Thursday, February 18, 2016

We don't need to focus on creating a bank or computers to establish a mental illness bank for the NRA.

Mental Disorders in America. Mental disorders are common in the United States and internationally. An estimated 26.2 percent of Americans ages 18 and older or about one in four adults suffer from a diagnosable mental disorder in a given year.

We need to find the problems for the mental illness in the USA and begin to move our society forward into MENTAL HEALTH. Guns need control UNTIL the USA is to point where it is REALISTIC to have a bank of computers that record the profoundly psychotic.

There is not enough data space to create a super computer for 26.2 percent of Americans. It also enters into invasion of privacy. It is not possible to create a data bank of mental illness in the USA. NOT POSSIBLE. 

It is convenient political rhetoric and that is all it is.

February 28, 2014
By Victoria Bekiempis
Every year, about 42.5 million American adults (click here) (or 18.2 percent of the total adult population in the United States) suffers from some mental illness, enduring conditions such as depression, bipolar disorder or schizophrenia, statistics released Friday reveal.
The data, compiled by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), also indicate that approximately 9.3 million adults, or about 4 percent of those Americans ages 18 and up, experience “serious mental illness” – that is, their condition impedes day-to-day activities, such as going to work....

A significant number of deaths in the USA every year are suicides and there are often suicides with murders of the family. It is time to get real. The difference between 26.2 and 18.2 are children in case you didn't figure that out. 

Judge Scalia did not practice absolute anarchy with guns. Judge Scalia would agree that California had the right to ban the guns that were used in the San Bernardino shootings.

December 3, 2015
By Ashley Jones and Dan Frosch
The rifles used in the San Bernardino (click here) mass shooting were illegal under California law because they were modified and violated the state’s ban on assault weapons, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives determined on Thursday.