Comments by "" (@DavidJ222) on "Fox News"
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Trump told Stormy that she reminded him of his daughter. That's right. Trump told the woman he had an affair with, that she reminds him of his daughter. Evangelicals love this stuff!!! šš¤£
In September 1994, a little less than a year after Tiffany was born to Trump and his second wife, Marla, the couple appeared on an episode of Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous. āDonald, what does Tiffany have of yours and what does Tiffany have of Marlaās?ā asked host Robin Leach.
āSheās a very beautiful baby,ā Trump replied. āSheās got Marlaās legs. We donāt know whether or notāāhe put his hands to his chest to indicate her bra sizeāāsheās got this part yet, but time will tell.ā
While Trump was onĀ The ViewĀ in March 2006, he was asked what he would do if Ivanka was on the cover ofĀ P-boyĀ magazine, Trump said it depended on what was inside the magazine and added, āAlthough she does have a very nice figure. Iāve said that if Ivanka werenāt my daughter, perhaps, I would be dating her.ā
In a February 2013 appearance onĀ The Wendy Williams Show, during a question and answer game, Williams asked Trump and Ivanka, "What's the favorite thing you have in common with your father?" Ivanka answered, "Either real estate or golf" while Trump added, "Well, I was going to say 5ex."
All true stories.
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Everyone has that person in their life who "always plays the victim." When something goes wrong it's "never their fault."
They're the type of person who does something wrong then tries to paint you as being the real problem for calling them out. Because their bad deed was just them making things even.
These people can be impossible to deal with because they're never wrong. This mentality also stunts their developmental growth, because when you're never wrong, you don't have to change a thing.
According to research, the VictimMentality or, as they call it, "Tendency for InterpersonalVictimhood," or TIV, is a stable construct that people can carry with them throughout their lives.
It's defined as "an ongoing feeling that the self is a victim, which is generalized across many kinds of relationships." That's why your friend with the VictimMentalityĀ alwaysĀ plays theVictim and everything that happens in the world is an affront to them.
"HI, my name is DJT, but you can call me Victim. Many big strong men with tears in their eyes are saying this." š¤£
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"There is beauty in truth, even if it's painful. Those who lie, twist life so that it looks tasty to the lazy, brilliant to the ignorant, and powerful to the weak. But lies only strengthen our defects. They don't teach anything, help anything, fix anything or cure anything. Nor do they develop one's character, one's mind, one's heart or one's soul."
--JosƩ N. Harris
Trump is a successful liar because he refuses to remember. Not only that: He refuses to anticipate that he will remember the current moment in the future. If you live mainly in the current moment, then the future consequences of your lies will not matter to you. And if you have lived your entire life this way, and to great acclaim and success, why would you ever want to change?
Trump was annoyed when Dr. Fauci stole the spotlight by throwing out the first pitch for Major League Baseballās opening game. In response, he falsely claimed that the Yankees invited him to throw out the first pitch. His lie was roundly refuted a short time later. The incident recalls Trumpās false boast that the crowd attending his 2017 inaugural address was the largest in history. Objective photographic evidence decisively refuted that lie.
And yet Trump never pulls back on blatantly false statements ā lies that are so obvious that they often defy the laws of physics, chemistry and common sense.
The key to Trumpās psychology is that he moves through life as āthe episodic man.ā For Trump, each day is a temporary moment of time. Psychological research shows that nearly all adults develop stories in their minds about their own lives.
These stories ā what psychologists call ānarrative identitiesā ā reconstruct the past and imagine the future. As you make daily decisions, you implicitly remember how you have come to be who you are, and you anticipate where your life may be going. You live within narrative time.
But the episodic man does not live that way. Instead, he immerses himself in the angry, combative moment, striving desperately to win the moment. But the episodes do not add up. They do not form a narrative arc. In Trumpās case, it is as if he wakes up each morning nearly oblivious to what happened the day before. What he said and did yesterday, in order to win yesterday, no longer matters to him. And what he will do today, in order to win today, will not matter for tomorrow.
What is truth for the episodic man? Truth is whatever works to win the moment.
For most people, and every other president in the history of the US, an episodic life would be unsustainable in the long run. There is a primal authenticity in Trump. He tells you exactly what he feels in the moment. He lies straight to your face, without shame, without any concern for future consequences. It is the stark audacity of untruth.
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An ode to DJT
And on the 8th day, God looked down on his planned paradise and said, I need a man to test the will and goodness of a free people. So God made a dictator. God said I need a man who failed at everything but theft and broken promises, to live in a golden palace, and convince the poor he serves their needs. So God made a dictator. God said I need a wicked man to lead the common folk with h8tred and fear. So God made a dictator. God said I need a corrupt man who is above the law and immune from justice. So God made a dictator. God said I need a man who will useViolence to seize power. So God made a dictator. God said I need a man whose followers will call black white, call evil good, and call criminals hostages. So God made a dictator. God said I need his political party to obey without question, and the press to fear his wrath. So God made a dictator. God said I need a cruel man who uses his power and position to punish and harm his opposition. So God made a dictator. God said I need a man who breaks the faith of even his most godly followers, and leads them to idol-atry, and place him above me. So God made a dictator. And then God said, I sent this man to test you, and until you cast him down, you have failed. So God made a dictator.
āTake the guns first, go through due process second.'
--Trump, Feb, 2018
That's exactly what anyDictator would do.
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The dawn of American democracy didnāt come in 1776, with the Declaration of Independence. It didnāt come in 1788, when the Constitution was ratified by the states, or in 1789, when George Washington took office. According toĀ Harry Rubenstein, chair and curator of the Division of Political History at theĀ American History Museum, the symbolic birth of our system of government didnāt come until its noble ideals were actually put to the test. On September 19, 215 years ago, Washington publishedĀ his farewell address, marking the first peaceful transfers of power in American history and cementing the countryās status as a stable, democratic state..
This moment, Rubenstein says, āis crucial for creating the in-and-out system of government that we have. And this is unique. In that time and era, politicians would gain power, or kings would stay in office until theyDie.ā At that nascent stage in American history, before precedents such as the two-term limit were even set, many were uncertain about what would happen after a galvanizing figure like Washington resigned office. But at this critical juncture, the leadership of Washington and others proved more than adequate to preserve the democracy. āStepping down is unique,ā says Rubenstein. āItās a powerful statement about Washington and American democracy.ā
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