other Thursday at noon MST.)





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