My most frequently used phrase since 45 was inaugurated: WTF is he even talking about?
[mediaite.com]
On a T-shirt I just received:
Super
Callous
Fragile
Racist
Sexist
Not My
Potus
I will wear it gleefully. VOTE Republicans out of office!
The hashtags I had trending before being, ummm, asked to leave Twitter, were #globalembarrassment, #notmypresident, #fucktrump, and #pleasedieinyoursleep.
I haven't a fucking clue! His base seems to get it. I guess l'm just not fluent in stupid.
@MissKathleen That's way to generous.
But folks, isn’t he tremendously healthy, more tremendously healthy than any president has ever been before! I am paraphrasing so I don’t know if I left out a tremendously there. If that medical report he published was written by a doctor then I am the virgin Mary! Incidentally, I am neither a virgin nor am I called Mary!
He doesn't know what he's talking about either.
I was having a similar conversation on this latest gaff by the Grand Poopbah at the White House and a friend shared this with me:
"The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump: 27 Psychiatrists and Mental Health Experts Assess a President." That book became an instant New York Times bestseller. Within days, it was out of stock at the big outlets and sold out in bookstores around the country. One of the nation’s largest publishers could not keep up with the demand for weeks. Clearly, our concerns were resonating with the public.
Diagnosing Donald.Diagnosing Donald.Thomas Dunne Books
One way or another, the consequences of Trump’s presidency are affecting pretty much all of us. Much of this has to do with his effects on our own mental health.
For one, Americans are exhausted. The 24/7 news cycle may be part of the reason why, but there’s potentially another explanation. Pathology is confusing to the healthy. There is a reason why staying in close quarters with a person suffering from mental illness usually induces what is called a “shared psychosis.” Vulnerable or weakened individuals are more likely to succumb, and when their own mental health is compromised, they may develop an irresistible attraction to pathology, destruction, and even death (of self or others). The resulting harm is how we tell illness from health.
Politics has nothing to do with medicine, which is why a liberal health professional would not ignore a kidney stone in a patient just because he is Republican. Similarly, health professionals would not call liver cancer something else because it is afflicting the president. When signs of illness become apparent, it is natural for the physician to recommend an exam. But when the ailment goes so far as to affect an individuals ability to perform his duty, and in some cases risks harm to the public as a result, then the health professional has a duty to sound the alarm.
Human beings are an enviably adaptable species. However, when mechanisms go awry and reach a state of disorder, the capacity for variety and diversity diminishes and behavior becomes very predictable. This diminishing of flexibility is as consistent in the failing heart as it is in the cancer cell or the disordered human mind.
It is in this context that we should view Trump’s latest exploits. Special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation is not just a matter of criminal indictments; as Trump feels increasingly walled in, his mental stability is likely to suffer and hence also public safety. Mental impairment and criminal-mindedness are not mutually exclusive; not only can they happen at the same time, when combined, these two characteristics become particularly dangerous. Trump has shown marked signs of impairment and psychological disability under ordinary circumstances, hardly able to cope with basic criticism or unflattering news. Presumably, additional stressors will make his condition worse. So far the signs have been almost too predictable.
It does not take a mental health professional to see that a person of Trump's impairments, in the office of the presidency, is a danger to us all. What mental health experts can offer is affirmation that these signs are real, that they may be worse than the public suspects, and that the patterns indicate the need for an urgent evaluation (simply trying to “contain” him or asking him to “get over” them will not work).
Simply put, Trump has already exceeded our usual threshold for evaluation. Just some of the signs that have raised red flags include: verbal aggressiveness, boasting about sexual assaults, inciting violence in others, an attraction to violence and powerful weapons and the taunting of hostile nations with nuclear power. Specific traits that are highly associated with violence include: impulsivity, recklessness, paranoia, a loose grip on reality and poor understanding of consequences, a lack of empathy and belligerence toward others, rage reactions and a constant need to demonstrate power. Such traits interfere with the ability to think rationally, to take in needed information or advice, to weigh consequences and to make sound, logical decisions based on reality.
Do you think he is a sociopath, a psychopath or does he have narcissistic personality disorder? Best guess .
@Marionville I can imagine that narcissism and sociopathic tendencies are part of his personality but more importantly I don't know if he would pass a mental competency test and perhaps that will be his out if he is prosecuted.
He is a moron who goes off into never never land.