I know many people here worry that mental health restrictions on gun ownership will go too far, or just be misused. Are the current laws (state or federal) ok on this issue, and if not what would you change?
Is it just me, or is it kinda ironic trusting the psych "sciences" with our "mental health" considering that this field is predicated on a philosophy having the view that religion -- basically any belief in god/God/gods or a human "soul" -- is a mostly harmless delusion?
I've actually posed that question to clergy who were fond of recommending that people "seek professional help" for their emotional distress, and found that none of them, not one, had ever even bothered to notice this discrepancy.
For this, and a gift basket of other reasons, I have no faith in the world according to psychiatry or psychology.
Consequently, I have great difficulty recommending a subscription to their authority in determining who shall be permitted to have rights.
There's a longer rant on this subject, but I haven't written it yet.
You've all been subjected to my observation about the psych "sciences" and their involvement in public education, and the question of why, if their stuff has any validity, their unfettered access to the education system has resulted in the increasingly awful results from that quarter.
Given their history and their performance to date, I submit that they are very much the wrong people for the job.
With that in mind, I don't see any utility in writing new laws to give them more power and authority.
Maybe we could employ some actual judgment with regard to who's crazy, and not duck that responsibility in favor of incompetent "experts" who will be biased in favor of their funding source.