WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2026
Her latest suggestion ignored: Yesterday, on Deadline: White House, the Atlantic's Anne Applebaum kept floating a general notion.
She seemed to be floating a general notion concerning President Trump. To our ear, she went beyond her previous attempts at hinting / suggesting / but not quite saying what she now rather plainly seemed to imply.
"I think the story of this, today's madness starts a few days ago," she said at 4:06 p.m. With that, she initiated a lengthy discussion involving Nicolle Wallace and two other high-profile panelists.
Applebaum's use of "madness" seemed to be colloquial there. But soon, a new level of hinting took shape.
As Applebaum continued, she directly cited President Trump's peculiar text to the Norwegian PM. In that text, the president had strangely said that his failure to win the Nobel Peace Prize had possibly created a bit of a new world order.
According to Applebaum, "the text blamed Norway for not giving him the Nobel Peace Prize. It said, now that he hadn't won the prize, he wasn't going to be so interested in peace anymore. And he implied that this was a justification to invade Greenland."
It's as we've noted in the past two days. On Monday, Applebaum had cited this same peculiar text in this essay for the Atlantic. On Tuesday morning's Morning Joe, she had discussed the same peculiar behavior by President Trump.
Now, a mere ten hours later, her hinting / suggesting went well beyond the hinting / suggesting which had been lodged in those earlier efforts. Here's the start of what she told Wallace as two other panelists listened:
APPLEBAUM (1/20/26): Many other crazy things have happened, but this was so strange, and so off-the-wall, and it was so clearly detached from reality...that I think people are finally beginning to see that there's something very wrong.
Something is "very wrong," Applebaum flatly said. The president's text had been "so off-the-wall" that people "were finally beginning to see" it.
Things the president said in that letter were "clearly detached from reality!" She had used similar language before, but now she added this:
APPLEBAUM: I mean, Trump is living in his own world. I'm not going to make a medical diagnosis. I don't think there's any point in doing that at this point, but he has his own world, his own rules. He's not practicing normal diplomacy. He's not seeing the world in a normal way. And that is, of course, since he controls the U.S. military, very dangerous.
Could there be a violent invasion of Greenland? Yes there could.
With that, her presentation ended. Plainly, she felt she was describing a situation which involves great danger.
"I'm not going to make a medical diagnosis," Applebaum now said. This went well beyond the hints and suggestions she'd previously lodged—but as the long discussion unfolded, neither Wallace nor either of the other two panelists reacted to the plain insinuation lodged in that new formulation.
"I'm not going to make a medical diagnosis," Applebaum had now said. Since she isn't a medical professional, it wasn't obvious how she possibly could have made some such diagnosis, even in a provisional way—and she herself quickly backed away from her own newest hint.
"I don't think there's any point in doing that at this point," she said, without explanation.
Still, despite that instant walk-back, an obvious line had been crossed. We think of the passage from Camus' allegorical novel, The Plague, in which this finally occurs:
CAMUS (page 36): The word “plague” had just been uttered for the first time. At this stage of the narrative, with Dr. Bernard Rieux standing at his window, the narrator may, perhaps, be allowed to justify the doctor’s uncertainty and surprise—since, with very slight differences, his reaction was the same as that of the great majority of our townfolk.
As it turned out, the citizens of the fictional Oran still weren't ready to confront the idea that they may have been hit by a plague. But now, the word had been uttered for the first time—and events would move on from there.
Applebaum had moved her hinting and her suggesting up another notch. The term "medical diagnosis" had been uttered for the first time—but reluctance being what it is among our imperfect species, the same old avoidance occurred
Given his "off-the-wall" behavior—given his clear "detachment from reality"—should someone be seeking a provisional medical diagnosis of the president's possible condition?
The possibility had now been floated. But no one returned to this overt suggestion in the course of the ensuing lengthy discussion.
Ever so slowly they turn! It has long been a rule within the guild—simply put, you absolutely don't go there! You don't discuss the possibility that there could be some problem with the cognition, or with the mental health, of a major political figure.
As with many rules, this rule had been a very good rule—until such time as it wasn't.
Yesterday afternoon, with Applebaum moving her hinting up a notch, Wallace, Bassin and Professor McFaul all plowed blindly ahead. In the course of a long discussion, they gave no indication that they had heard what Applebaum had just said.
Wallace quickly offered a murky parable, but then she went with this:
"Again, we don't know why he acts this way. But let's just say it—he acts like a bleeping lunatic."
Like many others, Wallace has been "just saying" that sort of thing for a very long time. But with that, we were back to simple insults of the colloquial kind. No one was prepared to suggest that it might be time to ask actual medical specialists how this strange behavior by the president might possibly look to them:
Is something medically wrong with President Trump? Could it be a form of cognitive decline? Could it be a serious "personality disorder" (a form of what is still called a "mental illness")?
Could it be a cognitive decline layered on top of some such unfortunate condition?
Applebaum has been hinting for the past several days that the answer is some form of yes. She keeps ratcheting up her suggestions, but she doesn't seem ready to make the recommendation herself.
Earlier that very day, Colby Hall had been forthright enough to describe the type of cognitive decline he thought he saw right before him. No one was willing to enter any such realm on yesterday's Deadline: White House.
In theory, journalists should investigate what they think they see, often by seeking the views of highly qualified specialists. Again and again, then again and again, our journalists and major pundits may not always choose to do that.
More from The Plague: In Camus' famous allegorical novel, The word “plague” had just been uttered for the first time.
For a slightly longer passage, you can just click here. In what ways might our own foot-dragging modern journalists resemble the folk in Oran?
ReplyDeleteKnowing that the mad-as-a-hatter, notorious war-mongering russophobe-neocon Applebaum is bad-mouthing our Greatest Evah President Donald Trump is nice.
It's a resounding confirmation that everything is going great; the swamp is getting drained. Thank you for this, Bob, and thank you Mr. President for continuing to drain the swamp.
Keep draining the swamp, Mr. President, please, and God Bless!
Talk about weirdos and jagoffs...
DeleteWe would all be smart to be Russophobes these days.
DeleteSomerby accuses Appelbaum of making hints and suggestions, of "walking back" her remarks because she wouldn't make a pointless medical diagnosis. Yet she clearly said something is wrong with Trump and he is dangerous to our nation. He calls that "avoidance" when it is simple professionalism. But Somerby is the master of the hint himself, even as he weaponizes it against Appelbaum, who apparently has not been emphatic enough for his taste. Kind of hypocritical, seems to me.
ReplyDeleteHope this helps, Bob:
ReplyDeletehttps://bsky.app/profile/murray.senate.gov/post/3mcuxnbkqp225
"neither Wallace nor either of the other two panelists reacted to the plain insinuation lodged in that new formulation."
ReplyDeleteHow can something be both plain and an insinuation? The words are contradictory. Somerby plainly dislikes Appelbaum. She can do nothing right. If she hints it is too little and if she plainly states that Trump is dangerous that is still too little. He wants her all the way out on her limb, so it can be sawed off by those who will point out that she is no medical expert.
So, what is Somerby's game today? He seems to prefer his own idea that Trump has cognitive decline layered over a personality problem. That would not be a medical condition. We all have personalities of one sort or another, which only rise to the level of a disorder if one is seeking to change themselves or gets arrested, or loses a job or a spouse too many times. We all have cognitive decline. Somerby himself is too "delicate" to use the word dementia, which would be a medical condition. So, what is his beef with Appelbaum, other than that she is a female and an expert at something Somerby knows very little about?
Colby Hall, meanwhile, is out over his skiis. He has no training to allow him to diagnosis Trump and is only using another colloquial term himself. Yet he pleases Somerby.
"Anne Applebaum is a senior fellow and journalist whose work focuses on authoritarianism, democratic decline, and the history of Central and Eastern Europe." None of that involves medical training. It is smart of her NOT to offer a diagnosis when she has no training. It is also smart of her to point out that, in the context of history and authoritarianism, Trump is a danger to our nation. Why doesn't Somerby acknowledge that? That is the bottom line on Trump's behavior, the importance that affects us all, not what some doctor might ultimately write in his chart at the rest home.
"How can something be both plain and an insinuation?"
DeleteOf course Bob didn't say some thing could be both plain and an insinuation. He used the phrase 'plain insinuation' to mean an obvious insinuation, an insinuation you can't miss.
Keep trying.
Somerby is the one who is unclear.
Delete"In Camus' famous allegorical novel, The word “plague” had just been uttered for the first time."
ReplyDeleteThis is untrue. Camus neither invented the word, nor was he the first to use it. It was used during the time of the Bubonic plague in the middle ages.
"The plague in the Middle Ages, especially the devastating mid-1300s pandemic, was most famously called the Black Death, also known as the Bubonic Plague, the Great Mortality, or the Great Pestilence. These names described the widespread death, dark boils (buboes) that oozed blood, and the sheer scale of the epidemic caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis. "
Why does Somerby say stupid things like this? To confuse his readers? To be dramatic? To show his own ignorance -- that is what he does with such stupid remarks.
Good lord! The quote is from the book and the word plague had been uttered for the first time in the context of what was happening in the novel.
Delete11:57 below beat you to this observation.
DeleteSo, please explain why Somerby doesn't make that clear. Do we all have to go read the book to know what he means? Even if it is in the book, did Camus mean what Somerby does?
When someone uses an allegory, it needs to have points of similarity. Where these are not obvious, they should be explained by the author. Somerby doesn't ever do that. That makes his allusions the equivalent of personal meanings, and that is dangerously close to the mental states schizophrenics and other delusional people inhabit. Communication is two-way, not just one person sending out thoughts in a way that others cannot understand.
Somerby talked a lot about Driving Miss Daisy yesterday without actually saying anything meaningful about it, beyond that he has been thinking about it. Then he promised to discuss it today, but has switched to Camus today. It is natural to find this confusing.
DeleteLast time Somerby talked about Camus it was to chide liberals for sleeping in the woods. Now it is about not calling Trump nuts, except we have been doing that, just not using the right words. And I still don't understand what Appelbaum did that was so bad. Isn't she pointing out that Trump is crazy? What did she walk back? I don't know, but perhaps you can explain the things Somerby himself leaves fuzzy?
"So, please explain why Somerby doesn't make that clear."
DeleteFair enough, I'll make this as clear as possible: you're dumber than a box of hammers and a writer has to assume a certain base level of intelligence for his readers so that his writing is not belabored to the point of madness, which seems to be the only kind of writing you can understand.
This is an insult disguised as an explanation. Perhaps you don't understand Somerby either.
Delete"In what ways might our own foot-dragging modern journalists resemble the folk in Oran?"
ReplyDeleteWhy does Somerby never tell his readers what HE thinks he sees in books like The Plague? To be allegorical, the book would have needed to avoid calling the plague what it was. Did that happen in the book, or was it the people of Oran who were in denial, refusing to accept a truth that was being plainly spoken to them? I'll bet Somerby hasn't read the book recently enough to know. It is another prop he has grabbed to bolster his own complaint, which itself boils down to a triviality given that so many people have pointed out Trump's incompetence between 2015 and today. It doesn't need some super special kind of medical diagnosis to deal with the mess Trump is making. It only needs action (not more words). The Plague, even as an allegory, has nothing to do with what is happening in our country today. It might have applied to the pandemic, to Trump's failures to cope with the disease spreading and killing Americans, but Somerby didn't bring it up when it was relevant.
In this way, grabbing at props, Somerby is very much like Trump when he gave a speech waving around a bound set of likely blank paper or an irrelevant manual of some sort, calling it his achievements of the past year. Assuming that no one would be able to inspect the list, just as no one is going to run out and re-read Camus just to fact-check Somerby's supposed allegory. Such references are like Trump's set of mugshots, which he accidentally presented too close to the camera, so that we viewers could see that some were convicted of DUI and similar minor crimes, not murder or even mayhem. They all looked brown, and to my eyes, sad not vicious. But the words said Minnesota, so we're supposed to believe they all killed white women. Heck, these are the kind of guys ICE has been recruiting, if they didn't have Spanish surnames. And someone went through and removed all the black faces from his pile. Do Trump's handlers really have concerns about too openly targeting black people, after all the racism spouted by Trump himself? Or maybe the Somalis were deported for committing fraud and not any violent crimes like DUI?
Somerby is perhaps saying that the people of Oran were afraid to use the word plague, so it was being uttered there for the first time. I know, he doesn't say that, but maybe he is hinting or suggesting it somehow. Hard for me to know.
DeleteCalling for journalists to call Trump crazy isn't going to help anything. It might even create sympathy for Trump among his current supporters, such as they are. It will look like left-wing persecution of the sitting president, it will sound treasonous and create a reaction on the right, to rally around Trump because he is our leader. Those are good reasons not to use Somerby's medical language without an actual diagnosis by someone impartial.
Somerby never calls out Trump's actions, his corruption, his misbehavior, his failure to release the Epstein files (when his name is likely on every page), his illegal attack on Venezuela. It is as if Somerby doesn't care what Trump does wrong, just what he is called by the press. That seems like a pretty extreme failure to recognize what is truly important, on Somerby's part.
Anonymouse 11:57am, what Trump is called in the press IS what matters. What Somerby and you say right here is of limited value in comparison. However, you know that.
DeleteThe press is supposed to report facts, not name-calling. If you find nothing here valuable, please go away. No one wants you to be here.
DeleteIdiot trannytroll has got to go.
DeleteAnonymouse 11:51, you don’t need to paste the sentiments of Salon online, we’re well aware of them, even as you maneuver to link Somerby to Trump. You spent years saying that Bob should be going after the sexism on Fox News and immediately kicked that to the curb when he DID. Now in desperation you’re driven to saying “f-you!” to every contrarian. You’ve met your true level.
DeleteAnonymouse 12:06pm, yet another post that flatly reveals that you think your comments are more important than those of the blogger. You run this joint in your mind. That’s what reveals you as being the nasty bullies that you are.
DeleteAmanda Marcotte wrote the piece. Those are her sentiments, not necessarily those of Salon. An opinion piece is not the same as an editorial by the editor of the publication (who is not Marcotte in this case).
DeleteI never asked Somerby to go after the sexism on Fox. I don't recall anyone else here doing it either. It has long been obvious that Somerby doesn't understand what constitutes sexism (or what the word misogyny means in relation to sexism) and he is not qualified to go after Fox for something he so frequently displays himself. The latest example is his treatment of Appelbaum.
YOU are not a contrarian yourself. You are a troll with no real opinions of your own. You cannot express yourself clearly and do not use English well and you are an unempathetic nuisance who mocks the troubles of others. No one wants you here.
@11:57 - Anything Trump does, no matter how sensible, will be spun as bad by his enemies. You says Trump picks fights that he can win and avoids fights he might lose. What's wrong with that?
DeleteAnything Trump does bad, no matter how crazy, will be pointed out by his enemies -- that is how politics works. This isn't a matter of Trump "picking fights" but of his trying to take over other countries without any declaration of war or authorization by Congress, as required by our laws.
DeleteIf some guy walked down the street and sucker-punched the smaller people (women and children too), would that amount to "picking fights" with anyone, or would it just be naked aggression without provocation? Such a person would be quickly locked up (taken to Bellevue for observation). That you consider such behavior "sensible" causes us to worry about your mental state (or it would, if we didn't recognize that you are a troll).
that makes your hero a chickenshit, Dickhead, your fucking fascist freak
Delete
DeleteI dunno about children, but retarded Democrat cat-ladies are extremely aggressive, and, when sitting behind the wheel, extremely dangerous, sometimes homicidal.
I'd say, sucker-punching them might be justified, occasionally. Depending on the situation.
Fuck off, troll
DeleteThis is what is wrong with the right wing, @12:59
DeleteAnonymouse 11:26am, I find it hypocritical that you have no problem with psychoanalyzing Bob’s every statement to the tune of calling him a pedophile, but he’s out of order in demanding any specificity as to the media’s conclusions about Pres.Trump.
ReplyDeleteMy conclusion of the Trump’s text is that he’s thinking that he could win the presidency twice regardless of US establishment disdain, and have achievements related to peace, and these leaders who depend upon us still treat him as being out of their league. So ok, I’ll worry about what I think is in US interest and I’ll force you to talk about that subject no matter how often you pigeons flutter your wings.
You have just described Trump as a snowflake motivated by grievances. Congratulations. And you write this at a blog where the blogger says Trump is mentally ill.
DeleteSomerby's own words condemn him. I repeat those words and call them bizarre, such as when he called Anne Frank's picture (at age 14) "worth the price of the book". Who says stuff like that? Today Amanda Marcotte wrote an essay at Salon explaining why guys like Epstein pick on 14 year old girls while girls like Trump pick on similarly defenseless countries like Venezuela and Greenland:
Delete"But this binary debate over whether Trump’s various offenses are a distraction misses the larger story. All these issues are tied together under one common theme: Trump is the worst kind of bully, a cowardly one. Like his friend Epstein — who enjoyed targeting small, helpless teenage girls — the most important thread throughout Trump’s life is that he tries to feel big by harassing those who he feels can’t fight back.
So far, Trump hasn’t been accused of sexually assaulting any underage girls trafficked by Epstein. But there’s overwhelming evidence the president shared Epstein’s view that what makes one powerful is avoiding conflict with those who can truly challenge you, and instead preying on the young, the small and the disadvantaged. In a civil trial, journalist E. Jean Carroll accused Trump of using his physical size to overpower her during a sexual assault, a claim the jury found to be true. The common theme of the over two dozen women who have accused Trump of sexual abuse or harassment is of a man who only goes after those he believes can’t defend themselves because they’re asleep or cornered. Or, as was the case of the pageant contestants who said he leered at them in the dressing room, he literally owned the event. Reporting shows that Trump and Epstein shared an enthusiasm for creeping on teenage girls, exploiting their dreams to be models and bullying them into accepting unwanted sexual attention.
This pathetic stance of feeling strong by going after the vulnerable has permeated Trump’s behavior of the past few weeks, whether he’s consciously trying to distract from the Epstein files or not. “[H]e really does seem to think that might makes right — that if the U.S. has the power to take something, then that thing is rightfully ours,” Jill Filipovic wrote in her newsletter this week about Trump’s threats to Greenland. “This is the kind of antisocial, base world view that preschool teachers work diligently to counter: It’s nice to share with others and they should share back with us; no, William’s toy truck is not yours to take home simply because you are bigger.”
https://www.salon.com/2026/01/21/epstein-continues-to-explain-everything-about-trump/
Cecelia, note that this is not my "psychoanalysis" but Marcotte's. It is hypocritical of you to advance Somerby's calls for psychoanalysis of Trump while objecting when it is applied to Somerby.
DeleteAnonymouse 12:01, it’s ironic that mices can’t tell the difference between petty party polemics on X and your incongruous depiction of Trump as both coward and tyrant.
DeleteAnonymouse 12:06pm, unless you have an agenda that is based upon an evaluation of Bob’s importance that belies your daily estimation of him, you, as usual, are entirely superficial.
DeleteThe tranny troll is still a fucking useless troll. Begone.
DeleteNo, Cecelia, YOU claimed Trump was aggrieved by the disdain of the US “establishment”* and the view by foreign leaders that Trump is “out of their league.” You have described a personality disorder.
DeleteOh look! Cecelia is trying to use big words without knowing what they mean! So hilarious when she does that.
DeleteAnon 12:01pm, feeling unappreciated despite any success is not a personality disorder. Trump’s not doing anything that he doesn’t feel is necessary. Candor is his nature.
DeleteAnonymouse 12:34pm, you’re still pulling that tactic out anonymouse playbook. Actually, you need to be instructed in every move, so it must be be from Alinsky.
DeleteMost genuine leaders without personality disorders don’t go around complaining about not winning prizes and begging for respect. Also, his willingness to air his pettiest grievances and lie to flatter himself, like the lie that he won in 2020, you call “candor” but rational people, like Bob, see it as evidence of mental disorder.
Delete“ feeling unappreciated despite any success”
DeleteHis base loves him. His admin and Fox News treat him like Kim Jong Un is treated by his cowed sycophants. Right wing Christians say he is ordained by God. His feeling “unappreciated” is the reaction of a child, an emotionally stunted individual. Get real Cecelia.
Feeling unappreciated despite success IS a symptom of a personality disorder.
DeleteAnon 12:01pm, and as you’ve always said about that cohort- they're the movers and the shakers. Unlike world leaders.
DeleteAnon 12:01 pm, so normal people like Bob understand that Trump’s disordered? As I said, your tactic of insulting and chiding him over it in 5000 words is all phony baloney.
DeleteThey (and you) elected him Cecelia. The right wing media props him up with its oversized audience. Business leaders and the wealthiest people in the US bribe him and are being treated with great favoritism by him. Witness the daily pardons in exchange for million dollar “donations” to his PAC. He has the full power of the DOJ to carry out his every aggrieved whim. Don’t sit there and tell me the movers and shakers aren’t on his side. You still keep describing a personality disorder: no matter how much power this man obtains, he always feel it’s not enough. there are critics: “why do people dislike me?” He’s too much of a snowflake to try to win over his critics. He would rather attack them, arrest them etc. that’s the mark of weakness, not strength.
DeleteAnonymouse 12:01pm, so why are you chiding Bob when he wants the media to talk about Trump’s psyche when it’s all so terribly apparent?
DeleteSomerby never calls for Trump's removal.
DeleteAnonymouse 1:13pm, you don’t do that before you have the bricks under it. That’s what Bob is trying to do. He wants the media to broach it. That’s when people start having the courage to come out of the woodwork in discussion. You’re arguing all ways to Sunday, per usual.
DeleteWhy can’t republicans “broach” it, Cecelia? Are they incapable of doing something for the good of the country without the media providing them cover? Or is the GOP all in with Trump? They have the power to impeach and remove him.
DeleteAs has been said here many times, it is not the job of the press to seek out medical diagnoses in order to bring down a president. It is their job to report the news.
DeleteThese days, Somerby is pretending to complain about the media in order to attack the left. He underscores that there has been no medical diagnosis, as if Trump's behavior were not sufficient reason to impeach him or remove him via Article 25. Back when Trump's crimes were obvious, Somerby still complained about the impeachment proceedings, so this is not Somerby's attempt to nail down Trump's condition, but his way of protecting Trump from further attack based on his health.
Somerby's calls for professional diagnosis of Trump (by the media no less) are his way of protecting Trump, since he will never be subjected to a cognitive assessment. No one is fooled by Somerby's arguments. Today, he claims that Appelbaum has "walked back" something she does not have the standing to assert, being a historian and journalist, not a physician. How is that her fault?
You are a troll. Go away. It should be obvious even to you that no one wants you here.
May Mitch McConnell burn in hell for all eternity.
DeleteMitch McConnell blocked Trump's impeachment and removal, but we on the left aren't the ones who worry about a literal hell. Our consolation is that Trump is apparently worrying about going to hell when he dies. That kind of earthly torture is the fate of those with any kind of conscience, but I suspect Trump is just upset that he won't be able to take his gold peace prize with him when he dies.
DeleteAnonymouse 1:2)pm, because they don’t think Trump is nuts. You have to wait on Republicans in order to discuss it, and Bob’s out of line for pushing it? This says everything we need to know. A anonymices would be happier if TDH no longer existed, than they would if Trump was pushed out. However, the Somerby focus is your paycheck after all.
DeleteAnonymouse 1:35pm, that’s interesting because I don’t think Trump is spiritually inclined at all.
DeleteHas Turtle died?
DeleteNo one says we have to “wait on Republicans”, Cecelia. My question was, what are republicans waiting on? They are the ones with the power. Trump’s corruption is quite enough for him to be impeached, regardless of his mental state, and the press has been going after him pretty hard on that, and his lying, but the GOP won’t even perform an investigation. What makes you think that the discussion of mental illness is going to change the Republican stance? You and they fundamentally reject the idea that Trump is off his rocker. You were here earlier defending him against the charge that he has a personality disorder!
DeleteAnonymouse 1:29pm, it’s interesting that Bob simultaneously doesn’t care if Trump is pushed out, but is also wasting his time in trying to push the media into a public discussion on that subject. A discussion that would far and away out distance the opinions of a blogboard full of anonymices and anonymouse flying monkeys. Yes, removing Trump from office due to mental health or physical health is a vastly more practical tactic. An impeachment is war. It’s combat. There’s no way to disguise it as being for the good of everyone. It’s more than likely to stir up animosity in people who aren’t inclined towards politics, than Trump being old geezer who can’t handle things. The notion that a media drumbeat for psych evaluate would be of little substance is idiotic. Look how fast they got Biden’s pals to drop him.
DeleteAnonymouse 1:55pm, see me at 2:04pm.
Delete“ removing Trump from office due to mental health or physical health is a vastly more practical tactic.”
DeleteThis is nonsense. What do you think the mechanism is to do this? Hint: it’s more difficult to do than impeachment.
Biden's pals didn't drop him. His donors dropped him.
DeleteAnonymouse 2:12pm, it’s more difficult, but it’s far and away more effective and there’s time. “Get on it, guys and gals” is Bob’s point. Your point is what it always is: “Shut up and die, Bob.”
DeleteSomerby has not proposed any action beyond officially diagnosing Trump (by the press, which does not have the expertise or access to Trump to do this).
DeleteYOU need to fuck off Cecelia. You write nonsense when you try to write anything substantive, and the rest of the time you insult and annoy people. Go away.
Has the Overton Window shifted? Is the idea of the US acquiring Greenland becoming more politically acceptable?
ReplyDeleteFuck off fuckhead troll.
DeleteEveryone knows he shifted to taking Iceland you dumb creep.
Delete...acquiring....
DeleteGo take a flying fuck, Dickhead in Cal, you fucking fascist freak.
Yes and yes.
DeleteAnonymices, of your leadership, who told you to go to this new tactic of telling people to f-off. It’s terrible psychology, so it must be the infamous “Corby” character.
DeleteFuck off
DeleteActually, it must be the same person who told Hillary to cuss out David every day. That’s worked for years.. right?
Deletefuck off, Cec, Nazi bitch
DeleteAs a violent criminal, you're guns are no match for my insults to ICE agents.
DeleteWho needs a 2nd Amendment, when you can just call someone an asshole if you want to kill them?
DeleteWhy are there so many right wing trolls at this supposedly liberal blog that no one reads?
DeleteGreenland already said "No".
DeleteLike the girls in the Epstein Files.
It is not more politically acceptable to the inhabitants of Greenland, and there is zero credibility to the propaganda excreted by Trump and his fascist cohorts that taking over the country enhances US security. Retired military leaders have weighed in on this. You can look it up. Or, more to your liking, you can accept the drivel posted on X by some random clown and repost it on this site.
DeleteThe Overton window is as wide as Trump’s morality.
Delete"Is the idea of the US acquiring Greenland becoming more politically acceptable?"
DeleteNo. Because Trump, one of the worst negotiators in history, has alienated both the Danes and the Greenlanders with public insults and bullying.
"Here is how the Guardian reported on a speech European President Ursula van der Leyen gave earlier today:
DeleteEuropean Commission president Ursula von der Leyen reiterated that “the future of Greenland is only for the Greenlanders to decide” as she warned that Europe needs to “transform the ways in which we think and act” to step up to challenges posed by the rapidly changing world order.
She said that Europe needed to realise “we now live in a world defined by raw power,” adding that “in this increasingly lawless world, Europe needs its own levers of power” and abandon its “traditional caution” to build on its economic might and become more independent.
Speaking at the European parliament’s plenary session in Strasbourg, von der Leyen also repeated the key lines from her Davos speech yesterday, warning that the US threat of tariffs on EU partners over Greenland could send the relations into “a dangerous downward spiral” and “only embolden the very adversaries we are both so committed to keeping out of the strategic landscape.”
“Greenland is not just a territory in a key region of the world map, and the land rich in critical raw materials, a strategic outpost on emerging global sea routes. It’s all of these things, but above all, Greenland is home to a free and sovereign people. It is a nation with its sovereignty and its right to territorial integrity, and the future of Greenland is only for the Greenlanders to decide,” she said."
From “Duty To Warn” on X (@duty2warn), who describe themselves as “Mental health professionals warning about Trump”:
ReplyDelete‘Trump’s obvious neurological decay is the new Big Lie, and the mainstream media needs to stop being complicit. The random garbling we saw and heard from him yesterday was not early stage, it was an advanced degenerative neurological disorder that's beyond disturbing. MSM: don't sugar coat or normalize this - be like Lawrence O'Donnell, who said this last night:
"There's this character named Donald Trump, with orange-colored skin and big hair, who shows up to all these events, sometimes he's asked questions, and words come out of his mouth. But he's not there. His mind ... is gone."’
They praised O’Donnell. As I recall, Somerby accused him a while back of being “over his skis.”
Apparently, these mental health specialists don’t require you to have a medical degree or be a mental health professional to make pronouncements like O’Donnell did.
There are mental health professionals who have made public statements about their concerns about Trump. These people can be quoted by others, or form the basis of journalist comments about Trump, without the judgment being attributed to O'Donnell himself instead of the doctors coming forward.
DeleteIt is pretty obvious what is happening to Trump. Those who have lived with dementia in grandparents or spouses recognize it in Trump. As I said yesterday, you don't have to be a mental health expert to recognize abnormal behavior, just to diagnose and treat it. We are concerned not with getting Trump "help" but with protecting the country from harm due to his increasing incompetence, more obvious with each passing day.
Kamala Harris’ swanky $8 million Malibu hideout comes with plenty of privacy for the former vice president … as seen in the first ever photos of the home.
ReplyDeleteHarris and her husband, Doug Emhoff, quietly dropped $8.15 million last month on the gated mansion in Point Dume, one of Malibu’s most exclusive coastal enclaves.
Harris said "Thank you, gullible Democrats for funding our new mansion. The security is top notch, so Doug will have no problems keeping law enforcement at bay when he decides to beat the shit out of me, being the known violent abuser of women he is."
Republicans count on voters not knowing that Harris is married to a man who is successful in business and can afford such a house. (I suspect some of that property is now a good investment due to lower property values after the last fire. It can be expected to appreciate.)
DeleteThe same is true of Ilhan Omar, whose husband is successful and wealthy, and Nancy Pelosi, whose husband was similarly successful before his retirement. The implication by Republicans is that these female elected politicians stole the money while working at their government jobs. This claim is not as often applied to men, since career success is considered a job qualification for them when they run for office.
Somerby, as a hawk for pointing out sexism, might have pointed out this double standard held by right wing trolls and Republicans in general. It is now part of the right wing platform to force women out of public life, confine them to home and child-rearing and keep them out of both politics and business.
Oddly, no one ever asks Marjorie Taylor Greene how she built up her nest egg before retiring this month. That implies a double standard for Republicans and Democrats, not just between men and women (some of whom have wealthier husbands than others).
When Trump took office, he declared nepotism legal and refused to divest his businesses or prohibit business deals by his appointees and family members. It is now "anything goes" when it comes to grifting, so it is hard to tell whether this troll admires Harris or is complaining about her. I suspect the latter, given his repetition of one of the false campaign smears against her husband.
This kind of comment is appearing now because Harris has started her campaign for the Democratic nomination in 2028, appearing back in public life after taking a break from politics. Obvious the right considers her a major threat, or they wouldn't be paying someone to post such comments.
Thanks to Trump's 2nd HUGE tax break for the rich in five years, Kamala Harris and her husband were able to afford to purchase a beautiful, multi-million dollar home in Malibu, much to the envy of jealous losers.
DeleteThank you Mr. President.
Where is it written that Harris, who holds no public office, cannot buy whatever house she wants? Why would she buy an ugly house? And no, Trump did not enable her husband to earn the money they spent on that house. He was the one calling her a "hoe" every step of her campaign.
DeleteAdd "couldn't drain the swamp" to the epic list of Trump's public failures.
DeleteThanks for pointing it out, 12:07.
It’s the age old brain dead right wing trope that liberals can’t be wealthy without being hypocrites.
DeleteRepublicans will get down on their knees for grifters like Trump, but find it offensive that a woman and her very successful businessman husband have bought a nice house in California.
DeleteAnonymouse 12:34pm, it’s possible that you can be over your skis as to a particular matter, but not generally over your skis. You can be less than concrete. You can do it!
ReplyDeleteFuck off. What you think is witty is just annoying to others here. Go away.
DeleteMy point at 12:34 was that the mental health professionals at duty to warn are happy to see remarks like O’Donnell’s, without demanding he be a mental health professional or stage discussions of mental health professionals on his program.
DeleteMy point is that so many actual professionals have expressed concern about Trump's mental status that when O'Donnell does it, he is repeating common wisdom not making a professional judgment himself. O'Donnell isn't pretending to be a mental health professional. He is repeating what we now know from others about why Trump is behaving in such a batshit way.
DeleteThese judgments are now coming from clinical psychologists, cognitive neuroscientists (the doctor who fixes brain malfunctioning), and now Cheney's personal cardiologist concerning the likelihood Trump had a stroke back when his face was saggy in public and he disappeared for a week. There is a consensus emerging among different kinds of mental health professionals that Trump is cognitively impaired. That info is what people like O'Donnell draw upon when they repeat that Trump is not right in his head (speaking in their own colorful ways).
Gee. I wonder why European leaders aren’t that fond of Trump. Hmm. It must be, in the words of Cecelia, that they simply have a personal animus to him, he’s “ out of their league. “ It can’t be that he is antagonistic towards them and taking steps to destroy the alliance. Nahh.
ReplyDeleteWhy don't the trolls fuck off when we tell them to? I suspect it is because they don't speak English good, or they're bots.
ReplyDelete"NUUK, GREENLAND (The Borowitz Report)—The government of Greenland announced on Wednesday that it had begun construction in its northernmost region of a maximum-security prison for pedophiles.
ReplyDeleteThe prison, which will house “the worst of the worst,” is a joint venture between Greenland and the nations of the European Union.
A Greenlandic government spokesperson, Hartvig Dorkelson, said that the construction of the prison “should not be seen as an act of provocation,” adding, “The only person who could be offended by this would be a pedophile.”
Wallace calls Trump a “lunatic” and Somerby calls it a “simple insult.”:
ReplyDelete‘Wallace has been "just saying" that sort of thing for a very long time. But with that, we were back to simple insults of the colloquial kind. No one was prepared to suggest that it might be time to ask actual medical specialists how this strange behavior by the president might possibly look to them:’
The mental health professionals at duty2warn praised O’Donnell for saying that Trump’s mind was gone.
Is that a simple colloquial insult also?
Anonymouse 2:07pm, what it means is that you’re going to get pushback as to this being a partisan group of mental health “leftists”. It has to look like it’s nonpartisan, non-collective… experts…who are reluctant, but feel they must speak. You must choreograph an orchestra, not a bunch of showgirls.
DeleteNo, they just have to be correct in their diagnosis. Mental health is not, by definition, political. The problem is that Trump has been showing signs of cognitive deficit so blatant that everyone sees it and knows what they are seeing, but his power prevents people from saying anything about it, for fear of retribution, or making the situation worse by unleashing Trump's looniness. No such orchestra is going to emerge when Trump is threatening people with very real punishments, including deportation (despite citizenship) and imprisonment, firing and blackballing.
DeleteSomerby has been talking about emperor's new clothes, but the real story analogy is who will bell the cat. Calling mental health professionals "showgirls" is not a good look for you, Cecelia. Women would not say something like that -- it wouldn't occur to them. Yet another leak of your true male troll identity.
Does Trump have to nuke some innocent country before our government will act to remove this madman? We shouldn't have to be asking that question.
Anonymouse 2:39pm, it took no time , with Joe. But, hey, if you aren’t up for it, who is? Bob. In everything there’s an A team and a B team. You are the first to point out that obviousness, when you are alluding to your own expertise. An expertise that thinks a comparison between an orchestra and a Vegas show is objectionable. You’re such a phony. You’re not asking questions. You’re trying to shout questioners down.
DeleteCecelia, this comment makes no sense at all. Fuck off. We all want you gone. You have no business here.
DeleteA "show girl" does not necessarily refer to Las Vegas. It refers to a woman who dances or performs for a living. Women don't use it as a put-down, the way you did. Men think first of strippers (exotic dancers) and not Vegas showgirls, because so few women work in Vegas and most take their clothes off for money while businessmen get drunk and fantasize about them. Here in the USA, there is still a disparity between the number of women who play in orchestras compared to men. Calling orchestra musicians high class while denigrating showgirls is sexist and unfair to women, who have fewer opportunities to join orchestras. Women in the USA understand this stuff. You just wanted to juxtapose something low class with something better, so you picked a gendered insult that no real life woman would have chosen. One more piece of evidence that you are a man pretending to be a woman, and a troll at that.
Now go away. You are not wanted here. Fuck off, as they say in Denmark.
Not to mention that orchestras don't have dancers, and thus have no choreography involved. Probably another language-mistake arising from being on an Eastern European troll farm. When you write music for an orchestra, it is called composing, not choreography.
DeleteMaybe she meant conducting an orchestra? But dancers don't have conductors or anything equivalent.
DeleteAnonymouse 3:23pm, and we all know that Vegas dancers wear snow gear and give renditions of Hamlet. How could not notice this.In other words they have their place just as the duty2warn people do. But D2W has gone commercial. They’ve aligned under a snappy billing. A loose group of experts, colleagues, etc. Is a better strategy. But you do Corby.
DeleteFuck off. Why do you think attacking a nonexistent Corby helps your situation? Go away.
DeleteAnonymouse 3:40pm, why would anonymices get so batshite over a reference to someone who is “nonexistent”? No, Corby is an icon here. She’s an emblem. As long as there is a TDH, Corby will live.
DeleteFuck off Cecelia.
DeleteNope.
DeleteJacob T. Levy, a political theory professor at McGill University, analyzed the charter of Trump's proposed Board of Peace:
ReplyDelete"Levy argued that the arrangement was brazenly corrupt even by Trump's standards.
"Proposing this structure... is impeachable. It really is," he wrote. "Regardless of whether this organization ever even looks in the direction of Gaza, it's an assault on the international order subordinating the decisions of [nation] states to the personal jurisdiction of the Trump family."
"It's hard to be shocked anymore, I know, but we should be shocked," the professor added."
https://www.rawstory.com/trump-king-of-the-world/
Colby Hall is dishonest. He says:
ReplyDelete"Gutfeld has cracked the code, disrupting a TV genre once defined by Johnny Carson, David Letterman, Jay Leno, and yes, Colbert himself."
This is untrue. Gutfeld didn't disrupt late-night. Trump did that when he demanded that Colbert and Kimmel be tossed off the air. The media kowtowed to Trump by failing to renew Colbert's contract, and then by trying to dislodge Kimmel by fiat, a move that was protested far and wide to the point that they had to reinstate him. Gutfeld had nothing to do with any of that.
It is easy to see why Somerby has been pushing Hall and Mediaite lately. It is another right wing outlet masquerading as normal media when it is bought and paid for by the right. No one else would praise Gutfeld, the way Hall is doing, and no one else would promote Gutfeld, the way Somerby does so often, to the point of repeating his derogatory jokes against lefties while pretending to be daintily offended by them.
Gutfeld is a right wing propagandist masquerading as a comedian. He is part of Fox's misinformation campaign, the right's noise machine. Apparently, so is Hall. And it is Somerby's assignment by his handlers, his talking points, to promote Hall and Mediaite. Why all the pretense? Because those who dislike Trump won't watch Fox and other right wing outlets, and yet their votes are needed in the midterms. A wolf in sheep's clothing, pretending to be centrist or unbiased, can sneak into the lives of Independents and influence them before they discover that they are being fed shit disguised as news. Gutfeld indeed!
"A woman testified in an English court that Barron Trump “saved” her life when he found out she was being beaten by a jealous man and immediately called the police, according to multiple reports on Wednesday."
ReplyDeleteTrump was on a phone call with a woman he recognized as having been beaten up. He was in no personal danger, not anywhere near the woman, and the person who beat her up had no idea she was speaking with Trump.
How then is Barron Trump a hero? Without thought, he placed the woman herself in greater danger by phoning the police about the incident, thus depriving her of both her privacy and the chance to decide for herself how to handle things. She will be lucky if the guy who abused her doesn't come back and kill her.
I doubt Barron Trump gave that possibility a single thought.
You get the woman to safety then call the cops. He was on a phone call with her and did not do that. That is foolishness, not heroism.
DeleteIn fact, Trump precipitated the attack on his friend:
Delete"The Daily Mail reported 22-year-old Russian national Matvei Rumiantsev “was jealous of the American’s relationship with the woman and flew into a rage when he tried to phone her earlier that evening.”
Rumiantsev later went to the woman’s home and repeatedly punched her. Jurors were told he kicked the woman in the stomach and called her a “whore” and a “slut” during the video call with Barron Trump."
Trump was in the US while his friend was in Europe.
Why is Barron Trump hanging around with women who are being bullied by Russians? Was this woman perhaps being trafficked? Is she considered the property of a clique of Russian men? How does Barron Trump know such people at all?
DeleteApple doesn't fall far from the Russian whores
DeleteAnonymouse 3:19pm, so she’s automatically a whore, huh Corby?
DeleteHow would a high school aged girl (the same age as Barron) even know a Russian man who would have access to where she lives to the point of being there when she got a call from the US, so he could punch and kick her? This sounds like trafficking, not dating.
DeleteLike father, like son.
DeleteAnonymouse 3:36pm, I think calling the police when someone is being attacked is the better strategy tha n not calling the police. sheesh… you’re dishonest.
DeleteBut then… you’ve already labeled this woman as being whore for no other reason than knowing Barron Trump. If you were really knew what you were doing, you’d call her a transwoman. But no, they’re saints by definition.
Anonymouse 3:38pm, oh, maybe having gone to Russia with his father and have met the pretty daughters of Russian pols, businessmen, waitstaff? ? Or done that in the U.S.. Maybe having a mother who is from that neck of the woods. There are other explanations, but go right to whore because that’s kind of champions of women that you truly are.
DeleteYou apparently know nothing whatsoever about domestic violence. Most women do, which again suggests you are not female. Barron caused that situation, it is only fitting that he helped the woman who he placed in danger with his call. But the whole situation seems fishy, not because she is a "whore" (an antiquated term not used by actual women in the USA, but used by men to control women), but because this isn't the kind of dating teens engage in right out of high school. Barron seems to have an unusual social life, as does the woman he called. In fact, referring to her as a "woman" is odd, given Barron's age (just turned 19). Why is he involved with a "woman" with a 22-year old Russian boyfriend, living in Europe (UK?). In fact, why is her age not mentioned but the boyfriend's age is known?
DeleteI think anyone who dates a member of Donald Trump's family is automatically a whore, including Melania.
DeleteAnonymice 3:57, what do you mean when you say I know nothing of domestic violence. I’m a man, right?According to anonymices, men slap women around as a hobby. Ive slapped many a “whore” (as you called her) around in my day. It’s fascinating that you’re disputing this woman’s courtroom testimony of what happened when Barron (or you…) wasn’t anywhere her. He was thousands of miles away and you want him to diddle around as she asks him for help. For all we know, the man could have been rather prominent, or the son of someone prominent, so her initial instinct would be call someone first. That instinct wasn’t Barron’s and by her testimony he saved her.
DeleteAnonymouse 4:05pm, I think those women are smart enough to not give a rat’s as to your opinions. Most people are.
DeleteThe woman's name is not given in the news article but the man's name is, which suggests the woman may have been a minor.
DeleteAccording to the news report, Barron called her expecting to have a chat. He saw and heard the man in the background and called the police, which the woman later said "saved" her. The woman didn't call him for help and the Russian man was reportedly upset because she was talking to Barron. You are making things up to fit your preferred narrative (as Somerby calls it).
DeleteDOJ spoksemodel Lindsey Halligan has resigned as US Attorney, a position which she never held in the first place. Only under Trump.
ReplyDelete"One of the way the nations of the world can move against Trump and America is by dumping our Treasuries and equities. This process began yesterday when Denmark sold off and exited US Treasuries." Simon Rosenberg
ReplyDelete
Delete"Denmark sold off and exited US Treasuries"
Panic in the White House! The walls are closing in!
Look at what happened to the Stock Market yesterday as a result.
Delete