FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2025
Howling into the void: President Trump has been on a bit of a jag of late.
First, he gave us the magic beds. Then he identified the Democrats as "the party of Satan."
Last weekend, he posted an AI videotape in which he himself is dumping mountains of excrement on the heads of his fellow Americans. Then he called the backhoe in and, as Bing Crosby once sang, "the walls came tumbling down."
At one point, he had been two years old—two and a half, to be more precise. Then, a terrible medical incident disabled his mother and made a bad situation worse.
Now, as sitting American president, he's dumping waste on the heads of the American people and, out in the literal realm, he has knocked a large chunk of the White House down. These last two behaviors were so peculiar that even our own major news orgs took note. But nothing is ever going to make these trusted elites in our own Blue America come to terms with what is sitting right there before them—with the apparent situation concerning which they've been warned.
In our view, it isn't surprising that the president is targeting iconic representatives of the country over which he presides. A familiar backstory may help explain the hostility which might imaginably be seem to be lurking in his devolving behaviors. But it was the book which was edited by the Yale psychiatrist which put Blue America's major journalists on a type of early notice.
The book was a New York Times best-seller, but it wasn't reviewed by the Times. It was published by MacMillan, but this page for the audiobook seems to be the only remaining official evidence of that connection:
The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump:
37 Psychiatrists and Mental Health Experts Assess a President — Updated and Expanded with New Essays
Author: Bandy X. Lee, M.D., M.Div...
About This Book
As this bestseller predicted, Trump has only grown more erratic and dangerous as the pressures on him mount...
Has President Trump become "more erratic and dangerous?" Has he become dangerous at all?
That, of course, is a matter of judgement. But three years later, in the summer of 2020, the president's niece, a Ph.D.-wielding clinical therapist, published a second best-seller:
Mary L. Trump, PhD
Too Much and Never Enough:
How My Family Created the World's Most Dangerous Man
About The Book
In this revelatory, authoritative portrait of Donald J. Trump and the toxic family that made him, Mary L. Trump, a trained clinical psychologist and Donald’s only niece, shines a bright light on the dark history of their family in order to explain how her uncle became the man who now threatens the world’s health, economic security, and social fabric.
Again, those judgments are matters of assessment, of personal and professional opinion. That said, the news orgs of Blue America had been issued a second warning. Their refusal to discuss such assessments has continued to the present say, with excrement raining down from the sky and the East Wing, all of a sudden, suddenly no longer there.
What might explain these manifestations? In the summer of 2020, the niece offered this:
In the last three years, I’ve watched as countless pundits, armchair psychologists, and journalists have kept missing the mark, using phrases such as “malignant narcissism” and “narcissistic personality disorder” in an attempt to make sense of Donald’s often bizarre and self-defeating behavior. I have no problem calling Donald a narcissist—he meets all nine criteria as outlined in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5)—but the label gets us only so far.
[...]
Does Donald have other symptoms we aren’t aware of? Are there other disorders that might have as much or more explanatory power? Maybe. A case could be made that he also meets the criteria for antisocial personality disorder, which in its most severe form is generally considered sociopathy but can also refer to chronic criminality, arrogance, and disregard for the rights of others...
"A case could be made," the doctorate-wielding niece now said. Just for the record, the leading authority on the syndrome in question presents the symptoms of that disorder in the following manner:
Antisocial personality disorder
[...]
DSM-5
The main text of fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) defines antisocial personality disorder as being characterized by at least three of the following traits:
- Failure to conform to social norms and laws, indicated by repeatedly engaging in illegal activities.
- Deceitfulness, indicated by continuously lying, using aliases, or conning others for personal gain and pleasure.
- Exhibiting impulsivity or failing to plan ahead.
- Irritability and aggressiveness, indicated by repeatedly getting into fights or physically assaulting others.
- Reckless behaviors that disregard the safety of others.
- Irresponsibility, indicated by repeatedly failing to consistently work or honor financial obligations.
- Lack of remorse after hurting or mistreating another person.
- In order to be diagnosed with antisocial personality disorder under. the DSM-5, one must be at least 18 years old, show evidence of onset of conduct disorder before age 15, and antisocial behavior cannot be explained by schizophrenia or bipolar disorder.
That stands as the basic (rather familiar) list. In simpler narrative fashion, the authority posits this:
Antisocial personality disorder (ASPD) is a personality disorder defined by a chronic pattern of behavior that disregards the rights and well-being of others. People with ASPD often exhibit behavior that conflicts with social norms, leading to issues with interpersonal relationships, employment, and legal matters. The condition generally manifests in childhood or early adolescence, with a high rate of associated conduct problems and a tendency for symptoms to peak in late adolescence and early adulthood.
The prognosis for ASPD is complex, with high variability in outcomes...
[...]
People with ASPD may have a limited capacity for empathy and can be more interested in benefiting themselves than avoiding harm to others. They may have no regard for morals, social norms, or the rights of others. People with ASPD can have difficulty beginning or sustaining relationships. It is common for the interpersonal relationships of someone with ASPD to revolve around the exploitation and abuse of others. People with ASPD may display arrogance, think lowly and negatively of others, have limited remorse for their harmful actions, and have a callous attitude toward those they have harmed.
Just so you'll know, this branch of medical science holds that this syndrome—this unfortunate "mental disorder"—is perhaps more prevalent than one might suspect. Along the way in its lengthy presentation, the authority alleges this:
Prognosis
Boys are almost twice as likely to meet all of the diagnostic criteria for ASPD than girls and they will often start showing symptoms of the disorder much earlier in life. Children that do not show symptoms of the disease through age 15 will almost never develop ASPD later in life. If adults exhibit milder symptoms of ASPD, it is likely that they never met the criteria for the disorder in their childhood and were consequently never diagnosed. Overall, symptoms of ASPD tend to peak in late teens and early twenties but can often reduce or improve through age 40.
[...]
Epidemiology
The estimated lifetime prevalence of ASPD amongst the general population falls within 1% to 4%, skewed towards 6% men and 2% women.
The claim is something like a prevalence of six percent among men! Presumably, some afflictions of this "disease" (or this "disorder") are more substantial than others. But this is the general shape of the medical science which the major organs of our press corps have uniformly agreed to ignore.
For the record, medical science can always be wrong, and the very concept of "mental illness" (the term "mental disorder" is apparently now preferred) is much fuzzier—is much less clear—than is the concept of physical illness. When we say that someone is afflicted with a mental disorder, are we simply describing unusual conduct, or are we reporting a physiological impairment of some kind?
If our journalists would ever perform their function, we might see an informed discussion of an array of such points. Still, we already consider these assertions as made by the leading authority:
Causes
Personality disorders are generally believed to be caused by a combination and interaction of genetics and environmental influences. People with an antisocial or alcoholic parent are considered to be at higher risk of developing ASPD. Fire-setting and cruelty to animals during childhood are also linked to the development of an antisocial personality disorder, along with being more common in males...
[...]
Genetic
Research into genetic associations in antisocial personality disorder suggests that ASPD has some or even a strong genetic basis. The prevalence of ASPD is higher in people related to someone with the disorder. Twin studies, which are designed to discern between genetic and environmental effects, have reported significant genetic influences on antisocial behavior and conduct disorder.
In the specific genes that may be involved, one gene that has shown particular promise in its correlation with ASPD is the gene that encodes for monoamine oxidase A (MAO-A), an enzyme that breaks down monoamine neurotransmitters such as serotonin and norepinephrine. Various studies examining the gene's relationship to behavior have suggested that variants of the gene resulting in less MAO-A being produced (such as the 2R and 3R alleles of the promoter region) have associations with aggressive behavior in men.
This association is also influenced by negative experiences early in life, with children possessing a low-activity variant (MAOA-L) who have experienced negative circumstances being more likely to develop antisocial behavior than those with the high-activity variant (MAOA-H). Even when environmental interactions (e.g., emotional abuse) are taken out of the equation, a small association between MAOA-L and aggressive and antisocial behavior remains.
And on and on from there. In the case of the sitting president, some such "genetics" may have been contributed by his father, who is, rightly or wrongly, repeatedly described as a "sociopath" in Mary Trump's book.
In this passage from that book, "Mary" and "Fred" are the president's parents:
Whereas Mary was needy, Fred seemed to have no emotional needs at all. In fact, he was a high-functioning sociopath. Although uncommon, sociopathy is not rare, afflicting as much as 3 percent of the population. Seventy-five percent of those diagnosed are men. Symptoms of sociopathy include a lack of empathy, a facility for lying, an indifference to right and wrong, abusive behavior, and a lack of interest in the rights of others. Having a sociopath as a parent, especially if there is no one else around to mitigate the effects, all but guarantees severe disruption in how children understand themselves, regulate their emotions, and engage with the world.
Children of sociopaths face a difficult road. So said the clinical therapist, and so says the leading authority, right there in paragraph 2 of its lengthy report:
The prognosis for ASPD is complex, with high variability in outcomes. Individuals with severe ASPD symptoms may have difficulty forming stable relationships, maintaining employment, and avoiding criminal behavior, resulting in higher rates of divorce, unemployment, homelessness, and incarceration. In extreme cases, ASPD may lead to violent or criminal behaviors, often escalating in early adulthood. Research indicates that individuals with ASPD have an elevated risk of suicide, particularly those who also engage in substance misuse or have a history of incarceration. Additionally, children raised by parents with ASPD may be at greater risk of delinquency and mental health issues themselves.
There's more, much more to the way the niece's account of the family history dovetails with the leading authority's lengthy account of the way this syndrome is born. That said, the American press corps has steadfastly refused to discuss this part of the niece's best-selling book.
Today, the uncle is soiling and demolishing leading emblems of the American nation. As this continues, our news orgs will continue to be shocked, shocked by the puzzlingly "erratic" behavior the president puts on display.
Will he have to knock the whole White House down to shake these elites from their lethargy? The president's devolving behavior tracks the state of medical science, but what explains the endless refusal to perform exhibited by the biggest stars of our realm?
Is the sitting president "a real piece of work" at the present time? Under the circumstances, we think possible danger is plainly suggested by his increasingly erratic personal conduct.
As we say that, we remember to pity the child, but we also leap to say that the adult may in fact be a dangerous person, as those two best-selling books have asserted right in their titles.
Is the sitting president a real piece of work? You may or may not want to use that language. But if the president is a piece of work, what about the other people with whom he's now surrounded? And what can we say about our journalists, who will happily go over the cliff before they agree to report the state of our medical science?
In our view, his behavior is becoming stranger and stranger, but so perhaps is theirs. The state of the science, such as it is, is still being ignored—disappeared.
Tomorrow: Much, much more
Shaun King
ReplyDelete@shaunking
“I actually think it's a great idea to build a big ballroom on the White House grounds.
It's virtually impossible to hold events of any size there and they are always wasting millions on tents and heaters and chairs and lights and everything else.
Stop acting like you have some emotional attachment to the East Wing. You don't“
I have an "emotional attachment" to the East Wing because it contains the offices of the First Lady. It represents the progress women have made since it was designated for such use. Its removal is symbolic to women, as is Melania's complete absence from the White House.
DeleteIf Shaun King has no attachment to the East Wing, he is speaking for himself. It is not surprising when men don't share the same reactions to things as women do. He sees only the inconvenience of using tents for large events. I see no reason they couldn't use ballrooms external to the White House, the way businesses and families do.
The presidency is not in the entertainment business, even if Trump has never lost that urge himself. This fiasco illustrates that apparently no one can say no to Trump.
Why not hold events at the Melanoma Center for the Performing Arts (or whatevs). The lifelong criminal fuck now says it will cost $350M. As a retired appraiser that is fucking bonkers. He now wants to pay for it by stuffing more money into his slimy pockets with a direct transfer of wealth from taxpayers. Talk about taxation without representation... Where da fuck are the idiot Tea Party fucktards?
Delete11:08 - Trump does not ask anymore.
Delete@10:41 - one grifter commends another grifter.
DeleteIn other news, the sky is still blue.
Is this the same Shaun King, David?
Deletehttps://nypost.com/2022/08/01/activist-shaun-kings-pac-paid-over-40k-for-guard-dog-report/
It figures that he would cozy up to Trump eventually.
Candace Owens is now saying she is done with Trump, that Trump played a role in Charlie Kirk's assassination (she also seems to think Israel was involved).
DeleteThis is hardly surprising since it is hard to miss how Trump is our most corrupt and criminal president.
Trumpers are surprised that Trump is our least popular president, but again, with Trump's corruption and criminality, this should not be surprising to anyone.
Some black people I read refer to Shaun King as "Talcum X."
DeleteUnkind? Yeah. Cold? You bet. Still funny.
Well, if Shaun King said it, who are we to argue? What a worthless comment. I would say it is a low point for DiC to quote some nobody as an authority whose opinion is to be revered, but low point it ain’t.
DeleteSomerby juxtaposes two events and implies they are causal. Then he lists diagnostic criteria from the DSM and then claims that medical science can always be wrong.
ReplyDeleteIn every single life on this planet, there is some prior bad event that can be claimed to have caused a later event. And if medical science can always be wrong, then what is the point of describing any medical condition, much less using a list to diagnosis a person in the news, without testing or evaluation, without medical assessment. This is name-calling that would cost a licensed psychiatrist their license, as it did Bandy Lee.
Somerby says: "The state of the science, such as it is, is still being ignored -- disappeared."
This is untrue. No one has disappeared the DSM. Trump has refused to release the results of his medical evaluations to the American public. We have privacy laws and it is his right, just it is anyone else's, to keep the results of medical testing private. No one has disappeared the tests themselves, or the state of the "science" or the many claims that Trump is suffering from dementia (not ASPD) which Somerby has routinely ignored here, when these are more obvious than any claim that Trump is abnormal for other reasons.
For example, why ASPD and not malignant narcissism (which Bandy and Mary Trump also describe)? Why not OCD, which can be the basis for his vaunted germophobia and his greed? Somerby is unqualified to diagnose Trump. Even if he were qualified, he doesn't have access to Trump in order to conduct a proper assessment of him. And given that there is manifestly something "wrong" with Trump, why has Somerby never done anything at all, to remove him? Why has Somerby opposed the impeachment efforts, claiming they would overturn the will of Republican voters? Why has Somerby never suggested that Trump be removed using Article 25? Why did Somerby never claim that Trump's mental illness was behind his attempt to overthrow the election in 2020?
Again, Somerby slides away from blaming Trump (preferring to pity him because he was once a child, as we all were) and insists that we must blame those around him (who he convenietly does not name). Eventually he will blame blue America because Harris lost, or blame those of us who waste time reading Somerby's blog, because we are not Republicans who might have controlled Trump's actions via peer pressure, or some such nonsense. But nothing is Trump's fault, according to Somerby. He is a poor sick, very special boy, who cannot be held responsible for anything, because pity that he was once a child, and his mommy didn't love him enough. Poor widdle Trumpie-kins. And it seems pretty obvious that Somerby may see some of himself in Trump, as Somerby feels very very sorry for himself because his daddy died and couldn't protect him from his mean old mother, who was so bad to him that he created a one-man standup show to complain about her. It would make any man crazy, amirite?
To blame Trump, with whom Somerby identifies, he would have to blame himself, and Somerby's own narcissism will not allow that insight.
At some point, Trump with either die or go to jail. This seems even more likely if the Epstein Files are ever released to the public and Trump is seen for what he has always been -- an abuser of women of all ages. Trump has now torn down the East Wing as an assault on Melania as first lady -- she refuses to live in the White House with him. His action makes emotional sense but Somerby doesn't see it, calling him crazy.
Somerby paradoxically refers to the state of medical science, after reminding us that it can always be wrong. That's how he pretends to say something while saying nothing at all. And then he promises much much more tomorrow. Can't wait.
Bravo!
DeleteBrava.
DeleteThe DSM is not really based on medical science; it plays a role, but it is not a primary role.
DeleteSomerby's narrow agenda is to attempt to distract people from Trump's crimes, his broader agenda is to get Dems to capitulate to Republicans, so that neoliberalism and elitist rule remains the status quo.
But who are the targets? Republicans do not care about Trump's crimes, they are at a minimum vaguely aware of them, yet they get a kick out of having a flawed leader.
And Somerby has no credibility with anyone left of center.
Somerby could have been somebody, instead of a bum, which is what he is.
He could have been a contender.
Delete"Is the sitting president a real piece of work? You may or may not want to use that language. "
ReplyDeleteWe have been told already that Shakespeare referred to a piece of work in a good way, then Somerby borrowed the phrase and used it in a bad way, as a complaint against someone engaging in misbehavior. Which way does he mean it when he refers to Trump. Given that there are two opposite meanings, it can mean either or neither, in other words, nothing at all.
I wouldn't want to use the phrase for that reason. But when medical diagnostic terms are being misapplied too, because Trump has not been diagnosed consistent with medical practice, we cannot use those terms either, except as name-calling. There are many, much more satisfying names we can call Trump, so why pretend to be scientific when there is no effort to evaluate Trump psychiatrically, and when dementia is an obviously more accurate term?
Here are the terms I prefer: criminal, greedy bastard, epitome of evil, sexual abuser and rapist, pedophile who lusts after his own daughter, thief, compulsive liar, the most ignorant man on the planet, worthless piece of shit, grandiose narcissist, dangerous mobster, monster, vicious vengeful out-of-control murderer-by-proxy, ugly asshole. Why be dainty about who and what Trump is?
"We have been told already that Shakespeare referred to a piece of work in a good way,"
DeleteYou haven't been told that by Somerby.
As I have repeatedly pointed out now, the genetic predisposition to ASPD is not supported by Trump's family tree. His father may be a suspected sociopath, but none of Trump's siblings are. Neither are his children. Trump has two sisters and two brothers. None of them have ASPD.
ReplyDeleteIt bothers me that Somerby doesn't seem to need any evidence to support the conclusions he pushes here. For example, he is willing to believe that Tucker Carlson's father's divorce was responsible for Carlson being an asshole as an adult. There is no support in the literature for the idea that divorce in middle childhood produces "pieces of work" like Carlson. Most boys get over it, they learn to cope with whatever occurs in their lives, especially when their fathers have great wealth and remarry so that the family is intact.
It is too obvious that Somerby blames his own mother for his problems. That doesn't mean she was responsible for what he became, any more than the absence of a mother accounts for Carlson's financially convenient politics, his shift toward Russia, and his ongoing assholery. That is a bridge too far, rationally.
Somerby needs to go back to the drawing board. He needs to stop trying to explain Trump and think instead about how our nation is going to cope with the damage Trump has already done (and will do, if not stopped soon). I get it that Somerby has no real interest in the problems of our nation's people, no serious interest in politics. This is a place for him to work out his own psychological problems. But he isn't making much progress along those lines and it might help him to visit a therapist who might provide some insight, instead of repeating the same boring nonsense on a blog where he never discusses anything cogent about the media or politics or even Trump himself.
"It bothers me that Somerby..." continues to post every day?
Delete"It is too obvious that Somerby blames his own mother for his problems.'
DeleteI've been reading Somerby off and on for 25 years and I don't ever remember him mentioning his mother. But I'm sure your insights are incredibly valid.
He has mentioned her once or twice, but he doesn’t blame her for his problems.
DeleteI guess you never saw his standup one-man show or any of the interviews where he talked about the insights gained from creating that show after her death. He definitely blamed her for his problems. It doesn't take a shrink to recognize that.
DeleteYou guess right. I never saw his standup routines or his interviews. I was referring to what he posts on this blog.
DeleteI've been commenting here for more than 25 years and I have cited those interviews and reviews of his one-man show, several times, as recently as during the last two weeks. Do an internet search.
Deletehttps://washingtoncitypaper.com/article/293770/laugh-trick/
He started Apr 1, 1998.
DeleteI don’t read your comments.
DeleteYou have to be two years old before you can be three, or ten or fifty-five or seventy-nine. Duh! Everyone who gets old goes through that same sequence. So what?
ReplyDeleteBy this logic, every criminal should be released because of prior trauma.
DeleteSomerby has said that he thinks no one should ever go to jail. In that case, it means nothing whatsoever when he includes Trump in the list among all those "no ones". I'm OK with putting Trump in a padded cell, but I think that pretty soon he is going to wind up in a hospital bed anyway, because that's the end stage of dementia.
I remember being three years old, but I don’t remember being two.
Delete12:31 If you want reminded how you acted as a 2-year old, watch Trump.
DeleteNo, I don’t want reminded.
DeleteDoctors are saying Trump has a year left, maybe a year and a half.
DeleteTiedrich gets it:
ReplyDelete"that’s all, folks. it’s over and done. the once-stately East Wing of the White House has been completely reduced to a pile of rubble.
here’s another thing that’s now a pile of rubble: our Constitution. masked ICE thugs trample over it every day on the streets of our cities.
want more rubble? just look at our tariff and trade policies, and our relationships with our allies. they can’t trust us to be honest — or even coherent — about anything.
does any sane person believe any of the fairy tales our government has been spewing about the fishing boats they’ve been blowing up, without providing one scrap of evidence? our credibility is also a pile of rubble.
hey, you know what else is a pile of rubble? Preznit Fuckwit’s poll numbers — because everything fucking sucks right now, and none of this shit is popular."
"our next Democratic president is going to have a lot of cleanup work to do — but one of the many things they must campaign on is a vow to put all this shit back the way it was before Cankles McRottinghand assaulted it. not just the Epstein Ballroom, but also the parking lot where our beloved Rose Garden used to be."
DeleteI like the idea of naming the new ballroom after Epstein. It seems fitting, given that this is yet another distraction from the contents of the Epstein Files, and the fact that Trump's name is on every page.
ReplyDeleteI cannot take seriously the predicted doom from building a White House facility to house large functions. Trumpian doom has been predicted because of policy after policy. These dooms did not happen. On the contrary, things got significantly better in many of these areas. As each doom failed to occur, the doommongers simply forgot about that prediction, but got all excited by the next doomsday prediction. Here are some dooms that didn't occur.
Blacks will be prevented from voting!
Gay and trans people will be frequently attacked!
A world war will come!
The stock market to plummet!
Trump's tariffs will cause a jump in inflation!
I cannot take seriously your argument. Nobody is predicting doom, asswiipe.
Delete@11:43 - read the comment at 11:22 on this thread for examples of doom predictions. (This program used to append my nym automatically. I wrote @11:34.)
DeleteGive it time DiChead. The ignorant Orange Felon is hard at work to destroy everything to get even with the majority of Americans who hate his stupid ass.
DeleteThey have already drawn maps to exclude black Representation in Congress in several States. Including my home State. This would not have been possible before the Robert's USSC fucked up the voting rights act. You lie David. Prove me wrong.
DeleteI predicted no Trump voter would care about inflation if Trump was elected.
DeleteIt was no great feat, since no Trump voter cared about inflation before Trump was elected, either.
I don't see doom @11:22 but rather an accurate depiction of what is happening now in our country. Doom would be if we didn't think things would change after the midterms and especially with a new president in 2028. Trump's people (Bannon for example) are saying Trump will run again. I believe he will be too old by then.
DeleteTrans people have had numerous legislative attacks impacting their health care in several red states. Including my own. You lie David. Prove me wrong.
DeleteDavid, the doom is inherent in the obvious fact that Trump doesn't care what any of his constituents think. He doesn't seem to worry about favorability ratings and seems to feel he can do anything without consequence, at the polls or legally. That lack of restraint is scary given that Trump has no common sense or internal restraints either. He has the impulse control of a two year old -- Somerby got that right.
DeleteDoom implies fate. The Republicans did this to us.
DeleteTrump's gang of earth hating oil thugs certainly are eyeing the country with the largest oil reserves. Their right wing Noble Prize winner is on board with a coup to open up their reserves to our oil barons. You lie David. Prove me wrong.
DeleteSomerby keeps trying to expand the blame to all of humanity, but we are not all equally responsible for Trump and his actions.
DeleteThere is a frightening AI bubble in the overpriced stock market. You lie David. Prove me wrong.
DeleteTrump's tariffs are taxation without representation. Companies are no longer absorbing the costs and trumpflation is here and accelerating. You lie David. Prove me wrong.
DeleteIt's not like falling off a cliff. It's more like sliding off a very steep hillside. Have you seen videos of Trump's paramilitary force driving through city streets, pointing guns, and pouncing on people for no reason? Do you find that mildly disconcerting?
Delete"I cannot take seriously the predicted doom from building a White House facility to house large functions. Who predicted doom from construction?" Name one David. Most just pointing out the ignorance, lawlessness, and stupid. Also it is not being built to house large functions, it is being built to grift the billionaire class. Also too to look like ballroom in mother Russia, daddy Putin's house.
DeleteBlacks will be prevented from voting!
DeleteGay and trans people will be frequently attacked!
A world war will come!
The stock market to plummet!
Trump's tariffs will cause a jump in inflation!
- All of us will be prevented from voting in '26.
- They are through the legal channels
- No one was suggesting that; however, we are blowing up random fishing boats. It makes Trump and Hegseth chuckle, but people are still being killed.
- Stock market...may collapse, but Trump's friends will still find a way to enrich themselves.
- Inflation is continuing apace.
No one, David, is predicting doom from the demolition of the East Wing of the White House or the construction of Trump's gaudy ballroom.
DeleteYou made that up.
An earlier commenter quoted an article that used the image of a "pile of rubble" to draw a metaphorical connection between the demolition of the East Wing with the destruction of other things--not buildings--by Trump.
Hey David, inflation was 3% today x 12 mos. = 36% Holy shit that is worse than bad. Quit spouting stupid shit asshat.
Delete@6:44 It was 3 percent year over year. Three percent today times one year = three percent.
DeleteI know, just fucking with the fascist POS.
DeleteInflation is already moving in the wrong direction. The impact of the insane tariffs is just starting to be felt. Anybody buy coffee recently?
DeleteHas you've noted, this is the end product of a long string of white wing criminality. Tail gunner Joe, Nixon/Kissinger, trading arms for hostages, got WMD. They all skated.
ReplyDeleteOccam's Razor says the President has always been a dumb ass who is getting a lot dumber with age.
ReplyDeleteBut...but...Trump's Antisocial Personality Disorder helps him to be a more effective president! Or maybe it's a more affected president.
ReplyDeleteToday’s essay is an example of how Somerby excuses Trump. The poor boy has ASPD.
ReplyDeleteSomerby explains his behavior. I know that Somerby's frequent refrain is, "pity the child", but I don't believe that Bob is suggesting that we should pity Trump.
DeleteAnd yet he keeps suggesting it...
DeleteIllya, Bob isn't just implying that we should pity Trump; he's suggesting we feel sorry for him in the same way we'd pity a stillborn infant—irrevocably, irreversibly, utterly. That's the finality of his message. That’s Bob’s “gentle” negation.
DeleteNo, Cecccclia: I believe that Bob is precisely suggesting that Trump, the child, who is no longer with us, should be pitied, because of his disordered upbringing. I don't see where Bob wants us to pity Trump the disordered and malignant individual, who is inflicting horrible things on a multitude of people.
DeleteYour Gracious Host muses why our media insistently refuse to notice that the pitiable child who grew to become a contemptible man is not at all normal.
DeleteAs long as his increasingly bizarre actions and statements are treated as normal, some portion of our voting public will remain uninformed.
Only Republicans treat Trump as normal. If that includes the press, that seems appropriate given that there are Republicans in the press.
DeleteThe voting public needs to do its own research.
Ilya, I think Somerby IS saying that we should pity the adult Trump because of his childhood. He was more explicit about this back when Trump was being tried for crimes and during his impeachments. Somerby has a definite -- let he among us who has never sinned cast the first stone. I seems like there is nothing bad enough for Trump to have done that will cause Somerby to acknowledge Trump's criminality and moral transgressions.
DeleteWait until Epstein Files are released. Somerby will argue that Trump is a man and men have urges, thus he is no different than Roy Moore or Brock Turner. Somerby has a track record of excusing some pretty awful people, so I doubt your giving him the benefit of the doubt is going to work out for you.
IIya, you come to that conclusion because you don’t hear particular insults coming from Bob’s mouth. You, or me, and any of the anonymices get called some epithet by each other every day. We disparage. Bob goes with “damaged toy”…the broken doll. Softly and thoroughly, Bob utterly negates.
Delete“broken toy” is name-calling too, Somerby thinks he’s clever but you are the only one missing his put-downs
DeleteAnonymouse 7:54pm, how am I missing the severity of Bob’s put-downs when I argue that they are far more severe in their negation of a human being than the ordinary appellations and insults that we toss at each other or at politicians.
DeleteI think we are agreeing that Somerby is a creep.
DeleteSomerby needs help.
DeleteCecelia: If I understand you correctly, you're saying that Somerby's point is that Trump's is irreparably damaged by his childhood? In that we agree. Of course, it's also genetic, but that's trivially true.
DeleteYes, Trump is a damaged, wretched shadow of a human, and Bob wants us to pity the child who became that. Granted, it's an odd formulation.
Anon@7:18 -- I guess we'll just disagree on that account. I don't see where Somerby is asking us to pity the disordered Trump the adult. We are all a collection of mental disfunctions. Some of us are just better at not making others suffer through them.
DeleteIlya, Bob’s characterizations aren’t meant to invoke pity as much as finality and irretrievably. “Pity the poor…” Bob suggests that Trump, Carlson, Gutfeld are broken in ways that aren’t fixable. The allusions to children “child” are there to give him (Bob) a certain cover from sounding hissy-fit partisan (in other words, like an flying monkeys) while making it clear that these people are irretrievably damaged and that an adult society would recognize this and completely marginalize them. We’d shake our heads and erase them. He is far and away more judgmental and intractable than the anonymices who scold him. That’s because Bob wants a stake in the hearts of his political opponents, but annonymices are here to go after Bob. Why? Because they’re too stupid to understand that he’s more of a partisan and an elitist than they are…AND they endlessly demand to be stroked like cats. Other bloggers will give them that. Not Bob…
DeleteBob isn't so much a partisan elitist as he is a standard-issue Right-wing asshole.
DeleteCecelia has made up a huge pile of BS that doesn't fit anything that Somerby has said or that other commenters have said here. If she really believes any of this, her brain is a pile of spagetti. In fact, this sounds like something a poorly-trained AI might say in imitation of other comments with actual ideas.
DeleteSomerby was a decent "early 80's style moderate Republican" back in the day in the style of Dem centrists Clinton and Gore. Of course as with so many others, as he gets old and cranky he drifted further right. Not as fucked up as Cecelia, but getting there.
DeleteThe media are not blue.
ReplyDeleteCut-and-paste day at the Howler.
ReplyDeleteI never liked Mao, but I do love Cecelia.
DeleteCecelia has twice the balls as Mao.
Delete2 x 0 = 0
DeleteEverybody knows Cecelia is a man pretending to be a woman.
DeleteIt is part of why they have zero credibility.
Anonymouse 3:10pm,” credibility”? You are every anonymouse and therefore you’re no one. You're a mist.
DeleteWhen you start dismissing reality as "mist" you are getting perilously close to a psychiatric diagnosis.
DeleteAnonymouse 6:04pm, I can get “perilously close to a diagnosis or any other observation you might make about me because I have an identity here. You’re vapor.
DeleteJust what identity is a nom de plume exactly? How does that make you you? When will the real Cecelia stand up?
DeleteIt's confirmed. It sits atop what I have written. You can make judgments about me. You're one of many anonymized individuals. Among that cohort, what mice’s (meece’s) credibility or consistency can anyone possibly impute to you? That’s impossible. That’s why you’re an anonymouse.
DeleteEven if you make up a name and use it consistently, you are still anonymous. I don't know why the various trolls here don't understand that.
DeleteAnonymouse 7:13pm, nope. If you consistently posted under the name Megan, to some extent, we would we all get to know Megan. It’s highly likely that we could identify you as being Megan, even if you occasionally posted under “anonymous”. That’s why you don’t do it. It’s also why certain anonymices will broach certain subjects, certain expressions, arguments in order to allude to the credentials that they have formerly claimed.
DeleteIf this were true, we wouldn’t need nyms and you wouldn’t be making a fuss. You want nyms to enhance your name-calling. Look at those attacking “Slabby.”
DeleteI am a bot.
DeleteOf course you don’t want nyms because an anonymous status protects you from accountability. You don’t want to be answerable for anything you have written two minutes ago. That’s the way anonymouse flying monkeys operate.
DeleteAnonymouse 2:44pm, and anonymices are eunuchs.
DeleteI would like to be answerable for everything I have written. But I don't trust you maggot fuckers.
DeleteAnonymouse 8:29pm, too late. We’re already going to hold you answerable to calling us maggot fuckers. Your life won’t change an iota, but, hey, we’re holding you answerable…
DeleteTelling someone you’re holding them accountable is a threat. That makes you a thug. Why would anyone want to talk to you?
DeleteChild fuckers is one thing, but maggot fuckers is a line too far.
DeleteA maggot is a fly’s child.
DeleteYou know what you say Cecelia, Trump 2028, Fuck Your Feelings. What goes around comes around.
DeleteCecelia,
DeleteSqueal louder for Mao, please.
Trump's fake video of him shitting on the 'No Kings' protestors would be funny if it showed him riding one of the shit bombs a la Slim Pickens in Dr. Strangelove.
ReplyDeletelol
DeleteMiami Dade University apparently handed over a piece of property worth about $400 million to Gov. DeSantimonious, who thereupon just fucking gave it to King Orange Chickenshit for his supposed presidential library. What horseshit this is.
ReplyDeleteGovernor Whiteboot's wife has been indicted for directing 1 million Medicaid dollars to her favorite private charity.
DeleteIf he had an ounce of sense he would have refused the whitey tidy booties and gone Floridah barefootin'.
DeleteWill we ever know "What Goldberg saw"?
ReplyDeleteYour Gracious Host promised on Wednesday and Thursday that hw would tell us--but not until tomorrow.
As a certain young Broadway star sang, tomorrow is always a day away.
Trump is one of a kind, Americans love his personality, and no one cares what acronyms angry, hateful, mentally ill feminists and Democrats slap on him.
ReplyDeleteIf only his "personality" were the only problem with Trump.
DeleteTrue enough, Americans have long held unhealthy favorable feelings for their worst criminal offenders. Of course 98% of these criming cultists are Repubes.
DeleteColorado woman with long criminal history convicted of voter fraud. Yes, she's a Republican.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.cbsnews.com/colorado/news/colorado-woman-voter-fraud-douglas-county/
Four residents of The Villages in Florida were convicted of voting twice, all republicans. They were told to take a 12 week adult civics course, completion of which might prevent their prosecution. This must be a serious offense. Pam Bondi was Florida's AG at the time, if I am not mistaken. You go, Pam!
ReplyDeleteThat occurred in 2020.
DeleteIt was illegal back then too. Why do you think the election year matters?
DeleteMuddled old man yells at cloud, says presidency was stolen from him. "DO SOMETHING!"
Delete5:59 I was adding details because I didn’t want someone to believe that it was recent. It was my original post. Of course it doesn’t matter.
DeleteI recall visiting my parents in a FL senior residence years ago. The subject of voting came up. Several of their friends agreed that it was appropriate for snowbirds to vote both in FL and up North. They didn't consider it morally wrong or illegal.
DeleteIn yet another bizarre recollection that stretches credulity, several friends of DiC's parents thought it was legal to vote twice. Sure, they all sat around and agreed that it was a good idea. Makes perfect sense.
DeleteBeing a protector of true Democracy I am sure David in Cal turned the America hating cheating sons a bitches in to the authorities.
Delete"Several of their friends agreed that it was appropriate for snowbirds to vote both in FL and up North."
DeleteYour parents had some really stupid, dishonest friends. No wonder you turned out the way you did.
It's pretty obvious that David in Cal was raised by terrible excuses for human beings.
DeleteProbably Jewish (i.e. fans of ethnic cleansing), too.
Being a sociopath doesn't make someone endorse magic beds or ID Democrats as the party of Satan. These examples do not support Somerby's thesis about Trump's disorder. If Somerby had any expertise on the topic of mental illness, he would know better than to refer to Trump as "howling into the void".
ReplyDeleteThe amount of raw sewage that comes out of the pie hole of orange Jesus is so vast that I'd completely forgotten about the magic beds. What a fucking hoot. Possibly DiC's parents had friends who also believed in the magic beds.
DeleteGaza doctors struggle to investigate 'signs of torture' on unnamed dead returned by Israel
ReplyDeleteSameh Yassin Hamad, a member of the Hamas-run government committee responsible for receiving the bodies, said there were signs of bruising and blood infiltration indicating that the bodies had been severely beaten before death. He also said there were stab wounds on the chest or face of some of them.
Some of the images we saw from the unit clearly show deep indentations or tightly-fastened cable-ties on the wrists and arms and ankles. One photograph appears to show the bruising and abrasion that would confirm that ties had been used while the person was still alive.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4gz3r46e37o
Pornhub Moses Johnson has our house closed for 81 of 93 days because the idiot President fucked children.
ReplyDeleteThe Congress has effectively been dissolved. Just like somebody once dissolved the Reichstag. The SC is corrupted to the point where they make up shit not in the Constitution to protect the felon. We do not have a functioning democracy anymore, I am sad to say.
DeleteThe King is murdering persons on the high seas against all international law. And the King has moved a major aircraft carrier group out of European theater to the Caribbean.
Where the fuck are the trump peaceniks we heard so much about?
I think nuclear war is now an inevitability.
Generosity!
ReplyDeletePresident Donald Trump said on Oct. 23 that an anonymous donor has sent the federal government a $130 million check to cover the shortfall in military troop pay during the ongoing government shutdown.
“He called us the other day and he said, ‘I'd like to contribute any shortfall you have because of the Democrat shutdown. I’d like to contribute, personally, contribute any shortfall you have with the military, because I love the military and I love the country, and any shortfall, if there’s a shortfall, I’ll contribute it,’’’
Um, $130M adds up to $100/soldier. Yea!!! Donor is Andrew Mellon spawn that hates negroes taxing (taking) his unimaginable inherited wealth. Also, not that the law matters to these fascist fucks, illegal.
DeleteHey Maggot Fockers, what happened to tariffs being based on a formula scientifically formulated by the stoners at the Heritage Foundation that is based on the countries trade deficit? Remember that goofy no basis in realty shit and the stupid prop? What the fuck is the reasoned basis now?, other than fucknutz' hard on for the latest slight against him this day? Or what his handlers manipulated him into doing to get the most juice out of the stock market. What a way to run an economy. Into the fucking ground. Please feel free to speak up Maggot Fockers.
ReplyDeleteThey started at the get go with a formula. The formula was not their own but had been constructed by an economist, who upon looking at their work said that they were doing the math wrong and as a result were massively overestimating the tariffs. Upon being made aware of this error they naturally did nothing. Fucking morons.
DeleteMurder, Inc. announced murder strike #10 today. Total murder victims is around 42.
ReplyDeleteJames Lankford, chair of Intelligence Committee, says they're not even being briefed on what the 'evidence' is to launch these strikes.
Wonder what the name of that No Kings protest was supposed to mean. Anyone?
The actions are so much more important than the formalities. The big questions are whether the attacks are hitting valid targets. And to what degree are the attacks reducing the amount of illegal drugs being brought into the country? And, what are the advantage's and disadvantages of the possible alternatives?
DeleteUnfortunately, we ordinary people have no way to answer these vital questions. So, instead we talk about procedures and formalities
"Unfortunately, we ordinary people have no way to answer these vital questions. So instead, we are asked to take the word of people who haven't made a good faith argument since before the Reagan Presidency."
DeleteFixed for accuracy.
If people still don't believe the people being killed are drug smugglers or terrorists, it's only because Trump is terrible at being a persuader.
DeleteThe actions are so much more important than the formalities.
DeleteThe "formalities". You mean like the laws and institutions of our democratic republic? Fuck them, right Dickhead? We must allow our Fuhrer to act without all those pesky meddlesome inconveniences of a representative democracy.
Spoken like a true fascist, Dickhead.
Unfortunately, we ordinary people have no way to answer these vital questions.
Exactly, Dickhead. And that is just the way King Orange Chickenshit wants it.
"The big questions are whether the attacks are hitting valid targets."
DeleteEven if they are smuggling drugs, they don't deserve to die.
You support murder. You are an accomplice to murder.
Unfortunately, Trump will never get around to killing child rapists, because it would decimate the Republican Party.
DeleteDue process is not a "formality." It is the process by which we make sure that the person targeted is guilty and not innocent.
DeleteSometimes I think folks are being too harsh on David in Cal. Then I read some shit comment of his and all I can think is fuck you you fascist piece of shit.
Delete"Unfortunately, we ordinary people have no way to answer these vital questions." So that include James Lankford, chair of Intelligence Committee?, you ridiculous piece of fascist shit.
DeleteRepublicans like to distance themselves from the distasteful personal qualities of Trump and his grifting family: the inability to tell the truth, the racism, the constant pathologic need to be at the center of everything, the completely transactional motivations, and the bullying behavior. They say "I don't like the man but I like his policies." To say that they like the man would reflect negatively on their character and we can't have that. The problem with this is that it places no limits on supporting a candidate meeting their policy criteria. A history that includes being besties with a pedophilic human trafficker? Check. Conviction for sexual assault? Check. Stealing from a charity? Check. Running a fake university? Check. Running a pardoning factory for crooks including drug traffickers? Check.. Etc etc etc. They are steadfast and would vote in Jeffrey Dahlmer if he promised to give tax breaks to billionaires, balloon the national debt and wage war on brown people.
ReplyDeleteThey would vote for Jeffrey Darmer, even if he promised to raise taxes on billionaires and wage war on brown people.
DeleteI'm not going to call them completely steadfast.
DeleteFor instance, I can't believe there is any way they would vote for Jeffrey Dahmer if he promised to give tax breaks to billionaires, and not wage war on brown people.
Then there is the see no evil sect who are completely bewildered by the pardon of money laundering Chengpang Zhau after his company Binance strikes a deal with Trump’s crypto outfit. They ask “who is giving the president advice?” as if his shameless money grubbing character couldn’t have predicted this. What a fucking lot of deplorables. This crew, unlike the ones described above, are so mendacious that they feign surprize that Trump is Trump.
DeleteRepublicans are incapable of governing: Day 25
ReplyDeleteActurally it is around Day 82 of 95 Pornhub Moses Johnson has had the house shut down, you know 'cause of Epstein and he can't dislodge the felons balls out his mouth. Also too, think they have been at work about 87 days for the whole fucking year. Jaggoffs and weirdos, the whole lot of them.
DeleteThey need to name it the "Epstein Ballroom", because "Trump Ballroom" is already being used to describe Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson's mouth.
ReplyDelete