THURSDAY: We continue to beat a dead horse!

THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 2026

Ty Cobb is plain spoken: Ty Cobb isn't a medical specialist. He's a high-end Washington lawyer who worked under President Trump for a bit less than a year, though he says he never voted for him.

That's how Washington lawyering frequently works. The overview goes like this:

Ty Cobb (attorney)

Ty Cobb (born 1950) is an American lawyer. He was an Assistant U.S. Attorney for the District of Maryland in 1981–86. He has been a partner at Hogan Lovells in Washington, D.C. From July 2017 until May 2018, he was a member of the Trump administration legal team, though he has stated he never voted for Trump.

[...]

For nearly a year, Cobb managed White House matters related to FBI Director Robert Mueller's special counsel investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections. Having been recommended to President Donald Trump by John Dowd (a member of Trump's private legal team), Cobb joined the White House internal legal team on July 31, 2017 and reported directly to Trump. Cobb said he accepted the assignment because "it was an impossible task with a deadline" and because "I have rocks in my head and steel balls."

[...]

On May 2, 2018, Cobb announced that he was retiring as White House special counsel at the end of the month. He issued a statement that "it has been an honor to serve the country in this capacity at the White House. I wish everybody well moving forward."

Cobb stated on October 22, 2018, that he did not think the Mueller investigation was a "witch hunt," as Trump repeatedly called it in the press. He repeated that assessment in an ABC News interview on March 5, 2019, adding that he thought that Mueller was "an American hero."

That gives you some basic background. Cobb reported directly to President Trump, then seems to have beaten a bit of a hasty retreat. (There could always be more to the story.)

Stylistically, we'd say that Cobb is plain spoken. Last night, speaking to CNN's Erin Burnett, he offered a striking assessment of President Trump. We'll highlight his most striking claim:

COBB (1/21/26): You know, he can’t get into a sentence without raising a grievance. And he can’t get in, get into a sentence and find his way out without either, you know, asserting some revenge-based point, you know, some fantasy, delusional fantasy such as the alleged rigged election, which Bill Barr made clear to him was not the case before having to resign because of the coup that Trump wanted, or without drawing glory to himself, suggesting that, you know, he ended eight plus wars. You know, nobody knows what they were. 

You know, this is. this is a—this is a man who is who is demented, and his narcissism has run amuck. And I don’t think there’s anybody outside the boundaries of the United States who believes for a second that Trump is sane at this stage of the game, and those in the United States are merely in denial or [are] so invested in him, they can’t, they can’t accept what their lying eyes tell them.

Including physicians. Dr. Jonathan Reiner, one of our, you know, leading cardiologists in the country who’s a frequent CNN guest, you know, calling on Congress to have hearings on his fitness.

So spoke the barrister Cobb. He isn't a medical specialist, but he is familiar with President Trump. His most striking assessment was this:

I don’t think there’s anybody outside the boundaries of the United States who believes for a second that Trump is sane at this stage of the game.

"Sane" is not a technical term. Other words in that ruminationnarcissism, delusionalactually are, at least in the hands of a specialist.

This was not the first recent occasion on which Cobb held forth like this. CNN is willing to hear this sort of thing from a barrister, but under prevailing rules of the game, they won't be willing to interview carefully chosen medical specialists about this state of affairs.

Our guess would be that this is a tragic situation in which some sort of cognitive decline may be layered on top of a pre-existing (technical term) "personality disorder." No one chooses to be so afflicted, but the outcome can be very bad.

We're beating a dead horse with this topic. In closing, please notice this:

CNN has plainly mis-transcribed what Cobb plainly said. Below, you see what he actually saidand you see the CNN transcription:

What Cobb actually said:
I don’t think there’s anybody outside the boundaries of the United States who believes for a second that Trump is sane at this stage of the game.

What the CNN transcript says: 
 I don't think there's anybody outside the boundaries of the United States who believes for a second that Trump is saying at this stage of the game.
What the news report at Mediaite says:
 I don't think there's anybody outside the boundaries of the United States who believes for a second that Trump is saying at this stage of the game.

The videotape is available at Mediaite; you can hear what Cobb plainly said. But as you can see by clicking this link, the outlet failed to correct CNN's transcription mistake. Cobb's most striking assertion is also mis-transcribed there!

Everybody makes mistakes. Also, this is the world we have chosen.

16 comments:


  1. "Ty Cobb isn't a medical specialist. He's a high-end Washington lawyer who worked under President Trump for a bit less than a year, though he says he never voted for him."

    Oh whoa, a lawyer, nay -- a Washington lawyer! -- said something about Our Greatest President? How incredibly boring.

    By the way, do you know one about a thousand of Washington lawyers chained together at the bottom of the ocean?

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  2. As a gay, Latinx Democrat, I wasn't a fan of JD Vance, but for the first time in a while he is saying something that I have been saying for weeks now. Every bit he said is common sense. Even Sen. John Fetterman (D.) has been saying the same thing too.

    JD just won my my respect and vote in 2028.

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    1. Can you tell us what he is saying that he agrees with?

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    2. Watching VP JD Vance, stand taking questions by media, answering without hesitation and NO teleprompters, is impressive. Considering our last two Democratic Presidents could not speak without a script or teleprompter. They hid from media in most cases.

      Delete
    3. When all you do is make up shit that bears relation to reality and is offensive to every person with an ounce of decency or common sense, you don't need a teleprompter.
      Also, your trolling is lame.

      Delete
    4. As a gay, Latinx Democrat
      You forgot to add: in the country illegally and receiving SNAP benefits. That would've made your story so much more poignant.

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    5. The liberals say trolls in the glen don't exist but I know that they do.

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    6. Even Sen. John Fetterman (D.) has been saying the same thing too.
      Fetterman suffered a stroke and has been battling mental illness. Perhaps, that's why it make sense to you. There's a good article about his struggles and how he's changed in Mother Jones.

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  3. Cobb's point is wildly exaggerated. He claims to know what all 8 billon non-Americans believe And doesn't identify any non-American who holds this belief, let alone all of them. Cobb's Trumpian exaggeration is just a pretentious way of saying that he personally doesn't think Trump is sane

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    Replies
    1. Quaker in a BasementJanuary 22, 2026 at 3:15 PM

      He's using hyperbole--effectvely!--to make a larger point.

      Delete
  4. Trump is succumbing to dementia rapidly. It's entirely unrelated to his personality disorders. Trump is addled and his connection to reality is tenuous. It's quite apparent. How much damage he's going to inflict before he's finally 25th-ed -- hard to say.

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  5. ""Sane" is not a technical term." Somerby says.

    Sane is a legal term, which makes it technical to the field of law. It can also be used colloquially, but Cobb is an attorney. When he calls for hearings on Trump's fitness, it is more likely he is using the term in the technical sense.

    Somerby just loves to keep repeating his own belief that Trump's decline is layered on his personality disorders, but that is for an expert to determine, not someone like Somerby. When you talk about a person's cognitive decline, it is from a previous baseline that includes those preexisting personality disorders.

    Here is a reasonable definition of personality as the term is used by psychologists:

    "...the unique, enduring pattern of thoughts, feelings, and behaviors that distinguishes an individual, representing their characteristic way of adjusting to life, shaped by genetics and environment, and generally stable but evolving."

    Note the words enduring, characteristic and stable. The persistence of traits over time and context is part of the definition of personality. The term decline implies a change for the worse compared to previous functioning. So, this assumes those stable characteristics as a baseline and measures current functioning compared to what was typical for that person.

    It is not necessary for Somerby to claim that Trump's decline is layered over his personality, because that is assumed by the previous baseline -- how that person functioned before the suspected decline.

    This mistaken idea of Somerby's is as glaring as a math error would be to a statistician, and it reveals Somerby's lack of understanding about psychology and how abnormal behavior is assessed. I wish he would stop repeating it because I find it embarrassing for him.

    The error that Somerby points out in the CNN and Mediaite transcripts are obvious errors by the voice recognition system used to produce the transcripts. These are very frequent now that so many news services are using software without having human beings review and correct errors. This isn't earthshaking and most people can see that the mistake makes no sense, and then figure out what Cobb probably said instead. Sane and saying sound similar.

    There was a similar increase in spelling and other kinds of errors when publishers stopped employing copy editors. As Somerby says, this is the world we've chosen. Actually, I don't recall voting on this, but we do live in a capitalist society in which profit takes precedence over other values. Only immigrants have actually chosen to live here -- the rest of us were born here and we just put up with circumstances. Some of us are now choosing to leave. But Somerby's glib remark about choice is offensive in the context of who has the right to live where. I'm sure it was just a bit of thoughtlessness, but it is another reason why I dislike him.

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  6. Deporting criminals reduced crime. CBS reported Murders plummeted more than 20% in U.S. last year, the largest drop on record
    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/murders-plummet-crime-trends-2025/

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    Replies
    1. You're kidding, right? No, you're that deluded.

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  7. How can Somerby call this a "dead horse" when every day more people come out and call Trump insane and ask for a hearing on his mental competence?

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