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NCMHPC | |
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National Coalition of Mental Health Professionals and Consumers, Inc. |
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an educational foundation and advocacy organization serving mental health consumers and professionals |
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President’s
Message: Protect the living, and future generations- use our rights to freely
organize and to speak our hearts and minds, to take back our nation’s values of
mutual responsibility!
In the January 2005 Coalition Report, I made these assertions: “…the steady,
unrelenting and open, as well as sneak, attacks on
The time
for the real referendum on health care is still with us, and the health care reform
movement can make it happen.”
However, a
long-standing Coalition member, a seasoned fighter in our movement has written
to us that the real challenge facing mental health and substance abuse care professionals
at present is our unwillingness to engage in the battle for hearts, minds, and
dollars, i.e. the political process, that would take back talk therapy from
what the National Coalition is insisting is the highjacking by the health
insurance and pharmaceutical industries (see our position stated in the flyer
in this issue of the Coalition Report).
This declaration
of the “unwillingness to engage” by professionals has been echoed by many other
advocates. Is this true?
I think that
avoidance, and “getting by” – rather than “unwillingness” – make up the basic
posture to which many Americans retreat. I think the posture of avoidance, and
“getting by,” is the same one adopted by the great majority of our colleagues
and our fellow Americans – all of us health care consumers!
As some of
us believe: Identification with the aggressor is everywhere around us.
In his1948
appeal to us all, Wilhelm Reich distilled his analysis of “the mass psychology
of fascism” into his hard-hitting little book, Listen, Little Man! His
words introducing this “talk” to the “Little Man” in each of us, so strikingly
illustrated by William Steig, I think desperately need repeating now: “…It is time for the living to become hard
where hardness is needed in the struggle for its safeguarding and development;
in doing so, it will not lose its kindness if it sticks to the truth
courageously. There is hope in the fact that, among million of industrious,
decent individuals there are always only
just a few pestilent individuals who cause murderous mischief by appealing
to the dark and dangerous impulses…and lead them to organized political murder.
There is only one antidote to the germs of emotional plague in the mass individual:
his own feeling of living life. The living does not ask for power but for its
proper role in human life. It is based on the three pillars of love, work and
knowledge.
He who has to protect the living against
the emotional plague has to free speech as we enjoy it in More
than ever we need to
keep organizing, and to keep fighting for all health care in
order to be fighting for mental health and substance abuse care (for a clear
essay on how all of social insurance is interconnected, see the Rekindling
Reform Position statement in this Coalition
Report issue).
We need all
your active support in donations, volunteering for committee work,
membership recruitment and very wide distribution of information about all
work.
We need to speak
the truth to power, to speak out on real human values, not the “values” of
“free markets,” of “strong defense,” tax cuts to the wealthy at the expense of
the “million of industrious, decent individuals.”
Thanks to
everyone for all you do to protect the living, and to take back our nation’s
values of mutual responsibility, a shared caring and responsibilities to one
another – the common good to which our nation
- in its founding -dedicated us all.
Dave Byrom
Please see the articles in the Coalition
Report issue, and on our website,
for our projects and campaigns, for the proactive, for the policy offensives.
The National Coalition is, and will, fight on to preserve quality care
and patient choice, privacy, and decision-making power. We are continuing
our extensive networking and collaborative projects with many health care
and social justice organizations, as well as with many organizations of mental
health and substance abuse professionals from all practitioner disciplines. We
are determined to expand our Campaign to
Inform America of what systems of
real mental health and substance abuse care require. And we remain dedicated to
replace Managed Health Care, with a pro-patient, pro-quality, pro-consumer
system accessible for all. |
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