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Wed Oct 15 2008
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Columns
Molly Ivins
Mental Issues
January 10, 2002
AUSTIN -- And a happy New Year to all the friendly folks at the
Henry Cisneros' special prosecutor's office, now coming up on its seventh
year. Cisneros, who left office five ago as Clinton's housing secretary, is
back in San Antonio doing good works in the area of affordable housing. But
his special prosecutor David Barrett, like Ol' Man River, he just keeps
rolling along.
Cisneros, having long since pleaded to a misdemeanor and paid a
$10,000 fine, is no longer a target of investigation, but Barrett is
reportedly still investigating someone who did or did not tell him something
about Cisneros. It's bound to be a high crime, since the entire flap was
over whether Cisneros had lied to the FBI -- not about whether he had given
money to his ex-mistress (an affair that was both over and public knowledge
well before Cisneros ever went to Washington) -- but about how much he had
paid her.
So the moral here is: Don't ever lie to the FBI about how much
you have paid an ex-mistress, even if it's common knowledge that you have
done so. The Cisneros special prosecutor costs the taxpayers over $2 million
a year and is no doubt worth every penny.
The special prosecutor law is now dead, too, Congress having
realized that it had created a Frankenstein monster -- but there is no way
to kill off Barrett's office.
In another revolting development, Andrea Yates -- the Houston
mother who drowned her five children in the bathtub -- is the poster woman
for a long-needed change in the law. Harris County District Attorney Chuck
Rosenthal is now indicating that he may not seek the death penalty after
all, but will go for a life sentence in exchange for a guilty plea.
This woman needs to be put in a mental hospital, not put to
death or in prison for life. She's clearly insane -- almost as insane as the
Texas criminal justice system. Yates has pleaded not guilty by reason of
insanity. Well, she's guilty. She killed her five kids and then called the
police to report that she'd done it. Nothing can make her not guilty of that
hideous act, but she is not a responsible person. The system needs a plea of
"guilty but insane." Insanity is not cured by putting people in a Texas
prison. It's not good for those with mental health problems.
What are we saying by prosecuting this woman? That we don't
think there is such a thing as mental illness? Exactly how benighted do we
want to prove we are in the year 2002? Yates had a history of post-partum
psychotic depression and had tried to kill herself twice. In 1999, when she
had four children, doctors told her and her husband she should not have
another because of the psychosis.
Two weeks before the murders, she was taken off anti-psychotic
medication and put on anti-depressants. She went downhill, and her husband
begged her doctors to put her back on the stronger meds. She was described
as being in a "zombie-like state" at the beginning of her incarceration and
has since been put back on Haldol, the anti-psychotic often prescribed for
those who hear voices or are thinking delusionally.
Do people think she would be "getting away" with murder?" Do
they think she's faking her illness? What possible solution to this tragedy
can be offered by the criminal "justice" system?
While the Yates trial plays itself out, a new film about mental
illness, "A Beautiful Mind" starring Russell Crowe, is having an
extraordinary impact on those who see it. It is a biography of John Forbes
Nash Jr., who won the Nobel Prize in physics in 1994 for work he had done as
young man before paranoid schizophrenia cost him about 30 years of his life.
For a long period, Nash was the "town nut" in Princeton, N.J., a
demented character familiar to everyone. Nash, extraordinarily enough,
recovered from schizophrenia, which is quite rare.
I have no idea whether Yates will ever recover -- certainly not
from having murdered her own children. But Yates is not the one facing a
test, this society is. Can we do no better than the superstitious medieval
tradition of burning the witch at the stake?
To find out more about Molly Ivins and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web
page at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2002 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
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Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008 
Molly Ivins
"What the hell will they do to us next?" December 26, 2002
"Feed the hungry" December 24, 2002
"Book Recommendations" December 19, 2002
"New Bush Team" December 13, 2002
"The old war criminal" December 10, 2002
"Justice" November 28, 2002
"Total Information Awareness" November 21, 2002
"Blast from the past" November 19, 2002
"Rehnquist in hot water" November 12, 2002
"Electoral defeat" November 7, 2002
"Reforming the accounting industry" November 5, 2002
"New records for chutzpah daily" October 31, 2002
"Wellstone Memorial" October 29, 2002
"Texas two-step" October 24, 2002
"Anti-women decisions" October 22, 2002
"Stomach ailments" October 17, 2002
"Bad Manners" October 15, 2002
"Multi-causational" October 10, 2002
"Sick, sad tidings" October 8, 2002
"After action reviews" October 3, 2002
"The far, far left" October 1, 2002
"Capitalism" September 26, 2002
"Iraq agrees" September 18, 2002
"Billie Carr" September 17, 2002
"The Millionaire Protection Agreement" September 12, 2002
"Write Off" September 10, 2002
"Saber rattling" September 5, 2002
"Saddam and the Dick" September 4, 2002
"Kickbacks and Iraq" August 29, 2002
"Hypocrisy" August 27, 2002
"Hawks and Doves" August 22, 2002
"More Problems - Enron and the government" August 20, 2002
"By how much don't they get it?" August 15, 2002
"A perfectly glorious political year in Texas" August 6, 2002
"Reforming Corporate America" July 25, 2002
"WorldCom" July 24, 2002
"Take your "we" and shove it." July 18, 2002
"Corporate Malfesance" July 11, 2002
"Peace is better than war" June 25, 2002
"Democrats in Texas" June 18, 2002
"Texas state Republican convention" June 12, 2002
"Speak the vocabulary of consumer protection" June 12, 2002
"Connect the dots" June 6, 2002
"Cheney-Halliburton connection" June 6, 2002
"Global Warming" June 4, 2002
"I told you so" May 30, 2002
"Is there anybody in this business who is not a crook?" May 21, 2002
"How inept can he get?" May 16, 2002
"Murders in Mexico" May 16, 2002
"Loss of the womanly qualities" May 9, 2002
"A Flying Fig" May 9, 2002
"Terrorism and Israel" May 2, 2002
"The Bushies" April 30, 2002
"Border Law and an Alcoholic Goat" April 24, 2002
"More News and Commentary" April 21, 2002
"Tax Code Woes" April 15, 2002
"Where are the Democrats?" April 15, 2002
"Going downhill" April 9, 2002
"One Giant Texas" April 4, 2002
"Health Care Stupidity" March 26, 2002
"Marching Backwards" March 21, 2002
"Texas? Mercy? Athur Andersen." March 19, 2002
"Celebrity Boxing " March 14, 2002
"Dr. Strangelove" March 12, 2002
"Splendid Primary Season" March 5, 2002
"The Invisible Government" March 3, 2002
"Another Bad Idea" February 28, 2002
"A Thoroughly Bad Idea" February 20, 2002
"Some Megatrend" February 20, 2002
"Contemporary campaign finance reform" February 14, 2002
"Taxes, Inequality and Corporations" February 12, 2002
"Problems and Political Donations" February 7, 2002
"Internal Contradictions" February 6, 2002
"The Government and Business" January 31, 2002
"Enron, Enron, Enron" January 29, 2002
"Prisoners and World Trade" January 24, 2002
"Examining Welfare and Government Spending" January 15, 2002
"Mental Issues" January 10, 2002
"Gray, the Budget, and Economic Stimulus " January 8, 2002
"A New Season" January 3, 2002
"What do you do when the money leaves?" January 2, 2002
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