THURSDAY: "Grandiose" and "delusional," the specialists said!

THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2026

We live in a subpar world: What is the president's mental state or mental condition? If only as a matter of theory, how might a journalist start to discuss that topic?

As we noted on Tuesday, we were intrigued by one part of the recent letter on this topic from 34 medical specialists. We refer to this part of the statement which Senator Whitehouse recently entered in the Congressional Record:

Medical Concerns About President Donald J. Trump and His Fitness for Office  

[...]

Grandiose and delusional beliefs, including assertions of infallibility, imagery of himself as Pope suggestive of a divine mission, being a mythical warrior hero, depicting himself as combat pilot—dropping feces on civilians, and claims that his decision-making authority is unlimited...   

"Grandiose and delusional beliefs." The medical specialists listed such apparent beliefs among their long list of concerns about the president's fitness for office. That inclusion rang a bell with us, because we'd recently perused the Wikipedia entry on the simple term, "Grandiosity." 

On its own, "grandiosity" doesn't seem to exist as a clinical mental health diagnosis. The Wikipedia report starts like this:

Grandiosity

Not to be confused with grandiose delusion...

In psychology, grandiosity is a sense of superiority, uniqueness, or invulnerability that is unrealistic and not based on personal capability. It may be expressed by exaggerated beliefs regarding one's abilities, the belief that few other people have anything in common with oneself, and that one can only be understood by a few, very special people. Grandiosity is a core diagnostic criterion for hypomania/mania in bipolar disorder and narcissistic personality disorder.  

As described (and to the extent that we understand that passage), "grandiosity" doesn't exist as a diagnosis in and of itself. That said, it does constitute "a core diagnostic criterion" for conditions which may obtain in narcissistic personality disorder.  

That said, how do specialists measure the presence of "grandiosity?" As the entry continues, it offers a checklist of manifestations which fits the conqueror of Venezuela and Iran to something quite close to a T:

Measurement

Few scales exist for the sole purpose of measuring grandiosity, though one recent attempt is the Narcissistic Grandiosity Scale (NGS), an adjective rating scale where one indicates the applicability of a word to oneself (e.g. superior, glorious).

Grandiosity is also measured as part of other tests, including the Specific Psychotic Experiences Questionnaire (SPEQ), Personality Inventory for DSM-5 (PID-5), Psychopathy Checklist-Revised, and diagnostic interviews for bipolar disorders and NPD. The Grandiosity section of the Diagnostic Interview for Narcissism (DIN), for instance, describes:

  1. The person exaggerates talents, capacity, and achievements in an unrealistic way.
  2. The person believes in their invulnerability or does not recognize their limitations.
  3. The person has grandiose fantasies.
  4. The person believes that they do not need other people.
  5. The person over-examines and downgrades other people's projects, statements, or dreams in an unrealistic manner.
  6. The person regards themself as unique or special when compared to other people.
  7. The person regards themself as generally superior to other people.
  8. The person behaves self-centeredly and/or self-referentially.
  9. The person behaves in a boastful or pretentious way. 

Is it our imagination, or do those traits fit the past and future conqueror to something resembling a T? 

The president does in fact seem to "regard himself as unique or special when compared to all other people," except perhaps for a handful of the world's most prominent strongmen. Does he seem to imagine himself as one of Them but as separate from everyone else?

Also, does the president "exaggerate his talents, capacity, and achievements in an unrealistic way?" Might it seem that the man who said "Only I can fix it" believes, in an almost magical way, in his own (extremely limited) capabilities?  

Did he possibly feel, as some have suggested, that his godlike powers would cause Iran to fall in the same way Venezuela had? With Cuba sure to follow?

We've linked you to Wikipedia's report on "grandiose delusion / delusions of grandeur" in the useless past. This entry on simple "grandiosity" should not be confused with that, the Wikipedia entry warns.   

Having said that, we ask you this:   

What would it be like to live in a world where major journalists were willing to pursue a medical topic like this with some of those medical specialists? Where journalists were capable of some such undertaking?

(On balance, ours almost surely are not.)

Where journalists pursued the question, in a sensitive and capable way, of where runaway grandiosity on the part of a sitting president might conceivably take us? What would it be like to live in a world where journalists were capable of (skillfully) doing that?  

We live in no such world, of course. We live in a world where mainstream journalists swear a blood oath that they will never pursue any such vital questions. Also, where the pitiful children of our most-watched "cable news" channel behave in the astonishing ways we've described in the past two daysfirst telling us Where The Douchebags Are, then telling viewers who should be baited as gay as the major organs of Blue America agree to avert their gaze.  

That's the world in which we actually live. We repeat a basic observation:   

Man [sic] is the rational animal, Aristotle is frequently said to have said.  

On balance, and all too plainly, that famous old bromide just isn't quite right. In fact, understood in the flattering way we humans have chosen, that famous old bromide is wrong.   

It has always felt good when we've housed such beliefs. It has felt good, but it's been wrong!


22 comments:

  1. Bernie Carbo's idMay 28, 2026 at 3:24 PM

    "Where journalists were capable of some such undertaking?"

    A bridge way, way too far for current journos who can't (or won't) get even the most basic facts straight.

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  2. "We live in a subpar world"

    While I agree that we have a subpar leader, I'm not sure why Somerby must generalize that to our whole world.

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  3. Democrats are going to lose in both houses in November because their most celebrated and publicized candidates now are a tiny perverted faggot in Texas and a Nazi in Maine.

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    Replies
    1. Are you laboring under the misapprehension that your comment contains any information on any subject other than your regrettable character?

      Delete
  4. “suggestive of” is a weak standard.

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    Replies
    1. Go fucking play with your Nazi friends, dickface

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  5. Trump’s attorneys are seeking to invoke a federal statute to swap him out as the defendant and have the U.S. government take his place. If it is successful, the move would essentially nullify Carroll’s case since the federal government cannot be sued for defamation. The appeals court last month rejected a request for a hearing on that argument.

    Because fuck you, what are you going to do about it

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    Replies
    1. This reminds me of the dopes who think we aren't going to shoot ICE agents, because it's against the law.

      Delete
  6. Quaker in a BasementMay 28, 2026 at 7:18 PM

    "Is it our imagination, or do those traits fit the past and future conqueror to something resembling a T"

    In my book, entertaining the thought that you might be qualified to be the leader of the entire free world requires a bit of grandiosity.

    This guy is just an asshole.

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    Replies
    1. I agree with you Quaker. And, not just Trump: all of them. The head of a corporation I worked for exhibited a lot of grandiosity. I can hardly visualize how much more grandiosity for a US President.

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    2. Go fuck yourself dickface, go play with your Nazi friends

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    3. "And, not just Trump: all of them."

      DiC's everpresent MAGA bias: since all politicians have some amount of grandiosity, then they must all have the same amount of grandiosity, so Trump is no worse than the rest.

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    4. Fair point, Hector. Yes, Trump is worse than the others.
      "Trump administration officials have pressed the office responsible for printing the nation’s money to design a $250 bill featuring the president’s portrait..."
      ... according to four current and former employees, in what would be the first appearance of a living person on U.S. currency in more than 150 years.

      https://althouse.blogspot.com/2026/05/trump-administration-officials-have.html

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    5. "worse than the others" LOL

      What previous president(s) ran to the Supreme Court begging for immunity from their multiple felonies and the right to assassinate his political opponents?

      Go fuck yourself, dickhead, with a rusty chainsaw.

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  7. What does Mary Trump think? Has she taken time away from teaching us about the staged Butler shooting and press dinner shooting to help us out with the subject of delusions? Being that she is a certified clinical psychologist?

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  8. Tiedrich:

    "the Donnyverse has no clue how to run against a candidate who is young, energetic, articulate, honest, and full of ideas — and so they’re trotting out the same old tired bag of dumbfuckery they always lazily fall back on.

    'It's a huge problem for the Democrat Party that you take one look at the men they run for elected office and just know that they couldn’t name a single obscure wide receiver from the early 2000s.'

    really, hotshot? that’s what you’re going with? that Jimmy Tal isn’t sportsbally enough to be a senator from Texas? who in the hallowed name of Toxic Masculinity Jesus even thinks like this?

    this is what it looks like when an entire political party has no ideas, no clue how to solve the problems it created, and nothing to run on. they’re reduced to making weird-ass arguments that have no bearing on the actual, important issues of the day.

    seriously, are you telling me there’s some homey gassing up his car somewhere in Amarillo right now, going ‘sure, maybe this Talarico could do something about these high prices — but I really need to know more about these wide receivers.’"

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    Replies
    1. "oh god, the ‘six genders’ thing. someone told Dear Leader that Talarico identifies himself as cisgender, and the rotting old fuck misheard it as ‘six genders’ — and because the Emperor has no brain, all the loyal cultists have to repeat this dumbfuckery as if it were something Talarico actually said. it’s all so bone-crushingly idiotic that it makes my head hurt just to write about it."

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    2. you laugh, but nobody ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American reds. Remember, we all wanted to have a beer with GW Junior Bush? Because Gore was such a know-it-all. Tiedrich is funny but this negative shit works on the braindead maggot base. As I keep saying, Dems always make the same mistake, they assume the American people are smart enough to see thru the bullshit republicans do.

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  9. It isn't the president's beliefs, grandiose and delusional or not, that disqualify him from the presidency, it is his actions. This is the most corrupt and incompetent president we have ever had, one who has broken laws and desecrated the White House and denied the Constitution in just his first year in office.

    Why does Somerby keep focusing on his thoughts, which are not crimes, instead of his behavior which has been sufficiently criminal to justify impeachment over any number of acts?

    Somerby is a goon who doesn't understand how our government works. He is obsessed with irrelevancies and blind to what Trump has DONE to deserve removal from office.

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  10. https://www.hopiumchronicles.com/p/new-economic-data-confirms-trump

    Trump has the worst economic growth record of any President in the post WWII era.

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    Replies
    1. I need David in Cal to once again explain the science behind the (illegal) tariffs set for each country and the island full of seals; and to explain how we lost the straight of Hormuz like nobody ever lost it before, and how this was good for the economy also too.

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  11. Both men and women have testosterone and estrogen. The role of estrogen in men is important to functions men typically think of as uniquely male, including their sexual functioning:

    "Yes, men absolutely have estrogen. While it is widely considered a "female hormone," it is also a crucial component of male physiology, necessary for optimal sexual, bone, and brain health.

    Where It Comes From

    Men do not typically produce estrogen on their own in large quantities. Instead, the male body makes the primary form of estrogen (called estradiol) through a chemical process: (1) The Conversion: An enzyme called aromatase converts testosterone into estradiol. (2) Locations: This conversion mainly occurs in fat (adipose) tissue, the brain, the testes, and the liver.

    Why Men Need It

    Estrogen in men is vital for several core bodily functions: (1) Sexual Health: Estradiol is essential for modulating libido, maintaining erections, and supporting healthy sperm production. (2) Bone Strength: It plays a key role in maintaining bone density and preventing fractures as men age. (3) Brain & Heart: It helps protect cardiovascular health and supports mood regulation and cognitive function."

    Taunting other men over their hormone levels is ridiculous given that these men on the right don't seem to understand how their own bodies work.

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