Monday, February 23, 2026

           "PJ Reed. The Arizona State Hospital and Patient Abuse."


Paolo Jack Reed.

                                                  "The wrath of American justice."

ANY AND ALL WHO MAY FEEL THE SAME, PLEASE, FREE TO REACH OUT ME PERSONALLY: 

paoloreed@gmail.com

NOTE: The editor and founder of this publication, P. Jack Reed, offers his services today as an expert witness specific to either civil actions, or better yet, criminal prosecutions of American psychiatrists subject to such prosecution in our otherwise great nation's criminal courts. In this latter sense, I ask no more than straight up costs with no nature of fee arrangement; while in the former case, a contracted  flat fee grounded in possible awards via a successful civil action, no more than 6% depending upon on the specific issues most at stake.

_____________________

    An emerging concern has very much caught this writer's attention in recent months. The supposedly caring people who work in our nation's always  dysfunctional public mental health care are behind as though the all to well known failed promise of deinstitutionalization actually panned out as planned.

    This is patently false premise, and speaks that much more clearly to the degree of mistruth that is very much associated with the American psychiatric establishment. Throughout modern history the American Psychiatric Association, and its collective membership- American psychiatrists- has again have again and again lied in this fashion to the American people. 

   The following article was published almost one year ago, but its central message carries to this point in American history. The American people cannot rely upon a medical profession that continues to turn a blind eye to the health and safety interests of the very people the profession itself claims to care so much about. 

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Bill on court-ordered psychiatric commitments tabled 

Two bills would allow the Montana State Hospital to deny civil and criminal commitments if the hospital is full or if other conditions aren’t met.

Currently, the hospital must accept everyone that is committed by a court. State health officials say they are regularly held in contempt if they can’t admit patients in a timely manner. They say that some patients could be served in the community rather than at the state hospital.

But local hospitals and mental health advocates say there are no providers that can take these patients. 

Matt Kuntz with the National Alliance on Mental Illness of Montana says, “We can’t change the laws to direct people to beds that don’t exist."

Kuntz and others said they could support the bill if funding for psychiatric beds were included. 

Sponsor Republican John Esp asked the Senate Judiciary committee to table the bills while those negotiations play out. The committee agreed.

   And while one can appreciate that when this Montana legislative quandary arose, the original action was shelved, the need remains the same. All mentally ill American citizens who need long term care in some nature of care setting, including state managed mental hospitals, have every fucking right to access such longer term care. 

     It is patent discrimination, societal and point specific to this very jaded medical profession, that only some mentally ill Americans are being granted access to such long term terms care. And it is worse yet when one takes into the count the growing trend of restricting such access to state managed mental hospitals, wherein only violent felons who just so happen to be affected by serious mental illness are being provided such access to state managed care and treatment.   

    The APA has again made clear that it cares little about all mentally Ill Americans on equal footing. Just as these ill-advised American psychiatrists continue to defy law and policy in near literally any in-patient psychiatric care setting at this critical juncture in American history.

     This concern will be revised in the near future. 


Paolo Jack Reed.
Founder.
Stoner Woods/Red River.
Caddo Parish, LA. 



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I would really love input of any kind from anybody with any interest whatsoever in the issues that I am sharing in this blog. I mean it, anybody, for I will be the first one to admit that I may be inaccurately depicting certain aspects of the conditions
at ASH, and anonymous comments are fine. In any case, I am more than willing to value anybody's feelings about my writing, and I assure you that I will not intentionally exploit or otherwise abuse your right to express yourself as you deem fit. This topic is far, far too important for anything less. Thank you, whoever you are. Peace and Frogs.