Saturday, July 05, 2025

Excursion to the bizarre world of Trump: Swing that pendulum back or else!

Arguably, the US has been generally improving since its founding. Slavery ended. Women got the vote. Native Americans got citizenship. Social Security and other advances under FDR and then LBJ created a social safety net. Black people earned their civil rights. LGBTQ people accrued rights. People with disabilities finally got protections and accommodations.


Boy, did that make white men angrier and angrier.


While America generally seemed to be on track toward a stronger safety net for the most vulnerable, civil rights for more classes of people, and other progressive trends, Trump happened along just as more of the world hopped on the pendulum swinging back against that, toward toxic nationalism and repression of The Other. In Hungary, the Netherlands, France, the UK, Poland, and elsewhere, reactionary politics are gaining purchase and Trump was already there, with quicker insults, harsher language, and his claim to be the only one capable of exacting the retribution that would be so cathartic to resentful whites. It was timely, and the simplistic “'Make America Great Again,' with thinly veiled racism against the browning of America" (Fitz-Gibbon, 2025, p. 171), made Trump's bizarre behavior look exactly like he meant it, retributive, a Dirty Harry for the white race unafraid to destroy whatever might elicit that desire for vengeance.

References

Fitz-Gibbon, Andrew (2025). Nonviolent perspectives: A transformative philosophy for practical peacemaking. New York, NY: Anthem Press.

Friday, July 04, 2025

Excursion to the bizarre world of Trump: Deëscalation in order to escalate the struggle

The gold standard method of deëscalation used by unarmed civilian protection teams around the world is the CLARA method. This acronym breaks down into Calm, Listen, Affirm, Respond, and Add information.

How is this germane to managing Trump, to managing his Make America Great Again MAGA followers, many of whom are violent? How can a deëscalation method be used to reduce the harms from Trump's ICE, his Homeland Security officials such as Kristi Noem, notoriously noteworthy for having shot her young dog because it didn't respond to her training as she wished?

On an individual basis, the CLARA method, while not a guarantee of success every time, is recognized by those working to protect civilians in hot conflict zones as the most likely to succeed. Just as a Gazan who wished to survive does not scream or even argue with an Israeli Defense Force member, dealing with an ICE agent in the US is best done with some finesse, not hurling epithets or even making accusations based on a legal or moral argument.

In the literature on civil resistance we find a key to dismantling Trump's bizarre grip on America; security defections based on loyalty shifts (Chenoweth & Stephan, 2011). This is unlikely to occur with military or law enforcement when they are under actual attack, even with nonlethal violence arising from the passions of the moment--a thrown stone, or a shove in the chest--but also when they are vilified and met with scorn and rage. However natural and understandable that outrage may be, expressing it to the armed agents of the state will not generally do much except cause them to close ranks and jack up repression. 

Part of how to bolster such needed defections is the strategic use of humor, especially humor that mocks only the leader, not law enforcement, not military, and not his mass of supporters. This was one of the key elements of the success led by young people in Serbia to overthrow dictator Slobodan Milosevic in 2000. The components of that strategic strand of their resistance included exactly those admonitions from the core leadership of university students as they led the group Otpor!, the Serb word for resistance; they told the growing number of Otpor! chapters throughout the country to poke fun only at Milosevic, not anyone else. This helped lead to a fissure between the autocrat and those who had been loyal to him.

Some worry that mocking Trump by infantilizing him might by extension diminish the reality of the harm that Trump does by his behavior that seems stuck in the most narcissistic stage of normal human life, a period during infancy. "President Trump’s critics come by their rhetorical infantilizations quite honestly. He emotes like a child. He lashes out against resistance and criticism. He is, by many standards, mischievous and untrustworthy" (Gilbert, 2021, p. 333). Pairing characterizations of Trump's petty, grotesquely immature behavior with the disastrous results is one key to making that humor more effective.

The other danger in overuse of some targeted humor is the sense that the resisters are discourteous and petty themselves. The balance may not be easy to achieve, so many nonviolent leaders stress simple constant respect for all, even those who may not be worthy of it at times, to keep the image of the resistance spotless.

For example, when Gandhi advised the Dalits (Untouchables) in India who wished to pray in the temple, he told them to be respectful of all, to not curse at those who oppressed them, but to show nonviolent courage under all circumstances. They did so, setting up a human blockade on the road to the Vykom temple, and did so for months, even during the monsoon season, sometimes standing resolutely in chest-deep waters. In the end, after such a display, the temple opened its doors to them, acknowledging the devotion with which the resisters kept their presence, a devotion that wore down those who were in charge of the temple (Bondurant, 1965).

With any nonviolent campaign, leadership is best done with many tested methods, including what some term adaptive management, that is, constant openness to assessment and reassessment, reset and adjustment. What worked 40 years ago may not find fertile soil so easily now. What works in Guatemala may flop in Hong Kong. Being alive to the signs and signals and being able to quickly evolve is part of the art of resistance, an art to which no strongman is impervious.

One of the many paradoxes of strategic nonviolence is that deëscalation of many situations enables the escalation of resistance. When we held an Easter day gathering at a remote thermonuclear command base in Chequamegon National Forest, there was a lot of singing and a musician named Glen Walker Johnson circulated amongst the crowd playing a soothing hand-held harp, smiling. Meanwhile, we had brought saplings with us and digging tools, we pickaxed holes in the gravel road right in front of the base gates, and planted trees while the local sheriff and deputies observed. I had talked to the base commander the day before to tell him of our plans. He had said, "You will be hurt worse than you can imagine." But after digging up the road, we concluded our demonstration without any arrests and, as we were walking out, I lingered to make sure everyone was safe and found myself strolling with the base commander and the sheriff. I thanked the commander for not making good on his threat. "Y'all behaved yourselves," he said. Even though we had just done serious property damage, I knew what he meant. We showed no disrespect to anyone, we sang instead of chanted at them, and when we broke bread during our ceremonies, we had offered them some. We continued our deëscalation of all who had seemed to support the evil of nuclear weapons while we continued to escalate our campaign to shut down that base. It worked. We won. The base is completely dismantled and returned to nature in the national forest.

References

Bondurant, Joan V. (1965). Conquest of violence: The Gandhian philosophy of conflict. Berkeley CA: University of California Press.

Chenoweth, Erica, & Stephan, Maria J. (2011). Why civil resistance works: The strategic logic of nonviolent conflict. New York, NY: Columbia University Press.

Gilbert, C. J. (2021). The diapered Donald: Comic infantilizations of a U.S. American president. Quarterly Journal of Speech, 107(3), 328–353. https://doi-org.proxy.lib.pdx.edu/10.1080/00335630.2021.1945132

Sombatpoonsiri, Janjira (2015). Humor and nonviolent struggle in Serbia. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press. 

Thursday, July 03, 2025

Excursion to the bizarre world of Trump: He's a monster but he's our monster

In one study of voter perception of the personality traits of presidential candidates--Trump and Biden--Democrats saw some narcissism and Machiavellian traits in Biden, but much greater levels of both in Trump, along with a clear predominance of sadism in Trump, none of that in Biden. Republicans, on the other hand, reported the narcissism and Machiavellian traits as about equal in both and had little concern over the question of sadism (Prusik, 2025). Other studies[1] have also looked at various voter emotions, including some that correlated men with weak self-image attracted to aggressive, dominating, authoritarian candidates, identifying Trump as such.

Indeed, sadism seems to be political theater[2] to Trump, showing his base that he is indeed their retribution, with tendencies toward both ethnic cleansing (e.g., move as many Hispanics as possible out of the US, utilizing false labeling of them as violent criminals) and genocide (support for the IDF slaughtering Gazan civilians). Firing or demoting most high-ranking women in the military seemed to be red meat to his MAGA base, possibly many of whom seemed to be resentful that a big strong man isn't necessarily the best leadership of a highly technical, complex organization tasked with keeping the US secure. That simplistic identification--I'm big and strong and I should have been promoted to lead when I was in the army--could help explain Trump's appeal and the positive feedback loop of support for increasingly brutal and unfair actions by Trump and by his handpicked hatchet actors such as Pete Hegseth (the one firing women from commands in the Pentagon and even ordering DoD libraries stripped of what he determines to be DEI content).

References

Prusik, M. (2025). Dark tetrad traits in politicians and voter behavior: Joe Biden and Donald Trump in the 2020 presidential election. Journal of Research in Personality, 115, N.PAG. https://doi-org.proxy.lib.pdx.edu/10.1016/j.jrp.2024.104568



[1] https://www.psypost.org/the-psychological-puzzle-of-donald-trump-eye-opening-findings-from-20-studies/

[2] https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/feb/06/trump-sadism-judith-butler

Wednesday, July 02, 2025

Excursion to the bizarre world of Trump: It's all out of his depth

Donald Trump may be a shallow person (e.g., clearly obsessed with gold and glitz, naming everything after himself, pouts and perennially claims to be the victim, jokes about having sex with his daughter), but nowhere is he less able to make coherent conversation or decent decisions than in international politics, according to University of Limerick political scientist Scott Fitzsimmons (2022), in his examination of Trump's personality as it affected his processes or lack of processes in navigating international relations, agreements, and foreign policy decisions. 

Fitzsimmons parsed Trump's simplistic refusal to participate in trade agreements (pulling the US out of the Trans-Pacific Partnership), environmental stewardship (ending US participation in the Paris Accords), and nuclear weapons agreements both new and long-standing (no other US president blew up so many highly effective constraints on possession, proliferation, and prevention of nuclear war and nuclear arsenals, including many tough and effective deals that included Russia and including the complex and highly effective Iran nuclear deal). Fitzsimmons concluded: 

"Although Donald Trump’s foreign policy behavior is often characterized as erratic and unpredictable, he was remarkably consistent in his hostility toward international agreements. The president withdrew or threatened to withdraw the United States from several agreements and consistently characterized agreements as ‘horrible deals’ that ‘cheat’ his country" (p. 40).

Others have noted that his pattern seems to be that no deal ever made by any US president other than Trump deserved to continue to exist. Trump has been using the stick of tariffs to not only punish other countries, showing his overreliance on simplistic single tools rather than any actual ability to negotiate complex win-win outcomes; indeed, his sole tool of zero-sum approaches, absolutely adversarial and endlessly seeking dominance, has reached its zenith in some ways as the European Union and NATO seemingly capitulated to every one of Trump's whims, likely with the hope of outlasting Trump until the US can regain its senses and stability. 

While boasting relentlessly about his brilliance at deal-making, he first unraveled the Iran deal that took many countries years to finesse into existence, and then, out of some grandiose need to use huge explosive weapons, just bombed Iran's most protected uranium enrichment facilities. His childlike need to bomb a nation that was not capable at that point of building even one nuclear weapon was underscored by his sudden thanks to Iran for letting him know that they would strike a US base in the Middle East in response, and to actually say that he gave them permission to do that military strike. Trump's instant rage at anyone questioning him in any way may be preventing mainstream media from pondering what Trump and the Republicans might do or say if a Democratic president had given permission to another nation to blast a US military base.

References

Fitzsimmons, S. (2022). Personality and adherence to international agreements: The case of President Donald Trump. International Relations, 36(1), 40–60. https://doi-org.proxy.lib.pdx.edu/10.1177/0047117820965656

Tuesday, July 01, 2025

Excursion to the bizarre world of Trump: I'm Boss of everyone!

The first term ascendancy of Trump to power was accompanied by his overwhelming self-confidence, bragging about his power (e.g., claiming that Article 2 of the Constitution lets him do whatever he wants), and behavior described in the journal International Affairs as "possessing the maturity of a petulant child rather than a man in his seventies" (Dezner, 2020, p. 384). This immaturity and impulse-control failure, along with his childlike refusal to read normal presidential reading, such as the daily intelligence briefing, meant that his accomplishments in office in his first term were predictably few, mostly enabled by then-Senate leader Mitch McConnell, who drove through the tax cuts largely benefitting the über-rich and the stacking of the US Supreme Court.

That court gave Trump virtual immunity from federal prosecution no matter what he did, as long as it was done during his presidency. In addition, during the Biden years a highly detailed plan was developed for the takedown of the so-called deep state (the non-partisan guard rails structurally built into the US federal government that survived all elections and kept the government running), Project 2025. This has enabled the most impetuous Trump behavior, especially his raging revenge impulses toward any and all critics and those who have tried to hold him to account at any point.

Indeed, this sense of omnipotence is so utterly infused in Trump's thinking that he will make absurd commands to any and everyone, telling Harvard University what they can teach, even telling the head of the Federal Aviation Authority that all air traffic controllers must come from MIT because they all must be "geniuses[1]."

References: 

Drezner, D. W. (2020). Immature leadership: Donald Trump and the American presidency. International Affairs, 96(2), 383–400. https://doi-org.proxy.lib.pdx.edu/10.1093/ia/iiaa009


[1] https://www.msnbc.com/all-in/watch/new-email-reveals-trump-s-aggressive-new-claim-of-executive-power-tpm-233841733963

Monday, June 30, 2025

Excursion to the bizarre world of Trump: Tossed off Twitter, back on X

Before Elon Musk purchased Twitter and renamed it X, Donald Trump posted there incessantly, frequently to bully, harass, insult, name-call, demean, and harm his enemies--and he seemed to count anyone who may have failed to endorse all his claims and ideas as his dire threat enemy. Twitter blocked him, ending his account because of his bullying and provable lies. 

Features of cyberbullying include the targeted person's knowledge of both the permanence of posts and that the posts can be shared (Bingaman & Caplan, 2023). Thus, even if deep emotional harm is not the immediate intent of the sender, it operates as a harm to various degrees on its targets. For cyberbullies, that is either the endgame goal or an additional benefit, but for those who engage in this sort of cyber-behavior over time, it indicates a knowledge and even satisfaction from the targeted person's pain.

While it is true that cyberbullying as generally studied by psychological researchers is focused on adolescent bullies and adolescent targets, it is telling that Trump fits right in, with the possible research protocol anomaly that he seems to have so many transitory targets that his quantitative spread shows insufficient repetitive attacks on one target to classify him as an official cyberbully (Bingaman & Caplan, 2023). Unofficially and in real world analysis, his cyberbullying is unprecedented in many respects. Certainly no US president has ever communicated in such a fashion.

References

Bingaman, J., & Caplan, S. E. (2023). Cyberbully-in-chief: exploring Donald Trump’s aggressive communication behavior on Twitter. Atlantic Journal of Communication, 31(4), 342–353. https://doi-org.proxy.lib.pdx.edu/10.1080/15456870.2022.2047683

Sunday, June 29, 2025

Excursion to the bizarre world of Trump: In the Twilight Zone

Is Trump in mental decline? How else can his performances during the 2024 campaign in particular be interpreted? For instance, at a campaign rally, he stood on stage for almost 40 minutes, saying nothing, just swaying during campaign music. And his interviews seemed to tell the same story. 

Clinical psychologist Dr. Ben Michaelis told[1] PBS interviewer Amna Nawaz describes his analysis of Trump's speaking style over the years as decreasing in complexity, but more important to his thought patterns, he's becoming less linear, more tangential, and even into circumstantiality, which Michaelis describes as "losing the thread entirely."

Michaelis is clear that neither he nor anyone else can make a clinical diagnosis of dementia without face-to-face analysis, but he points to many suggestive signs of it, buttressed to some measure by the dementia suffered by Trump's father, Fred Trump. Nothing is definitive, yet the bizarre behaviors are at the least a legitimate concern. 



[1] https://www.pbs.org/newshour/show/trumps-rambling-speeches-raise-questions-about-mental-decline