The mental illness industry does not exist to heal people. It was largely built by Gilded Age industrialists to control the population, keep people functioning as workers, and pathologize suffering caused by systemic conditions. Instead of recognizing distress as a natural response to unmet needs, exploitation, and trauma, the industry reframes it as a personal defect: something wrong inside the individual that must be corrected. This shifts attention away from the real sources of harm and instead places blame on the person who is struggling.
The dominant model of mental health care bypasses our core biological needs. Human beings need connection, safety, and a sense of meaning to thrive. When these are missing, distress is inevitable. But instead of addressing the conditions that create suffering—poverty, isolation, trauma, oppression—the system offers medications and behavioral interventions that suppress symptoms rather than resolve their underlying causes. The idea is to get people back to work, back to being “functional,” without ever questioning why so many people are breaking down.
This approach not only fails to help but often causes harm. Psychiatric medications, for example, are prescribed as if they are correcting an imbalance, but no such imbalance has ever been proven. Many of these drugs numb emotions, blunt motivation, and create long-term dependence. Withdrawal can be horrific, sometimes worse than the original distress. Meanwhile, therapy models rooted in behavior control reinforce the idea that people just need to think differently or try harder, ignoring the deep physiological effects of trauma and chronic stress.
None of this is an accident. The modern mental health industry was shaped by people like Rockefeller and Carnegie, who were more interested in social control than actual well-being. They funded institutions that framed distress as an individual problem, one that could be managed through medical and psychological intervention rather than systemic change. Over time, this narrative became deeply embedded in our culture, making it difficult for people to even consider alternatives.
And when the harm is outright criminal, such as sexualized violence by doctors and therapists, the system protects its own. Licensing boards are a joke. They exist to create the illusion of oversight while doing nothing to hold abusers accountable. Administrators and board members look the other way, allowing perpetrators to keep practicing for years, sometimes decades. The result is that victims are dismissed, retraumatized, and left without justice, while predators continue their careers with nothing more than a slap on the wrist, if that.
Real healing does not come from suppressing symptoms or forcing compliance. It comes from understanding how our nervous systems work, how distress is an adaptive response to unmet needs, and how creating safety and connection allows for genuine recovery. This is not something the mental illness industry will provide because its entire foundation depends on keeping people disconnected from their power.






