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Is Trump a Narcissist?

Is Trump a Narcissist?

  • Yes.

    Votes: 47 92.2%
  • No.

    Votes: 4 7.8%

  • Total voters
    51
Do you think Trump is a narcissist? I really believe he suffers from narcissistic personality disorder. According to the Mayo Clinic these are the criteria used for evaluating narcissism:



Pretty much all of those things could be used to describe Trump. I do not believe someone that only ever considers his own personal interests above all else and is simply incapable of empathy or respect for others should not be a candidate for president.

Absolutely.
 
Actually?

People who prefer that a licensed and practicing psychiatrist who has examined a patient make a determination about someone's actual mental state.

As opposed to a bunch of citizen's playing armchair-doctor's jumping on another character assassination meme like a crew of grade school bullies.

Kind of like Trump saying Hillary Clinton (who he not so long ago thought was one of the greatest women in history, and certainly the greatest Secretary of State ever) is "unstable".
 
I posted this in another thread. it is a pretty good read---

Is Donald Trump trying to throw this election?

Is Donald Trump trying to throw this election?

Conspiracy theories are almost never true, and they're fun only to the extent that people don't actually believe them. That said, it's hard not to consider David Axelrod's assessment Thursday on CNN, following a rocky week for the 2016 Republican presidential nominee: "If Donald Trump were trying to lose this election — and I'm not saying he is — but if he were, I'm not sure he'd behave any differently than he has in the last few days."

There has been mostly-in-jest murmuring since Trump took his escalator ride down to political stardom last year that he is a plant for Hillary Clinton, perhaps persuaded to run by Bill Clinton to torpedo the Republican Party. It's a preposterous conspiracy theory, especially ridiculous because either the Republican electorate would have to be in on the prank or oblivious to Trump's repeated attempts to disqualify himself.

And yet, here we are. After managing to win the Republican nomination over a large field of governors and senators, despite (or maybe because of) his alienating large groups of Latinos, women, Muslims, African Americans, and most remarkably of all, conservatives, Trump almost singlehandedly turned his post-convention bounce into a polling deficit that, were it to hold through November, would make Walter Mondale and Barry Goldwater feel better about their losses. Even at the convention, his wife plagiarized Michelle Obama, a misstep almost too comically inept to be accidental.

At a time when Republicans are pleading with Trump to focus his attacks on Clinton, he's now at rallies "talking about receiving a Purple Heart from a supporter, promoting his golf club in Virginia, and creating new headlines about his spat with the Khan family who lost their son in the Iraq War," as The Washington Post's Amber Phillips notes. "What is he doing relitigating every controversy from the primary season?" Megyn Kelly asked on Fox News Wednesday night. "It's true the mainstream media now hates Trump," she added. "But must he help them? Must he help them so generously every day?"

Donald Trump has managed to provoke stalwart Republicans into declaring their intention to vote for Hillary Clinton. Hillary Clinton! It's hard to see how you could do that by accident.

So let's consider the possibility that Donald Trump does not want to be president, as some Trump skeptics have argued all along. Trump appears to genuinely enjoy campaigning for president, unlike his Democratic rival, but actually being president requires hard work, lousy pay (for Trump), and a sharp attention to detail on a broad range of complicated subjects. Unlike a real estate chief executive, a president is constrained by two coequal beaches of government. Unlike on reality TV, you are hated by up to half of the country.

With Trump, meanwhile, "it's impossible to keep him focused on any topic, other than his own self-aggrandizement, for more than a few minutes," Tony Schwartz, who (at least) co-wrote Trump's 1987 bestseller The Art of the Deal, told The New Yorker. "If he had to be briefed on a crisis in the Situation Room, it's impossible to imagine him paying attention over a long period of time."

cont...
 
Well, we also have to consider this as well. You can go down the list and check the boxes and decide for yourself.

Sociopathic traits

He then consolidates the information into the following 16 sociopath symptoms:
1. Superficial charm and good "intelligence"
2. Absence of delusions and other signs of irrational thinking
3. Absence of "nervousness" or psychoneurotic manifestations
4. Unreliability
5. Untruthfulness and insincerity
6. Lack of remorse or shame
7. Inadequately motivated antisocial behavior
8. Poor judgment and failure to learn by experience
9. Pathologic egocentricity and incapacity for love
10. General poverty in major affective reactions
11. Specific loss of insight
12. Unresponsiveness in general interpersonal relations
13. Fantastic and uninviting behavior with drink and sometimes without
14.Suicide rarely carried out
15. Sex life impersonal, trivial, and poorly integrated
16. Failure to follow any life plan


But he will not ever be diagnosed due to his socio economic status. Rick people are 'eccentric' and never have ANY personality disorders.

Still, he has a LOT of people wondering if he should get anywhere near the White House due to his erratic behavior and statements.
 
Do you think Trump is a narcissist? I really believe he suffers from narcissistic personality disorder. According to the Mayo Clinic these are the criteria used for evaluating narcissism:



Pretty much all of those things could be used to describe Trump. I do not believe someone that only ever considers his own personal interests above all else and is simply incapable of empathy or respect for others should not be a candidate for president.

In addition to being a clinically defined narcissist, I opine that he's also a sociopath. I say sociopath because I've seen some describe him as a psychopath. There are some differences.

A psychopath doesn’t have a conscience. If he or she lies to you so he can steal your money, he or she won’t feel any moral qualms, though he or she may pretend to. He or she may observe others and then act the way they do so he’s not “found out". They, like regular folks, have built-in defense mechanisms. Probably more so.

A sociopath typically has a conscience, but it’s weak. He or she may know that taking your money is wrong, and he or she might feel some guilt or remorse, but that won’t stop his or her behavior.

Actually, I'm trying to give Trump the benefit of doubt by calling him a sociopath.
 
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