America at risk: Trump history and behavior suggest destructive mental processes

Diogenes

Nemo me impune lacessit
Contributor
Trump is not just a childish man having a tantrum or a selfish man who can't accept defeat.

His actions are dangerous to America's health and security.

Since Donald Trump’s election, the psychiatric community has debated calling out his illness(es).

The American Psychiatric Association says we should remain silent out of fear that we would violate the Goldwater Rule — an APA rule adopted largely to prevent the partisan misuse of psychiatric diagnoses to unduly influence an election.

But it is clear what many psychiatrists know privately, and a few have said publicly.

The threat to our democracy is too great to remain silent.

It may be no surprise that Trump railed against a 2020 election process that promised a major increase in turnout through early voting and voting by mail.

He and many Republicans have advocated for ways to suppress votes, and admitted repeatedly that when everybody votes, Republicans lose.

Many say that Trump's refusal to agree to a peaceful and orderly concession is just a threat from a selfish man who can’t accept defeat.

President-elect Biden calls Trump’s failure to concede an “embarrassment.”

It is worse.

When someone says they are planning their suicide, mental health professionals don’t call it a “cry for attention.” They hospitalize them immediately to prevent harm.

When someone threatens homicide, violence or child abuse, we act swiftly to protect potential victims.

It is naïve to consider the current acts of Trump as childish tantrums and nothing more than fodder for late night comedians.

Trump’s particular history and actions create a high index of suspicion for destructive mental processes which are putting the country and its safety and security in jeopardy.


https://www.usatoday.com/story/opin...mood-personality-disorders-column/6332417002/
 
The diseased orangutan is merely one pathetic creature.
Are his 70,000,000 trumpanzees also afflicted with mental illness?
Or are they simply normal for the less evolved sub-species that they are?

Assuming that they're human is the primary impeding factor in finding the best way to deal with them.
 
People are being too dismissive of what's happening & too secure that this election has been decided.

I think it's likely that Biden still takes office in January - but anyone who has observed Trump knows that there are no limits there. I won't be shocked by anything that happens.
 
People are being too dismissive of what's happening & too secure that this election has been decided.

I think it's likely that Biden still takes office in January - but anyone who has observed Trump knows that there are no limits there. I won't be shocked by anything that happens.

Donald Trump may soon miss most the legal protection that it affords.

For four years, Trump has benefited from the de facto immunity from prosecution that all presidents enjoy while in office.

But that cloak will pass to Joe Biden when he's sworn in on Jan. 20, leaving Trump out in the legal cold.

"Clearly, the president enjoyed immunity when he was in office," said Danya Perry, a former state and federal prosecutor in New York. "And it's possible, as a matter of law, that he could be indicted on Jan. 21."

"His legal risks increase immeasurably come Jan. 21, both on the civil and the criminal side," Perry said.

The most developed case that could ensnare Trump might be out of the Southern District of New York.

It stems from the federal prosecution against Michael Cohen, Trump's onetime personal attorney and fixer.

Cohen pleaded guilty to a range of crimes, including arranging illegal hush money payments to keep women silent during the 2016 campaign about extramarital affairs they say they had with Trump before he was president.

Cohen has said he acted at the direction of and in coordination with Trump. Prosecutors, meanwhile, referred to Trump in court papers as "Individual 1."

It is Justice Department policy that a sitting president cannot be indicted.

So although it's possible for a president to break the law before or during his time in office, prosecutors' inability to seek an indictment effectively means he can't be accused, tried or punished while still in office.

Cohen's wrongdoing, which prosecutors tied to Trump without naming him, raises the question as to whether Trump might face charges of his own.

"Ordinarily, had the target not been a sitting president with immunity, I think 'Individual 1,' as he's referred to, very likely would have been prosecuted along with his aider and abettor, Michael Cohen," Perry said.

There's also the possibility that Trump could attempt to pardon himself before leaving office.

Trump has asserted he has that power.

What is clear about Trump's pardon power, however, is that it does not extend to crimes at the state level. And that could prove problematic for Trump in his former hometown.

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. has an active criminal investigation into Trump and his businesses.

The exact contours of the probe are not clear, but court papers suggest he's investigating possible insurance or financial fraud.

The Vance case is not the only legal trouble brewing in New York.

The state attorney general, Letitia James, is conducting a civil investigation into the Trump businesses. James is looking into whether the Trump Organization improperly inflated the value of its assets for loan or insurance purposes, and then deflated the value for tax purposes.

The president's son, Eric Trump, reportedly was deposed under oath last month as part of the probe.

While James' investigation is a civil one, it could cross over to the criminal side depending on what investigators uncover.

https://www.npr.org/2020/11/20/937044524/once-out-of-office-trump-faces-significant-legal-peril
 
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