Forensic psychiatrist, mental health advocate and systems thinker. Opinions my own. RT not endorsement.

Joined May 2021
9 Photos and videos
Paul Furst retweeted
When media outlets like the AFR publish editorials like this, they undermine the democratic rationale of journalism. Instead of holding power to account, they become propagandists for the richest and most powerful.
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Paul Furst retweeted
All too rare. @FinancialReview should ask permission to reprint it
A well-argued rejoinder to the bilious tide of saint-claiming going on right now. From a business owner/originator who clearly knows what he’s talking about. Bravo
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Paul Furst retweeted
Australia now has the world’s strongest economy and some of its weakest economic reporting. Coverage of the latest Federal Budget exposed just how far standards in Australia’s media have declined. The Budget data showed Australia remains one of the strongest-performing advanced economies on Earth. It is currently the only country with unemployment and inflation both below 4.7%, median adult wealth above US$250,000, triple-A credit ratings from all major agencies, moderate interest rates, and government debt below 25% of GDP. On top of that, the Budget introduced reforms aimed at tackling long-standing structural inequities changes that many economists argue were overdue. In most countries, results like these would dominate headlines and strengthen public confidence. Instead, much of Australia’s media responded with outrage, fear campaigns and ideological attacks. Headlines warned of “budget debacles”, “dire consequences”, “war on wealth”, and “further pain”, while largely ignoring Australia’s globally leading economic performance. Much of the commentary relied on the same recycled narratives that have dominated economic reporting for years narratives that often collapse under scrutiny. Claim: Living standards are falling. Reality: Living standards dipped globally after COVID, including in Australia, but key indicators have rebounded strongly since 2023. Australians are travelling overseas in record numbers, spending more on dining, retail and discretionary goods, and consumer activity has surged. Claim: Wages are going backwards. Reality: Real wages were hit during the inflation spike that followed the pandemic, but wage growth has now outpaced inflation. Since late 2023, wages, pensions and welfare payments have all risen faster than consumer prices. Claim: Australia is a high-tax country. Reality: Australia remains one of the lower-taxed advanced economies. The GST is just 10%, far below consumption taxes across much of Europe, while Australia’s total tax-to-GDP ratio sits near the bottom of the OECD. Claim: Labor keeps increasing taxes. Reality: IMF data places Australia among the lowest-taxing developed economies in both 2025 and 2026. Claim: Labor is anti-business. Reality: Business profits outside mining have reached record highs, while employment and expansion across many sectors continue to grow. Claim: Labor spends recklessly. Reality: Spending as a share of GDP under Anthony Albanese remains below levels seen under several previous governments, including the Morrison Government. Claim: Business investment is collapsing. Reality: Investment stagnated during the Coalition years but has resumed growth under the current government. The bigger issue is what this says about Australia’s media culture. Economic reporting increasingly resembles political campaigning rather than factual analysis. Too often, selective statistics, misleading framing and emotionally loaded commentary replace balanced reporting. When positive economic outcomes are ignored while fear and outrage dominate coverage, it damages public trust, distorts national debate and weakens social cohesion. Australia’s economy is not perfect. Productivity, housing affordability and inequality remain serious challenges. But pretending the country is in economic collapse despite internationally strong results does not inform the public. It misleads them.
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Paul Furst retweeted
Hot Fuzz (2007) is one of the most tightly constructed comedies ever made. Edgar Wright and Simon Pegg pack the script so densely that almost every line ends up as a setup, payoff, callback, or sly reference to classic action movies.

What’s the name of this movie? • 10/10 Plot • 10/10 Cinematography • 10/10 Cast • 10/10 Acting • 10/10 Soundtrack • 10/10 Direction
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Paul Furst retweeted
🚨NEW: Kerry Kennedy has announced Late Show Host Stephen Colbert is the recipient of the 2025 Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Award for his advocacy for free speech and speaking truth to power. RETWEET to congratulate Colbert on this honor!
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RT @AllenFrancesMD: Finding: Healthy people who use chatbots a lot were not harmed by them. Not that reassuring because of folie-a-chatbo…
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Paul Furst retweeted
Opinion | News Corp’s controlling share of real estate company REA Group is worth about $13.75 billion — about 65% of News Corp's entire market value. No wonder The Australian is tut-tutting so hard. crikey.com.au/2026/05/20/tax…
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Paul Furst retweeted
Nothing says "I have no idea what I'm talking about" more than stating that "antipsychotics don't have meaningful benefit in psychosis."
23 Jun 2025
The idea that antipsychotics do not provide clinically meaningful benefits in acute treatment of psychosis is so disconnected from scientific & clinical evidence that I consider contorted arguments for it as a proxy for one’s ability to engage in supercharged confirmation bias.
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Paul Furst retweeted
Some frenzied feedback on the below: The cookers hate facts - but here are a few: 1990: 60% of the population finished year 12 - now 80% ; 8% of the population had a uni degree - now 34% Female participation rate 52% - now 63% Inflation was 6.5% - now 4.1% Cash rate was 17% - now 4.35% Life expectancy was 76 years - now 85 years To name a few ... Is 2026 better than 1990? Of course it is.
1990: Poor levels of education, low female workforce participation, high inflation, high unemployment, high interest rates, low life expectancy, company tax rate 39%, top income tax scale of 47% came in at $50,000pa ... And the home ownership rate was only 1 ppt above where it is now. But those were the good old days.
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Paul Furst retweeted
Thoughts? To me this is MADNESS. Can anyone think that, presented with two paths at an election - the Trumpian and non-Trumpian - Australia would EVER say, "Yup, let's emulate the worst US President in the history of the world"? #Seriously. #Auspol
Angus Taylor tells Sky After Dark viewers it was a “mistake” for any Libs to distance themselves from Trump & MAGA at the 2025 election. “You won’t see me doing it!” Angus wants this to stay in the late-night Sky vault. Please share so mainstream Aussies also find out. #auspol
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Paul Furst retweeted
Many of them didn't. Your great-great-grandmother was probably drinking opium for her nerves, sold at the corner shop as cheap as a pint of beer. It was called laudanum, a mix of opium and alcohol that doctors handed out for anxiety, sleeplessness, and "women's troubles." Mothers fed it to crying babies. The babies often stopped crying because they stopped breathing. The men drank. By 1830 the average American was putting away almost two bottles of liquor a week. Whiskey cost less than coffee or milk. People started their day with a shot and ended it with another. Toddlers drank from their parents' rum mugs. ADHD has a long paper trail. A Scottish doctor described kids who couldn't focus in 1798. By 1846 there was a popular German children's book about a boy called Fidgety Philipp who couldn't sit still. In 1902, a London children's doctor named George Still wrote a famous paper on the same kids and called it a "defect of moral control." Same kid, three different centuries. Depression and anxiety had old names too. Melancholia, hysteria, the vapors. Treatments included bloodletting, ice baths, and chaining people to a wall. By 1937, American mental hospitals held 451,672 patients and took up more than half of every hospital bed in the country. Inside the walls, about 1 in 10 patients died each year. Then came the lobotomy. Between 1949 and 1952, around 50,000 Americans were strapped to a chair while a doctor hammered an ice pick through the thin bone above their eye and wiggled it around inside their brain. It took about ten minutes. Sixty percent of the patients were women. About 1 in 20 died from the procedure. Many of the ones who lived came out with no personality left. The man who invented the procedure won a Nobel Prize. Britain's male suicide rate hit 30.3 per 100,000 in 1905. The lowest rates ever recorded in British history are happening right now. Plenty of our ancestors didn't make it. They drank themselves dead. They overdosed on shop-bought opium. They got locked in asylums and never came out. They had picks driven through their eye sockets. They killed themselves in numbers we don't see today. The conditions were always there. The treatments just used to be worse than the disease.
May 16
How did our ancestors survive without ADHD medication or depression pills and anxiety meds? Can anyone explain?
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RT @AllenFrancesMD: I've had numerous debates with antipshchiatry movement. We agree about overtreatment/but totally disagree re undertreat…
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Paul Furst retweeted
Just your friendly reminder that the Howard and Costello Government still comfortably retain the record for the highest taxing Budgets in Australian history With 24.2% of GDP in the 2004-05 and 2005-06 Budgets
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Paul Furst retweeted
Sickening.
One of the most terrifying images in history: a transformation from life to death. Gaza in 2023 and 2026!
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Paul Furst retweeted
Bless the Murdoch tabloids and their biased shite. How did they react when Tony Abbott and the Liberal Party broke major election promises? They praised it. Here is a reminder. Enjoy! Also, cry me a river!
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Paul Furst retweeted
“People have had enough of the hand-out culture that’s taken over this country." theshovel.com.au/2026/05/11/…
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Paul Furst retweeted
Peta Credlin says she’s found the problem with the Libs, they haven’t lurched far enough to the Right.🙄 Blames those horrible moderates with “big moderate voices” forcing Labor-lite policies.🤔 You know, like the One Flag policy, exiting Net Zero🤣 You cant fix stupid. #auspol
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Paul Furst retweeted
oh this isn’t an exaggeration. this is exactly how tucker carlson is.
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Paul Furst retweeted
Renewables surpass coal power globally. This is why bad actor politicians, One Nation, etc, are going into hyperdrive. Their puppet masters, fossil fuels, are increasingly desperate. It’s why the lies are even more extreme — and even more obvious…
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