COGNITION(S): "One man's damaged psyche," he writes!

SATURDAY, JANUARY 24, 2026

But what is he trying to say? In yesterday morning's report, as we rushed off to the medical mission, we may not have quoted enough of David Brooks' latest column. 

The questions we were pursuing included such questions as these:

Is something medically wrong with President Trump? If so, is that a dangerous state of affairs with respect to future possibilities involving the president's judgment?

Also, are Blue America's major journalists and major news orgs prepared to discuss the possibility that something might be medically wrong? Even concerning the possibility which is easier to discussthe possibility of cognitive declineour journalists seem to be searching for ways to suggest that a cognitive problem may exist without ever actually saying it.

Today, the Brooks column appears in New York Times print editions. The headline cites an emerging "crackup," and "the unraveling of President Trump's mind" is quickly cited in the column's text. 

What exactly is the columnist saying? As we noted yesterday, here's how the column starts:

The Coming Trump Crackup

Last week Minneapolis’s police chief, Brian O’Hara, said the thing he fears most is the “moment where it all explodes.” I share his worry. If you follow the trajectory of events, it’s pretty clear that we’re headed toward some kind of crackup.

We are in the middle of at least four unravelings: The unraveling of the postwar international order. The unraveling of domestic tranquillity wherever Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents bring down their jackboots. The further unraveling of the democratic order, with attacks on Fed independence and—excuse the pun—trumped-up prosecutions of political opponents. Finally, the unraveling of President Trump’s mind.

Of these four, the unraveling of Trump’s mind is the primary one, leading to all the others. Narcissists sometimes get worse with age, as their remaining inhibitions fall away. The effect is bound to be profound when the narcissist happens to be president of the United States.

Dire thoughts seem to be lurking there. But does the columnist ever say that something may be clinically wrong?

Many people, Blue as well as Red, have come to believe that President Biden suffered some sort of cognitive decline during his term in the White House. Many people have come to believe that various journalists and various news orgs failed to pursue that possible state of affairs until President Biden suffered through that one disastrous debate, and possibly after that.

In the wake of that possible journalistic failure, it may seem odd to think that our journalists are now reluctant to explore the possibility that President Trump may be suffering from some similar type of decline. Beyond that lies a second possibilitythe possibility that he was suffering from some clinically diagnosable "personality disorder" in the many long years before that.

Was President Trump afflicted with some significant form of "mental disorder" perhaps from his childhood on? That tragic possibility has been aggressively articulated in a pair of best-selling books.

In keeping with long-standing rules of the guild, that possibility has also been almost completely ignored.

When Brooks writes about "the unraveling of President Trump's mind," is he suggesting the existence of a diagnosable medical problem without flatly saying so? Each person can decide that question for him or herself. But as we've been saying this week, ever so slowly they turn!

It seems to us that our journalists may be trying to suggest that something seems to be medically wrong without simply saying so. As we noted on Wednesday, Colby Hall came out and flatly said it this week, but few others seem willing to follow.

Is something with President Trump in a clinically diagnosable way? Was David Brooks implying as much in his column without simply saying as much?

Yesterday, we cited some of the language Broos employed as he discussed "the unraveling of President Trump’s mind." We didn't include these ruminations, which appear near the end of his column:

I don’t have enough imagination to know where the next crackup will come—through perhaps some domestic, criminal or foreign crisis? Though I was struck by a sentence Robert Kagan wrote in an essay on the effects of Trump’s foreign policy in The Atlantic: “Americans are entering the most dangerous world they have known since World War II, one that will make the Cold War look like child’s play and the post-Cold War world like paradise.”

And no, I don’t think America is headed toward anything like a Rome-style collapse. Our institutions are too strong, and our people, deep down, still have the same democratic values.

But I do know that events are being propelled by one man’s damaged psyche. History does not record many cases in which a power-mad leader careening toward tyranny suddenly regained his senses and became more moderate. On the contrary, the normal course of the disease is toward ever-accelerating deterioration and debauchery.

We'll admit that somewhat odd. First, Brooks quotes Kagan imagining a profoundly dangerous state of affairs. Then he quickly seems to pivot, saying it wouldn't be all that bad!

He also states the obvious:

Events on the current global stage are being "propelled by [President Trump]." He then refers to the president's "damaged psyche:"

Is that a colloquial term? 

(He goes on to talk about "power-mad leaders" moving toward even greater states of "deterioration.")

For now, we leave you with two questions:

What are our journalists trying to sayand why can't they simply say it? 

Also, what does this say about the maturity and the competence of our vaunted national discourse? Putting it another way:

As a matter of basic anthropology, what does it say about us?

Also this: Brooks may be working under rules delivered to him by his editors. He may be trying his best to suggest something which he isn't permitted to say.


18 comments:


  1. "we may not have quoted enough of David Brooks' latest column. "

    Jesus Christ, you are deranged!

    But sure, squeal, and quote other idiot-Democrats squeal, if that's what makes you happy...

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    1. Somerby is not a Democrat. Brooks is definitely not a Democrat either -- he is a never-Trump conservative. Someone who uses the phrase "idiot-Democrats" and "squeal" is a troll. Go away.

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    2. Liberalism is the newest mental illness. You can see why democratic women are so unhappy. They are apparently easily brainwashed by the left who only want chaos.

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    3. Nonsense. Go away troll

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    4. Retarded Democrat cat-ladies are easily triggered, I noticed.

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  2. "What are our journalists trying to say—and why can't they simply say it?"

    Brooks did say it. Why can't Somerby hear it?

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  3. "But I do know that events are being propelled by one man’s damaged psyche. History does not record many cases in which a power-mad leader careening toward tyranny suddenly regained his senses and became more moderate. On the contrary, the normal course of the disease is toward ever-accelerating deterioration and debauchery."

    Brooks says that things are going to get worse with Trump if nothing is done about him. That is obvious. Brooks doesn't want to be charged with treason for advocating a coup, but we do have the means to remove Trump if our elected officials had the will to use them. That is obvious too.

    Somerby pretense, his failure to understand what Brooks is saying, is Somerby's pathology. We can ask daily what is wrong with Somerby that he plays coy and tries to push for journalists to state their concerns more clearly during a period when Trump is prosecuting journalists, having the FBI invade their homes, calling them public enemies and urging papers to fire them. Brooks shows sufficient courage to say that Trump is deteriorating. Somerby wants him to place himself in great danger, for what purpose? We all know what he is saying -- all except the deliberately obtuse Somerby.

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    1. To my knowledge, no one in Roman times ever made a medical-professional diagnosis of Caligula. How was his madness dealt with? Look it up. It was the same remedy used to deal with all corrupt and evil dictators across time. Is that what Somerby is advocating? Brooks isn't saying it out loud either, but we all know what it is.

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  4. Those bruises on Trump's hands are not the result of banging into a table, as claimed by our government. Inquiring minds want to know what our president is being injected with. We deserve the full truth about Trump's health, including his cognitive issues.

    The government can hide Trump's treatment records, but his behavior is on display for all to see. It is clearly not normal, even for Trump. What is wrong with the president? That is what Sonerby should be asking, and he should be targeting Leavitt, not Brooks (who is telling the truth).

    Somerby has cast himself as a single voice crying in the wilderness because no journalist will diagnose Trump's mental illness. But we don't need labels -- we need someone competent to take charge of our government, allowing Trump to tend to his health problems in private. But that would mean the most obvious grifting would have to be put on hold. The greedy won't allow that, so we must watch Trump suffer and make a total mess of foreign policy, the economy, our cultural institutions, and our national heritage so the rich can get richer. Not a word from Somerby about the wrongness of Trump's actions.

    It would perhaps be too difficult for Somerby to face his own complicity in reelecting Trump -- the way he helped push Biden off the Democratic ticket, criticized Harris to the point that Democratic support was sapped and Trump crept back into office to do the dirtywork no one let him do in his first term. Somerby was part of Trump's reelection success but now Somerby is unaccountably trying to shove the loudest press voices out of the picture, pretending they won't speak up about Trump, when they are the ones doing that daily, not Somerby. Somerby keeps asking for a professional diagnosis of Trump, but he won't accept the ones already offered by various mental health experts. So, who does he thinks should be telling us Trump has dementia? Trump's people aren't going to do it.

    Here is yet another way in which Somerby and Trump are alike. Trump's niece wrote a book called "Too much and never enough" about her uncle, describing his greed. For Somerby, the efforts of various experts to describe Trump's mental illness are both too much and yet they are never enough to satisfy Somerby's specious cries for someone to tell us what is wrong with Trump -- as if Somerby has not been listening to the nearly daily descriptions of Trump's abnormality, his incompetence, his dementia. What more does Somerby need? Whatever it is, he is not specifying clearly and plainly what he wants to hear said, and he rejects what some have had the courage to publish, so what more does Somerby want? Whatever is happening is clearly not enough for him, and that is Somerby's pathology, or his excuse, for failing to join the chorus telling our country that Trump needs to resign or be removed.

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  5. Trump does crazy stuff, and you say it's his mind. What on earth are you talking about? Maybe it's normal behavior for somebody who's a lowlife and surrounds himself with other lowlifes—nobody to put the brakes on.

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    1. The opening scene of The Sopranos takes place in a therapist's office. Maybe Trump's behavior is extreme, even for lowlifes. A different test of whether behavior is disordered or not is whether it works for the person himself. It Trump an effective lowlife? Is he getting what he wants? I would say the answer to that is no, and if a powerful president cannot get his needs met, something is very wrong.

      Freud thought that success in life consisted of being able to work productively and to form relationships with others. Trump has disowned his lifelong bestie, his rent-a-wife has abandoned him, his family has nothing to do with him, he has made a mess of the White House renovations, and none of his national plans are working (economy is bad, Putin is using him not admiring him, he is the Rodney Dangerfield of dictators). That means his is not a very good lowlife among lowlifes.

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  6. If Somerby is liberal, why is he so out-of-step with what other liberals say in their opinion pieces, articles and substacks?

    Here are some things the press is not: (1) a political party, (2) a professional mental health organization, (3) academic political analysts, (4) historians, (5) experts in foreign relations, (6) lawyers, (7) entertainers, (8) fortune-tellers, (9) educators, (10), our mothers. The press reports current events and news. That's it. They try to get the facts right while doing so. Somerby apparently wants the press to be something else, although he won't say exactly what.

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    1. For the same reason other liberals said in their opinion pieces, articles and substacks that Biden had a cold and jetlag on the night of the debate.

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    2. Based on the quality of the speeches given by Biden right after Biden recovered from his trip, that explanation was true.

      Trump is not recovering. He gets worse every time he gives a speech.

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  7. "As Naftali Bendavid of the Washington Post wrote on Saturday, the president is getting it from all sides as world leaders in Davos not only ignored his demands to be handed Greenland, but also pushed back, while at the same time at home, his immigration policies have given rise to massive demonstrations, including a strike that shut down the city of Minneapolis on Friday.

    Adding to that, the targets of his retaliation campaign are not rolling over and are instead fighting –– and suing –– back instead of being cowed.

    Bendavid is reporting, “Foreign leaders, meanwhile, appeared to conclude they had little to lose from openly accusing Trump of thuggery, something they had been reluctant to do before,” while adding that lawmakers like Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey (D), California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) and Sen Mark Kelly (AZ-D) have openly challenged Trump's authority believing he will back down.

    According to GOP adviser Mike Madrid, one year into his second term, the president is finding he is facing a radically changing political landscape as the polls show voters are turning against him in a stunning reversal.

    “I don’t think there is any question. It’s the prime minister of Canada. It’s the pope,” he told the Post. “There is this new energy when our allies are rattling the saber back, and that is in turn emboldening folks at home.”

    The Post reports notes that the pushback to Trump is undeniably being effective as his threats to invade Greenland if he didn't get his way quickly dissipated, and the plans to invoke the Insurrection Act at home withered quickly away in the face of resistance.

    That led Madrid to warn Trump, ““In the past six months, everything has changed. The fever swamp is still full force, but there is no question there are breaks. The question is, can [Trump] hold it together? And if this is happening before the midterms, imagine what happens if the Democrats take one or both houses.” [Rawstory]

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  8. Trump is just getting started.

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    1. Trump is a failing old man who is unable to function in his job. He is getting worse every day. He needs to be replaced.

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  9. "THE CELESTIAL REALM (The Borowitz Report)—Stating that He had had “just about enough of this idiot,” on Saturday God wreaked revenge on Donald J. Trump by transforming the United States of America into Greenland.

    In a terse public statement, the Almighty declared, “Prayers answered, jerkwad.”

    The act of God coupled with His blistering pronouncement left many atheists reconsidering their positions, nonbelievers reported.

    In Canada, Prime Minister Mark Carney extended a helping hand to his beleaguered American counterpart, offering, “Since we know how to handle cold weather, we would consider making the United States our eleventh province.”

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