
by James A. Bacon
Mental-health advocates in Virginia are making the case for more money for… what else? … mental health. An article by Radio IQ illuminates a disturbing example (I find it disturbing, not Radio IQ) of how the alleged need for mental- health services expands relentlessly to cover ever more of life’s travails.
Now activists are pushing the idea that people should be able to call upon mental-health professionals — often at public expense — for help in dealing with one of humankind’s most ancient and universal of emotions: grief.
Voices for Virginia’s Children, a nonprofit advocacy group, held a press conference earlier this week, in which CEO Rachael Dean acknowledged that Governor Glenn Youngkin’s “Right Help, Right Now” program implemented in 2022 “made some improvements in the mental health space,” as Radio IQ put it, but Virginia’s children need more help in schools.
The story was told of Marcus Lynch, a track star, father and husband who struggled with mental health issues after the death of his father. When Marcus was murdered in 2022, his wife Amanda turned to the care and support of their surviving children.
โGrief is an injury to the heart, mind, body and nervous system. And like any injury, it requires specialized care,” Lynch said. “Yet funding for these essential programs remains limited.”
Death and grief are human universals. Every culture in the history of mankind has developed means to deal with them: usually family, faith, and friends. No need for “specialized care.” Only in modern-day America does anyone see the need to professionalize, institutionalize, and fund with tax dollars the means to help people cope with inevitable life tragedies.
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