Dr Colin Ross Interview: CIA Doctors and the Psychiatry Scam

This was a great discussion! Did ya’ll know that Colin Ross was present at the Greenbaum Lecture?!

Dr Colin Ross Interview: CIA Doctors and the Psychiatry Scam

This week we’re joined by Dr. Colin Ross. Dr. Ross is a psychiatrist who received his M.D. from the University of Alberta in 1981 and completed his specialty training in psychiatry at the University of Manitoba in 1985. He is the author of over 135 papers in professional journals, most of them dealing with dissociation, psychological trauma and multiple personality disorder. He is a past president of the International Society for the Study of Dissociation and Trauma and a former Laughlin Fellow of the American College of Psychiatrists.

Dr. Ross is also the author of several books, including, ‘The CIA Doctors: Human Rights Violations By American Psychiatrists’,  ‘Military Mind Control: A Story of Trauma and Recovery’ and ‘The Great Psychiatry Scam’.

In his book ‘The C.I.A. Doctors’, Dr. Ross provides proof, based on 15,000 pages of documents obtained from the C.I.A. through the Freedom of Information Act, that there have been pervasive, systematic violations of human rights by American psychiatrists over the last 65 years. He also proves that the Manchurian Candidate “super spy” is fact, not fiction. He describes the experiments conducted by psychiatrists to create amnesia, new identities, hypnotic access codes, and new memories in the minds of experimental subjects.

In ‘The Great Psychiatry Scam’, Dr. Ross provides evidence that modern pscyhiatry is actually a pdeudo-science, with many of the main accepted theses about the causes of human mental illness actually disproven by psychiatric experiments and research.

SOTT Talk Radio: Good Science, Bad Science – Psychology and Psychiatry

This was a good one – we even went into overtime!

SOTT Talk Radio: Good Science, Bad Science – Psychology and Psychiatry

In this second in our series of shows on the topic of science and its benefits and negative consequences for mankind, we took a look at the use and abuse of psychiatry and psychology.

From the psychotherapist’s chair to anti-depressant drugs and diverse therapeutic modalities, psychiatry and psychology have come up with as many solutions for mental health issues as there are theories of what makes people tick.

While many individuals have benefited from some form of intervention or another, the application of psychological knowledge for propaganda purposes, mind control experiments and pure corporate greed has apparently left most people’s psychological health more fragile than ever.

This week, we attempted to sort the good from the bad and the ugly by ‘psychoanalyzing’ some of the questionable practices and theories of the mind, and untangling the confusion produced by psychological terminology that frequently overlaps the same basic underlying problems people encounter in our stressful modern world.

The Psycho-Therapeutic school system: Pathologizing childhood

Presently, we’re at an all-time high of eleven percent of all school-aged children in America who have been classified as mentally ill.

The Psycho-Therapeutic school system: Pathologizing childhood

According to a recent report by the Centers for Disease Control, a staggering 6.4 million American children between the ages of 4 and 17 have been diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), whose key symptoms are inattention, hyperactivity, and impulsivity – characteristics that most would consider typically childish behavior. High school boys, an age group particularly prone to childish antics and drifting attention spans, are particularly prone to being labeled as ADHD, with one out of every five high school boys diagnosed with the disorder.

We discussed the subject of modern psychology and psychiatry in this weeks SOTT Talk Radio podcast here:

In this second in our series of shows on the topic of science and its benefits and negative consequences for mankind, we’ll be taking a look at the use and abuse of psychiatry and psychology.

From the psychotherapist’s chair to anti-depressant drugs and diverse therapeutic modalities, psychiatry and psychology have come up with as many solutions for mental health issues as there are theories of what makes people tick.

While many individuals have benefited from some form of intervention or another, the application of psychological knowledge for propaganda purposes, mind control experiments and pure corporate greed has apparently left most people’s psychological health more fragile than ever.

This week, we will attempt to sort the good from the bad and the ugly by ‘psychoanalyzing’ some of the questionable practices and theories of the mind, and untangle the confusion produced by psychological terminology that frequently overlaps the same basic underlying problems people encounter in our stressful modern world.