Saturday, November 7, 2020

Crazy Chisholm

Frederick R Smith has moved to Frederick R. Smith Speaks (substack.com)

George Brock Chisholm (1896-1971) was born in Oakville, Ontario and he joined the Canadian Army’s 15th battalion during the First World War. He served as a cook, sniper, machine gunner, and scout, and his leadership skills and calm demeanor under pressure brought him honor, including a Military Cross for heroism at a battle in France. In 1917, he returned to Canada a legend, and at this point, he decided to pursue medicine, which had been his passion since he was a child. His fascination with human emotion brought him to prominence during World War II.

Chisholm earned an M.D. from The University of Toronto and he specialized in psychiatry during an internship in England. After working six years as a general practitioner, in 1931 he studied at the Yale School of Human Relations where he focused on the mental health of children. He concluded that:

“Children must be free to think in all directions irrespective of the peculiar ideas of parents who often seal their children’s minds with preconceived prejudices and false concepts of past generations. Unless we are very careful, very careful indeed, and very conscientious, there is still great danger that our children may turn out to be the same kind of people we are.” [1]

After his Yale studies, Chisholm returned to the Canadian military to study the psychological aspects of soldier training in the Second World War. He quickly rose to the post of Director General of the Medical Services of the Canadian Army. In 1940, leading British psychiatrist John Rawlings Rees and Chisholm co-founded the World Federation of Mental Health (WFMH). Chisholm proclaimed that their goal was the “The reinterpretation and eventually eradication of the concept of right and wrong” [2] and declared that “If the race is to be freed from its crippling burden of good and evil it must be psychiatrists who take the original responsibility.” [3] In 1944 the Canadian Government appointed Chisholm to the post of the newly created Deputy Minister of Health. In 1945, Chisholm told the American Psychiatric Association:

“We have swallowed all manner of poisonous certainties fed us by our parents, our Sunday and day school teachers, our politicians, our priests, our newspapers and others with a vested interest in controlling us.... The results... frustration, inferiority, neurosis and inability to enjoy living, to reason clearly or to make a world fit to live in.” He urged psychologists and psychiatrists to become leaders in the “planned development of a new kind of human being” and added: “Without the extensive help of psychologists and psychiatrists it is quite probable that mankind will not long survive the fearful changes which are taking place.” [4]

Chisholm is one of many of the founding fathers of modern psychology. The psychiatric leaders (sic) wish to re-educate the population using mind games to create a new breed of amoral people. Their goal — a worldwide socialist order. With respect to part one, they have succeeded, as Bill Clinton is the quintessential example of amorality. With respect to part two, their weapon is holding the threat of incarceration in mental facilities for those who do not go along with their concept of socialist world order.

Throughout his career, Chisholm was obsessed with the concept of right and wrong. He also disdained the concepts of love of country and parental morality instilled in children. He proposed that psychotherapy work to eradicate the concept that man has the right to defend his own private property. Specifically, in the February 1946 edition of Psychiatry he wrote:

There must be an opportunity to live reasonably comfortable for all the people in the world on economic levels which do not vary too widely either geographically or by groups within a population. This is a simple matter of redistribution of material wealth… Even self-defense may involve a neurotic reaction when it means defending one’s own excessive wealth from others who are in need.  [5]

There we have it. At least Chisholm was honest about what he really wanted — comprehensive overarching socialism. This ilk may have good intentions, as they genuinely want that everybody has most things handed to them. The problem is that socialism has never worked, and it never will work. If everybody has an assurance that all needs will be met, then who will have the desire to work toward a goal to produce the things that everybody needs? Collectivism leads to slavery to produce the necessities of life. This concept also explains why the socialist governments of Canada, England and Australia have made it illegal for men to defend their property (i.e., gun elimination). Look out USA! In November 2020 we are well on the path to the same horrors. Everybody will be equal, but equally miserable, except for our leaders (sic). 

Chisholm and his associates have been working diligently for a worldwide socialistic system and their prime instrument is the United Nations. So, Chisholm found his way to become the leader of the World Health Organization, an organ of the United Nations.

In the typical left-wing smear move, the Wikipedia website says that “Religious and other conservative writers and groups have accused Chisholm of being a Marxist or a Communist or subversive.” Well the facts sure confirm that assertion!

For the one closing overarching question: of the elite who espouse equal distribution, how many are in the upper stratosphere of wealth and possession? Plenty.

  1. Your Dictionary
  2. Wikiquote reference to “The Psychiatry of Enduring Peace and Social Progress,” 1946 pg. 5
  3. AZ Quotes
  4. Harvard Square Library
  5. None Dare Call It Treason 25 Years Later pg. 221, reference to Psychiatry, Feb. 1946
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Author and Publisher, Frederick R. Smith
Editor, Sean Tinney 

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