In the 1978-1979 academic year at Princeton University, 36 undergraduates and eight graduate students obtained abortions using the insurance plan provided through mandatory student health fees. Previously, University Health Services (UHS) helped students obtain abortions through other means. A group of 27 students, saying that Princeton University “has violated our right to freedom of conscience in forcing us to pay for something which we consider to be morally reprehensible,” proposed a rebate for students opposed to abortion for the portion of student health fees that would be used to fund them in 1979. Protests of the mandatory fees being used for abortions intensified over the next few years. Rebates were never approved, but in 1981, the Board of Trustees voted to fund abortion coverage from the endowment earmarked for UHS rather than from sources that included student health fees. Coverage was maintained as part of the student health plan.
Concerned Alumni of Princeton pamphlet, 1981. Office of the Executive Vice President Records (AC271), Box 25.
Every year, the state of Illinois struggles to find a place for hundreds of children with serious mental-health issues—holding them in psychiatric hospitals for sometimes weeks or months even after they're cleared for discharge.
We know that instead of economic aid without psych, "mental health" tries to medically traffick and exploit people. Here is proof from #Illinois and children kept without release from The Atlantic:
"...one 8-year-old girl who, in 2015, spent 153 days in a psychiatric hospital—only 20 of them 'medically necessary.' Walker and her colleagues call them “stuck kids.”
"In 2014, 88 psychiatric hospital admissions went beyond 'medical necessity,' but that figure jumped to 246 the following year..."
"State has spent nearly $7 million from 2015 through 2017 on psychiatric hospitalizations for children as young as 4 that went beyond..."
Psych Victim Wardell: "His hospitalization dragged on through Thanksgiving, Christmas, and his birthday in March, and he became increasingly angry, arguing with staffers about his stay and even getting into fights with other 'patients.' “I was fighting everybody because they wouldn’t let me go home,” he said."
Circa $10,000 spent on economic aid for minimum living costs is far less than the cost of false imprisonment and exploiting with "mental health."
Remember Gillian Speke's daughter in the #UK gave them an over $100,000 profit per year in an UHS owned hospital in Britain. At least the Atlantic was brave enough to name the victims, unlike the BBC News.
His mother said the boy had merely thrown a tantrum. But a hospital owned by America’s largest psychiatric chain, UHS, held him for three days — and filed a court petition to keep him even longer. ...
Florida psychiatric hospital held a 6 year old against the will of his parents- Despite not being a danger