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Defaming The Royals? New Documentary Cuts Claims About Prince Harry's 'Mental Health'...

By Nikki Schuster Jul. 6 2021, Published 10:54 a.m. ET

Source: OK

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Thomas Szasz would agree, with Prince William, that mental health / psychiatry is often used to defame people as a tool typically to force those patients not willing to go along with what he calls the science of lies. Defaming is used in many other ways inside and outside of psychiatry and medicine.


As Christians we understand science as well as medicine and psychiatry, its branches, to be based in the non-traditional religion of paganism by many means but significantly through the use of the scientific method used by astronomers to study the stars and celestial entities they worshiped, including Greeks and Romans from Hermes, where the highly used symbol for western medicine comes from, to Zesus. Furthermore, psychiatry / mental health has no basis in the scientific method and has no test or method of proving nor discovering illness. This branch of medicine relies on subjectivity, the metaphorical, disease discovery and other non-scientific methods and means like subjective voting with little consensus unlike other 'sciences' that at least attempt to chart and offer some type of scientific based test.


With the prevalence of such baseless subjectivity, defaming individuals is easy and common place. As Christians we believe that their are things that simply will and have always been apart of the human condition before the establishment of modern western medicine as we know it. We believe that God is the source of the healing process, which is both spiritual and physical. Not merely physical as non-traditional pagan religions believe such as science and medicine - again rooted in astronomy. Human conditions like shyness and emotions associated with the loss of a loved one.

 

Defaming The Royals? New Documentary Cuts Claims About Prince Harry's 'Mental Health' After Prince William Reportedly Intervenes


By:Nikki Schuster Jul. 6 2021, Published 10:54 a.m. ET

Just hours before ITV aired their primetime documentary Harry and William: What Went Wrong? in the U.K. on Sunday, July 4, the network cut out claims from the program alleging that Prince William and his staff planted stories about Prince Harry's mental health, according to a new report. Kensington Palace allegedly reached out to the network in relation to a "number" of details, with the Palace reportedly warning producers that a potentially defamatory claim was made. The claim in question was made by Omid Scobie, Harry and Meghan Markle's biographer, who suggested palace sources briefed the press on William's apparent "concern" over his brother's mental health following the Duke and Duchess of Sussex' 2019 interview with journalist Tom Bradby. During the interview, 36-year-old Harry publicly spoke about the brothers' rift for the first time. Shortly after, royal insiders bashed Bradby's line of questioning because they felt it was inappropriate, adding that William was apparently in pain and concerned to see Harry so upset. In the show, Scobie (author of Finding Freedom: Harry and Meghan and the Making of a Modern Royal Family) said: “I would say that it was no coincidence that it was shortly after that aired, even the next day, there were source quotes that came from a senior aide at Kensington Palace saying that William was worried about his brother’s mental health," per Daily Beast. Kensington Palace insisted Scobie had no evidence to support his suggestion of William's thoughts on Harry's "mental health" (even though the 39-year-old royal may have had concerns for his brother's overall happiness), according to Daily Mail, noting it would be defamatory if the claim about his mental wellbeing made it to air.

In light of the Palace's apparent warning and ITV '"carefully considering" their request, the network chose to remove any reference to mental health in the documentary. Harry's interview with Bradby was shown in the original 2019 ITV documentary — which was filmed in Africa during the couple's last official tour with the Royal family. During their candid talk, Harry told the journalist that he and the Duke of Cambridge don't see each other as much as they used to, but they "will always be brothers" even though they're "certainly on different paths." Meanwhile, Meghan — who welcomed the couple's second child together, daughter Lilibet Diana, last month — insisted the royal household failed to support her, a claim she later doubled down on when talking to Oprah Winfrey in March.

At the time of the couple's sit down with the talk show titan, OK! reported that Meghan opened up about her “very clear and very scary” suicidal thoughts while being a working member of the royal family. According to Meghan, 39, she asked The Firm for help with her mental health struggles but they refused, as it would be a bad look for the royal family.


Did you pagans consider themselves religious (non-traditional religion)? Did you know science and medicine is apart of a pagan religion? What is your religious belief? Have you put another God before your God?



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