Home

About
- Who We Are
- Community Guidelines
- Right to Respond

Advertising on BOR
- Advertise on BOR
- Buy on all Texas Blogs

Advertisements

Search




Advanced Search


Dissident Forcibly Hospitalized years, could you be next?


by: deb98126

Thu Mar 16, 2006 at 10:34 PM CST


I just listened to a segment on NPR a few hours ago about Wang Wanxing, a Chinese political activist.  Forcibly detained in a Chinese mental institution for 13 years, Mr. Wanxing was recently released and examined by European Forensic Psychiatrists who deemed him mentally sound and falsely hospitalized.  I have written several diaries about my own forcible detention and hospitalization by the FBI in Atlanta, Georgia.  As disturbing and wounding as that experience was, my ordeal wasn't as torturous as that of Mr. Wanxing.

Image hosting by Photobucket

ADVERTISEMENT
Mark Magnier of the Los Angeles Times reported Mr. Wanxing's ordeal back in November:

  The unexpected August release and exile of political prisoner Wang Wanxing after 13 years in an  asylum has shone a rare light on the communist regime's use of psychiatry as a tool of repression.

  In an extended telephone interview from Frankfurt, Germany, last week, the 56-year-old Wang said  he saw a political prisoner die after being force-fed while on a hunger strike.

  The facility in Beijing where he was treated also made frequent use of electrified acupuncture  needles, he said, alternating between high and low dosages to keep patients off balance, and fed  them powerful drugs that blunted their will to resist. Wang said he developed a technique for hiding  the pills in his mouth and would spit them out afterward to avoid drowsiness and other side effects.

  "Of course, I don't consider myself crazy," Wang said. "I don't think they should put people in  mental hospitals for political reasons. I think they did it to me because they didn't want to send me  to court, which would have brought a lot of international attention."

  Wang was picked up on the eve of the third anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown  for unfurling a banner in the square that criticized the Communist Party and called on Beijing to  reevaluate the event. "I've never regretted what I did in 1992," he said. "If time were turned back, I'd  do it again."  The Los Angeles Times, Home Ed., November 9, 2005, http://www.latimes.com/

This brought back memories of my own forcible medication and sedation at Peachford Behavioral Hospital, in Sandy Springs, Georgia.  Often, the medication nurse would order me to open wide to ensure I wasn't saving and hoarding pills for a suicide attempt.  At that point in my hospitalization, too many people new I had been forcibly hospitalized.  One doctor was very sympathetic and tried to alert the press.  If I had killed myself, the FBI would have a mess on their hands. ( I have intentionally omitted the name of the doctor because I have written him and several other staff members letters, with hope they will be emboldened to come forward in the near future.)

The reference in the article to Tiananmen Square Massacre of 1989  jarred my memory as well.  I remember exactly where I was; in Los Angeles, getting ready to go to Disneyland for the first time with my sister.  A very young woman then, I was just beginning to develop a political conscious.  I was very upset  and incredulous that somewhere in the world, young people, the same age as me were being slaughtered (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiananmen_Square_protests_of_1989).  However, this outrage was rapidly quelled by the glitz of  The Magic Kingdom, Universal Studios and Beverly Hills.  Never would I imagine that I to would one day experience a form of oppression at the hands of my government, the "greatest democracy" in the world.

Image hosting by Photobucket

Image hosting by Photobucket

Image hosting by Photobucket

Magnier continues:

  According to records given to Germany when Wang was released, his diagnosis was paranoia. The  documents indicate that he was sedated with Thorazine, an antipsychotic drug... China has three  broad categories of mental hospitals. Most are administered by the Health Ministry... The most  controversial, however, are the asylums built to incarcerate and treat mentally ill offenders. These  facilities, ...are run by the Public Security Bureau. All the doctors and nurses are  bureau  officials. There are ...facilities nationwide, and there are plans to build  one in every Chinese  city whose population exceeds 1 million...

  New York-based Human Rights Watch has documented 3,000 cases of psychiatric punishment for  political prisoners in China since the early 1980s.  The Los Angeles Times, Home Ed., November 9,  2005,http://www.latimes.com/.

Did you pick up on the reference; "plans to build one in every...city  whose population exceeds 1 million?" Just a few days ago, news was all over the blogosphere about Haliburton's construction of detention centers in the U.S.  If this is completed, look for big pharma to setup dispensaries in these centers for the purpose of forcibly medicating and thus subduing detainees (http://news.pacificnews.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=de9dd9fbbbbd59388d802c3f4e0e1288). . 

Image hosting by Photobucket

Magnier continues:

  Wang said many of the doctors and nurses were very nice to him, and without their kindness he  would not have survived. But there were also sadists among them, he added, typically poorly  educated nurses from rural areas. "Some enjoyed giving electrical shock therapy," he said. "And  they would require the other patients to watch."
  He recalled a patient named Huang Youliang who had registered repeated complaints of injustice  against the government that landed him in the \o7ankang \f7several times.

  Huang went on a hunger strike, Wang said, prompting the nurses to force-feed him. Normally this  was done by inserting a tube through the patient's nose and into the stomach.

  But instead, he said, five people pinned Huang down and blocked his nose, forcing him to open his  mouth, at which point they poured soup down his throat. He suffocated.

  Wang attributes many of the abuses he reportedly witnessed to a system that lifted many checks on  police power after Tiananmen in its zeal to impose order. Virtually all nations have criminal  asylums to handle people such as John Hinckley Jr., who tried to assassinate President Reagan. But  the police presence is usually limited to guarding the facility, not running it.

  Using mental hospitals to house political detainees offers the regime several advantages, said Robin  Monro, a human rights activist who wrote his doctoral dissertation on psychiatric abuse in China. It  avoids the need for evidence that would be required in court, and it allows for a virtually unlimited  sentence.

  "It's very convenient for them," Monro said. "You have no rights because you're deemed mentally  ill. People just disappear into the system." The Los Angeles Times, Home Ed., November 9,  2005,http://www.latimes.com/.

No commentary required with this last excerpt, it's pretty self-explanatory.  I ask you all to visualize this:

Image hosting by Photobucket

Image hosting by Photobucket

According to the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the U.S. has committed serious war crimes both here and abroad in the name of "terrorism prevention."

  Article 5.
No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.
  Article 9.
No one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest, detention or exile.
Article 12.
No one shall be subjected to arbitrary interference with his privacy, family, home or correspondence, nor to attacks upon his honour and reputation. Everyone has the right to the protection of the law against such interference or attacks.
Article 19.
Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers. http://www.un.org/Overview/rights.html

Now, I know my experience at Peachford Hospital pales in comparison to what is going on in China, Iraq and in U.S. prisons.  However, what I experienced was still a gross violation of my human rights!  The U.S. government has been gradually increasing the level of human rights violations in this country for years, in an effort to see what they can get away with.  As I mentioned in my diary, an intelligent young woman, Darlene Early, who is a paralegal, was forcibly detained and committed by police in Albany, NY for posting a sign of protest.

Image hosting by Photobucket

http://www.legalhelp.org/public/article.php#TOP 
http://www.northcountrygazette.org/articles/102505DMVProtestor.html

You can read a true account of my ordeal at:

http://www.indybay.org/news/2006/03/1806390.php

I'm asking you to please light up the phones at Peachford Hospital (770-455-3200) and ask that the doctors and staff who are aware of the forcible hospitalization of Deborah Lloyd, under the direction of the FBI, to please come forward, for the sake of human rights and justice!  I'm also asking you to please light up the phones at Congressman John Lewis' office (202-225-3801 and 404-659-0116) and voice your concern over the illegal and forcible hospitalization of a citizen in Fulton county.  This isn't even about me anymore, this is about preserving what few rights we have left and fighting back to restore our democracy!

Image hosting by Photobucket

Deborah
deb98126@yahoo.com

Tags: , , , , , , (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email

2012 Texas Elections
Texas Elections Previews:
-- Congressional Preview
-- State Senate Preview
-- State House Preview
-- State House: D Primaries

BOR Original Series:
-- Senate Showdown
-- Travis County Primaries


BOR Endorsements
2012 Democratic Primary

US Senate: Sean Hubbard

Congressional Races:
CD-10: Tawana Cadien
CD-14: Nick Lampson
CD-16: Silvestre Reyes
CD-20: Joaquin Castro
CD-21: Candace Duval
CD-22: KP George
CD-23: Pete Gallego
CD-30: Taj Clayton
CD-33: Marc Veasey
CD-35: Lloyd Doggett

Travis County Races:
DA: Rosemary Lehmberg
Sheriff: John Sisson
Tax/VR: Bruce Elfant
167th: David Wahlberg
Commissioners
Pct 1: Franklin or Gonzales
Pct 3: Karen Huber
Constables
Pct 1: Danny Thomas
Pct 2: Paul Labuda
Pct 3: Sally Hernandez
Pct 4: Maria Canchola
Pct 5: Carlos Lopez

State House Endorsements:
HD-43: Y. Gonzalez Toureilles
HD-74: Poncho Nevarez
HD-75: Mary Gonzalez
HD-90: Lon Burnam
HD-95: Nicole Collier
HD-101: Chris Turner
HD-110: Toni Rose
HD-117: Tina Torres
HD-125: Justin Rodriguez
HD-131: Alma Allen
HD-137: Joe Carlos Madden
HD-144: Mary Ann Perez
HD-147: Garnet Coleman

Select County Chairs

Early Voting: May 14-25
Election Day: Tues. May 29


Connect With BOR
Your source for Texas politics.

On Facebook: BOR
On Twitter: @BOR
On Tumblr: BOR
On Pinterest:
Rick Perry's Rental Mansion

Need A Vendor?
Check out BOR's Progressive Vendor Page for campaigns and non-profits.


Original Cartoons


This week:
"Secret Service"


Menu

Make a New Account

Username:

Password:



Forget your username or password?


Shared On Facebook

Advertisement

Best of Texas Left
- (Complete Directory)
- B & B
- Bay Area Houston
- Blue Bloggin
- Bluedaze
- Brains and Eggs
- Capitol Annex
- Collin County Democrats
- Collin County Observer
- Community Forum
- Dog Canyon
- Dos Centavos
- Easter Lemming Liberal
- Eye on Williamson County
- Feet to the Fire
- Grading Texas
- Greg's Opinion
- Grits for Breakfast
- Half Empty
- Houtopia
- In the Pink Texas
- Kiss My Big Blue Butt
- Letters from Texas
- McBlogger
- Mean Rachel
- Musings
- North Texas Liberal
- Off the Kuff
- Panhandle Truth Squad
- Para Justicia y Libertad!
- Pink Dome
- San Antonio Mayor
- South Texas Chisme
- StoudDemBlog
- Texas Clover Leaf
- Texas Kaos
- The Caucus Blog
- There..Already
- Three Wise Men
Best of Texas Right
- Blogs of War
- BlogHouston
- Boots and Sabers
- Lone Star Times
- Publius TX
- Rick Perry vs the World
- Safety for Dummies
- Slightly Rough
- Urban Grounds
Other Texas Reads
- Burka Blog
- D Magazine
- DOT Show
- Statesman Elections
- Strong Political Analysis
- Texas Monthly
- Texas Observer
- The Texas Blue
- Quorum Report Daily Buzz
Around Austin
- Austin Bloggers
- Austin Chronicle
- Austin Contrarian
- Austin Metblogs
- Austin on Two Wheels
- Austin Real Estate Blog
- Austin Statesman
- Austin Texas Bike Shit Stuff
- Austin Towers
- Austinist
- Capital MetroBlog
- Daily Texan
- Do512
- Downtown Austin Blog
- East Austinite
- Elise Hu
-
Flash Mob Austin
- Keep Austin Blue
- M1EK
- Travis County Democrats
- University Democrats
TX Progressive Orgs
- ACLU Legislative Blog
- Atticus Circle
- Criminal Justice Coalition
- Equality Texas
- NOW Texas
- PFAW Texas
- Public Citizen
- SEIU Texas
- Tejano Insider
- Texas AFT
- Texas HDCC
- Texas Watch
- TFN
- TSTA
- TSEU
- Texas Young Democrats
- United Ways of Texas
TX Elections/Returns
- TX Returns 1992-present
- TX Media/Candidate List

- Bexar County
- Collin County
- Dallas county
- Denton County
- El Paso County
- Fort Bend County
- Harris County
- Jefferson County
- Tarrant County
- Travis County

- CNN 1998 Returns
- CNN 2000 Returns
- CNN 2002 Returns
- CNN 2004 Returns
- CNN 2006 Returns
- CNN 2008 Returns
Traffic Ratings
- Alexa Rating
- Quantcast Ratings
-
Syndication

Burnt Orange Reporters
Publisher: Karl-Thomas M.
Editor-in-Chief: Katherine H.
Contributor: Phillip M.
Senior Writer: Michael H.
Staff Writer: Adam S.
Staff Writer: Ben S.
Staff Writer: Chaille J.
Staff Writer: Edward G.
Staff Writer: Emily C.
Founder: Byron L.

Read staff bios here.

Powered by: SoapBlox