The Michael Knowles Show - Your Brain's REACTION To SSRI's, Adderall, & Depression LIES: Michael & The Good Doctor | Dr. Josef

Episode Date: November 8, 2025

Are antidepressants and mood-altering drugs like SSRIs really helping people or are they quietly destroying minds? In this powerful episode of Michael &, Michael Knowles sits down with Dr. Josef Witt...-Doerring, a psychiatrist and whistleblower, to discuss the dark side of Big Pharma’s most prescribed medications. Dr. Witt-Doerring explains how SSRIs and other drugs alter the brain, the hidden risks patients aren’t told about, and why millions may be unknowingly trapped in cycles of dependency. From the science of chemical imbalance myths to the real stories of those harmed by overprescription, this episode takes a hard look at the costs of a culture that medicates instead of heals. 👉 Don’t miss this explosive conversation about faith, health, and truth in the fight against pharmaceutical deception. - - - Today's Sponsor: Good Ranchers - Visit https://goodranchers.com and subscribe to any box using code KNOWLES to claim an additional $100 off your first three orders ($40 off your first, $30 off your second, $30 off your third) + free meat for life. - - - Privacy Policy: https://www.dailywire.com/privacy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:02 We've done spinal taps. We've done functional MRI scans, which are real-time scans of the human brain kind of firing. Are there any differences between a depressed person and a non-depressed person? No. What about the relation of these kinds of drugs to violent acts and to aberrant ideologies? I've noticed a major uptick in violence from the left, notably associated with transgenderism, And in the lion's share of these cases, they're on SSRIs. Is it safe for 15 to 20% of our population to be on these drugs? The FDA is sitting on this because they are trying to cover up one of the biggest scandals in modern medical history. That's horrifying.
Starting point is 00:01:01 About one in five women in the United States is hooked on depression pills, powerful psych drugs that we don't really know all that much about. and in my experience, the women remain crazy as ever. So I have brought on an expert to tell me what these drugs really do. That is Dr. Yosef Wittduring. Have I pronounced that very Germanic name correctly? You have, you have. Dr. Yosef, thank you so much for coming on the show. Thank you for having me, Michael.
Starting point is 00:01:29 So you have gone really viral recently for discussing a lot of medical misconceptions, but especially SSRI drugs. I have known a lot of people on these drugs. I'm sure the entire audience knows a lot of people on these drugs. Some of them might be on the drugs themselves. I read a statistic that it's one in five American women are hooked on these kinds of drugs. Yes, so it's actually one in five Americans.
Starting point is 00:01:58 And so one and five Americans, including men. Including men are on psychiatric medications right now. Specifically, if we talk about antidepressants, which most commonly are SSRI, That's around 14% of the population and about 18% of women on SSRIs. And if you go up in age range to around when women are 60 and older, it's one and three are on psychiatric medications at that point. It's a huge amount.
Starting point is 00:02:27 I mean, it's so big that people are either taking them or they know someone in their immediate family who's on them. Everyone knows someone who is on one of these medications now. Okay, before we get to the other types of psych drugs, I want to focus in on SSRIs. What, forgive my ignorance, what is an SSRI? So it's a selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitor and it's a type of drug that was designed to block the re-uptake of serotonin between the neurons. So effectively, serotonin is a chemical messenger that allows neurons to communicate with one another. And if you block the re-uptake, it builds up in
Starting point is 00:03:06 the synaptic cleft, which is the space between the neurons, and that has a drug effect. So what that drug effect typically does is it is a numbing effect or an emotionally constricting effect, and that's what leads to that therapeutic benefit where people will feel less emotions. This is what I've heard about SSRIs and also what I've observed, is that it's not that it fixes people's emotions or corrects their emotions. It just blunts their emotions, right? Yeah, and that is kind of the, you know, one thing that people, that is really important for people I understand is that that is actually what they're doing, because for the last three decades, we've been lying to people about how these medications work. We've been telling
Starting point is 00:03:55 them that they fix a chemical imbalance. And it's something that I want to lay out because it's really important, because there is a distinction between saying, hey, there's something wrong with your brain, you have low serotonin, I'm going to give you a drug to kind of bring it up to the normal level, you know, case closed, everything's fine, it's like giving a type 1 diabetic insulin. We've essentially just corrected a biological problem and all the things that flow from that should be fine. That was the story sold to Americans through the chemical imbalance. I remember the TV commercials, I'd say, depression is caused by a chemical imbalance in the brain, so take this drug and it'll fix it. Exactly. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:04:34 And the thing is a lot of people, it's, you know, it really is quite an evil lie because many people, they're okay with that. They're okay with taking a medicine for a biological medical problem. But if you were to say to someone, the way these drugs actually work is by numbing you and constricting your emotional range, all of a sudden you start thinking about your grandma who says, you really shouldn't sweep problems under the rug. You know, you should deal with them. You should address them. And intuitively, a lot of Americans, they know that's not a great solution for problems to kind of just numb them with something else. And so we've been selling this lie that they're not really drugs that numb things. They are drugs that fix a medical problem in your brain.
Starting point is 00:05:23 So, okay, so the synapses are communicating. And the SSRIs block the serotonin, so the serotonin gets stuck in the middle. and numbs up your brain. And serotonin is just like a happy chemical? Yeah, it's one of the main neurotransmitters in the brain that control your mood, your personality, your emotions. Okay. So when did this all start?
Starting point is 00:05:49 I remember when the commercials first came on in the 90s or 2000s or whenever. When were SSRIs first discovered, prescribed, popularized? So we've had antidepressants since the 50s. But a lot of those older types, they were lethal in overdose. They were kind of complicated to use. And so they were used really sparingly. But then Prozac came out in 1987. That's when it entered the U.S. market. And Prozac wasn't, you know, you couldn't overdose on that medication. So it had a much safer safety profile as well. And so that drug became very successful
Starting point is 00:06:32 in the early 90s. It was the drug that made Eli Lilly. Eli Lilly was not a big company before Prozac. I mean, it's the biggest pharmaceutical company now with the GLP-1s. But Prozac came onto the market. Eli Lilly becomes a billion dollar company within a couple of years. And we get flooded with a lot of, they're called Me Too drugs. So after Prozac comes out, you get Paxil, you get Lexa Pro, you get Zoloft. All of these different SSRIs kind of follow Prozac's success. And the effect of that has essentially been brainwashing or propaganda where the commercial interests of all of these billion-dollar companies has changed how we think about these drugs. I mean, because they have been pushing this narrative that depression is a chemical imbalance and we have drugs to essentially
Starting point is 00:07:24 fix it. And so that's how they've kind of wrestled control of this narrative where before, you know, if you're anxious or depressed, like in the 80s, people would say, hey, let's look at your relationships, let's look at your purpose, let's look at your physical health, you know, are you dealing with problems of loneliness? The 90s comes along, and there's this huge commercial interests, and they take control of the narrative. Depression is now a medical problem that needs a medical solution, and if you say anything otherwise, you're dangerous, you're unscientific, you're kind of like a Neanderthal, like in terms of your understanding, you're in the past, and they've essentially been silencing these other views ever since then.
Starting point is 00:08:04 So between the modern liberal advice of just apply yourself with heavy psych drugs and the kind of traditional advice of take stock of your life and try to fix things that are able to be fixed and, you know, keep your eyes up to God and have a step upper lip, there are the hippies in the middle who say that if you, you know, I don't know, do a rain dance around the root of turmeric or something and like eat a few earth. then that will fix your depression symptoms. I'm being only slightly hyperbolic here, but what do you make of the so-called natural remedies?
Starting point is 00:08:38 It's bullshit. Okay. Good. And they're actually much closer to the liberals who are saying, fly yourself with medications, because there's this whole thing of nutraceuticals. I don't know if you've ever heard that. No, I like that word, but I don't, I've never heard of it.
Starting point is 00:08:54 So they, you know, adaptogens, nutraceuticals, supplements. supplements and so yeah and so these natural you know these natural hippie types they'll say you know take ashwaganda take saint jones ward take lion's mane take really high doses of um what's the one that turns people blue colloidal silver colloidal silver yeah and so and then they and then they or it could even be cannabis you know they'll say these are natural things they are safe you know don't worry about them they're not like those nasty pharmaceuticals yeah yeah but they are I mean, the only difference is that they're not coming from a pharmaceutical company. People use supplements like psychiatric drugs because they're actually quite powerful.
Starting point is 00:09:33 I mean, these chemicals, they have real neurological changes. They can sedate you. They can energize you. They can numb you. Wow. I thought you were going to say it's BS because it's, you know, you're just chewing on a piece of mint or something. No, no, no. You're saying, no, it actually, it is powerful and you should treat it like a drug.
Starting point is 00:09:49 You should treat it like a drug. But you shouldn't lie to yourself and say, oh, this is a natural thing. I'm not going to be dealing with the problems of tolerance. I'm not going to be where it wears off over time. I'm not going to have to worry about the fact that I'm sweeping legitimate problems under the rug. And I think they kind of delude themselves into thinking it's safe because it's not coming from a pharmaceutical company. Right. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:10 I heard one time someone argue that anything that's natural has to be good for you. I thought, like, many poisons are natural. What are you talking about? What's happening with cannabis now? I mean, I feel like, I mean, we've been legalized. cannabis, we have high potent, and this is not the ditch weed that people used to smoke a long time ago. It's like 40 times more potent. And cannabis is one of the biggest gateway drugs into psychiatry. Like if you're using high potency cannabis products and you have a psychotic, a bad trip, you know, a psychotic break on it,
Starting point is 00:10:43 cannabis more so than meth, LSD, cocaine is more toxic to the brain that you are more likely to convert to an ongoing psychotic state. I knew that marijuana was related with two psychosis, and I've just noticed that most of my pothead friends, I'm going to get so much pushback for this, but most of my pothead friends insist they have no problem, no addiction, it's all, it's totally great for you, but they increasingly get problems. But I've never heard that it's worse for the brain than LSD. When it comes to when it comes to someone who's had a bad trip transitioning to a bipolar or a schizophrenia diagnosis, And so essentially what that is with marijuana is that bad trip, for some people, that's not a temporary thing.
Starting point is 00:11:32 Like it actually hurts them. Think about it as a serious toxic reaction that can actually lead to enduring problems over time. And I know this because I've seen many of these patients, they'll have a psychotic episode on cannabis, and it takes them sometimes a year, even two years, to feel fully back to themselves. Now, during that year to two year period where their brain is recovering and they're still having periods of paranoia and mood instability, Doctors will diagnose them with bipolar and schizophrenia and put them on psychiatric medications and tell them that they have like a brain disease when they've actually just had a neurological injury from the high potency cannabis products that they're consuming.
Starting point is 00:12:08 And yes, it is more dangerous. In that respect, it is more dangerous than meth and LSD and cocaine. So, okay, there are two views on depression. One being that it's basically just kind of made up and it's people who are engaging in aberrant behavior, who have suffered a lot of misfortune, and haven't been able to pull themselves out of it. And so they've got these lifestyle problems that they're pretending is neurological or chemical or something, and then they pop the pills. The other side says, no, no, it's just hardwired into your brain, and your lifestyle has absolutely nothing to do with it. And you might be making all sorts
Starting point is 00:12:44 of bad choices, but your choices don't affect anything. And is one of those views correct, or is there, is the answer necessarily in the middle. So. Kayak gets my flight, hotel, and rental car right. So I can tune out travel advice that's just plain wrong. Bro, Skycoin, way better than points. Never fly during a Scorpio full moon. Just tell the manager you'll sue.
Starting point is 00:13:11 Instant room upgrade. Stop taking bad travel advice. Start comparing hundreds of sites with kayak and get your trip right. Kayak, got that right. Well, let's start with the biological one. So we've been looking for this chemical imbalance for decades now. And I want to talk about some of the ways we've done this because I think there may be some people listening to this who are just like, are you sure it's not a chemical imbalance? They've heard it so much.
Starting point is 00:13:43 We've done our spinal taps where we sample the fluid around the brain and we look for differences in the serotonin metabolites. you can directly measure that. You get a group of depressed patients and non-depressed patients. Are there any difference? No. We've done autopsies of the brains of people who have taken their lives, depressed patients, and compared them to non-depressed people. Are there any changes in receptor density in those brains under pathology slides? No difference.
Starting point is 00:14:14 We've done functional MRI scans, which are real-time scans of the human brain, kind of firing and showing all of the metabolic changes in the brain. Are there any differences between a depressed person and a non-depressed person? No. There has never been any biological signature to differentiate depressed for non-depressed. So are you therefore saying that this phrase clinical depression does not signify a real thing? It does not signify a biological problem. Usually people say clinical depression when they, I'm very depressed.
Starting point is 00:14:48 You know, it's just a, I think, a way to say, hey, this is really serious, you know, take this seriously. But I want to have a little bit of nuance here because I'm not trying to say that there's no genetic loading for anxiety and depression. I mean, we probably know some people who are worry wards. I mean, they were just born that way. You know, they're a bit more neurotic. They have a tendency to be more depressed.
Starting point is 00:15:11 That is just normal human personality. We exist on a bell curve and a spectrum. We're going to have more extroverts. We're going to have more worry warts. But that's hardly a disease. you know, imagine telling, you know, these worry words, you have a diseased brain, there's something wrong with you. This is just normal human variation. And so I think that is possible. And yes, maybe there is some medical problem that we haven't found out about depression, but we essentially
Starting point is 00:15:42 we haven't found it yet. And so I think to go around and tell people that we really know depression is this biological problem is just a complete lie right now, where we're, we're going to We actually have a lot of evidence that shows that, you know, depression is correlated with loneliness. It's correlated with, you know, life dissatisfaction, work dissatisfaction, and a lot of the things that are very intuitive. Okay. So if that's the case, then if someone is depressed, and there are plenty of people around today who say they're depressed or clinically depressed, meaning just very, very depressed, they should not go seek a chemical, is what you're saying. should just seek behavioral therapy. Yeah. Talk therapy. Yeah. And one of the big injustices that I really worry about is that we actually rob people of that opportunity. Because, you know, you're upset, you're depressed, you go online and you're going to see messages. You have a chemical
Starting point is 00:16:39 imbalance or someone on TikTok or, you know, a celebrity influencer talking about how, you know, SSRIs saved their lives. You go, okay, maybe that could be something that's wrong with me and sort of recastes how you view your problems. You go and see a doctor, you see a family medicine doctor. This is where 80% of the drugs come from, not psychiatrists, just family medicine doctors. You have a 15-minute visit where you get five to seven minutes of face time, and they tell you, hey, you might have depression, and we think it might be biological, and take this medication. And so you take the medication, and while you take it, you're ingesting along with the drug that numbs your emotions, a whole ideology about where the problems come from, and it robs you of the
Starting point is 00:17:26 opportunity to fix other parts of your life. Because if you think about depression and anxiety as essentially signals, like a smoke detector in your brain that's saying, hey, maybe you need to look at your health, you know, maybe you need to cut down on your drug use or your cannabis use, you know, relationships work, all that kind of stuff. Instead of listening to that signal from the smoke alarm, when you take that drug, you're essentially numbing it. And And you can go years or sometimes even decades, not addressing real legitimate problems in your life that simply fester there in the background while you're on the drug.
Starting point is 00:18:03 Do you think there is any circumstance in which doctors should prescribe SSRIs specifically or antidepressant drugs more broadly? Yes, yeah, I do. I think there are cases for that. But they should be, and this is, I mean, it's common sense. they should only be used after you've exhausted all of the non-drug approaches. And so if someone comes in and they're anxious and depressed and you go through, you know, relationships, purpose, meaning your physical health, you know, you get them off drugs and
Starting point is 00:18:35 alcohol, and you really take the time to get to know them and understand their life. This never happens, by the way. No, no doctors. Well, hold on. There is one exception. I know women, especially women of women, a certain age, have been going to their therapist for 30 years. They only ever seem to get crazier. And there, now, I'm sure the therapist hasn't actually gotten to know them very well.
Starting point is 00:19:00 Obviously not. They haven't worked on the symptoms. But, yes, in modern medicine, as you say, you go in, you get five minutes with the doctor, maybe. You say, okay, here's a script. See you later. Bye. Yeah. Yeah. And so, so it doesn't happen. But let's say, hypothetically, you did that and they had great relationships, and they're actually working a job that provides purpose and meaning, they're not using drugs, you know, they're moving their body, they're getting out in the sun, they're eating a nice, clean diet. If you have someone in front of you that's still suffering after that, I think you should use a medication. Why not use a medication in that point? Because you've exhausted all of the other non-drug means. You want that
Starting point is 00:19:38 person to function. You want them to be able, you know, to live a productive life. And so I have no problem with the use of the drugs after you've exhausted the common-sense non-drughey. drug approaches to treating anxiety. Now, what about the people who are currently on them? This huge percentage of Americans who are currently on SSRIs. One, other than restraining the range of emotion, are there other nasty side effects that come about as a result of this, other than just sweeping the problems under the rugs, which is a big enough negative side effect?
Starting point is 00:20:12 And two, would you advise them, or many of them, or all of them, to get off the SSRIs? So that's a complicated question. So let's, if it's okay, let's talk about some of the side effects first. And, you know, there's a lot of them. One of the things that I worry about the most with these medications is they can actually make some people worse in the long run. Our brains are not designed to be exposed to drugs on a daily basis for years at a time. And I'll take a little aside here just to say, Most people aren't aware that these medications are studied for 12 weeks to get approval.
Starting point is 00:20:56 There's never been a study that's gone any longer than a year. And these are drugs which clearly wear off over time. Our brain is not static. It doesn't like that you're taking a drug that disturbs neurotransmitter function, which doesn't just control your mood. It controls your heart, your digestion, your immune system. And so homeostasis kicks in. The body pushes it back against the drug.
Starting point is 00:21:18 and the effect was, the effect diminishes over time. And so one, I think it's kind of very bad that we only studied these drugs for 12 weeks, 12 weeks to a year, and then we put people on them for multiple years when they clearly wear off over time. So that's the first thing. Not only when do they wear off over time, what I see in many patients after they've been on them
Starting point is 00:21:42 for several years is they'll develop a trifecter of symptoms. Specifically with the SSRIs, people say, start to have low energy, they start to get brain fog, and they start to feel very flat. And that is just the effect of being on these drugs long term. Now, unfortunately, they will go and see their doctor at this time, and the doctor will say, well, they won't say, oh, you know, this is a side effect from chronic SSRI use, and you're kind of getting worse, you're numbed out, you've got cognitive fog now, they'll say, your depression is involving.
Starting point is 00:22:17 You've got treatment-resistant depression. You know, these are mysterious mental illnesses, and we need to put you on another drug. And so it starts this prescribing cascade where the drugs, when taken long-term, cause side effects that make the person worse, and then they take another drug. And all of a sudden, you start accumulating psychiatric diagnoses, and you end up on five or six different drugs. I think that's one of, like, the biggest risks and why we've seen the use of these medications balloon over time, because I do think they're making some people worse. What are some of the other drugs that the doctors will put you on then? So if you take an SSRI and it triggers a manic episode where you become disinhibited, you know, hypersexual, you start gambling, maybe you become hostile or aggressive,
Starting point is 00:23:01 they'll say, you have bipolar disorder and they put you on antipsychotic medications. And so, and those are those are heavy drugs. I mean, they have a lot of stopping power, they're really sedating. And your life really goes in a different. direction once you've put on that. You can gain like a hundred pounds on some of these antipsychotics. It can be completely disfiguring for some people. And so it can get out of hand really, really quickly. So if you're telling them, you know, not to be doing this, you know, because of all these side effects, then for the people who are currently on them, do you, would you give a blanket recommendation
Starting point is 00:23:39 get off? I think you need to check in with. You need to check in with. yourself and you need to look at your life and just say so the drugs do work so they do have this numbing effect right but if you pull that drug away you can throw someone into a very anxious state let's say they have a lot of issues going on in their life already what do you have in place of that and so before just coming off these medications you need to think about you know why did i get on it in the first place and so if you i think if you let let's say you just got on it because you went through a divorce or a job loss or you moved and you were lonely. Some kind of stressor at one moment of time which you've recovered from, you don't need to be
Starting point is 00:24:27 on that drug anymore. Like come off it. Do a gradual, slow, safe taper. But if you had, I mean, I don't know, maybe you're in a relationship that's having a lot of problems. Maybe you're, maybe you really don't like what you're doing at work. Maybe you have a whole bunch of physical health problems or you're, you know, you're using drugs and alcohol and it's leading to this anxious state, you need to address that first. Because if you just pull that drug off, you're also going to send your life into a tailspin. So I recommend that kind of practical approach, just thinking about, you know, what can you replace it with? But for the majority of Americans, for the majority of people on these medications, and just from my clinical experience and doing this for over 10 years now,
Starting point is 00:25:07 I think that 95% of people on these medications shouldn't have been put on them in the first place, and they don't actually need them. So it's dangerous. to quickly come off these types of drugs. How are you supposed to do it? If you want to get off these kinds of drugs, what's the safest way to do it? Sure. So there's a...
Starting point is 00:25:26 The safest way to come off these drugs is without exposing yourself to severe withdrawal. Now, one of the big problems is, is many doctors have been telling patients for years that the withdrawal is mild and it goes away in a couple of weeks. And because of this, they'll get people who have been on these drugs for years,
Starting point is 00:25:46 sometimes decades and they'll taper them off over a couple of months. And that can be really dangerous. Now, for some people, they can do it. Their brains are very elastic and they come off quickly and, you know, it's very difficult for a month or two and then they're fine. But you may recall, I mentioned the issue of protracted withdrawal with benzos and antidepressants. There is a fairly large group of people that if you expose them to these severe withdrawal
Starting point is 00:26:14 symptoms, they actually end up developing this neurological damage. And so the way to actually avoid the risk of that is to taper off slowly. Now, what I generally recommend for people is to start with a 5 to 10% reduction, and then every month, just assess how you're going. If that was a good reduction for you, you could do the same one. Or you could increase it. You could say, now I'm going to do 10%. Now I'm going to do 15%.
Starting point is 00:26:40 and go down in these very gradual steps. Many people, when they get to the very end of the taper, they struggle greatly. This is because at that point, you've removed so much of the drug. It's like you don't have a lot of residual drug floating around in the brain. And so when you take another bit out, you actually disconnect a lot of the receptors. And so when people get to the very end of the taper, if they're struggling, I would just want them to know that that is normal.
Starting point is 00:27:08 and they should go up to the previous dose before they had the withdrawal symptoms and ask their doctor if they can give them a liquid version of the medication. And the reason I ask them to do that is you can draw up the drug in a syringe and the great thing about syringes is you can get like a 1ml syringe
Starting point is 00:27:26 and there's like a hundred spaces on the side. It allows you to lower down that last amount with a lot of precision. And so I think finishing a taper with liquid is also a really great thing to do of someone struggling to come off. As for the time frame, for many patients, it can take them a year, sometimes up to two years to come off these medications if they've been on them for a really long time. And so I always tell people not to rush it, take your time. You should be able to come off
Starting point is 00:27:55 without having severe withdrawal. And that's the way to do it. What about the relation of these kinds of drugs to violent acts and to aberrant iret I guess I'll put my cards on the table. I've noticed a major uptick in violence from the left notably associated with transgenderism, a very serious psychiatric condition, and in the lion's share of these cases, basically every time, it seems, that we learn the information, they're on SSRIs. Yeah, yeah. Is there a relationship? Yes. So I believe there is. Now, this This has been shut down in the media for a really long time.
Starting point is 00:28:43 And sometimes people don't believe me when I say this. You can look at the drug labels from the FDA right now, and they already list these side effects in there. If you look at Adderall, for instance, there's a whole section in the warnings and precautions, which is the highlighted section of important risks in the drug label, that the drug can cause hostility because they see it a lot in kids. If you look at Abilify, it's an antipsychotic, homicidal ideation is listed in the drug label. If you look at the SSRIs, the drug label already says they can cause suicidal ideation, suicidal behavior, aggression and violence.
Starting point is 00:29:21 These are already recognized risks that the FDA has ratified and the pharmaceutical companies have put in their labels. But then when it comes to the issue of mass violence, all of a sudden, I feel like the media pretends that these drugs, There's no way that these drugs could do it. And if you bring it up, they try and intimidate you. They say, you're stigmatizing the mentally ill. You are, you know, you're trying to make an excuse, you're trying to scare people away from it. They try and shut you down.
Starting point is 00:29:52 But when we look at legal cases as well, this has been used as a defense in the court of law, and it has been found reasonable by judges and juries. It reduces culpability because they're on the psych drugs that were supposed to help them, but actually made it worse, and you're not even allowed to acknowledge that the drugs made it worse. Yeah. Well, let me talk about some of these cases, because they are shocking. Because most people are thinking about school shootings when they're worried about these medications. So one of the cases was with a gentleman called Donald Shell in Wyoming in the 90s.
Starting point is 00:30:30 He had previously taken Prozac and SSRI and become agitated on it. Another doctor put him on a different SSRI later on called Paxil. This never should have happened because it's the same drug class. If you got worse on Prozac, you shouldn't have been put on Paxil. But the doctor didn't know he had that prior history. Within a week of going on Paxil, Don killed his wife, he killed his daughter, and he killed his granddaughter. He shot all three of them, and then he killed himself. Now, the surviving son-in-law, Tobin, took out a claim against Smith-Kline.
Starting point is 00:31:08 This was before they became Glaxo Smith-Kline, and he sued them. And they were found 80% liable for what had happened due to failure to warn about the fact that it could cause homicidal and suicidal behavior. They appealed it, but the appeal did not work, and it stood. And this has happened, not just in this case, there have been several other cases. where judges and juries have found that if not for the person taking the psychiatric medication, this act of violence would not have happened. I had actually never heard of that. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:31:44 Are there more recent examples of courts finding this, or have the courts started to turn on it too? The most recent one that comes to mind, and some of this stuff is pretty gruesome. So, you know, yeah. But there was a gentleman David Carmichael who again very similar story was put on Paxall, I believe, and he actually killed his son. And while he was in a psychosis because of it, now he ended up spending some time in a psychiatric hospital afterwards for, I think it was two to three years, something like that. But the prosecutor did not press charges because they looked at him and they were just like, there's no, you know, judge. from your history, from your wife, and, you know, being an upstanding, great person, good citizen, there's no way we could explain this happening, if not for the drug. And so they didn't pursue
Starting point is 00:32:40 it to kind of send them, you know, send him to prison and jail and all of that. But one objection I've heard, even if you tell your friends or family, if they're on it, you say, you should really get off this. They'll give you the same excuse that you'd hear if you raised an objection to the COVID vaccine. Remember with the COVID vaccine, they said, if you take the vaccine, you won't get the virus. Then it turned out that wasn't true. And so they said, well, if you get the vaccine, you'll get the virus, but you won't transmit the virus. And it turned out that wasn't true. And they said, well, okay, you'll get it and you'll transmit it. But it would be much worse. The symptoms would be much worse if you didn't take the vaccine, which was unfalsifiable. Well, I've heard the same thing with the SSRIs, where you say, hey, you know, you've been taking these drugs forever and you haven't gotten less crazy. And in some ways you've gotten more crazy, it seems to me. So you should probably get off the drugs, right? And, you know, a lot of the time, they'll tell you, oh, well, no, you don't know how bad it was before. If you think this is bad, oh, trust me, it would be much worse without the drug. What do you say to those people?
Starting point is 00:33:38 I say to them that on a population level from the FDA's own clinical trials, taking these medications is associated with a greater risk of suicidal thoughts and behaviors. And I want to just let that sink in for a second, because this should sound absolutely bad crazy. How do they control? You're saying people who have depression or... Yeah. Like, it's the same kind of people. Is it just normal people or people on...
Starting point is 00:34:03 Because if it were just normal people and people on SSRIs, you say, well, those are the guys who are suicidal anyway? Or are you saying people... People with depression. People with depression who don't take the SSRIs. People with depression who do take the SSRIs, it's the ones who take the SSRIs who are more likely to kill themselves. Yes.
Starting point is 00:34:19 Crazy. And your reaction is exactly the reaction that I want everyone listening to have right now. It is in the drug labels. So if you look at the drug labels right now for SSRIs, it says for populations under age 25, taking SSRIs is associated at a population level with a higher chance of suicidal behavior. And so I don't think there is any good justification
Starting point is 00:34:46 for really using these medications in younger people. Yes, it will reduce their symptoms, their symptoms on the depression scale, which, by the way, is how they measure it. How many symptoms are you reporting? They're not measuring it by life satisfaction, relationships, rates of divorce, any of the things. So what are the symptoms? You know, anxiety, low mood, sleep.
Starting point is 00:35:08 And if you just give someone a drug that kind of numbs them out, those symptoms are going to go down. But you could also see how being in a kind of numbed out state may not be the best state to be connected in your relationships. Feel motivated at work. Feel the drive to go and change things in your life. And so it decreases your symptoms. and so people kind of feel better. But then they're also kind of spellbound because they're in a drug state
Starting point is 00:35:32 that they may feel better but their life really isn't getting that much better. And so when you think about it that way, you go, well, okay, so you're taking a drug that's masking problems. For many people, their problems aren't getting better. And you can also have these paradoxical reactions where people can become unexpectedly more suicidal.
Starting point is 00:35:52 It makes sense that taking them actually on a population level like you said, group on placebo, group on drug. The group on the drug is having more suicidal behavior and suicidal thoughts. And when further analyses were done, it was shown that it was not just in the group that was under age 25, that it actually extended to all adults. And so when someone says to me, hey, if I don't take this medication, it's going to lead to, you know, if people stop taking them, it's going to lead to more suicidal. That's what it comes down to.
Starting point is 00:36:27 Because people don't make the argument, oh, if they stop taking this medication, they're going to be more eccentric or they're going to be more annoying or they're going to be a little more. It's always, if you tell people not to take these drugs, they're going to kill themselves and you're going to have blood on your hands. The opposite is true. Wow. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:36:45 What about some of the other drugs? Because we've focused on this one class of antidepressants. Is that basically just what people mean by antidepressant? Pretty much the SSRI. That constitutes the lion's share of that antidepressant part. What are the other, because what are the other ones I've heard of? Benzos? Is a Benzo an SSRI?
Starting point is 00:37:04 No, a Benzo is a very popular type of sedative. Okay. And like Xanax or Clonopin, yeah, that kind of stuff. So that's different. I'm confessing my ignorance to the entire audience. So that's different. Are those also bad for you? They're incredibly bad for you.
Starting point is 00:37:21 And I don't like SSRIs, but I think Benzzi's. are worse. So, I mean, the issue with the benzodiazepines, kind of similar to the SSRIs, is they simply make people worse over the long run. That's a pretty blunt characterization. It is. And so you get, and here's what it looks like. If you're a benzodia user, try and see if this is happening to you right now. They become more agoraphobic. They stop, they stop wanting to leave their house, and they start to have a very anxious, ruminative, and obsessive thoughts over time,
Starting point is 00:37:57 and they start to have mood instability. So, I mean, this is what I see in my practice all the time. Half of my practice is getting people off benzos. So they get worse over time, more anxious, more withdrawn, and then they're really hard to stop. And some people, when they come off these medications too fast, this is the benzos and the antidepressants, they can actually have a neurological brain injury
Starting point is 00:38:22 called protracted withdrawal. that can be completely disabling. And it's almost like you've had a severe concussion, like someone has pushed you out of a window and you've hit your head, and people can be disabled for several years after they come off these medications. If they come off too quickly.
Starting point is 00:38:39 If they come off too quickly. And this is like another thing, when I say this, people go, this is crazy. My doctor would have told me if coming off this medication could cause a brain injury that could last for several years. And to them, I would say, pick up the drug label, look in the warnings and precaution, and read the section that says protracted withdrawal. These are recognized risks in the drug labels which doctors are not telling
Starting point is 00:39:06 patients about. And so, I mean, I've had people take their lives because they've been so disabled. They're not able to support their families. And, yeah, essentially, it's like you've had a brain injury and it can take them years to recover from. And this happens with the SSRIs as well. Are these the kind of drugs that people take on airplanes? Yeah, exactly. That's the only, That's the only time I really encounter them is I'll be flying with someone to say, oh, I popped it. What's the popular one? Xanax.
Starting point is 00:39:32 Xanax. I'm popping a Xanax for the airplane. I said, just get a whiskey. I don't know. That's what I get on an airplane. Well, the sad thing is I actually see a lot of perimenopausal women who are entering menopause get put on these drugs and end up getting a lot worse because of them. Menopause is one of the highest risk period for women when it comes to psychiatrists,
Starting point is 00:39:52 because they have mood instability, they have insomnia. And I have so many patients right now who are just going through menopause, who end up kind of hooked in this psychiatric hell, you know. So the idea being they start to go crazy during menopause, they can't take it anymore, they go get some drug. But if they had just gone through menopause, on the other side of it, they would have been basically fine again. Gone through menopause, started hormonal therapy.
Starting point is 00:40:20 That could be really beneficial for some women. But yes, exactly, you know, that's a really high-risk period for them. So then what is the alternative? You know, we're in a period where people really like the idea of alternative medicine, where it used to be all the left-wingers were the hippies, and now the white-wingers are kind of the hippies. And now Bobby Kennedy, who used to be a left-wing cook, is now the Republican Health and Human Services Secretary.
Starting point is 00:40:48 Jerry, and it's all, and like my very traditional wife is reading all about, I don't know, granola and seed oils and everything. That's a good wife. Yes, yeah, we're kind of totally upside down at this point. So what do you tell people to do? I mean, the answer is just deal with it, stiff upper lip, talk it out, fix your relationships. I don't mean to, I don't mean that derisively. That's like good advice sometimes. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:41:14 So, well, it depends. I mean, when we're looking at anxiety and depression, we have to respect it as a very complicated problem. I mean, like, what are the things that make people anxious and depressed? I mean, there's a whole range of things from the fairly benign to, you know, quite bad childhood trauma, where you develop maladaptive personality traits, and it's very hard to relate to people and you have low self-esteem. Like, that kind of issue requires, that might require a lot more work. That might require actually working with a professional to gain insight into how, you know, terrible things that happened to you in the past are playing out in your current life and relationships.
Starting point is 00:41:52 But then we can also have people that just have really terrible physical health. I mean, they're sitting behind their computer all day, you know, just typing away. They're not getting any sunlight. They're not moving their body. They're eating just lots of refined carbohydrates. They have insulin resistance. Their brain is starved of energy because they're completely metabolically destroyed. for that person, it's like, let's get you healthy. Let's get nutritious food back into you. Let's
Starting point is 00:42:22 decrease the amount of carbohydrates. And so your physical health is kind of improving. That might be a solution for one person. You could have someone who's in an abusive relationship. And then it's like, well, how do you navigate that? Oh, gosh, you have kids as well. Well, that's a big problem. How do we navigate this abusive relationship with this children going on? Like some of these things are really, like, I don't want to diminish anxiety and depression. I mean, some of the the things like, it's like a gut punch. It's really complicated, messy problems. You could be in a job that you hate, but then you have a family to support as well. And it's like, how do you find peace with that? And so, you know, I have friends. I'm being a little tough on the ladies and calling
Starting point is 00:43:03 crazy and stuff. But I do have friends where I think, well, you know, if I had that lady's husband, I'd probably be a little anxious and depressed too. Yeah. Be a little down in the dumps, you know, or if I had to do such and such job, that might get to me in the little bit too. So, look, it's, this is why I'm unsatisfied with the advice of just, you know, buck up kid, though I sometimes dispense that very advice, is at the level of the U.S. population, the fact that you have 20% of people, or whatever it is, feeling the need to go on these very heavy psych drugs tells you that something has gone wrong. Maybe at the personal level, maybe they need to pull themselves up by their bootstraps, maybe at the systemic level,
Starting point is 00:43:43 maybe at the political level. I think we should talk about that. And the thing that has kind of dawned on me the longer that I've been doing this for is that a lot of these problems actually start young. I mean, like relationships. I mean, this is one of the core pillars of your well-being. If you marry the wrong person, like if you don't have the right kind of guidance to understand, hey, how do I pick a partner that shares my same views about having kids or values or religion or anything like that? That could be really hard. I've seen that turn up in a lot of relationships.
Starting point is 00:44:15 You know, if you don't have parents that kind of encourage you to find the thing that energizes you and that you're going to naturally be interested in, and they say, no, you need to become a lawyer, you need to become an engineer, and, okay, you're not interested. Take the outer roll so you can sit down and focus because success is just doing these jobs, and you end up doing a job that you need to be essentially drugged to do. This is really common. Like I don't know. Great point.
Starting point is 00:44:41 There's so many people who get kind of driven into these careers. Is they white-collar job, you know, big, big firm, that is success, you know. Because, wow, I considered for a while in my 20s, I considered going to law school. So should I sit for the L-Sat? Should I go to law school? I thought, I really don't want to be a lawyer. On paper I could be, you know, I write, I read, I make arguments, but I just don't want to be a lawyer. It would be so depressing.
Starting point is 00:45:08 And today, whatever it is that I do, I don't even really have a real job. I work 20 hours a day or something, but I don't feel like I have a real job, and it really jazzes me up. Whereas I think if I worked half the amount of time that I do, even in a prestigious career, like a lawyer or a doctor, I would probably be severely depressed, it would be my guess. Yeah, yeah. And so I think we need to help kids when they are young actually challenge, you know, figure out some really important things. Like, most people aren't thinking about that at that stage in their life. And so, you know, I think, I mean, if we talk about, I think churchgoing has gone down. And if we look at the decrease in church going, I mean, that is something where people,
Starting point is 00:46:05 there is an emphasis on marriage. There is an emphasis on values, core values which you want to share with your partner, you know, before you get married. You know, if you're at a Catholic church, you talk to a priest and things like that. Some of these institutions actually used to kind of help with going through these motions so you don't make some of these really big mistakes
Starting point is 00:46:25 early on in your life. Okay, then I have a question to go further. So you say, well, sharing values with your spouse is going to be more conducive to flourishing than if you oppose your spouse. And I get that point. But let's say you do share value. Let's say you've got two couples.
Starting point is 00:46:41 Yeah. And they both share values, but they have different values. And one goes to church and one votes the right way, and one, you know, has kids and all the rest. And the other doesn't. Does all the opposite stuff. They both share values with their spouses, but they have very different values. Can we say that one set of values is more conducive to happiness than the other? USAA knows dynamic duos can save the day, like superheroes.
Starting point is 00:47:11 and sidekicks or auto and home insurance. With USAA, you can bundle your auto and home and save up to 10%. Tap the banner to learn more and get a quote at usaa.com slash bundle. Restrictions apply. I think statistically, I mean, you can look at some, like having kids is associated with greater happiness. I mean, that has been borne out with clinical trial research. Being married is associated with greater happiness.
Starting point is 00:47:40 Church going is associated with greater happiness as well. And so, we don't really have to guess. Yes. It is there. My theory on this from the systemic level is I think liberalism makes you unhappy. I think the ideology of liberalism. I'm not just knocking the leftists, even people who call themselves on the right, who are liberal, meaning they think that the highest good is to maximize individual autonomy, say. I think that makes you unhappy.
Starting point is 00:48:10 I think it alienates you from your family and your community and your nation and everything else. I think it gives you unrealistic expectations of yourself because you think that you can transform your natural limits. You can transcend your natural limits. You can transcend your body, I guess. You know, you can be a man and you can think that you're a woman. I think it inclines toward a lot of sexually deviant ideologies, but just more broadly, aberrant ideologies, that tells you that, you know, you can flunk every class in school but still be an astronaut someday. or it tells you you can be five foot three, but play for the New York Knicks.
Starting point is 00:48:44 And it says that if you don't have that belief, that that will somehow depress you, that that will, you know, that will be bad for your self-esteem. I think liberalism drives you crazy. And it's not just a thought that you need to have because that's actually been backed up with statistics, that when they look at liberal women compared to conservative women, they are more depressed than that. And I'll go a point further because this is something that I see, especially with like, you know, people call it, you know, like the oppression Olympics. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:49:14 Like there is something about liberal ideology right now where you are being oppressed, you know, the system is against you. You don't have an internal, you don't have a locus of control. Like you don't feel like you are in control of your life. You know, the way my life turns out is up to me and my responsibility and I can control it. I feel like that ideology is very much like men are holding me down, you know, the government, the people, all of these types of things. It's not a very empowering ideology.
Starting point is 00:49:45 It's not something that builds confidence in yourself and your ability to kind of navigate the world over time. And so that's something I also worry about. Do you have faith in the psychiatric profession? No. No, absolutely not. You know, I feel like they've absolutely betrayed the American public in a major way. And I would want nothing more than the president of, the American Psychiatric Association to be pulled before a panel of senators and to be asked some hard
Starting point is 00:50:15 questions like, why are one in three women over 60 on psychiatric medications? You know, why are, you know, 18% of our female population taking these drugs right now? Why are 17% of adolescent boys, you know, 14 to 17, diagnosed with ADHD right now? Why have SSRI, you know, why have antidepressant prescriptions gone up 500% while suicide, teen suicidal thinking have both gone up 50% in the last 30 years. Why is psychiatric disability going up? What are you doing? You know, I mean, and so I think there's been a massive betrayal, not just with the psychiatrists. I also think the National Institute of Mental Health in its prior form, it's getting reformed now by Bobby and his team. They have just been obsessed with biological cures for anxiety and depression. I think the, you know, you would think
Starting point is 00:51:11 that with, you know, 15% of the population, men and women on these drugs, that someone at the NIMH would have said, hey, let's do a two-year study where we look at people who get standard of care just kind of plopped on the antidepressants and we compare it to people who get some relationship coaching, you know, nutrition help, you know, some coaching on life and purpose. Let's see how those Two cohorts go so we can really see, you know, is it safe for, you know, 15 to 20% of our population to be on these drugs? Because that's a lot of us. And we should really know that well. They have never done any studies like that.
Starting point is 00:51:47 They're just looking for biological targets for new drugs. I think that is a massive betrayal of the American public. So then can you go even further to say, yes, the psychiatric profession has this whole conversation of mental health. and the obsession with mental health without ever dealing with the actual underlying issues of mental health, that that's a betrayal of what the psychiatric profession is supposed to be. But you would not go so far as to say that the practice of psychiatry or clinical psychology is in itself a fool's errand. As if to say, I know some people, they're prominent people who say,
Starting point is 00:52:26 nah, the whole thing is just kind of fake, you know, and it's trying to make sense. scientific, that which is a little bit more of an art, you know, the art of human relationships. Sure. Yeah. You still would defend psychology as a discipline or no. I actually have my own misgivings about psychology. And a lot of this comes from the fact that many people stay with therapists indefinitely. And that makes me suspicious. It makes me feel like people are really paying for friends. And so I think a lot of that goes on. I also think there is,
Starting point is 00:53:09 we're so censored these days as well, and I actually think that turns up in therapy. I think some therapists are afraid to actually take a stand on some things and say, I think you need to work on your relationships. I think you need to find, And I think you need to find a job that is more aligned with you. I think you need to think about living a life in service of others.
Starting point is 00:53:35 I think we're so agnostic in therapy. We're just like, well, what do you think about it? What do you think about it? The last example really got me too. It seems rather modest to just say, hey, maybe you should think about anyone else ever. But even that might be too far. I don't want to impose my moral and values system on you. Exactly. They really, I mean, they pussyfoot around the whole thing and they do not. And so I don't think it has backbone. This will make me sound really unscientific, but I'm going to say it anyway.
Starting point is 00:54:10 Great. I actually really believe in coaching. I believe in people like Tony Robbins. I believe in these guys that can get you up and motivate you and just say, no, you know, go out, work hard, live a life and service of others. you know, get outside of yourself, you know, don't be so me, me, me, and they give you more direction. Now, that hasn't been studied in like randomized controlled trials. And so I know there's probably medical professionals listening here and just being like, that's unscientific. Well, I don't really think the other side works. I would like to see a blend of more empowering coaching styles with therapy. I mean, think like some people think of therapy as this panacea. It's like, oh, I'm depressed. I'm going to go and see. this like 24-year-old, like social worker who's going to be able to tell me something about my life.
Starting point is 00:55:00 And they're like, oh, she's got a therapy degree. She's got a therapy degree. And therefore, she is an expert and I'm doing something. Yeah, she's expert. That's insane. Like, if you actually have a complicated problem in your life, you go to a professional. Why? And so I think people should say, okay, I've interpersonal problems in my relationship.
Starting point is 00:55:20 I'm going to find the person to help me with that. I don't like my job. I'm going to see a career coach. I'm not going to talk to the 20-year-old clinical social worker who really doesn't know anything about life. You know, she does cognitive behavioral therapy or something like that. So, yes, I think there are a lot of, I think there's actually a lot of problems in therapy as well. I've long thought that therapy is just confession for atheists. Yep.
Starting point is 00:55:48 And I go to confession. I should probably go more frequently than I do. do, but I regularly go to confession. And for those who are unfamiliar with sacramental theology, it means I go into a box and I kneel down. I first examine my conscience and I think about all the bad things I did over the week or two weeks or three weeks or ever long. And then I list them in number and kind to a man who has been consecrated to the priesthood and I'm confessing my sins through him to God and he is given authority by God in my view and in the view of the Bible to forgive or retain my sins. And that's what I do. And then I leave the box and I feel better. And I think that something
Starting point is 00:56:24 spiritually efficacious has actually taken place. But even when I try to recommend the sacrament to more skeptical friends of mine, I say, even if you do not believe in its spiritual efficacy, which is real, but you don't have to believe it at the moment, I promise you the psychological effects of that are going to be very strong. And I really don't have any experience in psychology. I've never, I've never gone to a psychologist, but I've known a number of them. I strongly suspect the three words, Ego Taye absolvo from a man that I believe is consecrated to his position by God, are going to be more powerful than the 24-year-old psych major with some degree who says, gee, wow, that's really interesting. Tell me more. Time's up. Give me another 200 bucks next week. Yeah, yeah. And of course it is. I mean,
Starting point is 00:57:17 I think about how we live our lives now. I mean, if you can take 20 minutes, 30 minutes to actually sit down and take a moral infantry of things that you have done and really reflect on them, how could that not be helpful? Because, I mean, the way I see most people living their life is, oh, uncomfortable feeling, let me whip out my phone and start scrolling through. We numb ourselves with drugs to pain. We numb ourselves with distraction. When you're going into confession, it's meditative.
Starting point is 00:57:51 You're really reflecting on core principles, values, you know, things that you want to practice, which you know long term will improve your life and the lives of others. How could that not be a powerful tool? And in some ways, it's such a perversion of... Psychology is such a perversion of confession, that in some ways it's an inversion,
Starting point is 00:58:14 Because, again, I'm getting most of the secondhand. But when I confess my sins, I feel a great degree of guilt for my sins, as I should. In fact, I say, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa, my guilt. And then I confess them, and then I believe God has forgiven me and I trust in God's grace. So I have a reason to let go of the guilt. If I go to a psychologist, the first thing you're going to say, don't feel, oh, you shouldn't feel guilt. You shouldn't feel shame. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:58:45 Go blame your mother. Don't know. You have to let go of shame. It's very bad for you. You need to love yourself. Yeah. You need self-care. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:58:53 And that's that whole locus of control, which you kind of see in the more conservative groups, more religious groups as well. Responsibility. Self-Rist. I'm in control. Yeah. Yeah. And this is why I get really worried about ChatGBT-B-T as well. People use Chat-Gat.
Starting point is 00:59:13 GPT for therapy and I've experimented with it as well asking it questions and it is just like the therapist that you had you know that you had acted out a moment ago it's other people you know it's not you that's so hard you know I'm so sorry for you that must be so difficult yeah I hear you wow I hear you it there's not there's not like a hard ass in there take ownership of your life you know you know you know get in control get in the driver's seat you know you can change things it's it's not really an empowering message a lot of the time. Because I want to hear to hear more on the chat GPT point because that's very scary. And I'm sure many more people are going to use it in coming years for therapy.
Starting point is 00:59:53 But on the point of even the shame and the guilt, even if you think I'm crazy, even if you think God doesn't exist and the priests are deluding themselves and whatever, you can at least understand why I feel guilt going into the confessional and then I don't feel guilt after the confessional. Because I believe that the creator and sustainer of the universe, my very maker, who knew every hair on my head before I was born, has forgiven me. But if you don't believe that, if you instead go to some guy with a degree from, like, Wellesley College, who you are speaking to as the great oracle, and you feel shame because you've committed bad actions. And then he says, no, you shouldn't feel shame. Why would you believe him? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:00:42 Is that going to work? I just don't think that's going to work. Yeah. I mean, I wouldn't find it compelling. Yeah. Doesn't do it for me. So, okay, so then they turn to chat GPT. This is quite concerning.
Starting point is 01:00:54 Yeah. Because I've used chat GPT for some research. Yeah. A lot of time, it's not reliable. Sometimes it's reliable. But when I say it's not reliable, I mean, it'll just completely make stuff. up and try to hide it. But sometimes you get interesting stuff, access to archives, if I'm doing historical research. Okay, so it can be a useful tool. You have to be very careful with it.
Starting point is 01:01:16 People treat this thing like it is God, like it is omnipotent, like it can give you the secrets of the universe, and like it can unfold your own personal mysteries to yourself. It's highly disturbing. And the part of it that I worry about the most is when people start making chat GPT like a friend. And they will have a boyfriend or a girlfriend that is chat GPT. Is this real? I've read headlines about this. This is really happening.
Starting point is 01:01:50 This is real. And then people have a panic attack because I think after you put in 50,000 prompts, it will delete the memory. So you lose, because when you use chaty chat. It remembers things about you and so you get more accurate replies that are kind of matched to you But when you go over a certain number of prompts, which you do if you're treating this thing like a romantic partner It dies and then people really freak out when that happens That's horrifying. Yeah, so the fear is not even of treating chat GPT like a god or an or an or something It's it's treating it like your therapist or your friend. It is and
Starting point is 01:02:28 You know one of the scariest things things about this technology is people can retreat into it. I mean, it doesn't, it doesn't have boundaries. It's not going to, you know, it's not going to be like your wife where it's going to, you know, come after you if you're insensitive, you're not, you know, attuned to the emotions. It just sits there and just kind of takes whatever you feed into it. And I mean, that is like the worst thing ever because you, I think people retreat into chat GPT because they're so wounded and fragile with normal human relationships that they want something that feels safe. But it's the worst thing to do. You need to be out there interacting with people and resolving
Starting point is 01:03:08 conflicts and not kind of shying away from everything. And so it essentially just, I mean, it allows people to retreat into this fantasy world. And I mean, the whole thing with X lately and they're like, have you seen like the artificial intelligence like anime companions that Elon has made? I saw something that was vague. disturbing that he posted. Yeah, so they didn't look into it much. They're provocative looking like anime avatars and I mean it's so twisted. I mean, it's so disturbing. And I mean, so. And you can treat the anime, the hot little 22 year old anime as your, as your girlfriend or something. Yeah. Yeah. But actually that tracks because I suspect one of the big drivers of porn and why. You know, I mean,
Starting point is 01:03:56 you read these reports of, well, especially, it first came out of Japan, but I think you're seeing this year now, too, is that guys will prefer porn to a girlfriend. And I remember I was having this conversation with my colleague, Andrew Plavin, and he said, can you, that's crazy. Why would anyone prefer porn to a girlfriend? I said, I totally understand why. Because your girlfriend has needs. She has needs. She yells at you sometimes. She is like tired sometimes. And porn is just whatever you want. And with chat GPT, it's just that to the nth degree. Correct. Yep. Yeah. It's a brave new world. I, you know, this is like off topic from what we're talking about, but I mean, in 10 years, we're going to have humanoid robots. I really believe that, powered with artificial intelligence, and I really worry about what the world is going to look like at that point. I have long said, once they perfect robots and AI, because all new technologies are immediately infiltrated by pornography, once they preempting, once they perfect robots and AI, because all new technologies are immediately infiltrated by pornography,
Starting point is 01:04:55 Once they perfect robots and AI pornography, the human race has about 23 years left. And then extinction will set in because people will flock to it. I actually do want to talk about the porn issue, though, because people write in, it's not just, certainly not just a my show, it's all over the place. Young men, for years and years now, I've said one of the biggest struggles in my life is I'm struggling with porn. And some are now speaking of pornography as a kind of a drug, you know, causing or fixing a chemical imbalance. say. It brings us all the way back to the top of our conversation. What do you make of that? I think it's a really apt analogy. And I would put pornography in with things like overeating, sometimes even gambling as well, and taking psychiatric drugs. It is a way to numb feelings.
Starting point is 01:05:43 It is a way to distract. It is a way to, like, because think about, okay, why am I watching porn? Well, I can't get a girlfriend, right? That could be one thing. I'm fighting with my wife. It could be another thing. The spark has disappeared in my marriage. These are complicated things to fix. So complicated that, oh, isn't it easier if I can just go get my desires met through pornography? I don't need to learn how to socialize better and go out and meet a girlfriend. I don't need to go through rejection.
Starting point is 01:06:16 I don't need to talk to 10, 20, 30 people until I find someone. I can just do that. I don't need to understand what's happened in our relationship. Why has the spark gone away? It is a way of distracting. It is a way of avoiding real problems in your life. And so I do think... That feeling of anxiety that reminds me of a comment,
Starting point is 01:06:35 if you'll forgive the crass remark. There was a comment that a college buddy of mine made in college. He referred to procrasturbation. The feeling of anxiety, I have to write a term paper. I have to study for an exam or something. And that that was actually the cause. He was describing in a funny way, the very thing that you're describing. I know.
Starting point is 01:07:00 And before you had that, and you know, maybe you would get up and go for a walk, you know, like, you have some anxiety and you're just like, I don't want to do anything. I'm jittery. You'd work out, but now you can just do that instead. Smoke a cigar. I don't know. That's what I do. I certainly don't work out.
Starting point is 01:07:16 I occasionally go for a walk. But I don't know. Yeah, you have a cigar, read a book, like a pleasure book, read a... Yeah. So if we're looking at systemic mental health problems, psychological problems, lifestyle problems, it seems to me one in five women, one and three women over the age of 60 being on these psych drugs is a big problem that we need to address. Yes. But if we're also looking at these social pathologies, the fact that virtually every young man in the country is hooked on porn that is damaging their relationships, screwing up their brains, that seems like a major issue to fix too before we start plying them with. psych drugs. Yeah, well, the issue with the psych drugs as well is they cause massive amounts of sexual dysfunction as well. So if we're going to add, you know, I think the porn issue is definitely a distraction and it's holding men back from going out there and just getting a girlfriend,
Starting point is 01:08:11 getting married and figuring that out. But these psychiatric medications, even the SSRIs, they cause profound sexual dysfunction, which is something that many people don't realize, as well. Like you're talking about ED basically? It doesn't work or? So there's two things there. So the first thing is that when people get on SSRIs, about 70% of them will experience. So it would be erectile dysfunction. It would be lower libido, muted orgasms as well. You know, just a loss of interest. And they are told when they get on these medications, hey, this is just the trade-off for not being depressed. It will go away when you come off the medication. What we have been finding recently, well, not that recently, over the last 20 years is some people, when they come off these medications,
Starting point is 01:09:02 the sexual dysfunction does not go away. It is permanent. And so they develop a condition called post-SSRI sexual dysfunction. Based on what I've seen in the literature, the incidence is about 1 in 216, which... What? Yeah, I mean, so two, yeah, yeah. Yeah, which is a huge amount when you consider... One in 200,000, I would never touch it. I would never even consider. One in 216 men who use SSRIs will have permanent sexual dysfunction. That's what I've seen on one study that has looked into that.
Starting point is 01:09:41 And so if you think about 8% of men in the U.S. are taking these medications, that's a lot of people. Now, so what PSSD does, and this is, psychiatrists and doctors have been trying to explain this away for decades by saying it's performance anxiety. Hey, you have depression and anxiety. You're complaining about, you know, your sexual functioning didn't return. You're just anxious. You have performance anxiety or something like that. They literally, it's a horrific thing. They will develop something called genital anesthesia where they lose a real.
Starting point is 01:10:18 erogenous sensation down there and it feels like, you know, what used to be sexually arousing actually just feels like you're touching the back of your hand or your arm. And so the sensation changes. On top of that, you know, they have the erectile dysfunction, loss of libido, all of that. They also develop cognitive, like really bad cognitive dysfunction, brain fog, and they feel lobotomized. They start to feel very dissociated, like severely numbed out on the medication. to the point where they say, you know, if I hug my kids or I hug my spouse, like I don't get like a warm feeling. You know, when I listen to that song from my childhood that I used to, you know, really enjoy, I don't get those prickles on the back of my neck of nostalgia anymore.
Starting point is 01:11:02 They feel totally disconnected. And people hear me talking about this and they say, they look like you right now. They look wide-eyed in disbelief, Michael. And then I tell them, this is already in the drug labels in the European Union. It's in the drug labels in Canada. It's in the drug labels in Hong Kong. It's in the drug labels in Australia. And this is where I'm so upset with the United States.
Starting point is 01:11:29 Six years ago, the PSSD network coordinated with other scientific professionals to submit a citizens petition to the FDA to get this put on the drug labels, and they've essentially just let it sit on the backburner. They have not addressed it. This group also sued the FDA saying, hey, we need an action on this because the regulations say that they have to reply. I think it's within 180 days to any citizens petition. So they were asking. They were saying, here is the evidence.
Starting point is 01:12:02 This is the same dossier we've given to the European Union, to Australia, to Canada. They have acted on this. They have put it in the labels. They are warning doctors about this problem already. FDA has just sat on this for six years. They sued them last year, I think it was earlier on this year to say, hey, we really want a decision about this. This is important. People need to know. And they dismissed it on a technicality. The FDA is sitting on this because they are trying to cover up one of the biggest scandals in modern medical history right now. And I think it is simply a disgrace, what's happening. Are you hopeful that this will now get through thanks to change in regime and Secretary Kennedy? I'm very hopeful that this will come through because the thing that's happened in psychiatry recently, which is very unique. We're at a really interesting moment in time.
Starting point is 01:12:54 Both conservative and liberal media are starting to actually turn on the establishment. For a long time, it's just been the conservative outlets, but we've had articles in New York Times, Washington Post, NPR. And once you start getting like liberal media as well as conservative talking about these issues, then that's where I think it's almost like the shame or the embarrassment or the fact that this is going to be a PR disaster for them is building up. So I actually think they are going to put it in there. But I think it's really sad because the American public, they deserved better than this. The FDA will review an entire dossier of scientific information, multiple clinical trials and animal studies in nine months to get. a drug from a pharmaceutical company onto the market. But they've had this report for six years and haven't done anything. It's like their emphasis is on helping the drug companies and not on actually helping the American population. Well, Secretary Kennedy has for years warned about agency capture by the corporate interests
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Starting point is 01:15:45 that's been dominating the news recently is that the Trump administration has said it's found a link between Tylenol and autism, that if pregnant women take Tylenol, it could lead to neurological problems in the kids, including autism. And this has led to liberal women guzzling bottles of Tylenol on camera,
Starting point is 01:16:03 and I think some have suffered serious adverse effects, actually. But then it turns out Trump didn't just invent this. Tylenol was it treating about it themselves. And Tylenol said, we don't encourage pregnant women to take any of our products, major medical institutions, Harvard, all the rest, the Trade Guild for the obstetricians and gynecologists, who now say Tylenol is totally safe. They previously said that Tylenol had this connection to autism.
Starting point is 01:16:30 Your take? I think it's like I mean this is reminds me of COVID and just the delusion that people have I mean it's like being on the left it's I think they want to associate themselves with being the party of science right
Starting point is 01:16:47 that's and that's it and so if all of a sudden you know Trump is criticizing taking Tylenol I hate Trump he's obviously wrong you know you know this this is safe and I'm going to do this despite him. I'm going to poison my body, potentially my baby, with this medication.
Starting point is 01:17:08 You're right. Of course. That's got to be it. Because if Trump says it, it's unscientific and it's wrong. And then Trump says, no, no, I got it from Harvard and from the obstetricians and gynecologists and from Tylenol. I got it from them. And it's that, I guess, the contempt for Trump, the presumption that he is anti-scientific. Trumps even the scientific credentials of the institutions and the drug manufacturer themselves. Yeah. And while we're on this topic, something that we didn't touch on, which I think is really important, is what the SSRIs actually do to the kids who are exposed to them when the mothers are pregnant. So anywhere between three and ten percent of pregnant women are on SSRIs. Good grief. Yeah. And so these drugs,
Starting point is 01:17:53 they freely cross the placenta. And for a long time, there has been concern about this idea that, okay, what is the impact of exposing a child's brain when it's going from the size of a spec to a fully formed brain in nine months? Like, if they are taking an SSRI that's going to kind of impact the serotonin system, will that lead to changes over time that we should be concerned about? And so there's some pretty frightening research here, and I want to start quickly with the animal research, because you can't do a randomized controlled trial in humans. at this stage where you just randomly assign some pregnant women to this and others. You can do it in mice.
Starting point is 01:18:36 And so they do it in mice. And what they find is that the mice who are exposed in utero and during the sensitive periods of brain development, they grow up to display a higher rate of autistic-like behaviors and decreased sexual activity. And so that is really concerning. The other thing that we found... So hold on. Because everyone's trying to figure out the cause of autism.
Starting point is 01:18:59 Is it merely over-diagnosed? Is it Tylenol? Is it vaccines? Though I had not heard this before, that there might be a link between SSRI use in women and the develop, in pregnant women and the development of autism. Correct. So there is, there is epidemiological evidence. There's the animal studies.
Starting point is 01:19:19 But there are some other studies which also quite, which I'd like to touch. And I was just at the FDA about a month ago. I was talking with Marty McCarie on a full panel about. about this. And we have 12 MRI studies now that show that the children who are exposed to these drugs in utero compared to not, they actually have functional and structural changes on the brain scans when you get the people exposed, the infants exposed and not exposed. They've also gone and looked at this later on when these exposed kids have become teens later on and they find that there's actually changed signaling in the brain in the areas that control emotions.
Starting point is 01:19:58 And that has correlated to worse mental health care outcomes. And so this is obviously worrying from the autism standpoint, but the other part of this is all of the transgender stuff that has been going on lately. I mean, you could say that a lot of this is social contagion. I mean, if you're on the left, you could say, you know, it's just increased acceptance right now. But since the early 90s, I mean, that's when we started putting a lot of of moms on these drugs and based on these animal studies like if these rats are growing up with decreased you know changes in their sexual functioning personally i have also seen men
Starting point is 01:20:39 um who have PSSD who after they have these sexual side effects normal heterosexual men who used to be attracted to women they find that they lose that attraction and they start to question their sexuality i and so i hear these stories and so i also wonder whether there is a link between putting kids while their brains are developing in utero and when they are children and before they have gone through their sexual maturity on these medications which which have profound sexual effects and also impact the brain what is that what is that doing to people is this leading to asexuality is this leading to gender confusion is this leading to the rise in lGBQ i mean i've heard some stats lately that in gen z it's like 25% of them are associating with being lgbtq yeah oh yeah and so that's
Starting point is 01:21:27 reported by liberal media, NBC News, that sort of thing. And so I do think that we need to ask that question. I mean, what is the impact of whether it's three or 10 percent? I've seen two different figures of pregnant women exposing their children to these drugs during development. Well, and also, there is a notable association between autism and the trans identity. Yeah. So even just drawing a link between SSRIs and autism would get you an association with the trans ideology. Yeah. That's terrifying. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:22:01 We've talked a lot about the women. Turning to the men and the boys, they seem to disproportionately like Adderall or be prescribed to Adderall. I've never done an Adderall in my life. Some friends have referred to it as Diet Coke, though I've never been tempted. what is your take on the prescription or over-prescription of Adderall for ADHD or just for people who call them smart pills at college or say they need him to focus at work? Yeah. I think about a story of a friend of mine, his name's Cuba Davis,
Starting point is 01:22:36 and when he was young, he got put on Adderall because he was struggling in school. He ended up taking it throughout college, and then he ended up going into journalism or something like that. Eventually the drug side effects caught up with him and he had to come off the medication. And when he was in his 30s, he realized that he had essentially been drugging himself into a job that he hated. Because off the medications, he's like, I don't want to do this anymore. And so he had to reinvent his life at the age of 30 because he did not want to be on psychiatric medication anymore. And so that's one of the things that I really worry about.
Starting point is 01:23:12 In the US, I feel like we worship at the altar of career success. And for many parents and for many students, that's how I have value. That's the most important thing for me. And they will drug themselves with these medications in order to succeed at that level. And so I worry that they're going to end up in careers that don't actually naturally energize them and inspire them. and they'll end up doing things that they hate. The other thing about this, which this is what all parents should know, is the main effect of taking these stimulants
Starting point is 01:23:50 is really to actually make boring subjects seem more tolerable and for kids to fidget less. When they look at the long-term academic outcomes, now that's what most parents care about. Yeah, yeah. Actual success, it doesn't do that. Real. It does not convert to long-term academic success.
Starting point is 01:24:10 It seems like they're over-prescribed because people want to stop boys from being boys. Yeah. And but listen, I wasn't fidgety. I was good in school. I was always good in school. And so I had friends and classmates who were, who needed to sit down. But it was always on the assumption that, well, if you just get the kid to sit down and pay attention, then he'll get the good grades and go to the good college and get the good job.
Starting point is 01:24:33 You're saying that doesn't happen. No, it just, it kind of sedates them. They become less of a problem for the teachers. the teacher can continue being boring. You know, they can be in a school system that really isn't that exciting to them. And the kid is just kind of, you know, on stimulants, like ultra, you know, chemically focused in just like doing the work. And they're like, okay, that's great.
Starting point is 01:24:55 That's great progress. They're not out there asking questions like, well, why do I think this is so boring? Like, what would actually be more interesting to me? Like, what would energize me and bring me to life? They shut it down with the stimulant. And again, we rob a person of the chance to be like, okay, school's not really for me, but like, I like this. And I'm really interested in this. And this is where my passion is going to be. And they would have done much better if they would just spend 10 years working on that passion. Eventually, you can turn it into a job and a career and something that you love. But yeah, you can use Adderall to just push people through the dysfunctional school system into jobs that they hate. Okay, now I have a related question, but it's a little more personal. I have a lot of friends who are hooked on those nicotine pouches, like heavy doses all day, rocking, you know, 15-milli-lip-pillies, double-decky.
Starting point is 01:25:52 Yeah. Me, I'm not that into it. But I do have one or two pretty regularly. I'll low dose, but I'll toss one in once, once twice, maybe three times a day. Yeah. Is that bad? Is that like the Adderall? Is that diet Adderal?
Starting point is 01:26:07 diet, diet coke. I don't think occasional use is bad when it comes to stimulants. And I'll lump in caffeine as well with this as well. I do a lot more caffeine than I do of the nicotine pouches. In general, nicotine and caffeine in randomized controlled trials, they do increase anxiety and they do impair sleep, especially if you go any more than a, you know, a small cup of coffee like before 10 a.m., something like that. I have three pretty strong coffees a day. So ending at like four people. How do you sleep? Not well. Yeah. I sleep poorly, actually. Which you can tell from my under eye bags. Yeah. So I'll tell a personal story. After my daughter was born, I was working at the FDA, and I was, um, just come out of residency and I, it was a very new job. I was writing reports
Starting point is 01:26:54 all the time. And I was drinking like three cups of coffee a day. And I was also using a lot of, like, a chewing tobacco and like zen. Yeah, okay. All right. That's exactly. Yeah. But every day, not like one occasionally now then like kind of like you know five to eight pouches in my mouth like oh heavily stimmed out wow okay and working yeah yeah um i ended up developing insomnia and i started taking zanax from a nurse practitioner as well and so it kind of like spiraled out of control and then all of a sudden i was taking xanax every day uh for six months and that started to make me worse and then thankfully i was i caught it and i was able to come off at the time now when i stopped drinking coffee and I stopped using so much chewing tobacco, I started sleeping like a teenager.
Starting point is 01:27:40 And so what I would say is for anyone who's having difficulty sleeping, for anyone who feels keyed up and irritable, you know, when they're sitting down with their kids at night and they're reading a book and they're just like, I'm just uncomfortable. I just don't feel relaxed. They don't just feel at ease in my skin. Look at your stimulant use. Now, this is not going to be a blanket. Yes or no. I know lots of people. who can have a cup of coffee a day and some nicotine pouches and they're fine, but there are people who are sensitive to it. And so if you are having these issues, I would recommend come off the stimulants, give it about five weeks or so. You will feel like a potato. You know, you just,
Starting point is 01:28:18 it's really hard to concentrate, like if you've been using a lot of them. I know I felt that way and I went through it. But you make, for me, I came out the other side with much better sleep and a very smooth energy curve. I mean, the big thing that I used to beat myself up on was when I would read to my daughter at night, I'd feel restless, and I'd be like, I can't wait for this to be over. That doesn't happen anymore.
Starting point is 01:28:41 I'm much more grounded and calm because I'm not on this, like, stimulant, like kind of withdrawal roller coaster at the end of the day. I'm glad you brought that up because I actually think caffeine and nicotine can be really overlooked as drivers of anxiety and depression, especially if you're using excessive amounts and it's impacting sleep. Excema is unpredictable, but you can flare less with ebbglis,
Starting point is 01:29:06 a once-monthly treatment for moderate-tissaphyr, after an initial four-month-longer dosing phase, about four and 10 people taking ebbglyss achieved itch relief and clear or almost clear skin at 16 weeks, and most of those people maintain skin that's still more clear at one year with monthly dosing. Ebglis, LBKZ, a 250 milligram per 2-millimeter injection is a prescription medicine used to treat adults and children 12 years of age and older who weigh at least 88 pounds or 40 kilograms with moderate to severe eczema. Also called atopic dermatitis that is not well controlled with prescription therapies used on the skin or topicals or who cannot use topical
Starting point is 01:29:37 therapies. Ebglis can be used with or without topical corticosteroids. Don't use if you're allergic reactions can occur that can be severe. Eye problems can occur. Tell your doctor if you have new or worsening eye problems. You should not receive a live vaccine when treated with Ebbglis. Before starting Ebbglis, tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. Ask your doctor about Ebbglis.com or call 1800 lilyr-R-X or 1-800-545-9-9. This might actually have led me to change my behavior. I went in here thinking, I'm not depressed, I don't really feel anxiety, but I, a little bit with the nicotine and definitely with the coffee. Yeah. All right. And sometimes I get a little restless. I'm reading those books at night, too.
Starting point is 01:30:19 Yeah, well, give me a call. And, you know, if you, if you're just a little bit of the nicotine and, you know, come off it, and it improves, I would love to... I can be a testimonial. Yes, yeah, yeah. My question then is, if all these drugs are so bad, if they not only don't deliver the promises, they say they will, but they actually make patients worse on such a wide scale, why are they so frequently prescribed. Is it just money? Is it just Big Pharma wants to make another buck? Or is there something deeper going on? So I've thought about this a lot. I'm going to hit this at multiple levels,
Starting point is 01:31:02 Michael. The first thing that I'm going to say is that for some people who have overwhelming, complicated problems, they want to believe that they have a chemical problem. They don't want to believe that they have problems that they can actually have agency over. It is reassuring to be like, It's not me. It's not my fault. It is my brain. And we should help those people break down their problems into little steps and guide them out of that. So I think there is a psychological component for some people. Say, if it's something in my life and I have to figure out how to untie this knot, and I can't figure out how to untie this knot, I'm going to be even more despairing than I already am, please just tell me it's the structure of my brain and I can take a happy pill.
Starting point is 01:31:44 Correct. Yeah. That is psychologically a much. much more comfortable place to live in. Yeah. Not my fault, essentially. So, so there's that. And I know we, I touched a little bit on the, on the pharmaceutical industry at the start. People do not realize that when you have a billion dollar industry, and that's what this is, you know, with a big B, you know, they control the whole narrative about this. And so all of the academics at the leading institutions are all running clinical trials for drug companies. That's essentially how you become the head of Harvard, Yale, Baylor, Mount Sinai, any of these places, they are training the next generation of doctors. They are imbueing them with this idea that these are medical problems still,
Starting point is 01:32:29 even though there's no evidence of that. Depression is a medical problem and these drugs are safer and more effective. I think we have really perverted guild interests coming out of the American Psychiatric Association where, you know, psychiatrists, we kind of differentiate ourselves from the other mental health professionals as being the ones who have the drugs. And so our organizations are also very pro-drug as well. And so they overhyped the benefits. They minimize the harms because it makes us look better and feel more important. But the final thing, and this is what I think that a lot of people, they already know this. I'm going to say this, but they've been feeling it for years. the insurance industry.
Starting point is 01:33:11 So doctors are incentivized to see more patients in less time. You make more seeing four people in an hour than you would spending an hour with one person and helping them through their issues. And so when you just have like a family medicine doctor there who's got 15 minutes with you, he spent half the time talking about your cardiovascular health, and then you say you're being depressed, that person has an incentive to get that wrapped up as quickly as possible. I mean, they could ask you about all of those things,
Starting point is 01:33:42 but all of a sudden you're crying, all of a sudden there's a huge emotional load, it gets messy, they don't want to deal with it. So it's so much easier for them to say, well, you've got five out of nine symptoms on this depression rating scale. This means you're depressed. And, you know, I don't want to hear about your problems. But I've got an FDA-approved solution for this. Take the Lexa Pro.
Starting point is 01:34:02 Yeah, I have a 130-T time. So we're going to, but I don't want to leave you with nothing. Yeah. So it's a very clean, efficient way for them to end the visit. And, you know, and I don't want this to sound too hard on doctors because I know they want to help people, but it's just crazy that we've told the American public that they can actually go to their family medicine doctor and expect this person who has no trouble. training in relationships work.
Starting point is 01:34:36 They don't even help you with your physical health. I mean, they're just kind of dishing out statins these days. Yeah. That we even expect them to do this. And so one of the big structural problems in psychiatry, I think, is we need to make coaches more available. So you can go and see a family doctor and they don't feel like, oh, shoot, I have this person in 10 minutes. Here's a script. They go, you know what?
Starting point is 01:35:00 You're having dietary problems. Don't worry. In my office, we've got a dietitian. They're going to sit down with you. You're going to be able to get that taken care of. We have a lifestyle person. You know, we have someone who helps with relationships. We have someone who helps with purpose and meaning. We run groups here, you know, three days a week. You can come at five o'clock. We have a small group. We're doing these sessions where we can really help you over time. We don't need to look for a quick fix. That's the kind of mental health care that we actually, that we need now. Because when you say the word coach, I like, the idea that you're suggesting. When you say the word coach, though, I think of like the scamiest, scusiest guy who calls himself a guru all-around life coach who has the answers to everything and no proof that he's ever learned anything in his life. Correct. But that's not what you're suggesting. You're suggesting, no, no, no, here, we're going to have your dietary counselor.
Starting point is 01:35:53 And they're just going to be kind of focused on that. And we're going to have, I don't know, coaches. But in real fields. Let's just say ex-po. You know. An ex-exec. but someone with training. I don't necessarily think they need to be a registered dietitian or they need to be a licensed psychologist. I think they need to be someone who has training in the area that you are struggling. Well, think about it.
Starting point is 01:36:17 When you go to the doctor, you're dealing with a physician's assistant the whole time anyway. How frequently are you actually talking to the board certified medical doctor? It's for like two seconds every visit. And we do this in every other part of our life too. You don't always need, you know, the gold standard credentialed top person. And in fact, and here is one of the, and this is why, you know, I may seem a little
Starting point is 01:36:39 like kind of foofy because I'm like, oh, you know, coach and, you know, this and that. But I actually think we need to wrestle away personal development from licensed professionals. One of the most effective treatments that we have for addiction is actually AA. And so Alcoholics Anonymous. This is a, you can do a secular version, but traditionally it's a Christian faith based 12 steps. which is essentially a curriculum. You're taking a moral infantry, writing your wrongs, admitting that you're powerless,
Starting point is 01:37:11 handing your life over to something greater than yourself and allowing it to help you change. You do that in unstructured, you do that in group settings peer to peer. A.A. is one of the fastest growing community organizations out there. Many of them are kind of withering away. A.A. is growing. People really like it.
Starting point is 01:37:31 These are not professionals. These are people helping each other who have a good curriculum. And so, you know what's amazing too? I have friends. Yeah. People I've known over the years. Vastly different political views, vastly different ages, vastly different lifestyles. I mean, friends as disparate as you can possibly imagine, religious, all of it.
Starting point is 01:37:54 I've never heard anyone talk smack about AA, and for people who have gone to it, I've only ever heard how much it benefited their lives. totally across the spectrum. And so, I mean, I would like to see us stop relying on professionals for these problems. I would like us to be helping each other in community. I have a close friend called Laura Delano. She has a group called In a Compass right now, and they are doing this kind of work for mental health problems. They are getting people together who are coming off these medications. They are putting them in peer-led groups together.
Starting point is 01:38:31 they've given them a curriculum. She is doing amazing work. And I really think we should be thinking more creatively about how to help people outside of go and see that doctor for 15 minutes. Okay, but hold on. Now, this, I totally agree with you. But this then raises a question that some people aren't going to want to confront, which is, you say, look, we need to stop worrying about all these credential people and focus on what's really working. And look, A.A. is really working. And there's some spinoffs, but it's kind of the OG one, which is really just a kind of practical instantiation of Christian counseling and, well, right. I've thought about this even personally, how I can help some of my depressed friends,
Starting point is 01:39:09 where I can point to all the problems in their life. But I said, ultimately, I think what a lot of it comes down to is they don't want to admit that God exists and wants things for us. And they want a secular version. They want a scientific version. They say, oh, I can never, don't bring your religious mumbo-jumbo in here. And my sneaking suspicion is, if you don't, to some degree, acknowledge God in your life, in the AA way to hand your life over to a higher power, an unnamed higher power,
Starting point is 01:39:48 if you don't in some way do that, you're just not going to get better. Am I overstating it? I need to think about that. I need to think about it more because I think the thing that I love about Christianity and I love about religion is that there is a right and wrong. There is a way to do things. There are the values in there. You know, live a life and service of others. Can you think of, you know, any better timeless advice that has always, you know, led to fulfillment and good relationships and all sorts of, like if you just follow that, all sorts of wonderful things happen into your life, you know, writing your wrongs.
Starting point is 01:40:27 You know, and so I do wonder that I think that we are in a mental health crisis right now because of the loss of religion and because we've lost, you know, timeless, the timeless moral values that have come through religious teaching. I just suspect if I were a, I think if I were an atheist, I would be some form of hedonist. Not, I'm not saying I would necessarily do a bunch of blow and hookers and stuff all day. I'm saying a hedonist or an epicurean at least in the sense that I would just do things that gave me pleasure. Ideally, higher pleasures because I would have the reason to recognize that higher pleasures are a little less destructive than lower pleasures. But I think at the end of it, at some point, if I were those things, at some point I think I would kill myself. because at some point I would become frail,
Starting point is 01:41:21 become injured, become old. Fill it inside. Yeah, at some point I'd just have enough. I'd probably just have had enough of the pleasures, and I'd probably kill myself. Which I think is mortally sinful and very, very terrible. But I don't, without the existence of God and what that means for my place in the cosmos
Starting point is 01:41:40 and how I should behave, I don't see how I would not, at least be inclined toward the end point of depression, which is what we're all talking about. And you'd be right, even statistically, because that's what we find. Hmm. Yeah. You're less likely to be depressed if you grow up in a religious household. I mean, that's what we're saying.
Starting point is 01:42:05 That makes sense. But imagine, you know, you're a psychologist. Like, if I were a psychologist, I'd probably give roughly the same advice to all of my patients. Imagine that. Some people would freak out, you need God in your life. You need God. Like you're some radical. Yeah. The thing that every wise person has said for all of human history. And every peasant statistically is said probably for all of history. Like you need God. You need like good is to be done and pursued and evil avoided. Like kind of you should live in an ordered way. Kind of basic stuff. Yep. But if you could a psychologist get away with that now? The patient comes in. Oh, Doc. They get report. They'd get reported, they'd lose their license probably. Yeah, they would get reported, they would get, you know, negative reviews. This person's pushing their ideology on me, this white male psychologist, conservative, you know, they are coming after, yeah.
Starting point is 01:43:00 They would come after you. The main thing that can help you, you're not allowed to encourage. I know, it's so crazy because we know how effective AA is, but therapy is, they are so agnostic from all of that. And you've put your finger on what I think is one of the biggest problems. I think is one of the biggest problems in the mental health industry is that lack of direction. They, they, in a guise to be accepting and all of that, they have completely removed any moral teaching from, from therapy. It's, what do you think? You know, what makes sense for you and your world and your family and all of that? Yeah. Yeah. Because this would, this would be one reason why I
Starting point is 01:43:37 would hesitate to go to a psychologist. If I felt great psychiatric stress, which, which I don't happily, But if I did, plenty of people do, I would be reluctant to go to a psychologist because of the value neutrality of it. In a secular culture, in order to have confidence that someone can give me the advice needed to improve my life, I need to know that they have a proper conception of what is good and what is bad. That is the most basic thing that they need to have. And the way that the system is set up, generally speaking, I have no way of knowing if that's true. No, no, you don't.
Starting point is 01:44:17 And they don't even want to mention it on their websites, you know, because they're going to freak some people out or make them feel, you know, nervous. But you're right. I mean, good and bad is important. And have you fixed the actual problem that I'm having? You have no way of knowing that either. And the thing that surprises people is most of these therapists that come out, they've been trained in cognitive behavioral therapy.
Starting point is 01:44:38 It's just essentially a manual that teaches people to reflect on their thoughts. There's nothing practical in these major areas of your life. It's a sad state. Rather than just reflect on your relationships. Like, hey, leave your alcoholic pervert boyfriend. How about you just do that? Your life's going to improve 800%. You do that.
Starting point is 01:45:03 Sorry to be judgy. They'd be like, no, you have to let the patient discover it for themselves. To ask open-ended questions, and maybe they will fall upon that truth in a couple of years. Yeah, yeah. Do you think you should leave your alcoholic-verbed boyfriend? I don't know. I would be a very bad psychologist. And they're like, you don't want to enforce your views on them, you know. He's like, well, what am I here? What are they paying me for? I know. Yeah. What are they paying me for my views? Aren't? No, maybe not. Because I guess there's this pretense that, you know, okay, in religion or in philosophy or in coaching even. Yeah. That's, you know, that's got values. That's got a point of view. That's loaded.
Starting point is 01:45:41 prejudiced. Yes. But therapy is neutral. Therapy is scientific and therefore it's totally neutral and outside the realm of value judgments. Correct. Yeah. Which is obvious, not only false, but absurd, absurd because it's impossible. Yeah. And it doesn't work. And we know a lot of these other things work. We've seen it in AA. We see it bearing out in the statistics that why are people who are brought up in religious households happier? You know, what is it about? that. What is it about their relationships and the way that they live their life and work? Do you think you could learn from that and bring some of that into therapy? But they don't. It's because it comes from academia. It comes from these colleges and these institutions,
Starting point is 01:46:28 and they are allergic to that. So can psychology be reformed? You know, this is a question that comes up with the academic institutions. Can they be reformed? Do they have to be bulldozed do we need to start again? Is there a way to reform the APA and the way that psychology is practiced? Or no, do we need an alternative? I think it is being reformed. Let me speak to psychiatry right now because recently we're having some really big changes going on. So right now, the, we've been able, pharmaceutical companies have been able to direct to consumer advertising since the 80s. And now the Trump administration
Starting point is 01:47:20 with Secretary Kennedy, they are putting new rules there or rolling back exemptions to it where essentially they have to list all of the risks with the medications on the ads, which will essentially make it impossible to do these big broadcast ads because the risk...
Starting point is 01:47:35 You only get 30 seconds. You only get 30 seconds. The risks are too much. So we're going to get back the media, right? And so that's going to... Because right now the media doesn't report on these things because they don't want to upset their advertisers.
Starting point is 01:47:46 And so I think we are going to get the media back from those money to interest. Well, that's a great point that actually might be lost on some people, because it only occurred to me just now anyway. When you're watching the nightly news and they advertise some depression drug on there, the question is not merely does the pharma company have the right to advertise at all? It's also how does the fact that the news is supported by the pharma company change the way that the news itself is reported? Obviously. I'm glad you brought that up and and and it is a good point to emphasize. Yes, there is a reason that you know, editors aren't covering this stuff. This, the story comes across their desk and they go, do I really want to run this story that has a negative perspective of this drug when I'm making, you know, several million dollars from the manufacturer here? Right. Aren't they just going to take their,
Starting point is 01:48:39 their ad spend and go to some other company? I don't want to have to fire people. I don't want to have to let people go. And so, yes, that's exactly what's happening. And so when that ends, I think people are going to, one, they're going to hear about the risks of these medications. They're not going to get such a lopsided view. And I hope we actually have, and people aren't going to like me for saying this, a much smaller pharmaceutical industry. I think jobs need to be lost. I think there needs to be less of an incentive to shove these drugs down the throat of Americans and things like that. I think we need less of that.
Starting point is 01:49:12 if the pharmaceutical industry shrinks, their influence over medicine, over the American Psychiatric Association, all of that, will lessen. And I think that will trickle down into practice. I mean, when you lop off the head of the biggest negative influence in the space, which is the pharmaceutical company, I think the downstream effects will lead to, you know, much more balanced correct mental health care. And even for those who would object and say, well, that would have a negative effect on jobs in America or GDP in America. I would say, well, you know, GDP is not all the same. Jobs are not all the same. And so wouldn't it be better to put American resources toward building things, innovating, rather than frying the brains of menopausal women? Yeah. I was just going to say that. Yeah. Should we measure the success of a country over the fact that we, yeah, we don't have, you know, over a fifth of people taking these medications, right? Wouldn't that? Wouldn't that be a wonderful thing? Right.
Starting point is 01:50:12 Yeah. And that we're not having, you know, one out of 216 men on these drugs, essentially with sexual dysfunction and all of the problems that go on with that. I mean, that's so dark. It's so evil. Dr. Yosef, if you had started the show just with, just with the warning that this high number of men who take the SSRIs will have lifelong sexual dysfunction,
Starting point is 01:50:37 I think we could have persuaded at least half the country not to take these drugs in about 15 seconds rather than an hour and a half. In any case, marvelous to hear all of this, really, really important perspective. And thank you for hopefully helping to fix the minds and spirits of many, many Americans. Thank you for having me, Michael. Not loving your AT&T or T Mobile Bill? Yeah, we've been hearing that a lot. Good news. Bring your AT&T or T Mobile Bill to Verizon and we'll give you a better deal.
Starting point is 01:51:10 So get away from that unfortunate phone bill and get to Verizon. Run, ride, canoe. Whatever it takes, we'll be here. Bring your AT&T or T mobile bill to a Verizon store today and we'll give you a better deal on the best network. A better deal. No surprises. That's Verizon.
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