There is something psychologically wrong with the President. Fortunately, some mental health pros ar

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President Trump exhibits classic signs of mental illness, including 'malignant narcissism,' shrinks say

Gersh Kuntzman

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Sunday, January 29, 2017, 4:00 AM
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President Trump has some sort of personality disorder, many believe.
(CARLOS BARRIA/REUTERS)

The time has come to say it: there is something psychologically wrong with the President.

The fuzzy outlines of President Trump's likely mental illness came into sharper focus this week: in two interviews with major networks, he revealed paranoia and delusion; he quadruple-downed on his fabrication that millions of people voted illegally, which demonstrated he is disconnected from reality itself; his petulant trade war with Mexico reveals that he values self-image even over national interest; his fixation with inaugural crowd size reveals a childish need for attention.

Partisans have been warning about Trump's craziness for months, but rhetoric from political opponents is easily dismissed; it's the water of the very swamp the President says he wants to drain.

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But frightened by the President's hubris, narcissism, defensiveness, belief in untrue things, conspiratorial reflexiveness and attacks on opponents, mental health professionals are finally speaking out. The goal is not merely to define the Madness of King Donald, but to warn the public where it will inevitably lead.

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"Narcissism impairs his ability to see reality," said Dr. Julie Futrell, a clinical psychologist, who, of course, added a standard disclaimer because she has never actually treated Trump. "So you can't use logic to persuade someone like that. Three million women marching? Doesn't move him. Advisers point out that a policy choice didn't work? He won't care. The maintenance of self-identity is the organizing principle of life for those who fall toward the pathological end of the narcissistic spectrum."

A little background: Shrinks don't typically analyze public figures. The reticence dates back to 1964, during Barry Goldwater's run for President. Then, like now, many shrinks believed that the candidate was psychologically damaged — but unlike now, many diagnosed him for a Fact magazine special issue titled, "The Unconscious of a Conservative: A Special Issue on the Mind of Barry Goldwater."

The headline itself — "1,189 Psychiatrists say Goldwater is Psychologically Unfit to be President!" — prompted the American Psychiatric Association to issue the so-called "Goldwater Rule": "It is unethical for a psychiatrist to offer a professional opinion unless he or she has conducted an examination" of the patient in question.

As a result, shrinks are the only professionals who are not allowed to offer their expertise to journalists trying to explain complicated issues to the public. Indeed, scientists can tell us about global warming, engineers can tell us if a bridge is about to give way, and soldiers can tell us if an enemy is weak or strong. But the mental health of the President? The experts are handcuffed, even as we elected the most paranoid President since Nixon and, clearly, the most self-deluded and dangerous American political figure since Aaron Burr.

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Not anymore. For the past few weeks, psychologists have been speaking out, arguing that their profesional integrity, and patriotism, can't be silenced. The latest? A top psychotherapist affiliated with the esteemed Johns Hopkins University Medical School said Trump "is dangerously mentally ill and temperamentally incapable of being president.”

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Shrinks would love to put Donald Trump on the couch. But he won't likely undertake psychological treatment.
(patrickheagney/Getty Images/iStockphoto)
The expert, John D. Gartner, went on to diagnose Trump with “malignant narcissism.”

Gartner has joined a growing chorus of experts who are so concerned about the president that they are willing to face the wrath of their professional organizations' gag rules.

In an earlier effort just after the election, thousands of shrinks joined a new group called "Citizen Therapists Against Trumpism," which quickly released a "Public Manifesto" to warn America about its leader's apparent psychosis.

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"We cannot remain silent as we witness the rise of an American form of fascism," the manifesto states.

The psychological warning signs? "Scapegoating ..., degrading, ridiculing, and demeaning rivals and critics, fostering a cult of the Strong Man who appeals to fear and anger, promises to solve our problems if we just trust in him, reinvents history and has little concern for truth (and) sees no need for rational persuasion."

Hate him or love him, but you have to admit, that's Donald J. Trump!

The American Psychiatric Association says that anyone exhibiting five of the following nine egotistical traits has Narcissistic Personality Disorder. Count up how many Trump exhibits:

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1. Has a grandiose sense of self-importance (exaggerates achievements and talents, expects to be recognized as superior without commensurate achievements).

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(Fact Magazine)
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This 1964 issue of Fact magazine about Barry Goldwater (right) prompted the American Psychiatric Association to issue guidelines forbidding shrinks from discussing the mental state of non-patients — which led to Trump.


2. Is preoccupied with fantasies of unlimited success, power, brilliance, beauty, or ideal love.

3. Believe that he or she is “special” and unique and can only be understood by, or should associate with other special or high-status people.

4. Requires excessive admiration.

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5. Has a sense of entitlement.

6. Is interpersonally exploitative.

7. Lacks empathy: is unwilling to recognize or identify with the feelings and needs of others.

8. Is often envious of others or believes that others are envious of him or her.

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9. Shows arrogant, haughty behaviors or attitudes.



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Donald Trump in the White House

My count: Eight, easily (I'm being charitable.)

His pathology was on display all over his interview with ABC News’ David Muir. Quoting the transcript doesn't do Trump's ego justice because his bluster is part of the effect, but the words themselves betray a twisted mental state.

"I know what the problems are even better than you do," he told Muir at one point. Later, when Muir refers to critics of Trump's plans to "take the oil" from Iraq, the President thundered, "Wait, wait, can you believe that? Who are the critics who say that? Fools." (No, just skeptics.)

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On Obamacare: "It's a disaster. You know it and I know it." (It's flawed, but workable.)

On Obama: "We have a great relationship." (They don't.)

On his own greatness: "I could be the most presidential person ever, other than possibly the great Abe Lincoln, all right?" (He could not.)

On voter fraud: Muir's statement that there is no evidence to bolster Trump's claim didn't matter to the President because "millions of people agree with me." (That doesn't make them or him right.)

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On news coverage of his speech before the CIA: "That speech was a home run. That speech, if you look at Fox...they said it was one of the great speeches. ... In fact, they said it was the biggest standing ovation since Peyton Manning had won the Super Bowl." (It was not. It was not.)

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President Trump’s interview with ABC News' David Muir revealed a troubling disconnect with fact.
(Martin H. Simon/ABC)
So boil it all down: We have a President who only believes something is true if it praises him. Everything else is fake news to him. Psychologists know what that is: It's a dangerous, pathological detachment from reality.

"That portion of the interview showed me that Trump lacks proper reality testing," said Jean Fitzpatrick, a relationship therapist practicing in midtown Manhattan.

She and others said this particular mental deficiency is why Trump surrounds himself with people who won't smash the narcissistic mirror, lest the Dear Leader become enraged (which we've already seen in Trump's jeremiads against journalists).

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"Living with a person with narcissistic or sociopathic traits is exhausting because they are all about meeting their needs and getting constant strokes," Fitzpatrick said.

The problem, as columnist Matt Bai pointed out last week, is that Trump has hired only lackeys because he's "not someone who puts a ton of value on the truth." The danger to the nation? "Who here will refuse to keep saying things they know aren’t true?" Bai added. "And will anyone tell the boss what he doesn’t want to know?"

Trump's lackeys are not only on the official White House payroll. His personal Riefenstahl, Sean Hannity, spent most of his interview on Thursday night on Fox News not only holding up the mirror to Trump, but polishing it with his own moist, hot breaths.

Let me be clear: This is not an attack on Trump's policies. You want to build a wall and charge Mexico for it? Sure, whatever. Borders are supposed to mean something, I suppose. You want to cut regulations? Again, I don't love the idea of dirty water or unbreathable air, but favoring Big Business over the environment is, like, page 4 in the GOP playbook. You want to defund abortion overseas? That's page 3. Even supporting Israel's illegal settlements in the West Bank isn't too far outside classic conservative thought (see pages 5-40 of that aforementioned playbook).

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So I'm not quibbling with Trump's proposals. I'm concerned with the man's clear mental illness. And there's a lot more at stake than just who pays for the wall.



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Donald Trump sworn in as 45th President of the United States

Another shrink to whom I spoke — who declined to be identified — said Trump was indeed mentally ill, and that his anger is a classic “repetition compulsion” that is similar to that of an alcoholic.

“It’s a reaction to some anxiety from childhood,” said the doctor, predictably going back to Freud’s root of all evil. “An alcoholic initially drinks to relax, but it destroys him in the end. With Trump, he's a disturbed person who protects himself by building up his ego and tearing down others.”

And it’s very difficult to treat that, Futrell added.

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“A narcissist’s defenses function to protect the person from the knowledge of what lies beneath, and as such, must not be challenged lest the walls come crumbling down,” she said. “It is important to understand that the need to maintain the self-image is so great, ... the severe narcissist bends reality to fulfill whatever fantasy about power, wealth, beauty, etc. s/he maintains.”

The Citizen Therapists’ manifesto argues that Trump's deformed ego will lead to "fear and alienation among scapegoated groups, ...exaggerated masculinity as a cultural ideal...coarsening of public life by personal attacks on those who disagree (and) erosion of the American democratic tradition (in favor of) the Strong Man tradition of power."

Trump's psychological damage will, in short, create "the illusion that real Americans can only become winners if others become losers,” which “normalizes what therapists work against: the tendency to blame others in our lives for our personal fears and insecurities ... instead of taking the healthier but more difficult path of self-awareness and self-responsibility. It also normalizes a kind of hyper-masculinity. ... Simply stated, Trumpism is inconsistent with emotionally healthy living — and we have to say so publicly."

Unfortunately, too few say it publicly. But the more Trump lies on Twitter, the more he and his staff demean journalists, and the more he bullies his opponents, the greater the number of shrinks who will come forward to say that not only does this Emperor have no clothes — he's out of his mind, too.
 
Ex-Trump executive: I knew he was ill for last 35 years
BYBARBARA A. RES
SPECIAL TO THE DAILY NEWS
Monday, January 30, 2017, 1:21 AM
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President Donald Trump speaks by phone with Russia's President Vladimir Putin in the Oval Office.
(JONATHAN ERNST/REUTERS)
Gersh Kuntzman's column about President Trump exhibiting signs of mental illness, former Trump construction manager Barbara Res emailed the following letter to the Daily News:

This is really ironic. Many years ago, I am going to say some time in 1982, The New York Times published a piece on narcissism. One member of our crew read the Times every day on the way to work and brought the article into the office.

Being the team who was charged with building Trump Tower, we all knew Donald Trump very well, especially myself. To a person, we all agreed that the characteristics outlined in the article fit Donald to a “T.” Now, 35 years later, professionals are saying what we knew back then. Only now he is so much worse.

President Trump exhibits classic signs of mental illness: shrinks


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Donald Trump in the White House

It is gratifying to see a confirmation of our speculations. I pray America survives his presidency, for however long it lasts.

Barbara A. Res is a former executive vice president of the Trump Organization, author of “All Alone on the 68th Floor: How One Woman Changed the Face of Construction” and Daily News contributor.
 
Basic ‘lizard brain’ psychology can explain the rise of Donald Trump

GERSH KUNTZMAN

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Tuesday, January 31, 2017, 7:57 AM
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Trump won the White House by acting as a “strongman” who could protect America from terror, job loss, etc.
(JEFF KOWALSKY/AFP/GETTY IMAGES)
wrong with him. Today, we need to examine what's wrong with us.

Indeed, if almost half of America supports a President who more and more psychological experts believe has a personality disorder bordering on mental illness, there must certainly be something wrong with those supporters, too.

There is: They crave a strongman above all else — even above democracy itself.

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Call it what you will — the "Authoritarian Dynamic," basic Freudianism, fear, insecurity, tribalism or even the rise of the "lizard brain" — but Donald Trump's rise follows a well-documented psychological path.

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"When a population is feeling insecure, it favors authoritarian figures who promise to solve their problems and defeat their enemies," said Dr. William J. Doherty, professor of Family Social Science at University of Minnesota and author of theCitizen Therapists for Democracymanifesto, now signed by 3,800 mental health professionals.

Doherty, a student of history as well as the mind, reminds us that humanity's current organizing principle — liberal, pluralistic democracy — is largely a recent development. For most of human history, of course, civilization existed because "warriors and warrior-leaders" defeated their tribe's enemies.

"We are programmed for embracing hierarchy, starting with children clinging to parents, and the more threatened we are, the more we hope that a 'strongman' can save us," Doherty told me. "We have become so tribal that many of us would vote for the devil if he wore our colors."


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Donald Trump's road to the White House as President-elect

That craving for a strongman kicks in when we feel insecure — so it's a self-fulfilling cycle: A would-be strongman whips up our sometimes-legitimate fears (of immigrants, of job losses, of loss of place in society, of Hillary Clinton) then rides in as the mother who will make it all better. Paging Dr. Freud!

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"Brain science is important here," said Jean Fitzpatrick, a Midtown therapist. "When we feel threatened, the most primitive part of our brain, what we call our 'lizard brain,' gets activated. We're just reacting, just focused on survival. A strongman is usually an expert at talking to our lizard brain. A politician who talks in a way that sounds geekier will not connect."

That's not to say that everyone who voted for Trump has the brain of a lizard (though some of you...)! But it does connect to years of studies about why certain populations (looking at you, Nazis and Italian Fascists) turn to dictator types when times get tough.

Australian professor Karen Stenner, who specializes in authoritarianism, racism and intolerance, calls this "the Authoritarian Dynamic," and her work on the subject is considered seminal. The opening line of her book offers a chilling reminder of the divide between pluralists and closed-minded authoritarians:

"Some people will never live comfortably in a modern liberal democracy,"she wrote.

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Who are those people? They're anyone "inclined to believe only 'right-thinking' people should be free to air their opinions, and who tends to see others' moral choices as everybody's business," she added. "Across time and place, we find that those inclined to discriminate against other racial and ethnic groups rush to protect the 'common good' by 'stamping out' offensive ideas and 'cracking down' on misbehavior."

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Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini also gained political power in Germany and Italy by playing on the fears of their respective nations.
(AP)
Intolerance — to outsiders, to gays, to free speech, to whatever — becomes particularly dangerous when society is under a perceived threat, she adds.

"The threatening conditions that activate authoritarian attitudes include, most critically, great dissension in public opinion and general loss of confidence in political leaders."

So our own fears created Trump.

Numerous studies back up the notion that fearful people are quick to abandon their stated values for the perception of safety. A 2011study in the American Journal of Political Scienceconfirmed that after 9/11, "those predisposed toward intolerance and aggression (became) even more intolerant and aggressive."

And a 2015 Englishstudy revealed that after the 2005 London terror bombings, "there was greater endorsement of the in-group foundation, lower endorsement of the fairness-reciprocity foundation, and stronger prejudices toward Muslims and immigrants."

Trump openly appeals to this fear. His executiveorder that shut down the bordersexplicitly cited the need "to protect the American people from terrorist attacks by foreign nationals," even though not a single attack on American soil since 1975 has come from a resident of the seven Muslim countries cited in the order.

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Trump has played on his supporters’ fear that accepting refugees will put the American public in danger.
(PETROS TSAKMAKIS/AP)
Nonetheless, the fear of terror attacks creates the perception that we have to guard ourselves from the dangerous world outside our group, which only heightens our insecurity and feeds our fear of the outside group — a vicious cycle that can easily be exploited, psychologists say. But it isn't limited only to terror but to any perceived loss of power.

"Trump supporters perceived their perceived lower status in society as undeserved and they compared themselves with others who had undeserved higher status in the way they were treated," Dr. Norm Feather, a professor of psychology at Flinders University in Australia, told me. "The relative deprivation would generate a lot of resentment against the current system and would affect voting behavior. These people are reacting to being left out and to perceived injustice and they vote to change the system."

Does that mean there is something "wrong" with Trump supporters? No. But they are easily exploited.

"There is nothing 'wrong' with people who are driven to fear — it's human," said Tracy Morgan, a psychoanalyst and editor of the website, "New Books in Psychoanalysis."

"When frightened, we don't think," she added. "We can only act to relieve ourselves from terrible anxiety. And when we have a leader who tells us that we should be afraid of things to come, that only he can protect us from, we are easily done in. We all want to feel protected. An infant without a protector simply dies."
 
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