Psychiatry and psychology
Use of mind-altering drugs and coercive "medical" treatments as methods of arbitrary torture and punishment in court
Detention in pursuance of tort or civil claims and not as punishment for crime, whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, is considered torture.
"Mental health" exists to its disreputable practitioners as a branch of law alongside civil and criminal law and not of medicine. None of the laws on mental health make reference to any specific diagnosis or treatment that would be beneficial to any patient. On the contrary the doctors who specialize in torture appear in court as adversaries of the defendants they are authorized by the courts without the law or the Constitution to drug and torture defendants for enhanced interrogation, forced confession, and restoration of competency for trial.
More rotten lawyers and shysters and corrupt judges from California.

If you have concerns about mental health or mental illnesses (e.g., depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder), seek professional help. ... Try something out. If it doesn’t work, try something else. ... Mental health should be a top priority for all lawyers and legal professionals. Disbar the stigma: seek help when needed, talk to family, friends, or colleagues about your situation, and support others.
First of all, they're lawyers. When they have "concerns" of mental health, it's certainly not themselves they are seeking such "help" for at any rate. And in a legal context, "help" is a "service," that is, a service of process in court. They're not interested in mental health for themselves. They are only interested in having mental health charges served against defendants and respondents in court as part of their civil or criminal claims in a typical lawsuit strategy, "Try something out. If it doesn’t work, try something else." There are all sorts of obscure and presumptuous motions lawyers can file in court relating to the mental health of their clients or opponents.