Quite literally Medicare...for all
Not sure how else to define it.
Liposuctions and plastic surgery? Tattoo removal?
Quite literally Medicare...for all
Not sure how else to define it.
Agreed on better mental health care and supporting legislation.
OK, but now we face the same dissonance we faced before...you can't tell who is mentally ill until after they already act unless you support mental health evaluations as a requirement that precedes gun ownership....
If it was up to me, mental health checks would be as common as annual physicals.
How many fucking morons fear being gunned down buying groceries? Not me.
Liposuctions and plastic surgery? Tattoo removal?
But they'd have to be mandatory because that's the only way we can prevent a "mentally ill" person from buying a gun, since none of these mass shooters think they're crazy.
It would be easier to swallow that insurance companies require mental health checkups along with physical ones in order to drive cars, vote, seek employment, etc than to just target gun owners.
It would be easier to swallow that insurance companies require mental health checkups along with physical ones in order to drive cars, vote, seek employment, etc than to just target gun owners.
Democrats have been seeking to ban guns using the same game plan since Slick Willie 30 years ago
When will the Democrats realize that continuing to do the same thing over and over again is insane?
IMO, it's untreated mental illness. Neither the Democrats nor the Republicans care to address the increasing lack of mental health care in America. They only want to ban shit and assert more control over the US population.
https://www.mhanational.org/issues/state-mental-health-america
2023 Key Findings
- In 2019-2020, 20.78% of adults were experiencing a mental illness. That is equivalent to over 50 million Americans.
- The vast majority of individuals with a substance use disorder in the U.S. are not receiving treatment. 15.35% of adults had a substance use disorder in the past year. Of them, 93.5% did not receive any form of treatment.
- Millions of adults in the U.S. experience serious thoughts of suicide, with the highest rate among multiracial individuals. The percentage of adults reporting serious thoughts of suicide is 4.84%, totaling over 12.1 million individuals. 11% of adults who identified with two or more races reported serious thoughts of suicide in 2020 – 6% higher than the average among all adults.
- Over 1 in 10 youth in the U.S. are experiencing depression that is severely impairing their ability to function at school or work, at home, with family, or in their social life. 16.39% of youth (age 12-17) report suffering from at least one major depressive episode (MDE) in the past year. 11.5% of youth (over 2.7 million youth) are experiencing severe major depression.
- Over half (54.7%) of adults with a mental illness do not receive treatment, totaling over 28 million individuals. Even in Montana (ranked #1), over 4 in 10 adults with a mental illness did not receive care.
- Almost a third (28.2%) of all adults with a mental illness reported that they were not able to receive the treatment they needed. 42% of adults with AMI reported they were unable to receive necessary care because they could not afford it.
- 10.8% (over 5.5 million) of adults with a mental illness are uninsured. Hispanic adults with AMI were least likely to have health insurance, with 19% reporting they were not covered by insurance.
- 6.34% of youth in the U.S. reported a substance use disorder in the past year. That is equivalent to over 1.5 million youth in the U.S. who meet the criteria for an illicit drug or alcohol use disorder.
- 22.87% of adults who report experiencing 14 or more mentally unhealthy days each month were not able to see a doctor due to costs. In Georgia (ranked 51), over one-third of adults experiencing frequent mental distress are unable to afford a doctor’s visit.
- 59.8% of youth with major depression do not receive any mental health treatment. Asian youth with major depression were least likely to receive specialty mental health care, with 78% reporting they did not receive mental health services in the past year. In South Carolina, the lowest ranking state, nearly 8 in 10 youth with depression do not receive care.
- Nationally, only 28% of youth with severe depression receive some consistent treatment (7-25+ visits in a year). Most (57.3%) youth with severe depression do not receive any care.
- Nationally, 1 in 10 youth who are covered under private insurance do not have coverage for mental or emotional difficulties – totaling over 1.2 million youth. In Arkansas (ranked 51), nearly one-quarter of youth with private insurance do not have coverage for mental health care.
- Only .718 percent of students are identified with emotional disturbance for an individualized education program (IEP). IEPs, with sufficient resources for schools and teachers, are critical for ensuring that youth with disabilities can receive the individualized services, supports, and accommodations to succeed in a school setting.
- In the U.S., there are an estimated 350 individuals for every one mental health provider. However, these figures may actually be an overestimate of active mental health professionals, as it may include providers who are no longer practicing or accepting new patients..
^^^So now you want to force everyone into getting mental health examinations because gun owners won't.
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This is America in 2023
to be fair, its not all America......its all happening in blue America......
What's behind the rise in gun ownership for people of color?
yes it does.....look where the 39 mass shootings occurred......how many occurred in cities not run by demmycrats?......none.....Actually it doesn't look like it!
Proof Democrats don't give a fuck about 45,000 annual suicide
1.2M attempted suicides and 100,000 annual drug deaths
not to mention the 10,000+ annual fatal alcohol-related auto fatalities