Showing posts with label Trump letter to Pelosi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trump letter to Pelosi. Show all posts

Saturday, December 21, 2019

Mental health professionals analyze Trump's letter to Pelosi

Reportedly co-authored by Stephen Miller, Trump's white supremacist White House adviser, Trump’s letter continued numerous obvious lies about impeachment, the Ukraine scandal and other matters.

In keeping with his strategy of stochastic terrorism, Trump’s letter is an incitement to violence by his followers against the Democrats for the “crime” of impeachment.

Trump is possessed of the delusional belief that he (and by implication his supporters) is a victim of a “witch hunt” akin to the famous event in Salem, Massachusetts, in 1692. In keeping with his malignant narcissism, Trump’s letter, of course, boasts of his strength and fortitude against the Democrats and other enemies.

[...]

Dan P. McAdams, chair and professor of the Department of Psychology at Northwestern University

[...]

Venomous and vitriolic, obsessively focused on the self and nothing else, this letter is what we have come to know as vintage Trump. Had we been handed this document just three years ago and told it was once written by a president of the United States, we would have been aghast, and we would have considered it to be one of the most remarkable texts ever unearthed.

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In terms of what we have come to expect from President Trump, the only remarkable thing about this letter is that it is so long — and that it contains a few big words, like “solemnity.”
But, remember, he had help writing the letter.
But in nearly every other way, the letter is like the vitriolic, grievance-filled tweets he sends out every day, full of falsehoods, hyperbole and hate. As an extended expression of who Trump really is, the letter shows you how his mind works and what his raw experience is like.

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Trump has fought ever day of his adult life as if he were being impeached by his enemies. And there have always been countless enemies, because his antagonism brings them out of the woodwork.

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Trump needs to hate Democrats. If suddenly all his enemies lay down as lambs and promised to cooperate with him, he might kill himself. He would have no reason to go on. He needs enemies as much as he needs air to breathe.

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Dr. David Reiss, psychiatrist, expert in mental fitness evaluations.

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For Trump, his feelings define reality. It would be interesting if someone in the media was able to ask Trump, "What does the word 'fair' mean to you?" Because, objectively, Trump complains he is being treated "unfairly" anytime he does not get his way, his feelings are hurt, and/or others are not accepting what he says at face value and without question — even if it is contrary to proven fact or internally inconsistent.

Whoever actually wrote the letter, it accurately reflects Trump's immaturity that has been obvious in public as long as he has been a public figure: insisting that his needs be met in a child-like manner; having very poor problem-solving ability; having an inability to take responsibility for anything and projecting his own negative attributes onto others; an inability to look at consequences of his statements or actions. Basically, acting as a frustrated or emotionally hurt toddler would react.

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Dr. Lance Dodes, assistant clinical professor of psychiatry (retired), Harvard Medical School, currently training and supervising analyst emeritus at the Boston Psychoanalytic Society and Institute.

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Mr. Trump's letter shows his incapacity to recognize other people as separate from him or having worth.

As he always does, he accuses others of precisely what he has done, in precisely the same language. When confronted with violating the Constitution he says his accusers are violating the Constitution. When others point out that he undermines democracy, he says they undermine democracy. Through these very simpleminded projections he deletes others' selfhood and replaces who they are with what is unacceptable in himself.

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Dr. John Gartner, co-founder of the Duty to Warn PAC.

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When you read excerpts of the Trump letter to Pelosi it doesn't do justice to how unhinged, paranoid and manic it is in its entirety.

It shows the usual formal properties of a Trump rant: proclaiming himself the victim of an evil conspiracy, while projecting onto his critics everything bad he is actually doing [...] all blended seamlessly with outright lies.

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Dr. Justin Frank, former clinical professor of psychiatry at the George Washington University Medical Center

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When I first read Donald Trump’s six-page letter to Speaker Pelosi, I marveled at the ease with which he shared what goes on in his mind openly, and without reservation. His letter is the quintessential example of how professional victims actually think. They turn the prosecutor into the persecutor.

Trump’s letter is just such an expression of entitled, delusional grievance. He accuses Pelosi of injuring his family, but it is his nepotism that exposes his older children to public scrutiny and his teenager (to whom he refers as “Melania’s son") to life in a fishbowl. More damning, in making her a public figure, he subjected the First Lady to humiliation. He knew full well he paid a stripper $130,000 not to talk about their affair and was surely aware that this and other unsavory behaviors would surface when he sought the presidency.

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He believes the lies he tells, the delinquent traits he disavows. It’s what psychoanalysts call delusional projection. We see it the simple sentence he wrote to the speaker: “You view democracy as your enemy.”

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It is he who hates a system that promotes the idea that no one is above the law.

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Trump has reverted to the most familiar means to cope with fears of being caught, punished and humiliated. Finally, the letter is a treasure trove for psychiatric residents who want to study the psychotic mind. Trump’s paradoxical sleight of hand makes him think he can hide in plain sight.

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Dr. Bandy Lee, assistant clinical professor, Yale University School of Medicine and president of the World Mental Health Organization.

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This letter is a very obvious demonstration of Donald Trump’s severe mental compromise.

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[B]ecause of a common phenomenon that happens when you are continually exposed to a severely compromised person without appropriate intervention. You start taking on the person’s symptoms in a phenomenon called “shared psychosis.”

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Shared psychosis at large scale is also called “mass hysteria.”

The president is quite conscious of his ability to generate mass hysteria, which is the purpose of the letter.

The book I edited, “The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump,” contained three warnings: that the president was more dangerous than people suspected; that he would grow more dangerous with time; and that ultimately, he would become "uncontainable." We are entering the “uncontainable” stage because of shared psychosis.

  Salon

P.S.  Trump has a mirror when he puts on his makeup.  Why doesn't he see his ears?  Does he put his shower cap over instead of behind them?  Or is there a psychological reason he leaves them uncolored?


He looks like a Kabuki clown.

And come to think of it...

Thursday, December 19, 2019

Do all narcissists do this?

I now know three who do.
[In Trump's letter to Nancy Pelosi, he discusses] his “perfect” call with the president of Ukraine. Here’s the kicker: “I said do us a favor, not me, and our country, not a campaign. I then mentioned the Attorney General of the United States. Every time I talk with a foreign leader, I put America’s interests first, just as I did with President Zelensky.”

You see, when you underline things it makes them true. People might lie when they’re typing in normal text, but if you underline it, or ALL CAP it, or UNDERLINE ALL CAP with an exclamation point, it pretty much has to be true. Watch:

TRUMP IS A STABLE GENIUS!

See?

  The Bulwark
...but hey, do what you want...you will anyway.

Wednesday, December 18, 2019

The madman's letter

Here again is a link to the whole thing, but I wanted to point out this paragraph that stands out to me as perhaps the most insane and disingenuous one of all (and that's saying a lot).


That's just outstanding.  Twice the House Democrats offered him the opportunity to appear personally or through his lawyers, and he refused.  And how many times has it been pointed out that the right to confront accusers is a process of a trial, not of a hearing that is tantamount to a Grand Jury? 

And he still thinks there was nothing wrong with that phone call.  Apparently, for him to have been wrong, he would have had to use the word "bribe" in it.

Obviously, reality is not a concern in Trumpland.

And then he makes the statement that "more due process was afforded to those accused in the Salem Witch Trials."   That's funny.  Along with the constant refrain of "witch hunt", he's still alluding to himself as a witch.  I wonder why no one has pointed that out to him.

...but hey, do what you want...you will anyway.

So mad he wrote a letter

[In o]ver six pages packed with scathing criticism, the president charges the architects of the impeachment process with violating their oaths of office, breaking their allegiance to the constitution and cheapening what he calls “the very ugly word, impeachment!”

  The Guardian
And only a few weeks ago, people - including Nancy Pelosi - were saying Trump wanted them to impeach him as an excuse not to do it. They would have been violating their oaths of office and breaking their allegiance to the constitution if they didn't.
The president’s claim that the impeachment process declares “open war” on democracy is a thinly veiled attempt to redirect back at his opponents accusations that he abused his power and obstructed Congress.

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Trump’s letter rehashes several of his favorite talking points, regurgitated profusely on his Twitter feed.

He claims his phone conversations with the president of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, were “perfect” and repeats a debunked conspiracy theory that Biden had forced the ousting of a Ukrainian prosecutor in order to stymie an investigation into corruption at an energy company that employed his son Hunter.

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Around the country, thousands of protestors attended rallies in support of impeachment. The demonstrations were organized by MoveOn.org and a coalition of progressive groups. Bundled up in winter parkas, protestors marched across New York’s Times Square chanting “No one’s above the law”.
Here are five highlights, or otherwise, from Trump’s dispatch.

1) ‘More due process was afforded to those accused in the Salem Witch Trials.’ Fourteen women and five men were hung in colonial Massachusetts the late 1690s, for supposedly engaging in witchcraft. “Spectral evidence” was admissible in the trials – evidence where a witness had a dream, or apparition, which featured the alleged witch engaged in dark deeds. Spectral evidence is yet to feature in Trump’s impeachment hearings.

2) ‘You [Nancy Pelosi] are offending Americans of faith by continually saying: “I pray for the president,” when you know this statement is not true, unless it is meant in a negative sense. It is a terrible thing you are doing, but you will have to live with it, not I!’

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3) ‘There are not many people who could have taken the punishment inflicted during this period of time, and yet done so much for the success of America and its citizens.’ Trump’s claims that he alone could withstand such rough treatment from his opponents rather fall down here – located as they are in a six-page ode to self-pity.

4) ‘You view democracy as your enemy!’ This exclamation comes midway through the letter, after Trump claims the Democrats have developed “Trump Derangement Syndrome”. Trump is not confident of the odds Democrats will recover from the malady: “You will never get over it!” he writes.

5) ‘I write this letter to you for the purpose of history and to put my thoughts on a permanent and indelible record. 100 years from now, when people look back at this affair, I want them to understand it, and learn from it, so that it can never happen to another president again.’ There’s a slightly self-satisfied air to the final paragraph of the letter, as if Trump feels he has delivered a piece of soaring oratory which will be pored over by scholars in years to come. At least here, in a sense, Trump is correct. People are unlikely to forget “this affair” – his presidency – for a long, long time and historians of the future will certainly examine this letter: just perhaps not in the way Trump would want them to.

  Guardian
Trump Pelosi letter: The 30 most blistering lines

I'm guessing he didn't sleep last night and will be rage-tweeting all day today.


Stephen Miller has gotten him in trouble before with a letter in the Comey affair which had to be edited.  This time, I guess, Trump decided WTF, I'm going with it.





Read the full letter here or here.

...but hey, do what you want...you will anyway.