I would be okay with all of this if society didn't use mental illness as a way of justifying
1. police murders
2. use it as an answer why children murder other children in school
3. use it as an excuse for not listening to those who have a 'mental illness'
Look up police murder mentally ill and if one is open to it they will see that the mentally ill card is used many, many times to justify murders, paint pictures by the media that mentally ill kills or causes others to kill. Myself personally, I feel that is a very large cause for the bad wrap that others speak about in being labelled mentally ill.
If a police officer shoots a mentally ill person most people breathe a sigh of relief and say 'thank god the police are keeping us safe'.
I'm just not sure how prevalent any of this actually is - or rather, how it relates. Police shooting a schizophrenic because they perceived a threat; well, often the threat is real enough, but the police don't have the training or experience or equipment to handle it the way an EMT might. I don't see that as mental illness "justifying" anything; it doesn't make the murder OK. It's just fact, and speaks to the lack we still have (in the US) of appropriate care, resources, options for the person who is ill.
Sometimes mental illness
is the answer to why children kill children. But I don't think it is used to justify the rightness of the murder. There is a kind of legal defense involving non-competency - the "insanity" plea - that is used in about 1% of US trial cases and successful about one quarter of the time.
http://law.jrank.org/pages/1136/Excuse-Insanity-Empirical-data-myths.html
(please read this article. It is very, very illuminating about the data surrounding the insanity plea)
Yes, your number 3: many people dismiss the mentally ill as "crazy". And that sucks. But I think the way to change that is more likely to be education than re-classification.
I think there is no data that most people "breathe a sigh of relief" when they hear that an officer has killed someone with a mental illness. I'm certainly guessing that at least the 1 adult out of every four who suffers from a mental illness in any given year (PRIDE OF AUSTRALIA: ROSIE BATTY WINS COURAGE AWARD) isn't heaving a sigh of relief. Maybe the other 3/4 are. I just don't buy it.
Yes, absolutely, each of us should be allowed to understand that others have differing points of view. Where I feel the line is drawn in the sand is when people say that my belief 'makes them feel' substandard. It is not meant to be hurtful and is mine to hold if I choose to without others driving me into the ground on the pretense that I am making them feel badly.
There is often much upheaval and 'feel bad' or uncomfortable before, what I believe to be necessary changes be put into place.
The bolding is mine.
You may think your belief is not meant to be hurtful. But as far as I can tell, in this paragraph above, you are saying that there are necessary changes to be put into place. That's an action item. Your action item takes away part of my identity and actually makes my life harder.
If I am understanding what you want: you want mentally ill, as a term of art, reserved for those with "broken brains" - dangerous impulses, harmful to others, abusive behavior. I know the list is longer - but that is your general point, I think.
And that those of us who are currently mentally ill would instead be "mentally injured" or some such. Which means there is no such thing as heredity or neurobiology in the understanding of mental illness. And if there is no such thing as that, well then, I don't qualify for care
because I was depressed before anyone laid a hand on me. My brother wouldn't have qualified for care until he had a psychotic break in public - a break that was a result of not having access to care - and then, at that point, he'd be classified as "broken brain", criminal, and we would all heave a sigh of relief when the police shot him.
This is a complicated, emotional topic. I really am respecting your opinion. But your opinion doesn't automatically get to become the right thing to do
without you running the risk of hurting people who would be negatively affected by your "necessary changes".
I just wish you could see that it is, actually, hurtful - because your whole idea is predicated on "mental illness" being a term that is ONLY used negatively. You yourself pretty clearly believe that it IS negative. So, as long as I'm one of those people, you are saying that I am "wrong" for being so. And I get that you are trying to fix that, but your solution is one that would negatively affect many, many people. I've got super-thick skin; I'm not crying "wounded!" over this - but politically, and I mean this very respectfully - this:
In all honesty I am fighting for the mentally ill - not against.
Is maybe not your battle to fight, if you don't identify as mentally ill.