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United States of Fear: How America Fell Victim to a Mass Delusional Psychosis
United States of Fear: How America Fell Victim to a Mass Delusional Psychosis
United States of Fear: How America Fell Victim to a Mass Delusional Psychosis
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United States of Fear: How America Fell Victim to a Mass Delusional Psychosis

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As the COVID-19 pandemic unfolded, LA-based psychiatrist Mark McDonald grew increasingly concerned by the negative mental health effects he witnessed among his patients—and Americans nationwide. These negative effects—stress, anxiety, depression, addiction, domestic violence, suicidal ideation—were all directly traceable to the climate of fear being stoked by public health authorities and irresponsibly amplified by national media. These fears in turn drove a hysterical overreaction from government in the form of draconian lockdowns and mask and vaccine mandates of questionable value. But the fear did not abate and quickly took on a life of its own, becoming an unstoppable force in all our lives. At last McDonald began to speak out, explaining that America is actually suffering from two pandemics: a viral one and a psychological one, a “pandemic of fear” that is in many ways more dangerous and damaging than the virus itself. Rooted in the natural anxieties of women on behalf of their children and families, inflamed and amplified by sensationalistic media, and driven over the top by hamfisted authoritarian measures from those in power, McDonald diagnoses the country at large as suffering from a mass delusional psychosis. This is not a metaphor. The malady itself is very real. Whether we can regain our collective sanity as a society remains to be seen.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateNov 12, 2021
ISBN9781637583203
United States of Fear: How America Fell Victim to a Mass Delusional Psychosis

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    Book preview

    United States of Fear - Mark McDonald M.D.

    PUBLISHED BY BOMBARDIER BOOKS

    An Imprint of Post Hill Press

    ISBN: 978-1-63758-319-7

    ISBN (eBook): 978-1-63758-320-3

    United States of Fear:

    How America Fell Victim to a Mass Delusional Psychosis

    © 2021 by Mark McDonald, M.D.

    All Rights Reserved

    Cover Design by Tiffani Shea

    No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means without the written permission of the author and publisher.

    ../black_vertical.jpg https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/ZMnPahIYA2oCRvgrKL_yIvQ_nDaNKFSvyqckGjJOPl1mqD_3KvmV9nZvoSTp_qAjSBYYvZrvmAGyLgz7WPYjXoo6bcnELGgVElF1Obje4tO57ZdOicsIDSOaoAvlYqIKgUOAjzc=s1600

    Post Hill Press

    New York • Nashville

    posthillpress.com

    Published in the United States of America

    Contents

    Introduction

    The Other Pandemic: The Making of a Mass Delusional Psychosis

    Chapter 1

    The Terrorization of Women: A Brief Cultural History

    Chapter 2

    Dereliction of Duty: How Feminized American Men Failed Their Women

    Chapter 3

    Fanning the Flames: The Role of Media and Government

    Chapter 4

    The Way Forward: Working Our Way Back to Sanity

    About the Author

    References

    Introduction

    The Other Pandemic: The Making of a Mass Delusional Psychosis

    In the summer of 2020 , the mother of a fifteen-year-old boy with ADHD declined to bring him to my office for his three-month medication follow-up visit. We haven’t been going out much recently, she explained. The boy had been my patient for eight years, and I had seen him regularly every ninety days throughout that entire period. He came from a rather typical, upper-middle-class West Los Angeles family with two parents. He was an only child. He was a good student and quite sociable, with no significant problems other than his ADHD, which had been well-managed for many years. His mother had always appeared anxious and somewhat controlling. I found his father to be warm, easygoing, and calm if a bit passive and unassertive. All three were likable people who had never challenged any of my clinical recommendations.

    After insisting that an in-person visit would be necessary for optimal care, I suggested she drop him off at the building instead. He was old enough to come upstairs by himself. This launched her into a hysterical rant about the dangers of her son walking through a public building and the health risk he would assume, not to mention the possibility of the family contracting a terrifying, highly contagious disease.

    Despite evidence to the contrary—that children are essentially immune to the Chinese Wuhan virus and even act as barriers to its spread—she insisted that I was uninformed, unreasonable, and cruel for demanding that her son come to my office in person to discuss his medications. A day later, I received another email, this one from her husband, apologizing on behalf of his wife, thanking me for helping care for their son all these years, but announcing that they would be seeking a new psychiatrist.

    Reading between the lines, I interpreted his message to be, My wife is hysterical, and there is nothing I can do about it. To preserve our marriage, I must go along with her demand to switch doctors to someone who will treat him over Zoom and keep him under house arrest until she regains her senses.

    From these brief exchanges, it was clear to me that a previously anxious woman had deteriorated into a delusional state, and that her husband could not find the courage to manage her in any helpful way, so he chose to collude with her pathology rather than take charge of his own family.

    I am a psychiatrist—a medical doctor. I have evaluated and treated both children and adults for psychiatric illness for over ten years, in a variety of settings that have included in-patient hospitals, residential treatment programs, and jails. For the past eight years, my focus has been outpatient care, mainly through my solo clinical practice in Los Angeles. This has allowed me to offer medication treatment and talk therapy, or a combination of both. Treating children has been of particular interest to me, which is why I earned a second board certification in child and adolescent psychiatry.

    I have seen thousands of patients. Several hundred fill my current practice. Most have been with me for at least two years, and many for five years or more. I always treat my patients with honesty and respect, but I do challenge them, make every effort not to collude with their pathology, and set the expectation that they do the work necessary to get better. My treatment philosophy is that acknowledging truth and reality is essential for a patient to make real progress. This acknowledgement often makes the patient uncomfortable and can even cause real suffering. But there is no shortcut to growth, and self-deception only serves as an obstacle to psychological wellness.

    Fear is not new to me. I treat many children and adults who are, at some level, afraid. They express their fear through anxiety, phobias, obsessions and compulsions, and even psychosis. Fear is not a bad thing, in and of itself. Like pain, fear serves to protect us from injury. Without it, human beings would be prone to taking unnecessary risks and all wind up dead before even reproducing. Fearless humans are quickly removed from the gene pool through natural selection.

    But fear can also be harmful when it arrives at the wrong time, for the wrong reason, or beyond the length of time that it is needed. We all know someone who suffers from chronic or neuropathic pain, conditions that bring such a degree of suffering to life that existence itself often becomes intolerable. Daily life cannot be enjoyed due to the constant distraction of physical pain. Far from being protective, this sort of pain condition is nothing short of extended torture.

    On an emotional level, pathologic fear produces the same result—it paralyzes one from engaging with life. When fear no longer protects from harm but simply inhibits one from living fully, it ceases to be helpful. When fear becomes the primary driver of decision-making, the quality of our decisions begins to suffer.

    Although every one of us lives with a degree of fear, for some people, the fear becomes so great, so impairing, so insufferable, that they come to me looking for a solution. Whether it’s insomnia, panic attacks, obsessions and compulsions, or melancholic depression, that solution often involves medication, some form of talk therapy, or both.

    Pathological fear not only harms the individual—it also harms families, communities, and society at large. A child who cannot sleep through the night due to regular nightmares will prevent his parents from sleeping. An overly cautious driver on the freeway will provoke accidents that harm and possibly kill people nearby.

    The effects magnify when groups of people become caught up in fear. One well-known consequence: To prevent the possibility of even minor injury, playground equipment in many schools and parks has been removed, depriving children of the opportunity to grow and develop through play.

    In the extreme, when fear spreads throughout an entire society, the effect is paralyzing. Decision-making becomes irrational and reactive. The sensationalizing of outlier events and the pursuit of safety supplants sound public policy. Media begin covering the fear story and serving it to their audience on a regular basis. Fear-driven official pronouncements evoke more fear among the citizenry, who demand more protection from politicians. A vicious cycle ensues. Mass hysteria develops, and people lose their capacity to think and act rationally.

    This becomes dangerous, similar to the way a mob functions—acting on pure groupthink and raw emotion. It’s a form of developmental regression that hobbles society. Unfortunately, there is no cure for fear on a societal level. The only way to address it is individually, one patient at a time.

    Although psychiatric illness is to a large degree biologically driven by genetics, diet, and exercise, environment plays a significant role in generating trends. Children and adolescents, for example, suffer more anxiety today than when I began my career. Although there are multiple reasons for this, the most important one, from my perspective as a clinician, is the rise of social media. Regardless of the country studied, the adolescent population shows a predisposition to internet and cell phone addiction, which strongly correlates with sleep deficit, anxiety, stress, and depression. Since I began working predominantly with young people in 2010, I have seen a steady, gradual worsening of emotional functioning—particularly in elementary-school-age patients—as cell phone use has expanded. It’s not uncommon now for fourth- and fifth-graders to carry their own phones with them. Many pull them out of their pockets reflexively the moment they sit down in my office, burying their faces in the little screen.

    Their parents often explain to me how this is the way they communicate with their friends—by sending text messages and pictures. Watching video after video allows them to tune out their immediate environment. Most children find it intolerable to be told to put their phone away for any extended period, as disconnecting from the online world activates a cascade of anxiety. It should come as no surprise, then, that anxiety is now the most common psychiatric diagnosis in the youth population.

    When the pandemic arrived in 2020, a new expression

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