The way the Texas project works is that any teacher, police officer, or city official can report you for 'mentally ill behavior' and the white suits will show up at your door for a test. The small tests they do in your living room, but if they think your ill, they will take you away for larger tests and observation. My brother has five kids and they all had to be checked out by a psychologist before they could attend public school. They were previously home-schooled. They all passed, but some of the kids around here don't.
One of my nephew's friends was rather rowdy and was diagnosed with ADD. The suits put him on Ritalin. Then he really started acting crazy. Cutting himself up, nausea, narcolepsy, etc. His mother looked up a few sites that list the dangers of Ritalin and pulled him off. He mentioned it to his friends and by the end of the day he was in state custody. His mother had to sign a paper that she would give him the medication, and she got him back. The local police show up when it's time for him to take the meds to keep track. She split for Canada a month ago and no one knows where either of them are at.
no subject
http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/328/7454/1458
The way the Texas project works is that any teacher, police officer, or city official can report you for 'mentally ill behavior' and the white suits will show up at your door for a test. The small tests they do in your living room, but if they think your ill, they will take you away for larger tests and observation. My brother has five kids and they all had to be checked out by a psychologist before they could attend public school. They were previously home-schooled. They all passed, but some of the kids around here don't.
One of my nephew's friends was rather rowdy and was diagnosed with ADD. The suits put him on Ritalin. Then he really started acting crazy. Cutting himself up, nausea, narcolepsy, etc. His mother looked up a few sites that list the dangers of Ritalin and pulled him off. He mentioned it to his friends and by the end of the day he was in state custody. His mother had to sign a paper that she would give him the medication, and she got him back. The local police show up when it's time for him to take the meds to keep track. She split for Canada a month ago and no one knows where either of them are at.