Today, on sale! Easy to Understand "Iatrogenic Psychosis:" Plain explanation of near futre
- jeremmiemoonchild
- 2017年3月15日
- 読了時間: 2分
English version is now available in the world. This is so exciting that my English book is available anywhere in the world.
This is the explanation at Amazon.
This unique book, Easy to Understand “Iatrogenic Psychosis,” is an effort to loosen and straighten all tangled discussions regarding current psychiatric treatments. Plain words are used so that even kids would understand it.
For example, this book dares to say,
“On television, a scholar who got money from drug companies does this explanation for them” and
“The doctors are hiding the fact that they cannot cure their patients.”
In each of these defying statements, the reader is confronted if one can deny it, and probably ends up admitting that one cannot even cite a single counter-example.
This book, Easy to Understand “Iatrogenic Psychosis,” does not even refer to any research paper, or statistics, except for “Further reading” list at the end. However, you cannot stop reading the compelling, flawless logic carefully written.
You might be emotionally moved at the end.
There is an additional note for English version at the end, where the author more naturally talks to all Americans. He says,
“I liked Americans. In my youth, Americans looked more open-minded than Japanese. This is why I listened to American rock and roll music, and probably went to study to the US, later. However, now I know that my illness was made by Americans, who told lies.
What has happened to Americans? Where is the value of honesty?”
Jeremmie Moonchild is a pen name and he is a Japanese. He is an ex-executive at a few foreign companies in Tokyo. He has been forced to stay home due to depression for 9 years. He wrote about his experiences in a book, “Depression is Heart’s Drug Disaster”: ~Notes of Daddy who became a patient of severe chronic depression, due to antidepressants~, February 9th , 2017KDP., which is now being translated by himself to be published in English. (Tentative English title: “Sample One of Depressing Matters”):
The author thinks that Robert Whitaker with his book “Anatomy of an Epidemic” thrust an arrow to the heart of the giant monster, several years ago. The huge body with unreasonably strong muscular power would endure and thrash in ugly protest, but the monster will never be able to pull out the arrow, as it is an arrow of truth. So, it should be a matter of time.
However, in order to accelerate a solution to this issue, the author thought that more and more people should be aware of them, and this book, Easy to Understand “Iatrogenic Psychosis,” can be a tool for this purpose.
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