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In reply to the discussion: Trump and McCarthy Meet and Agree on GOP Goal to Take House [View all]summer_in_TX
(4,390 posts)He is very able to get others to share his psychosis since he is a genius at marketing and propaganda.
So those low ratings may not reflect the impact of his endorsement on those races.
From The 'Shared Psychosis' of Donald Trump and His Loyalists - Scientific American
"One such person is Bandy X. Lee, a forensic psychiatrist at the Yale School of Medicine for the past 17 years and president of the World Mental Health Coalition. Lee led a group of psychiatrists, psychologists and other specialists who questioned Trumps mental fitness for office in a book that she edited called The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump: 27 Psychiatrists and Mental Health Experts Assess a President. In doing so, Lee and her colleagues strongly rejected the American Psychiatric Associations modification of a 1970s-era guideline, known as the Goldwater rule, that discouraged psychiatrists from giving a professional opinion about public figures who they have not examined in person. Whenever the Goldwater rule is mentioned, we should refer back to the Declaration of Geneva, which mandates that physicians speak up against destructive governments, Lee says. This declaration was created in response to the experience of Nazism.
[snip]
Scientific American asked Lee to comment on the psychology behind Trumps destructive behavior, what drives some of his followersand how to free people from his grip when this damaging presidency ends.
[An edited transcript of the interview follows.]
What attracts people to Trump? What is their animus or driving force?
The reasons are multiple and varied, but in my recent public-service book, Profile of a Nation, I have outlined two major emotional drives: narcissistic symbiosis and shared psychosis. Narcissistic symbiosis refers to the developmental wounds that make the leader-follower relationship magnetically attractive. The leader, hungry for adulation to compensate for an inner lack of self-worth, projects grandiose omnipotencewhile the followers, rendered needy by societal stress or developmental injury, yearn for a parental figure. When such wounded individuals are given positions of power, they arouse similar pathology in the population that creates a lock and key relationship.
Shared psychosiswhich is also called folie à millions [madness for millions] when occurring at the national level or induced delusionsrefers to the infectiousness of severe symptoms that goes beyond ordinary group psychology. When a highly symptomatic individual is placed in an influential position, the persons symptoms can spread through the population through emotional bonds, heightening existing pathologies and inducing delusions, paranoia and propensity for violenceeven in previously healthy individuals. The treatment is removal of exposure."
More at the link: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-shared-psychosis-of-donald-trump-and-his-loyalists/