@Mad Jack , I'm not sure why, but you keep twisting the arguments I'm making. I never said that treating mental illness and raising awareness would end mass shootings, and I'm not sure where you got the impression that I said that. I was trying to say that greater awareness towards mental health and breaking down the stigma some people perceive would be brought against them for seeking could prevent
some mass shootings, particularly the ones involving mental illnesses like severe depression or uncontrolled psychotic disorders. I'm
not saying that greater awareness will end the shootings, or that these people should be stigmatized. However, if a person has a disorder/illness and is afraid to come forward, or comes forward and isn't recognized, that's a problem, and it happens far more often than it should in our society. Adam Lanza is a perfect example of someone with psychiatric problems that were known about for years but didn't receive the treatment he needed and ended up committing a heinous act of violence. So am I trying to advocate monitoring the 1% of the population with A-SPD? No. Am I saying we need to "force the one in ten Americans with anger issues into treatment" (which I realize isn't a personality disorder along with "depressive personality disorder", which is why I said the article was ambiguous and put that "disorder" in quotes)? No. What I am arguing is that there are too many cases where the condition is very recognizable or a person with a very severe personality disorder goes completely ignored. That's a problem, and that was what I was saying I was disappointed that you weren't acknowledging.
As for your point on suicide, I already made that argument but you seemed to either skim over it or ignore it altogether, so I'll re-quote myself:
Either way you look at it, it doesn't change that we both want greater awareness and an end to the negative connotations often associated with people suffering from mental illness. To get back to the original topic, if we can't recognize that this is a problem in general society, nothing is going to change in the medical world where we're put on pedestals and expected to be shining examples of intelligent, well-adjusted, and healthy individuals all-around.