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Drugs
vs. personal responsibility 
“Destroy the mind and you can leave the soul to be conquered.” - Our Lady of the Roses, March 25, 1972
Pope
Pius XII lamented years ago that the worst sin of the 20th Century
was that it had lost all sense of sin. His statement was made decades ago, but
is even more relevant today. Through the effects of slick media propaganda we as
a nation have been drifting further and further into a foggy area of
rationalizations and pseudo-science.
We
are all aware of the illegal drug abuse in our country and in the world,
but what about the legal drug abuse perpetrated in our schools,
institutions and homes? An
atheistic, pseudo-scientific fable has been used to promote drug abuse and to
explain away what is more properly understood as “sin” and “evil.” James
Q. Wilson, Collins Professor of Management and Political Science at UCLA,
writes:
... even now, when the dangers of drug abuse are well understood, many educated people still discuss the drug problem in almost every way except the right way. They talk about the "costs" of drug use and the "socioeconomic factors" that shape that use. They rarely speak plainly--drug use is wrong because it is immoral and it is immoral because it enslaves the mind and destroys the soul. It is as if it were a mark of sophistication for us to shun the language of morality in discussing the problems of mankind.
Mislabeling personal sin and irresponsibility as "disease"
As
Daniel Duke laments, “Finding someone or something to blame for social
problems has emerged as a full-time occupation for a host of social scientists.
The recent history of research in the social sciences has witnessed the
unrelenting depersonalization of blame.”[1]
He writes that school discipline problems are shifted to other factors
for reasons that are often politically expedient.
Garth Wood's views are quite similar: “It has become the fashion of
late to consider that the development of an unsatisfactory personality should
carry with it no implications of blame [and] should not occasion feelings of
guilt…”[2]
The
United States Congress declared the 1990s to be the “Decade of the Brain,”
yet another sign of our country’s preoccupation with the material rather than
the spiritual: 
In reality, the Decade of the Brain theme epitomizes the problem in America: materialism. Not just materialism in the ordinary sense of the preoccupation with owning wealth and valuable physical objects. The Decade of the Brain is actually a time of moral and philosophical materialism, for psychiatry has convinced a great portion of the public that psychosocial and spiritual suffering has no psychological or spiritual meaning whatsoever but emanates instead from abnormalities in the physiology of the brain.[3]
In
our post-Christian and pagan society, the idea of personal sin and
responsibility has been progressively fading from view.
What concepts have replaced sin in America?
Genetics and brain disease. This new and pseudo-scientific view has been
popularized by a field called biopsychiatry, in collusion with many drug
companies such as Eli Lilly.
Stanton
Peele, in his book The Diseasing of
America, writes “how our society is going wrong in excusing crime,
compelling people to undergo treatment, and wildly mixing up moral
responsibility with disease diagnosis.”[4]
What exactly does he mean by this? He means that if man is merely “a
bundle of impulses and traumas, he can be absolved of guilt and responsibility
for his actions.”[5]
If man is merely matter in motion with no immortal spiritual soul, and
genetics and “biochemical imbalances” determine behavior, the idea of
responsibility would be meaningless. But such a reductionist view is clearly
against reality and Church teaching.
Mr. Peele points out that our understanding of responsibility is of the utmost importance:
At stake here is not so much science as the age-old debate over the nature of man and whether or not he is a free moral actor exercising an autonomous will. The idea that man should be held accountable for his choices implies such a free will.[6]
As the understanding of personal responsibility has been so entirely emptied of meaning, many courtrooms have consequently been turned into travesties of justice:
Inevitably, the repeal of personal responsibility has undermined society’s ability to call wrongdoers to account for their behavior. In the criminal courts, where the illness excuse has become the sine qua non of a sophisticated defense, the extent of this sea change is depressingly obvious. From Michael Deaver (alcoholism) to John W. Hinckley (insanity) to San Francisco Supervisor Dan White (Twinkies) to murderer Robert Alton Harris (fetal alcohol syndrome), our therapeutic culture has an explanation and a defense at hand. Although the nuances and intonations differ, the plaintive cry is always the same: I am not at fault. [Fill in the Blank] made me do it.[7]
The Church and personal responsibility
The Church is very clear in her teaching regarding free will and the nature of human responsibility. Notably:
The position taken by the Holy Office and that stated by Pius XII in his address on the education of Christian conscience[8] and in the address to psychotherapists[9] have clarified one limit beyond which speculation as to human responsibility cannot go without deviating from traditional Catholic doctrine. Normal human beings—normal being understood as signifying not ideally normal, or perfectly healthy persons, but the common run of men—under ordinary circumstance (including circumstances of temptation, stress, and pressure) possess sufficient freedom to be capable of sin and indeed, of mortal sin.[10]
Drug use magnifies
helplessness 
Dr. Peter Breggin, a best-selling author and practicing psychiatrist, has successfully treated many people who were railroaded into taking drugs to solve their problems. He has enabled many to understand that the taking of such drugs as Ritalin and Prozac has failed to address the personal conflicts in these people’s lives. Dr. Breggin's tells us that from his experience that:
To the extent that individuals believe they have “mental disorders” or “brain diseases” that are causing their emotional suffering, they become dependent on experts rather than upon themselves for the “cure.” They are further stigmatized by being told they need to take their psychoactive (mind-altering) drugs to “make them normal.” The process of psychiatric diagnosing and treatment often actually magnifies the patient’s feelings of helplessness and futility rather than empowering the patient to personally overcome them.[11]
R.C.
Lewontin, in his book Not in Our Genes, states that “The massive
utilization of psychotropics is part of the mechanism of adjusting the
individual to the status quo, of hyping, sedating, or tranquilizing the
emotions.”[12]
Drug use has increasingly become a means to adapt to stress and social
conditions, as well as to control others.
As
British author and parliamentarian John Buchan wrote in the 1930s, “It is when
a people loses its self-confidence that it surrenders its soul to a dictator or
an oligarchy. In Mr. Walter Lippman’s tremendous metaphor, it welcomes
manacles to prevent its hands from shaking.”[13]
In widespread practice, America has accepted drugs as a chemical security blanket.
The
amazing Bayside Prophecies...
These prophecies came from Jesus, Mary, and the saints to Veronica
Lueken at Bayside, NY, from 1968 to 1995.
LOSS
OF FREE WILL
"Little by little, through the years, man has orientated and made the human
being in his mind, with his loss of free will through drugs and brainwashing
through other mediums, man has now been reduced to almost a robot state.*
"Do not, My
children, be deceived by the father of liars, and his deception in raising up
armies that gather under the banner of communism, atheism, satanism,
agnosticism. And while they work both day and night to gather the powers and the
arsenals to enslave your country and the world, what do you do? You are like
children going through the fields picking daisies, tripping along merrily, high
on your way of life; your drugs and your alcohol and your dreams created by
false mediums." Jesus, April 2, 1977
* "The robotic effect that makes children temporarily more obedient and compliant is the result of drug-induced brain malfunction." (Dr. Peter R. Breggin,Talking Back to Ritalin: What Doctors Aren't Telling You About Stimulants for Children, 106)
DRUGS
ARE A PLAGUE
Veronica - The enemies of God, the conspiracy of evil in this country and
throughout the world now, this group of the octopus that is reaching out in
every direction to destroy our country, the United States of America, and many
countries now throughout the world, they cannot be labeled alone as communism,
Our Lady said. Their atheism is far greater and more involved than just those
small arms. Drugs are a plague, and the greatest plague for this country will
be the continued acceleration of witchcraft and satanism.
Christians, all Christians at this time, Jesus
said, must unite against the common enemy of God. December 7, 1977
SORCERY,
DRUGS, WITCHCRAFT
"Lucifer was cast from Heaven, but he retained much knowledge. He is the
father of all liars. He is and was and still is a murderer and a promoter of
murder. He will reverse the nature of the Christian if he can. He will have
you create a monster while searching for scientific knowledge of the creation
of life.
"He will
promote in mankind a form of insanity, for sin is insanity. Man will descend
to the level of the animal, degrading his body, committing murder,
extermination of the elderly, extermination of the ill, destruction of the
youth. Sorcery, drugs, witchcraft, My children. And don't laugh now: the
snickers will be your downfall. Witchcraft is here now upon earth. It is no
farce; it is no story; it is a fact. For it is diabolical, and the coming
forth of demons." Jesus, February 10, 1978
Directives from Heaven... http://www.tldm.org/directives/directives.htm
D89
- Sin
PDF
D92
-
Free will
PDF
D141
-
Responsibility
PDF
D142
-
Sin of Omission
PDF
D166
-
Drugs
PDF
D205 -
Sin is insanity
PDF
Links...
The Peril and Tragedy of Drug Solutions
Ritalin: Violence against boys Massachusetts News
Peter Breggin responds to the AMA on Ritalin
Testimony Before the Subcommittee Investigating Ritalin
Teen says antidepressants led to slayings, My Way
News, December 4, 2004
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20041204/D86P2IH01.html
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[1]
Daniel Duke, “Student Behavior, the Depersonalization of Blame and the
Society of Victims,”; see Keith Baker and Robert Rubel, eds., Violence
and Crime in the Schools (Lexington, Mass.: D.C. Heath, 1980), 31-47.
[2] Garth Wood, The Myth of Neurosis, 41-42.
[3]
Dr. Peter R. Breggin, Reclaiming our Children: A Healing Plan for a
Nation in Crisis, 20.
[4] Stanton Peele,
The Diseasing of America, (Lexington, Mass.: Lexington Books, 1989),
5.
[5] ibid., 147.
[6] Ibid., 146.
[7] Sykes,
Charles J. A
Nation of Victims: The Decay of the American Character (New York: St.
Martin’s Press, 1992), 144.
[8] AAS
44 (1952) 270-278.
[9] AAS
(1953) 278-286.
[10] Catholic Encyclopedia, “Responsibility,” 397.
[11] Breggin, Reclaiming
Our Children, 27.
[12] R.C. Lewontin, Steven
Rose, and Leon J. Kamin, Not in Our Genes: Biology, Ideology, and Human
Nature, 175.
[13]
Sykes, Charles J. A Nation of Victims: The Decay of the American Character, 160.