This said, I cannot disagree with Prosecutor Whitaker that behaviors of the pharmaceutical industry and its speakers' bureaus, the practitioners of footloose diagnosis and fancy-free polypharmacy (especially for the young), the too cozy relationships between big pharma and big academia, and dare I say certain decisions the APA has made all provide enough evidence for an adverse verdict, especially by a lay reader. The author makes important points about overvalued theories, misplaced treatments, and bad behaviors of some engaged in the often messy, uncertain practice of medicine and psychiatry. Unfortunately, this book is more indictment than honest critique—an example of confirmation bias pretentiously devoid of any balance in the attack.