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  1. Mar 4, 2018 · To the outside world, the TIs’ beliefs are implausible, ridiculous, or evidence of mental illness, in large part because technology and paranoia have a long, interconnected history. In 1810, a ...

  2. Oct 20, 2020 · Part 1: The paranoid reality of "targeted individuals." These journalistic accounts—in the mainstream press, as well as in self-publication sites like Medium and two Vice documentary features ...

  3. Jun 10, 2016 · A growing tribe of troubled minds. Mental health professionals say the narrative has taken hold among a group of people experiencing psychotic symptoms that have troubled the human mind since time ...

  4. Apr 1, 2021 · A growing body of research is helping to tease apart why some people with serious mental illness are prone to violence while others are not, and how clinicians and others can help through improved treatment and informed myth-busting. DeAngelis, T. (2022, July 11). Mental illness and violence: Debunking myths, addressing realities.

  5. Apr 6, 2020 · To drive people to meet-up groups or a psychiatrist so they can be medicated and/or get more federal grants for more mental health instead of training a real police force. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder is a big seller in the area.”

    • Lorraine Sheridan, David V. James, Jayden Roth
    • 2020
  6. Aug 7, 2020 · Targeted individuals claim that seemingly ordinary people are in fact trained operatives tasked with watching or harassing them—delivery men, neighbors, colleagues, roommates, teachers, even dogs.

  7. Oct 31, 2020 · Indeed, delusions that are evidence of mental illness are not typically shared because they are not typically shareable. Often this hinges upon a self-referential component to the belief—for ...

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