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Willowbrook: The Last Great Disgrace (NSFW)

Posted on 6/25/25 at 9:30 am
Posted by lsudave1
Baton Metairie
Member since Jan 2005
11275 posts
Posted on 6/25/25 at 9:30 am
So I will preface this by saying that this may need to go on the Movie board since it’s technically a documentary but it’s on Youtube so I’m not sure.

I went down a rabbit hole the other night about Willowbrook State School, which was the largest institution for special needs people in the US with around 6,000 patients and holy shite. I know there were institutions like this throughout the country with similar conditions but it is absolutely mind blowing that this was still occurring in the last 40-50 years and there are people alive today who unfortunately underwent unimaginable abuse in places like this. It’s also unbelievable that the average American is probably still unaware of this to this day considering it might be one of the worst things that has ever happened in this country. These poor children were subject to medical experimentation and literally just sat around all day with nothing to do except roll around in their own excrement.

I know the O-T’s feelings about Geraldo Rivera due to his more recent antics but thank God he exposed this place. This is not an easy watch but I’m interested to hear other people’s opinions especially considering the fact that mental healthcare is still such a huge unresolved issue. Also apologize for not knowing how to embed the video.


LINK


Posted by F1y0n7h3W4LL
Below I-10
Member since Jul 2019
3481 posts
Posted on 6/25/25 at 9:41 am to
I had no idea.

"Willowbrook" is such a charming and peaceful sounding name and adding "state school" makes it sound even better. That is hard to watch.

6,000 people makes for a small city.

Posted by GumboPot
Member since Mar 2009
138911 posts
Posted on 6/25/25 at 9:44 am to
Maybe the push to get rid of mental institutions like this starting during the Reagan ear was a net positive. It dispersed the problems and forced more care from family members instead of concentrating the problem in one building.
Posted by chinhoyang
Member since Jun 2011
25482 posts
Posted on 6/25/25 at 9:47 am to
In the mid-80's, I was involved with some litigation involving the Fort Worth State School (most residences were mentally disabled and not psychiatric patients). It was a terrible place. Our client drowned in a bath tub, and to this day I think one of the workers drowned her.

Posted by The Cow Goes Moo Moo
Bucktown
Member since Nov 2012
3963 posts
Posted on 6/25/25 at 9:48 am to
You should do a dive into the Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys.

It isn't for special needs children, but the things that went on there is sickening.
Posted by LSUBFA83
Member since May 2012
4031 posts
Posted on 6/25/25 at 9:50 am to
We did need to get rid of institutions like these but unfortunately we went too far and had nothing to substitute. And as a result many folks are left on their own.
Posted by TexasTiger89
Houston, TX
Member since Feb 2005
26267 posts
Posted on 6/25/25 at 9:50 am to
Willowbrook is the name of a crappy mall in Houston.
Posted by F1y0n7h3W4LL
Below I-10
Member since Jul 2019
3481 posts
Posted on 6/25/25 at 9:51 am to
quote:

Maybe the push to get rid of mental institutions like this starting during the Reagan ear was a net positive.


You're probably right.

With homelessness being a monumental problem, we hear a lot of people blaming it on Reagan for the closure of mental institutions.

Being homeless is a helluva bad situation but I wonder if sleeping under a bridge might be a step up from those horrible shithole institutions.
Posted by sqerty
AP
Member since May 2022
8054 posts
Posted on 6/25/25 at 9:55 am to
I've watched it. The things mentally handicapped people had to go through for so many years is heartbreaking. This was an expose that needed to be done.
Posted by lsudave1
Baton Metairie
Member since Jan 2005
11275 posts
Posted on 6/25/25 at 10:02 am to
quote:

We did need to get rid of institutions like these but unfortunately we went too far and had nothing to substitute


Agreed. I work in the field and I'm still somewhat of the opinion that there needs to be large institutions that provide long term care for psychiatric issues because now you can pretty much only receive care from a state mental institution if you've committed a crime (at least it's that way in Louisiana) which isn't really fair to those with mental illness who are not a threat to others. But as far as people with special needs go this is 100% NOT the solution.
Posted by Camp Randall
The Shadow of the Valley of Death
Member since Nov 2005
17066 posts
Posted on 6/25/25 at 10:04 am to
There is obviously no easy solution. Many of the people on the street today would/should be in a hospital of some sort. Money tho freedom etc
Posted by GumboPot
Member since Mar 2009
138911 posts
Posted on 6/25/25 at 10:05 am to
quote:

With homelessness being a monumental problem, we hear a lot of people blaming it on Reagan for the closure of mental institutions.

Being homeless is a helluva bad situation but I wonder if sleeping under a bridge might be a step up from those horrible shithole institutions.


From what I saw in that video sleeping under a bridge is almost paradise.

With that said, this is just part of the downside of the human condition. It will always exist. Diluting the problem seems to be a better solution than concentrating it, but I'm far from an expert on this issue.
Posted by Nado Jenkins83
Land of the Free
Member since Nov 2012
64775 posts
Posted on 6/25/25 at 10:06 am to
Our office/shop is not far away
Posted by HeadCall
Member since Feb 2025
5715 posts
Posted on 6/25/25 at 10:08 am to
quote:

Being homeless is a helluva bad situation but I wonder if sleeping under a bridge might be a step up from those horrible shithole institutions.


Just for the crazies though. The rest of society has to see all the blight now.
Posted by TheHarahanian
Actually not Harahan as of 6/2023
Member since May 2017
22724 posts
Posted on 6/25/25 at 10:09 am to
quote:

You're probably right.

With homelessness being a monumental problem, we hear a lot of people blaming it on Reagan for the closure of mental institutions.

I’ve never heard the blame placed on Reagan. I’ve heard it placed on Congress a lot.

Reagan pulled funding, but deinstitutionalization started in the 1960s.

And we need institutions, and better evaluation of people to determine if they’re capable of living in our society and caring for themselves, and not harming themselves or others.

Edit: the post below is correct.
This post was edited on 6/25/25 at 10:12 am
Posted by EvrybodysAllAmerican
Member since Apr 2013
12529 posts
Posted on 6/25/25 at 10:11 am to
quote:


Maybe the push to get rid of mental institutions like this starting during the Reagan ear was a net positive. It dispersed the problems and forced more care from family members instead of concentrating the problem in one building.


It dispersed them onto the streets to wreak havoc on all public spaces. Obviously you dont want abusive places like this, but there's got to be something in between this and the streets to help them.
Posted by GumboPot
Member since Mar 2009
138911 posts
Posted on 6/25/25 at 10:13 am to
quote:

but there's got to be something in between this and the streets to help them.
Posted by lsudave1
Baton Metairie
Member since Jan 2005
11275 posts
Posted on 6/25/25 at 10:15 am to
quote:

It dispersed them onto the streets to wreak havoc on all public spaces.


With regards to emptying psychiatric hospitals treating severe psychiatric disorders yes I agree. The patients at Willowbrook though had Autism, Downs Syndrome, MR and even some just had cerebral palsy or muscular dystrophy and were mistaken for being mentally handicapped. Those people were harmless and they were treated like complete shite.
Posted by ThermoDynamicTiger
Baton Rouge
Member since Jul 2008
1433 posts
Posted on 6/25/25 at 10:43 am to
That is painful to watch for even 1 minute. Those poor children. It's a sad and fallen world.
Posted by wm72
Brooklyn
Member since Mar 2010
8995 posts
Posted on 6/25/25 at 11:13 am to
quote:

Maybe the push to get rid of mental institutions like this starting during the Reagan ear was a net positive. It dispersed the problems and forced more care from family members instead of concentrating the problem in one building.


If you like tons of cities across America having swarms of mentally deranged people wandering around homeless and ultimately spending just as much tax money on the police, hospitals and social workers constantly dealing with them, it was great policy.

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