1. A tweet thread on over-medicalisation and over-medication under capitalism, based on my blog post on @biopoliticalph:
1. I’m surprised that there’s controversy over the claim that people are over-diagnosed and over-medicated in a laissez-faire capitalist society.
2. The medical establishment is part of a capitalist order that classifies and commodifies everything for profit, including human emotions and behaviours. Capitalism also suppresses dissent and resistance in order to maximise profit at the expense of workers’ needs and interests.
3. In order words, capitalism reproduces the status quo of white, cisgender, male, able-bodied privilege. This is why bell hooks describes America as not only capitalist but “a white supremacist capitalist patriarchy.”
4. The medical establishment is part of this system of interlocking oppressions. Pharmaceutical companies will diagnose and medicate whatever they can to turn a profit. Their only function is to increase shareholder value. If they can medicate everyone, they will.
5. But because capitalism intersects with other systems of oppression, the people most susceptible to coercive pathologisation and medication are those most oppressed under capitalism – racialised minorities, women & sexual minorities, disabled people, and so on.
6. Hence, these groups are medicalised and overmedicated in particularly unjust ways, which is well-documented across a range of literatures.
7. In “The Feminine Mystique,” Betty Friedan writes about how 1960s housewives were diagnosed with depression and prescribed barbiturates in order to sedate them and silence their legitimate complaints about patriarchal oppression.
8. In “The Protest Psychosis: How Schizophrenia Became a Black Disease,” Jonathan Metzl writes about how Black activists in the 1960s were diagnosed with psychosis and sedated with anti-psychotics in order to silence their valid grievances about white supremacy.
9. Disabled philosophers like Shelley Tremain have written about how mental disabilities like autism and OCD (which I have) are forcibly pathologised by the medical establishment rather than being recognised as biopolitical constructs and sources of resistance and solidarity.
10. As a result, disabled people’s experiences are trivialised, homogenised, and suppressed.
11. These are just a few examples of how the medical industry is complicit in the commodification and forced medicalisation of oppressed groups whose testimony poses a threat to the established order...
12. These groups must be pathologised and sedated so as to silence them and profit off of their silent suffering. These are long-established interdisciplinary critiques of how capitalist institutions operate in general.
13. While these critiques are susceptibly to criticism – for example, for lacking intersectional dimensions in some cases – they correctly identify a problem with dominant medical practices under neoliberalism. How is this controversial?
14. Perhaps one source of controversy is that these critiques could (incorrectly) be interpreted as being anti-drug. But this is far from the case. Drugs predate capitalism and have always been a feature of cultural, spiritual, and philosophical practices around the world.
15. The main difference under capitalism is that some drugs are validated as “medicine” while others are labeled as “street drugs.” But this taxonomy is, once again, an artefact of neoliberal hierarchies.
16. Suffice it to say that one can recognise the coercive medicalisation and sedation of oppressed people under capitalism without being against drugs per se.
17. Indeed, drugs should be liberated from the coercive biopolitical practices that medicalise not only human beings and behaviours, but also drugs that should be widely available.
18. Yet capitalist institutions coercively medicalise and medicate some oppressed people, while criminalising and incarcerating (AND often medicating) others, especially racialised minorities.
19. This therapeutic/illicit dualism is a neoliberal invention that ensures that oppressed people will be managed, supervised, and silenced one way or another, and Big Pharma wins either way.
@justin_garson - Sorry, I reposted it!

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More from @CiurriaMichelle

Dec 4
1. I assigned Gattaca in my bioethics class & I don't regret it. One of the premises of the film is that everyone is miserable. The "invalids" are unhappy because they're oppressed, but the "valids" are also unhappy because they can never live up to the culture's eugenics ideal..
2. or even fulfil their supposed potential as "valids." Jude Law's character, a "valid," can't accept that he came in second in swimming competition in spite of his "superior genes." He becomes paralysed after trying to kill himself...
3. Uma Therman's character, another "valid," is unhappy because she has a cardiovascular disability in spite of being "enhanced" in vitro, and she's popping pills to deal with the stress. "Newgenics" has created a culture of fear, loneliness, and misery...
Read 10 tweets
Dec 4
1. Is it wrong to let students use AI to generate essays instead of doing their own work? My colleague Gabriele Contessa wrote an excellent response to this question, which goes something like this:
2. (1) University students are adults and it's up to them whether to waste their time and money on a specious degree or actually learn something; (2) If AI can write better than most people, then maybe what students need to learn is how to use AI.
3. I want to add one more response to this question: (3) Academia was always a rigged game. The fact that we force students to use Standard English is a political choice that reinforces the elite status of the group that predominantly uses this vernacular - wealthy white people.
Read 9 tweets
Dec 3
1. A thread on mainstream theories of incarceration - retribution, rehabilitation, deterrence, restoration, incapacitation - which are gaslighting narratives that provide a smokescreen for racial capitalism:
2. Many critics say the American carceral system is based on retribution but I disagree. It's based on racial capitalism. All of the above principles - not just retribution - are in fact utilised to enforce a system of racial capitalism...
3. If you look at actual court cases, sometimes judges sentence someone to punish them; other times, they sentence someone "for their own good," because they "can't take care of themselves"...
Read 10 tweets
Oct 23
1. Thread on the ableist fetishization of so-called intelligence in academia. I just read yet another article that glorifies so-called intelligence, which is a social construct rooted in eugenics.
2. In an ableist culture (such as ours) in which so-called intelligence is so idolized that it’s a condition of citizenship & personhood, everyone will have anxieties about whether they’re ‘intelligent enough.’
3. Intelligence is a disciplinary apparatus that mobilizes people into a regime of compulsory (able-minded) intelligence, which conveniently justifies capitalism as a ‘meritocracy’ that both produces and rewards the most ‘intelligent’ (nondisabled) citizens.
Read 14 tweets
Jul 26
Philosophy is a love of wisdom, which cannot be quantified by grading rubrics or systematized by learning outcomes. Why are philosophy professors addicted to academic metrics that commodify learning? (A thread on #ungrading).
@Jessifer says that "grades (and institutional rankings) are currency for a capitalist system that reduces teaching and learning to a mere transaction. Grading is a massive co-ordinated effort to take humans out of the educational process"...
@Jessifer also says that learning outcomes presuppose what is to be determined in the course of collaborative inquiry, & should be replaced by "emergent outcomes" that "are co-created by teachers and students and revised on the fly"...
Read 10 tweets
Jul 24
Are lesbians women?
Monique Wittig (1992) says no. Jaboc Hale (1996) says sometimes.
Let’s break it down.
Wittig believes that lesbians are not women because to be a woman means to be in a binary relationship (paradigmatically, marriage) with a man:
“what makes a woman is a specific social relation to a man, a relation that we have previously called servitude, a relation which implies personal and physical obligation as well as economic obligation ("forced residence”)…, conjugal duties, unlimited production of children...
Read 9 tweets

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