Phillip McGarry previously highlighted benefits of maintaining medical impartiality in an era of political dissent, Reference McGarry1 but this striving for neutrality seems vulnerable to coming unstuck when it comes to analysis of putative relationships between mental illness and terrorism. In his response to the piece by Hurlow et al Reference Hurlow, Wilson and James2 he sets up and then demolishes a straw man.
Of course, he is entirely correct that those who are members of terrorist groups are generally psychologically stable. This is a consistent finding in the literature. After all, as observed by Lord Alderdice in his analysis of the 30-year campaign of terrorism in Northern Ireland, 'individuals with psychosis […] are excluded by terrorist organizations since they create a high risk' and those with 'personality disorder […] often become impossible for their organizations to handle'. Reference Alderdice3 But the same is not the case with lone actors, where a high prevalence of mental illness is found. And, within the UK, this has been the finding of those whose research background is the civil strife in Northern Ireland, Reference Gill4 to which McGarry wishes us to turn our attention.
One might question whether any lone actor can truly be called a terrorist, as most exhibit a mixture of mental disorder and social grievance, wrapped in a political flag. Indeed, the overlap between so-called lone actor terrorists, lone actor school/university killers, lone actor workplace shooters, lone actor assassins and lone actor spree killers is sufficiently large to suggest that they all be considered as parts of one phenomenon: grievance-fuelled violence.
The role of mental illness in lone actor political assassinations – a companion phenomenon to that of lone actor terrorism – has been understood for centuries, if not millennia. Reference James5 It has also been subject to systematic study since the 19th century with the work of Laschi and Lombroso Reference Laschi and Lombroso6 and, in particular, the 80-case study by Régis. Reference Régis7 In this second decade of this millennium it is beginning to seem reasonable to ask if the trend of repeating the truism that most people with mental illness are not violent is tipping the balance towards a culture within psychiatry that does not assist in the task of preventing violence from occurring where we can, both for the sake of the patient and their potential victims.
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