October 1, 2024

Vance doesn't project the villainy vibe that Trump does, by Hal M. Brown, MSW

 

To be a popular villain in fiction a character has to express their villainy with panache. Trump is a master of doing this, from floating the idea of putting alligators in the Rio Grande or shooting immigrants trying to cross the border in the legs to, just the other day, talking about having one day when police can round up criminals without the usual retraints on using violence against them.

Here's his latest crowd pleasing suggestion:

Trump's call for police to have a 'Purge'-like day is an authoritarian strategy.


Excerpt:

In the 2013 dystopian thriller "The Purge," America observes a tradition wherein, once a year for a designated 12-hour period, all crime is permissible — up to and including murder. During the purge, society is rocked by spectacular violence, which is said to have a cathartic effect: It dramatically reduces crime and unemployment. "The Purge" provides audiences with a warning about the horrifying consequences of selective observation of morals and a world ruled by a "might makes right" ethos. But at a campaign rally in Pennsylvania on Sunday, former President Donald Trump effectively floated the idea as a good thing. Except in his spinoff version, the twist is that it’s only the cops who get to do what they want. 

Poor J.D. Vance tries to pull off this kind of unabashedly evil persona, but he just can't manage it. Trump, with his sing-songy voice and the hold he has on his audience, manages it. Perhaps this works because he is able to use that modulated voice the way hypnotists use theirs to put subjects in a trance.

I suppose we can excuse Vance for seeming to be a Trump Mini-Me. 

Trump has been acting for decades. Vance is on the big stage now, but he has barely the skill for a small role in a community theater performance. If his best lines are about cat ladies and people eating pets he can't even deliver them well.

Tonight in the debate he has one last chance to prove his acting chops. He will have to do this debating someone who isn't going to be mouthing lines from a script written by lunatics.

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September 30, 2024

There's shtick, there sick, there's sick shtick, and there's sick and insane sociopathic shtick. By Hal M. Brown, MSW

 


Consider the meaning of these two words:

sicksik | adjective affected by physical or mental illnessnursing very sick children | (the sick as plural noun:  visiting the sick and the elderly | we were sick with bronchitis• relating to those who are illthe company organized a sick fund for its workers• (of an organization, system, or society) suffering from serious problems, especially of a financial naturetheir economy remains sick[predicativefeeling nauseous and wanting to vomithe was starting to feel sick | Mark felt sick with fear• [attributive(of an emotion) so intense as to cause one to feel unwell or nauseoushe had a sick fear of returning• informal disappointed, mortified, or miserablehe looked pretty sick at that, but he eventually agreed• archaic pining or longing for someone or somethinghe was sick for a sight of her(sick of[predicativeintensely annoyed with or bored by (someone or something) as a result of having had too much of themI'm absolutely sick of your moods(especially of humor) having something unpleasant such as death, illness, or misfortune as its subject and dealing with it in an offensive waythis was someone's idea of a sick joke• (of a person) having abnormal or unnatural tendencies; pervertedhe is a deeply sick man from whom society needs to be protectedinformal very good; excellentit was a sick party and there were tons of cool people there

shtick SHtik | (also schtick

noun informala gimmick, comic routine, style of performance, etc. associated with a particular personthere are many great comics who have based their stand-up shtick on observational comedy | her shtick was to haul out her pet ferret.• a person's special talent, interest, or area of activitymovies about ordinary women who do extraordinary things—that's my shtick.

Here's a more detailed definition of shtick. a word that is derived from the Yiddish word schtik .

Plain old shtick is a type of humor. Preface the word shtick with the word sick and we have a number of possible meanings, some good, some bad, and one very, very bad. Sick shtick humor can be good as in the example above meaning excellent or cool.  

Also related to humor as described above, it can be something unpleasant.

Trump engages in shtick in the formal sense of the word. His performances are a combined gimmick and a comic routine, but it is more than that. It is sick but not in a good or cool way, although I am certain he would disagree and most of his MAGA cult members would also disagree.

In fact, his shtick is sick in the very worst way. It is vicious and vomitous. It is also sick sick because it is coming from a person who is mentally sick.  

Trump's sickness has been decribed many times by his critics, some mental health professionals including his niece psychologist Mary Trump, the founder of the Duty to Warn group Dr. John Gartner, psychoanalyst Lance Dodes, MD, and myself, as well as some savvy amateur psychologists like George Conway who started the Anti-Psychopath PAC and Charlie Sykes (read his opnion here about Trump's "gibbering nonsense" here). There's no reason to further elaborate on this topic here.

If you follow the news on progressive media like HuffPost and RawStory you'll see stories like these just from this morning (click image to enlarge):


Trump wanting to implement Project 2025 and what this will mean for the country is only just starting to get major media coverage, but the exponentially growing evidence that Trump's cognitive decline and lapse into clinical delusional and sociopathic mania is still barely a major story and the coverage it does receive is mostly relegated to progressive media. 

More: 



The likelihood of Trump dying in office should make everyone voting for him realize that they are very possibly voting for J.D. Vance, who is clinically sane unless you consider the sociopathic personality disorder a form of insanity, to be president within four years. Vance, like Trump, fits most of the crtieria for being a sociopath (I won't spell it out why I say this when you can easily click this link). However, Trump is an unstable or insane sociopath. Vance is a stable or sane sociopath.

The Vance shtick isn't as flamboyant as the Trump shtick, but shtick it is because it is a gimmicky performance. One might say all politicians engage in shtick to some extent including Kamala Harris and Tim Walz. I can agree with this only if one says that it is a matter of degree. Harris and Walz avoid shtick and Trump and Vance revel in it and use it to manipulate their audience with lies and distortions.





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September 29, 2024

I hope these two articles are right but I am still scared. How scared am I and how scared are you? By Hal M. Brown, MSW

Image by Perchance AI Photos

I was perusing the internet this morning and among the first few articles that caught my attention there were two that gave me some guarded feelings of optimism. Still, I am scared. How scared am I? There's one English idiom that some may consider vulgar but it describes better than any I can think of: I am almost, but not quite literally


The first article was:

Will Trump try to end democracy? Yes — but these scholars claim he can't pull it off


The second article was:




Like millions of Americans I am almost, but not quite literally, scared shitless. Consider this video:


"Adding together what may become of the United States under Trump and what may happen in Israel there aren't words to describe the horror"

The evocative phase "scared shitless" comes close as long as it isn't used casually and you think of the times you had really bad diarrhea.

The two articles I cite address different situations but both offer an optimistic take. The first suggests that even if Trump wins democracy is not doomed. It explains how it may survive despite Trump and his MAGA minions attempts to dismantle and destroy it. The second, by former Trump lawyer Ty Cobb (one of the well known political mustache men), explains that if Trump loses the election he is likely to fail in his legal efforts to overturn the results.

People handle the possiblity of impending doom differently. Some engage in denial and avoidance. They just manage to turn off bad thoughts. They don't follow the news and try not to associate with people who want to talk about it. 

With the exception of thrill seeking junkies like sky divers and bungee jumpers most people don't seek out anxiety. Some avoid anything that provides it and other develop mechanisms to deal with things that trigger it.

Others are like me. While I let myself dwell on worse case scenarios I manage not to become overwhelmed by my fears. I think that no matter what happens poltically I and both those I love and other like-minded people will survive. If the worst comes to pass I will do what I can to fight the good fight. I will give emotional support to my friends. I will participate in the protests described in the first article. I will write my blogs. I will donate to pro-democracy causes.

In the meantime, when my anxiety provoking thoughts threaten to overwhelm me I am able to distract myself and put them out of my mind and I do and think about pleasant things.

Unfortunately others through no fault of their own can't strike this balance or have a lot of trouble doing this. They feel swamped by worry and anxiety. Sometimes this is to the point that it effects them physically and their health is jeopardized. Insomnia, eating too much or too little, overdoing alcohol or drugs, experiencing debilitating depression or anxiety are examples of what can happen. To get back to how I began this blog, they can literally have digestive problems.


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September 28, 2024

It can happen here, right? RIGHT!!! Start by asking what kind of monsters put children in cages and go from there. By Hal M. Brown, MSW

 


Thinking of this, which I often do, evokes a feeling of horrow beyond words. I see in my mind the well known photos of the the entrance to Auschwitz. (Photos and captions from Wikipedia)

Above: A doctor, center, with the 322nd Rifle Division of the Red Army, walks with a group of survivors at the entrance to the newly liberated Auschwitz I concentration camp in January 1945. The Red Army liberated the camp on January 27, 1945. Above the gate is the motto "Arbeit macht frei," which translates to "Work sets you free."

I think of pictures like these:

Above: Jews are deported from Würzburg, 25 April 1942. Deportation occurred in public and was witnessed by many Germans.

Below: I think of Heinrich Himmler (second left)  visiting Auschwitz where he witnessed the gassing of Jews:


I think of these happy looking NAZI officers:

Who are they? The are three SS officers socializing on the grounds of the SS retreat outside of Auschwitz, at “Solahütte”, 1944. From left to right they are: Richard Baer (Commandant of Auschwitz), Dr. Josef Mengele and Rudolf Hoess (the former Auschwitz Commandant).

I was think of trying to write about this as I fell asleep last night. This morning I read this essay by S.V. Date who is the senior White House correspondent for HuffPost (bio). The article says much of what I planned to write about.

Jan. 6... Terminating the Constitution... Rounding up 21 million people.... America, we’ve got some bad news.
It begins:

Nine decades later, that “it” is also what dozens of Republican donors, campaign consultants, pollsters and others interviewed by HuffPost say cannot possibly happen. They scoff at any analogy between former President Donald Trump, a man they support with varying degrees of enthusiasm, and the infamous dictators of the past. They insist that worries about Trump remaking the country as an autocracy are overwrought and designed solely to keep a Democrat in the White House.

“This will be a short period in history and we will swing right back to the middle,” said Hugh Culverhouse, a Miami lawyer who so far has given $500,000 toward Trump’s reelection effort.

While authoritarianism experts and democracy advocates hope Culverhouse is right, they worry – deeply – that he is not.

It is, of course, impossible to know for certain what a second Trump presidency might bring or whether, should he manage to seize absolute power, his rule would come anywhere close to the depravity of the tyrants of the last century.

Still, no other presidential nominee in United States history has behaved with the contempt for democracy that Trump has already demonstrated or even hinted at the sorts of autocratic actions Trump promises if he is returned to power. 

Could the predictions laid out in this article come to pass if Trump wins? Consider this Axios article:

Excerpt: 

Former President Trump, if elected, would build a Cabinet and White House staff based mainly on two imperatives: pre-vetted loyalty to him and a commitment to stretch legal and governance boundaries, sources who talk often with the leading GOP presidential candidate tell Axios.

Why it matters: Trump would fill the most powerful jobs in government with men like Stephen Miller, Sen. J.D. Vance of Ohio and Kash Patel — with the possible return of Steve Bannon. If Trump won in 2024, he'd turn to loyalists who share his zeal to punish critics, purge non-believers, and take controversial legal and military action, the sources tell us.

Trump and his prospective top officials don't mince words about their plans:

Hitler had his inner circle of 10 top lieutenants including Himmler, Göring, Goebbels, Bormann, and Speer, and Trump will have others you've heard of and others who are just as evil who most of you aren't familair with. 

Is there be a difference between them?

You say tomato, I say tomahto... let's hope the title and verse from the song holds true for the United States: 


Addendum:

Do Trump and his MAGA minions who want a lily white colored Christian country welcome the following people?

There were about 47.8 million immigrants in 2023. This represents approximately 14.3% of the population, or about 1 in 7 residents in the United States. Immigrants are defined as foreign-born residents. As of 2022 there were nearly 731,000 Haitian immigrants residing in the United States, comprising the country's 15th largest foreign-born population. There are about 3.5 million Muslims residing in the United States.


The pale skinned MAGAs may put up with Jews, Black, and Asian people being part of society, but clearly they would like to see the others disappear.












September 27, 2024

Let's say the new $100,000 Trump watch is worth $100,000, why the hell does Trump think it is a good idea to sell it now? By Hal M. Brown, MSW

 

In case you haven't heard it being discussed on MSNBC (read'$100,000 for that?" MSNBC's Morning Joe panel loses it over Trump's watch offer)
 or elsewhere, Trump is now selling the Trump watch for $100,000.



If you read RawStory there are two articles about it: 


and

There are other $100,000 watches semi-rich watch aficionados can buy or already have in their collections. For example, these are from 

Five of the Top Watches That Cost Around $100,000

Of course they don't have Trump's name on the front and "fight, fight, fight" engraved on the back.


Here's a dandy example. 

Nothing screams "I'm filthy rich" more than wearing a watch that costs as much as this golden super yacht. (Article)

As this is going on we have Melania making the news this way: 

Trump Sells $100K Gold Watches on Same Day Melania Insists People Can’t Afford Basic Necessities

Excerpt:

On the same morning (as Trump introduced his watch), Melania Trump appeared on Fox & Friends to promote her new memoir. Speaking with Ainsley Earhardt about Vice President Kamala Harris replacing President Joe Biden at the top of the Democratic Party ticket, Melania Trump said people are not able to buy “usual necessities” due to high inflation and her husband was “great for the country.”

“How I see it is, the record speaks for itself. The country is suffering. People are not able to buy the usual necessities for their families,” Melania Trump said. “We have wars going on around the world. Soldiers are dying. They were dying under this administration because of weak leadership. The border is open and dangerous.”

She added that people were “prospering” more under her husband’s administration and argued that everything is “great” when it comes to Donald Trump, but that you’ll have to accept some “strong tweets.”

“I think the American people need to decide what they really want. Maybe some strong tweets, but everything else great for this country,” she said. “SoHe' it’s all in the American people’s hands on November 5.”

It isn't that there aren't a few people who want to curry favor with Trump who will buy these watches. After all, it costs $200,000 to join Mar-a-Lago. This is about narcisstic messaging. However, Trump is supposed to be a master of messaging. 

Trump said "It has almost 200 grams of gold and more than 100 real diamonds. That's a lot of diamonds. I love gold. I love diamonds. We all do. Owning one puts you in a very exclusive club."  Who can relate to this?

Come on numbnuts, really, who is this message aimed at? How many of these watches does he need to sell to even make it worth his while? He'd need to sell 10 to make a million dollars minus the cost of the watch. The world of Trump is crazy but are there even 10 people willing to shell out 100 grand for.. well... for what exactly?

There may actually by a few MAGA cultists who, for example,  bought the golden sneakers or stock in Truth Social who learn about this and realize that they were suckers and that Trump cares about as much for them and their well-being as he cares for a kale salad.


This grift could backfire on Trump like some piece of crap junker car:









 


Now defunct website called Trumpelthinskin endeavored to skewer Trump. Trump 45 wasn't as bad as predicted, but now he has a second term and he's a horror show. By Hal M. Brown

  If not moving  To animate the image above click here. In 2017 Hillary Clinton accused Trump of being thinskinned. His reponse was "I ...