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Journal Article

Citation

Schmuck R, Chesler M. Community Ment. Health J. 1967; 3(4): 382-388.

Affiliation

Educational Psychology Department, Temple University, 19122, Philadelphia, Pa..

Copyright

(Copyright © 1967, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/BF02349239

PMID

24186693

Abstract

Superpatriots' concerns about mental health programs are explored. Superpatriots are defined by nationalistic conservatism, the perception of a major internal communist threat in America, and a commitment to action. Their opposition to mental health programs involves the belief that psychological testing invades privacy and that such programs are extensions of federal bureaucracy, encourage immorality, are ideologically biased, and are part of a communist plot to destroy America. Superpatriots who were interviewed werenot disturbed or alienated. They were strongly fundamentalist in religion, dogmatic, moralistic, and informally associated with other superpatriots through neighborhood groups.


Language: en

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