Stupid Ass Trump calling for Gun Legislation, Because they Were Busted with their Pants Down


You mean after they took it off a year ago...Tools to help the mental health people alert the gun registry..


BTW the worst mass shooting in America was a skinhead wannabe..

This is a lie, the rule that CONGRESS got rid of was the one where those who need help filing applications for Social Security could be denied their 2nd amendment rights to buy a gun. That law did absolutely nothing to help mental health professionals alert the gun registry. I don't think ANY of the people who have committed mass shootings in tis country have been done by people that needed help getting onto Social Security. It was a bullshit Obama Executive Action whose sole purpose was to appease the far Left and would have done NOTHING to make our schools and street any safer. It certainly wouldn't have stopped the kid in Florida from doing what he did.

Ehh yes it did.. I trained on the tool that they got rid of last year. It is not just about those who can not get SSC

The GOP also got rid of this, in place since the 1980's..I trained on it and it was a excellent tool . they got rid of it because it alerts the extreme mentally ill who are getting guns now.

Trump Administration Halts Registry Used by Mental Health Professionals
 
Eagles, you got to get off that ssi gun bullcrap.
This kid was cleared by the fbi and fl children services agency.
Please, tell me what kind of law would have stopped him besides banning guns?

Harley, Trump and the gang are only blaming the FBI. Yes the FBI blew it but these kids were let down by many things not just the FBI.
Trump and the GOP can't take responsibility for anything. Their actions are at fault too..

The GOP also got rid of this, in place since the 1980's..I trained on it and it was a excellent tool . they got rid of it because it alerts the extreme mentally ill who are getting guns now.

Trump Administration Halts Registry Used by Mental Health Professionals
So did the DCS
Please tell me what law would have stopped that kid
 
Eagles, you got to get off that ssi gun bullcrap.
This kid was cleared by the fbi and fl children services agency.
Please, tell me what kind of law would have stopped him besides banning guns?

And even then he would have killed by either buying the firearm through straw purchases, black market or would have gone truck bomb instead.

So seeing there are laws already that state murder is against the damn law what do the greeb voter want beside the banning of the firearm?

Well yes these assault rifles are out there to get now. Since the ban expired in 2002..
Nothing has been done since then to get them off the market..they are making it easier.

.
 
Eagles, you got to get off that ssi gun bullcrap.
This kid was cleared by the fbi and fl children services agency.
Please, tell me what kind of law would have stopped him besides banning guns?

Harley, Trump and the gang are only blaming the FBI. Yes the FBI blew it but these kids were let down by many things not just the FBI.
Trump and the GOP can't take responsibility for anything. Their actions are at fault too..

The GOP also got rid of this, in place since the 1980's..I trained on it and it was a excellent tool . they got rid of it because it alerts the extreme mentally ill who are getting guns now.

Trump Administration Halts Registry Used by Mental Health Professionals
So did the DCS
Please tell me what law would have stopped that kid

Here is my other thread..the ban on assault rifles expire in 2002. Reagan helped to get it in place.in 1992.the NRA has made sure that it was not renewed
Reagan Had an Assault Rifle Ban put in Place..It Expired in 2002, Paid Off Congress
 
Eagles, you got to get off that ssi gun bullcrap.
This kid was cleared by the fbi and fl children services agency.
Please, tell me what kind of law would have stopped him besides banning guns?

Harley, Trump and the gang are only blaming the FBI. Yes the FBI blew it but these kids were let down by many things not just the FBI.
Trump and the GOP can't take responsibility for anything. Their actions are at fault too..

The GOP also got rid of this, in place since the 1980's..I trained on it and it was a excellent tool . they got rid of it because it alerts the extreme mentally ill who are getting guns now.

Trump Administration Halts Registry Used by Mental Health Professionals
So did the DCS
Please tell me what law would have stopped that kid

Here is my other thread..the ban on assault rifles expire in 2002. Reagan helped to get it in place.in 1992.the NRA has made sure that it was not renewed
Reagan Had an Assault Rifle Ban put in Place..It Expired in 2002, Paid Off Congress
Im asking you what kind of law would have stopped this kid.
Bannging the type of gun he used is ridiculous logic.
What law would have stopped this kid?
 
FYI:

Senators’ Letter To SAMHSA Is Misguided: Dr. McCance-Katz Is Doing What Congress Demanded


Chances are, you have never heard of NREPP, but it’s a big deal – a really big deal.

That’s because NREPP essentially determines which mental health and substance abuse programs are “evidence based practices” , opening the door for them to claim a piece of $2.2 billion in HHS block grant funding being doled out each year.

NREPP was created in 1997 to maintain a computer registry that rates practices according to available evidence about their effectiveness. Theoretically, it provides those who access it with helpful information about what they should be doing in their communities.

The five Democrat senators questioned why Dr. McCance-Katz chose to hit the hold button on NREPP, leaving in limbo at least 90 programs seeking “evidence based practice” ratings.

The Washington Post described her decision as a “Trump administration” effort to, “suspend a program that helps thousands of professionals and community groups across the country find effective interventions for preventing and treating mental illness and substance-use disorders.”
.
.
What Dr. McCance-Katz is doing is exactly what Congress told her to do when it passed the Helping Families in Mental Health Crisis Act as part of the 21st Century Cures Act.

The reason why Dr. McCance-Katz has closed the NREPP website is because it has been listing programs as being evidence based practices whose usefulness is questionable. It appears as if NREPP often rubber stamped any practice that popped into the heads of someone with a treatment program that they wanted to sell.
.
.
Here is part of Dr. McCance-Katz’s public statement explaining why she discontinued NREPP. These comments begin with her describing what happened when you searched the NREPP registry for a list of evidence based practices that would help your community mental health provider better treat someone with a serious mental illnesses.

“The program as currently configured often produces few to no results, when such common search terms as “medication-assisted treatment” or illnesses such as ”schizophrenia” are entered. There is a complete lack of a linkage between all of the evidence based practices that are necessary to provide effective care and treatment to those living with mental and substance use disorders, as well. If someone with limited knowledge about various mental and substance use disorders were to go to the NREPP website, they could come away thinking that there are virtually no evidence based practices for opioid use disorder and other major mental disorders – which is completely untrue.

They would have to try to discern which of the listed practices might be useful, but could not rely on the grading for the listed interventions; neither would there be any way for them to know which interventions were more effective than others.

We at SAMHSA should not be encouraging providers to use NREPP to obtain evidence based practices, given the flawed nature of this system. From my limited review – I have not looked at every listed program or practice – I see evidence based practices that are entirely irrelevant to some disorders, “evidence” based on review of as few as a single publication that might be quite old and, too often, evidence review from someone’s dissertation.

This is a poor approach to the determination of evidence based practices. As I mentioned, NREPP has mainly reviewed submissions from “developers” in the field. By definition, these are not evidence based practices because they are limited to the work of a single person or group. This is a biased, self-selected series of interventions further hampered by a poor search-term system. Americans living with these serious illnesses deserve better…”
.
.
In case you didn’t get the point, mental health advocate and author, D. J. Jaffe, was more blunt.

“NREPP is supposed to be a list of programs supported with evidence, but it was mainly filled with pop psychology learning modules that fail to help the seriously mentally ill,” he wrote me in an email.

Earlier, he’d published an editorial in The Hill newspaper saying much the same.

Little of what’s in NREPP are actual treatments, and few are based on science.

For SAMHSA to list a program as being “evidence-based” it should require a program to have (a) independent proof that it (b) improves a meaningful outcome in (c) people SAMHSA is intended to serve, adults and children with serious mental illness or substance use disorders.

I discovered in my research (writing Insane Consequences: How The Mental Health Industry Fails The Mentally Ill) is that little of what is in NREPP meets those three criterion. The studies lack independence and often come straight from those who invent, sell, and profit from them. The outcomes being measured are not meaningful, metrics such as reductions in homelessness, arrests, incarcerations, hospitalizations, and suicides.

They are soft measures like satisfaction, feeling of wellness, empowerment, hopefulness, and resiliency. In fact, a program promoter could measure ten outcomes, find nine are not improved or even made worse, and then submit the one positive finding as proof the program is evidence-based. Clearly something is wrong.

The studies promoters are submitting are often not conducted among the seriously ill or substance abusers SAMHSA was founded to serve. As Twitter has proven, show the public pictures of cute cats and they smile.

Now all you have to do is tabulate the results and submit them to SAMHSA and you’ve got an “evidence-based” program that “improves mental health.” Taking people bowling could probably gain NREPP certification because it makes people happier.
.
.
Many of NREPP’s listed programs raised eyebrows during the House’s congressional probe of SAMHSA. In her testimony, Dr. Sally Satel of Yale noted that “of the 288 programs listed, four by my count specifically designated people with severe illness as their recipients.”

When I was in Florida recently giving a speech, my host told me that Weight Watchers (R) had been credited as an “evidence based practice” in their federal funding because it helped people with mental illnesses lose weight caused by medications. Should that be a priority of SAMHSA or for a local health department?

This is wherein the conflicts arise.

On one end are critics who say SAMHSA wastes money on often “feel good” programs for the “worried well” that have no scientific basis for helping alleviate a serious mental illness. On the other end are those who argue that any program that helps an individual with a mental health or substance abuse problem feel better about themselves or have more social interaction in a community should be federally funded.

I’ve simplified the argument but you get the gist.

Dr. McCance-Katz has shuttered NREPP so that she and her top aides can develop a vetting process that is not based on a single, selected report or outdated studies. She is establishing standards that must be met to earn the “evidence based practice” credentials and be worthy of our taxpayers’ dollars.

Because she was appointed by President Trump, I suspect the five Democrats are wary that Dr. McCance-Katz actions are aimed at cutting social programs. The five Senators certainly have a responsibility to monitor the job that the assistant secretary is doing, but they should wait to see what she proposes as an alternative to NREPP before assuming the worst.

I’m not certain where Weight Watchers (R) will end up when Dr. McCance-Katz is done. But what I am certain of is that she is trying to steer SAMHSA in a different direction from when it was heavily criticized during congressional hearings for being wasteful, ineffective, ignoring serious mental illnesses, and disparaging the use of medications.
 
Eagles, you got to get off that ssi gun bullcrap.
This kid was cleared by the fbi and fl children services agency.
Please, tell me what kind of law would have stopped him besides banning guns?

Harley, Trump and the gang are only blaming the FBI. Yes the FBI blew it but these kids were let down by many things not just the FBI.
Trump and the GOP can't take responsibility for anything. Their actions are at fault too..

The GOP also got rid of this, in place since the 1980's..I trained on it and it was a excellent tool . they got rid of it because it alerts the extreme mentally ill who are getting guns now.

Trump Administration Halts Registry Used by Mental Health Professionals
So did the DCS
Please tell me what law would have stopped that kid

Here is my other thread..the ban on assault rifles expire in 2002. Reagan helped to get it in place.in 1992.the NRA has made sure that it was not renewed
Reagan Had an Assault Rifle Ban put in Place..It Expired in 2002, Paid Off Congress
Im asking you what kind of law would have stopped this kid.
Bannging the type of gun he used is ridiculous logic.
What law would have stopped this kid?

These assault guns were harder to get since the ban...the 2002 expiration allowed the massive sale of these assault rifles.

making it easier for these mentally ill to get ahold of.. You can even buy them online I have heard.

He was of legal age to buy one..yet the lawat the GOP rolled back would have helped to red flag that he was a nut.

I would like to know how he got these guns?

.
 
It means we need tougher background checks in people who want to buy guns. Those would be average liberals, young adults on antidepressants, homosexuals, Mexicans, and blacks.

Like your right-wing wacko fellow traveller who posted here and then shot up a movie theater in Lafayette?

Oh wait. Not liberal, not young, not drugged, not gay, not Mexican and not black.
3 dead isn't exactly a "mass shooting." You found one rightwinger who shot some people. All the big mass shooters were liberals or Jihadis - people on your side of the isle.
 

You mean after they took it off a year ago...Tools to help the mental health people alert the gun registry..


BTW the worst mass shooting in America was a skinhead wannabe..

This is a lie, the rule that CONGRESS got rid of was the one where those who need help filing applications for Social Security could be denied their 2nd amendment rights to buy a gun. That law did absolutely nothing to help mental health professionals alert the gun registry. I don't think ANY of the people who have committed mass shootings in tis country have been done by people that needed help getting onto Social Security. It was a bullshit Obama Executive Action whose sole purpose was to appease the far Left and would have done NOTHING to make our schools and street any safer. It certainly wouldn't have stopped the kid in Florida from doing what he did.

Ehh yes it did.. I trained on the tool that they got rid of last year. It is not just about those who can not get SSC

The GOP also got rid of this, in place since the 1980's..I trained on it and it was a excellent tool . they got rid of it because it alerts the extreme mentally ill who are getting guns now.

Trump Administration Halts Registry Used by Mental Health Professionals

You lie:

Chances are, you have never heard of NREPP, but it’s a big deal – a really big deal.

That’s because NREPP essentially determines which mental health and substance abuse programs are “evidence based practices” , opening the door for them to claim a piece of $2.2 billion in HHS block grant funding being doled out each year.

NREPP was created in 1997 to maintain a computer registry that rates practices according to available evidence about their effectiveness. Theoretically, it provides those who access it with helpful information about what they should be doing in their communities.

The five Democrat senators questioned why Dr. McCance-Katz chose to hit the hold button on NREPP, leaving in limbo at least 90 programs seeking “evidence based practice” ratings.

The Washington Post described her decision as a “Trump administration” effort to, “suspend a program that helps thousands of professionals and community groups across the country find effective interventions for preventing and treating mental illness and substance-use disorders.”
.
.
What Dr. McCance-Katz is doing is exactly what Congress told her to do when it passed the Helping Families in Mental Health Crisis Act as part of the 21st Century Cures Act.

The reason why Dr. McCance-Katz has closed the NREPP website is because it has been listing programs as being evidence based practices whose usefulness is questionable. It appears as if NREPP often rubber stamped any practice that popped into the heads of someone with a treatment program that they wanted to sell.
.
.
Here is part of Dr. McCance-Katz’s public statement explaining why she discontinued NREPP. These comments begin with her describing what happened when you searched the NREPP registry for a list of evidence based practices that would help your community mental health provider better treat someone with a serious mental illnesses.

“The program as currently configured often produces few to no results, when such common search terms as “medication-assisted treatment” or illnesses such as ”schizophrenia” are entered. There is a complete lack of a linkage between all of the evidence based practices that are necessary to provide effective care and treatment to those living with mental and substance use disorders, as well. If someone with limited knowledge about various mental and substance use disorders were to go to the NREPP website, they could come away thinking that there are virtually no evidence based practices for opioid use disorder and other major mental disorders – which is completely untrue.

They would have to try to discern which of the listed practices might be useful, but could not rely on the grading for the listed interventions; neither would there be any way for them to know which interventions were more effective than others.

We at SAMHSA should not be encouraging providers to use NREPP to obtain evidence based practices, given the flawed nature of this system. From my limited review – I have not looked at every listed program or practice – I see evidence based practices that are entirely irrelevant to some disorders, “evidence” based on review of as few as a single publication that might be quite old and, too often, evidence review from someone’s dissertation.

This is a poor approach to the determination of evidence based practices. As I mentioned, NREPP has mainly reviewed submissions from “developers” in the field. By definition, these are not evidence based practices because they are limited to the work of a single person or group. This is a biased, self-selected series of interventions further hampered by a poor search-term system. Americans living with these serious illnesses deserve better…”
.
.
In case you didn’t get the point, mental health advocate and author, D. J. Jaffe, was more blunt.

“NREPP is supposed to be a list of programs supported with evidence, but it was mainly filled with pop psychology learning modules that fail to help the seriously mentally ill,”he wrote me in an email.

Earlier, he’d published an editorial in The Hill newspaper saying much the same.

Little of what’s in NREPP are actual treatments, and few are based on science.

For SAMHSA to list a program as being “evidence-based” it should require a program to have (a) independent proof that it (b) improves a meaningful outcome in (c) people SAMHSA is intended to serve, adults and children with serious mental illness or substance use disorders.

I discovered in my research (writing Insane Consequences: How The Mental Health Industry Fails The Mentally Ill) is that little of what is in NREPP meets those three criterion. The studies lack independence and often come straight from those who invent, sell, and profit from them. The outcomes being measured are not meaningful, metrics such as reductions in homelessness, arrests, incarcerations, hospitalizations, and suicides.

They are soft measures like satisfaction, feeling of wellness, empowerment, hopefulness, and resiliency. In fact, a program promoter could measure ten outcomes, find nine are not improved or even made worse, and then submit the one positive finding as proof the program is evidence-based. Clearly something is wrong.

The studies promoters are submitting are often not conducted among the seriously ill or substance abusers SAMHSA was founded to serve. As Twitter has proven, show the public pictures of cute cats and they smile.

Now all you have to do is tabulate the results and submit them to SAMHSA and you’ve got an “evidence-based” program that “improves mental health.” Taking people bowling could probably gain NREPP certification because it makes people happier.
.
.
Many of NREPP’s listed programs raised eyebrows during the House’s congressional probe of SAMHSA. In her testimony, Dr. Sally Satel of Yale noted that “of the 288 programs listed, four by my count specifically designated people with severe illness as their recipients.”

When I was in Florida recently giving a speech, my host told me that Weight Watchers (R) had been credited as an “evidence based practice” in their federal funding because it helped people with mental illnesses lose weight caused by medications. Should that be a priority of SAMHSA or for a local health department?

This is wherein the conflicts arise.

On one end are critics who say SAMHSA wastes money on often “feel good” programs for the “worried well” that have no scientific basis for helping alleviate a serious mental illness. On the other end are those who argue that any program that helps an individual with a mental health or substance abuse problem feel better about themselves or have more social interaction in a community should be federally funded.

I’ve simplified the argument but you get the gist.

Dr. McCance-Katz has shuttered NREPP so that she and her top aides can develop a vetting process that is not based on a single, selected report or outdated studies. She is establishing standards that must be met to earn the “evidence based practice” credentials and be worthy of our taxpayers’ dollars.

Because she was appointed by President Trump, I suspect the five Democrats are wary that Dr. McCance-Katz actions are aimed at cutting social programs. The five Senators certainly have a responsibility to monitor the job that the assistant secretary is doing, but they should wait to see what she proposes as an alternative to NREPP before assuming the worst.

I’m not certain where Weight Watchers (R) will end up when Dr. McCance-Katz is done. But what I am certain of is that she is trying to steer SAMHSA in a different direction from when it was heavily criticized during congressional hearings for being wasteful, ineffective, ignoring serious mental illnesses, and disparaging the use of medications.
 
If you have ever voted Democrat you should not be allowed to own a gun because it's a sure sign that you are batcrapcrazy.
 
Eagles, you got to get off that ssi gun bullcrap.
This kid was cleared by the fbi and fl children services agency.
Please, tell me what kind of law would have stopped him besides banning guns?

Harley, Trump and the gang are only blaming the FBI. Yes the FBI blew it but these kids were let down by many things not just the FBI.
Trump and the GOP can't take responsibility for anything. Their actions are at fault too..

The GOP also got rid of this, in place since the 1980's..I trained on it and it was a excellent tool . they got rid of it because it alerts the extreme mentally ill who are getting guns now.

Trump Administration Halts Registry Used by Mental Health Professionals
So did the DCS
Please tell me what law would have stopped that kid

Here is my other thread..the ban on assault rifles expire in 2002. Reagan helped to get it in place.in 1992.the NRA has made sure that it was not renewed
Reagan Had an Assault Rifle Ban put in Place..It Expired in 2002, Paid Off Congress
Im asking you what kind of law would have stopped this kid.
Bannging the type of gun he used is ridiculous logic.
What law would have stopped this kid?

These assault guns were harder to get since the ban...the 2002 expiration allowed the massive sale of these assault rifles.

making it easier for these mentally ill to get ahold of.. You can even buy them online I have heard.

He was of legal age to buy one..yet the lawat the GOP rolled back would have helped to red flag that he was a nut.

I would like to know how he got these guns?

.

This is a total bald-faced lie. There were no laws or rules or anything else on the books, rolled back or not, that would have prevented that guy from buying his gun.
 
It means we need tougher background checks in people who want to buy guns. Those would be average liberals, young adults on antidepressants, homosexuals, Mexicans, and blacks.

Like your right-wing wacko fellow traveller who posted here and then shot up a movie theater in Lafayette?

Oh wait. Not liberal, not young, not drugged, not gay, not Mexican and not black.
3 dead isn't exactly a "mass shooting." You found one rightwinger who shot some people. All the big mass shooters were liberals or Jihadis - people on your side of the isle.

Oh ******* bullshit. You don't get a day off from status as Board Whacko just because it's freaking President's Day.

Mass shooters are not driven by politics unless they're specifically targeting a political group --- like Adkisson did. Or unless their politics drive them to a religious group as Page's did.
 
15th post
FYI:

Senators’ Letter To SAMHSA Is Misguided: Dr. McCance-Katz Is Doing What Congress Demanded


Chances are, you have never heard of NREPP, but it’s a big deal – a really big deal.

That’s because NREPP essentially determines which mental health and substance abuse programs are “evidence based practices” , opening the door for them to claim a piece of $2.2 billion in HHS block grant funding being doled out each year.

NREPP was created in 1997 to maintain a computer registry that rates practices according to available evidence about their effectiveness. Theoretically, it provides those who access it with helpful information about what they should be doing in their communities.

The five Democrat senators questioned why Dr. McCance-Katz chose to hit the hold button on NREPP, leaving in limbo at least 90 programs seeking “evidence based practice” ratings.

The Washington Post described her decision as a “Trump administration” effort to, “suspend a program that helps thousands of professionals and community groups across the country find effective interventions for preventing and treating mental illness and substance-use disorders.”
.
.
What Dr. McCance-Katz is doing is exactly what Congress told her to do when it passed the Helping Families in Mental Health Crisis Act as part of the 21st Century Cures Act.

The reason why Dr. McCance-Katz has closed the NREPP website is because it has been listing programs as being evidence based practices whose usefulness is questionable. It appears as if NREPP often rubber stamped any practice that popped into the heads of someone with a treatment program that they wanted to sell.
.
.
Here is part of Dr. McCance-Katz’s public statement explaining why she discontinued NREPP. These comments begin with her describing what happened when you searched the NREPP registry for a list of evidence based practices that would help your community mental health provider better treat someone with a serious mental illnesses.

“The program as currently configured often produces few to no results, when such common search terms as “medication-assisted treatment” or illnesses such as ”schizophrenia” are entered. There is a complete lack of a linkage between all of the evidence based practices that are necessary to provide effective care and treatment to those living with mental and substance use disorders, as well. If someone with limited knowledge about various mental and substance use disorders were to go to the NREPP website, they could come away thinking that there are virtually no evidence based practices for opioid use disorder and other major mental disorders – which is completely untrue.

They would have to try to discern which of the listed practices might be useful, but could not rely on the grading for the listed interventions; neither would there be any way for them to know which interventions were more effective than others.

We at SAMHSA should not be encouraging providers to use NREPP to obtain evidence based practices, given the flawed nature of this system. From my limited review – I have not looked at every listed program or practice – I see evidence based practices that are entirely irrelevant to some disorders, “evidence” based on review of as few as a single publication that might be quite old and, too often, evidence review from someone’s dissertation.

This is a poor approach to the determination of evidence based practices. As I mentioned, NREPP has mainly reviewed submissions from “developers” in the field. By definition, these are not evidence based practices because they are limited to the work of a single person or group. This is a biased, self-selected series of interventions further hampered by a poor search-term system. Americans living with these serious illnesses deserve better…”
.
.
In case you didn’t get the point, mental health advocate and author, D. J. Jaffe, was more blunt.

“NREPP is supposed to be a list of programs supported with evidence, but it was mainly filled with pop psychology learning modules that fail to help the seriously mentally ill,” he wrote me in an email.

Earlier, he’d published an editorial in The Hill newspaper saying much the same.

Little of what’s in NREPP are actual treatments, and few are based on science.

For SAMHSA to list a program as being “evidence-based” it should require a program to have (a) independent proof that it (b) improves a meaningful outcome in (c) people SAMHSA is intended to serve, adults and children with serious mental illness or substance use disorders.

I discovered in my research (writing Insane Consequences: How The Mental Health Industry Fails The Mentally Ill) is that little of what is in NREPP meets those three criterion. The studies lack independence and often come straight from those who invent, sell, and profit from them. The outcomes being measured are not meaningful, metrics such as reductions in homelessness, arrests, incarcerations, hospitalizations, and suicides.

They are soft measures like satisfaction, feeling of wellness, empowerment, hopefulness, and resiliency. In fact, a program promoter could measure ten outcomes, find nine are not improved or even made worse, and then submit the one positive finding as proof the program is evidence-based. Clearly something is wrong.

The studies promoters are submitting are often not conducted among the seriously ill or substance abusers SAMHSA was founded to serve. As Twitter has proven, show the public pictures of cute cats and they smile.

Now all you have to do is tabulate the results and submit them to SAMHSA and you’ve got an “evidence-based” program that “improves mental health.” Taking people bowling could probably gain NREPP certification because it makes people happier.
.
.
Many of NREPP’s listed programs raised eyebrows during the House’s congressional probe of SAMHSA. In her testimony, Dr. Sally Satel of Yale noted that “of the 288 programs listed, four by my count specifically designated people with severe illness as their recipients.”

When I was in Florida recently giving a speech, my host told me that Weight Watchers (R) had been credited as an “evidence based practice” in their federal funding because it helped people with mental illnesses lose weight caused by medications. Should that be a priority of SAMHSA or for a local health department?

This is wherein the conflicts arise.

On one end are critics who say SAMHSA wastes money on often “feel good” programs for the “worried well” that have no scientific basis for helping alleviate a serious mental illness. On the other end are those who argue that any program that helps an individual with a mental health or substance abuse problem feel better about themselves or have more social interaction in a community should be federally funded.

I’ve simplified the argument but you get the gist.

Dr. McCance-Katz has shuttered NREPP so that she and her top aides can develop a vetting process that is not based on a single, selected report or outdated studies. She is establishing standards that must be met to earn the “evidence based practice” credentials and be worthy of our taxpayers’ dollars.

Because she was appointed by President Trump, I suspect the five Democrats are wary that Dr. McCance-Katz actions are aimed at cutting social programs. The five Senators certainly have a responsibility to monitor the job that the assistant secretary is doing, but they should wait to see what she proposes as an alternative to NREPP before assuming the worst.

I’m not certain where Weight Watchers (R) will end up when Dr. McCance-Katz is done. But what I am certain of is that she is trying to steer SAMHSA in a different direction from when it was heavily criticized during congressional hearings for being wasteful, ineffective, ignoring serious mental illnesses, and disparaging the use of medications.

You moron...Dr Crooked McCance-Katz who opposed it was a Trump nominee I understand the program well..

It’s been a few weeks since President Trump announced Elinore McCance-Katz as his nominee for the Assistant Secretary for Mental Health, and I must say, the pick serves as a reminder to all children’s mental health advocates that we have our work cut out for us.

It worked and helped so many mental health professionals

Feds freeze mental health practices registry - CNN
 
It will not mean action.

It is all smoke and mirrors ... they don't care at all who dies. They only care about their monthly check from the NRA.

.

You'll never get your gun ban....

These paid off congress are sweating bullets.. I wish I could march with those kids on March 2nd.. in DC #March4Life

.
Why, do you enjoy taking advantage of emotionally disturbed children being used as pawns by evil scum?
 
What Lying Trump and the GOP will do, if there is enough pressure they come up with some meaningless legislation like bullet clips are limited to 29 rather than 30 bullets and then hail it as 'peace in our time' for gun legislation.

They are hollow people and the deaths of children doesn't even register in their brains.
 
Why didn't Hussein do anything in the eight freaking stagnant years of his administration? Under Hussein's crooked "leadership" the FBI was so busy conducting illegal surveillances on political enemies that they failed to act on a tip about the Boston Marathon bombers, they dropped an investigation on the niteclub shooter just before he went viral, they failed to stop Hodgkinson and Paddock and they claimed that they couldn't find a guy when there were only nine other people in the U.S. with the same name.
 
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