And as for schizophrenics being unable to congregate, that's probably true of people afflicted with a severe form of the disorder, but it's absolutely not true of any of the people I've known who had the diagnosis. Their impairment made socialization with non-schizophrenics difficult to impossible, but give them a room full of people who could enthusiastically confirm and reinforce their particular delusion of persecution and you would not believe the level of bonding that takes place

This thread compares the experiences of people with the characteristics of victims of trauma-based mind control with those of people who believe they're being remotely tortured. Many of us who can identify with the kind of hands-on medical and psychiatric experimentation are very concerned at the way we're lumped into the same category and then dismissed by many people as being delusional. Because we're not.
As lightningBugout said:
...there is something in your post that seems to characterize MC survivors trying to distinguish their collective experience from the electronic harassment set that makes it sound as though "we" are also "mentally ill" and scapegoating another group. That was not in what I wrote.
I'd be careful with talking about DID and "mental illness." It's more complicated than that. Dissociation is a normal, healthy coping mechanism that, in and of itself, does not signify "illness" at all. It's simply an adaptation that usually outwears it's usefulness and often begins to cause problems in adult life. A great deal of suffering and some oddly formed emotional issues yes, but I would characterize dissociative disorders as more similar to maladaptive development than illness.
The fact that DID is so universally misunderstood--even on a conspiracy board--is due to the power of those original MKULTRA spychiatrists to control any sort of discussion of the disorder they were deliberately creating and exploiting. The old monsters have been dying off for a while now and DID is finally coming out from under the cloud of disinfo that was generated by them, but it's obvious just from reading recent posts here that the disorder is not in the clear yet.
To work to differentiate oneself from people suffering from delusional disorders is not intended to denigrate their suffering at all. And no one in this thread has done so. What we're trying to focus upon are ways to figure out what may have happened to us and to find terms to use to describe that suite of experiences and psychiatric diagnoses accurately. Anyone who insists upon gathering all of us into one group is in effect doing the work of the covert groups whose primary focus is upon invalidating anyone who survived a trauma-based mind control program.
If they can do that well enough, none of them need fear prison terms for their human rights abuses. And since most of us have screen memory programming specifically designed to invalidate ourselves, we're incredibly easy to discredit publicly. Like American Dream, I've known and liked people who self-identify as "TI's" but been unable to see evidence that e-harrassment was actually occurring--and we're talking years here. But their suffering was very real and the validation they were receiving from the online communities to which they belonged was profoundly comforting to them. I would never dream of depriving them of that comfort. But I can't sit back and allow my own history to be conflated with theirs any longer.
LilyPat