On 01/11/2017 03:34 PM, Jochen Fromm wrote:
> Eric I believe you are wrong if you believe you can have a narcissistic 
> person on your site. A narcissist cares only for himself. The policy of Trump 
> boils down to "I'm great and you're not unless you are like me, myself and I, 
> you loser". There is no way how he can make the country great again. As Paul 
> Krugman said America will turn into some form of authoritarianism, into a 
> Trumpistan nightmare at best. 
> Mr. Trump does not only have a brand, he *is* a brand, a brand that says "I'm 
> great". If you stay in this Trump hotel you are great. If you play on this 
> Trump golf course you are great, too. But it is just a facade. It is based on 
> lies, and there is nothing behind the shiny facade except emptiness. 
> Therefore he seems to hit back immediately if someone damages his image and 
> his brand, because he ceases to exist if his image is destroyed. He and his 
> brand have become undistinguishable.
> Marketing is no way to make America great again, Google has already an OS for 
> ads, and the American corporations excel in marketing, especially the fast 
> food chains. What will he do, build a Trump hotel in every city, a Trump golf 
> course in every national park? This would be a total Trumpistan nightmare. 
> Better than the nuclear apocalypse, but who would want such a future...




VIB I missed the rest of Jochen Fromm’s letter but agree whole heartedly.

 

The universe of a narcissist has a radius close to +1 plus the small consensus 
it controls. The Solipsist has complete mastery of a Universe of radius 
absolute 1 plus the deluded 

cohort of imaginary sycophants. The difference between the two is very small. A 
totally mad narcissist vacillates between the two positions slaughtering all 
contradictions real or imagined.

If a madman truly believes in himself … than he can commit any atrocity with a 
clear conscience. I true believer can completely ignore reality.

 

I was accused of being a pacifist lately when I am anything but that. Sometimes 
Violence is the only response to madmen and in such a case, hesitation is folly.

I was raised by survivors of The Great Slaughter in Eastern Europe, they taught 
me to fight and how to kill because they feared it’s return. Not in my life 
time was I ever called upon…

thank God. 

 

When I wanted to play hockey my father asked what are these Anglish games, you 
should learn to fight and kill. 

That is how you survive…

 

I was raised in a world of two realities, one flippant and the other bitterly 
serious.

 

Jochen sees the same insatiable monster’s path. 

We watch in quiet but we are not passive. The Russians know this beast as well 
as anyone. Finns, Balts, Ukrainians, Poles, Central Europeans we lost an 
uncountable number.

Then the Americans claimed a total victory in 1945, and got the same slow 
social disease.

War continued well into the 1950’s in the East.

 

Trump is no more than a bleating goat tethered to a tent peg in the forest. Now 
that both national parties are discredited more demons are emerging, the 
Media/Bubble and the National Intelligence community.

I admit to being dumbstruck by Trump’s counter reactions. He might make it to 
the end of a term but don’t bet on it. 

 

Trump and Putin are drawing out the poisons in the system.

Putin might survive in some clever way but Trump is clearly blinded by his own 
aura or his deodorant.

Trump is performing his role as Bait, very well.

vib 

 

I ask that no one ever confuses thinking for passivity, nor mistake me for an 
apocalyptic hermit.

So calm down a bit and reduce your heart rate before you touch a trigger.

 

Is that a spoof about Americans coming to Canada, tell them to bring a good 
coat because it is -40 C with windchill.

You are crazy to look for a balmy sanctuary up here. This place is only fit for 
the crazy Siberians now.



 

From: Friam [mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com] On Behalf Of Grant Holland
Sent: January-12-17 6:40 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Is the new president mentally ill?

 

Eric,

You make a good point about your concerns being orthogonal to mine.

To my point, though... one of the things that Trump is doing to exacerbate my 
concern is to nominate folks (e.g. the senator from Alabama to AG) who have 
vowed to promote further class marginalization, and have demonstrated that such 
is their propensity and commitment - by, for example, supporting the KKK.

Grant

 

On 1/12/17 12:12 PM, Eric Charles wrote:

Grant, et al.,

I fully understand concern for the effect that electing Trump might have on the 
attitudes of the larger population. I have relatives who are, in fact, moving 
from rural areas, where discrimination was already noticeable, to Canada, in 
anticipation of increased discrimination (inspired by what, to them, Trump's 
victory represents). However, I see that as conceptually distinct from concern 
over what Trump himself might do. They are moving due to concerns about their 
local neighbors, not about what might happen in the White House or in Trump 
Towers, and not because they are afraid of Trump being kept in proximity to the 
football. 

 

As for the VP and the cabinet deciding to try to ouster him, that seems 
unlikely, unless he becomes considerably more erratic. The "out" provided by 
the 25th amendment is clearly intended for someone who becomes unstable in 
office. The law requires people the president put in place to declare that they 
no longer have faith in him, which implies a fundamental change in the 
character of the person whose agenda they agreed to serve. 

 

The amendment is not intended to remove a narcissistic person, who was such 
when elected, and is still such in office. If it becomes clear that he is 
fundamentally unfit for office, they will turn against him, but "unfit" by 
their standards will mean that he consistently disrupts the ability of the 
party to get things done, not merely that he gives erratic press conferences 
and tweets in the middle of the night. As far as general decorum, recall that 
"whip it out like LBJ" is a perfectly valid expression. As far as mental 
incompetence, recall that Regan was pretty far gone by the end of his time, and 
the people around him kept things running fairly well. So long as the party can 
keep things running fairly well despite Trump's flaws, there won't be a 
sufficient number of people willing to sign. 

 

P.S. Out of curiosity, does anyone else know someone actually moving as a 
result of the election?

 

 

 

 

 

 





-----------
Eric P. Charles, Ph.D.
Supervisory Survey Statistician

U.S. Marine Corps

 

On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 11:57 AM, Grant Holland <grant.holland...@gmail.com> 
wrote:

Eric,

It looks to me like you are missing what people like myself and Jochen are very 
afraid of - the extreme marginalization of certain classes of people versus 
other classes of people. And when I say "extreme", I mean extreme. 

I grew up in the American South in the 1950s where lynchings of a certain class 
of people still occurred. That culture strictly forbade the pursuit of social 
and economic opportunity for that class, at the threat of beatings and death. 
And it was justified via an appeal to Christianity! For example, my mother (I'm 
a white guy) took over my Sunday school class in order to teach us (11 year old 
kids) that racism is Biblically justified. (She failed of course in her attempt 
at demonstrating that.)

So I know by experience that the danger of that kind of marginalization is 
real. (The propensity for a return to that world is alive and kicking even 
today in the deep South.) It is palpable and I recognize it in today's cultural 
and political manifestations.

I know that many of my friends who voted for Trump either think that I am 
simply a sore Hillary lover (I'm not really a fan of hers), or that I'm 
senselessly paranoid. But I think my fears are real and even probable. I'm way 
beyond mere disagreement. (That's where I was in 2000 when W won.) 

And I do not think that Jochen's fears are unjustified. Listen to him. You 
don't have to agree, but listen. He comes from a place that is fresh with the 
experience, and the consequences, of the real life manifestations of these 
phenomena. It happened, and Jochen knows what the tracks of that animal look 
like. 

Thanks for listening to me!
Grant 

 

On 1/12/17 6:07 AM, Eric Charles wrote:

The comparison of Meryl Streep to Klemperer or von Galen seems more baffling to 
me than the original conversation. As some on social media have been pointing 
out, she stood in a room full of like minded people, and spoke their collective 
mind, with no risk to her career or her person. She didn't say anything not 
being chanted from the rooftops by hundreds of thousands of other people, and 
said publically, by prominent celebrities and members of the press every day. 

 

Are we really worried Meryl will be disappeared in the coming weeks, and 
gassed? Are we worried she will be hit with false charges, arrested without 
trial, and have her properties become forfeit to the state? Are we even worried 
she might be blacklisted and never act again? And even if she did, are we 
worried she won't be able to get by in this world and support her family with 
the $75 million she already has? Those are honest questions. 

 

Maybe I'm very confused about what "courageous" means. I would consider the 
average BLM marcher, or women's march participant, more courageous. They could 
be attacked by police or counter protesters, they could be arrested, they could 
be fired from their jobs, they could become ostracized by their communities, 
etc. Heck, Jill Stein got herself arrested at Standing Rock and hardly anyone 
seemed to notice. I'm not saying Meryl didn't give a good speech, or that it 
was unimportant, but I honestly wonder what risk we really think she faces as a 
result of that speech, which leads us to dub her act so courageous, and to 
compare it to the actions of the other individuals mentioned. 

 





-----------
Eric P. Charles, Ph.D.
Supervisory Survey Statistician

U.S. Marine Corps

 

On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 2:24 AM, Jochen Fromm <j...@cas-group.net> wrote:

Meryl Streep reminds me of Clemens August Graf von Galen, who was one of the 
few bishops that had the courage to criticize the Nazi regime. He was a bishop 
in my hometown Münster near the Dutch border. In his sermons he criticized that 
the Nazis were killing innocent disabled people. The program was named T4. The 
Nazis let him live because he was too popular among the people. 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clemens_August_Graf_von_Galen

 

Many other priests and bishops were imprisoned by the Gestapo  (the secret 
state police) in concentration camps and died. In St. Hedwig's cathedral in 
Berlin many of those are mentioned on memorial plagues. While it may be futile 
to resist, those who have the courage to do it are not forgotten. 

 

It can also help to document the things that are unfolding, the violations of 
human rights, the corruption, and the injustice. In Dresden there was a Jewish 
professor Victor Klemperer who covered the actions of the Nazi regime in his 
diaries and journals. He was an important witness of all the injustice that 
happened. 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victor_Klemperer

 

-J.

 

 

-------- Original message --------

From: glen ☣ <geprope...@gmail.com> 

Date: 1/12/17 02:07 (GMT+01:00) 

To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <friam@redfish.com> 

Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Is the new president mentally ill? 

 


But the question is what actions are guided by remote diagnosis?  I admit that 
I hope high visibility shaming like that from Streep, when added to the rest of 
the stress he will be / has been under, will make him go away.  But it's not 
likely for the same reasons Steve cites that blame and stigma won't really work 
on him.

I suppose if we could really confirm that he's a particular type of narcissist, 
then we could build models of what he may or may not do and choose actions 
based on their expected efficacy.  But because, almost by definition, everyone 
who willingly runs for President is a narcissist of some sort or other and to 
differing extent, that diagnosis isn't helpful.

Listening to the confirmation hearings is more helpful, I think.  Take note of 
all the (many) issues where Trump and his appointees express diametrically 
opposite positions.  Focus on those fissures.  At best, his administration will 
shatter.  At worst, the more distance you can put between the incompetent 
Cheeto and the competent people surrounding him, the more likely we'll end up 
with a Bush2 or a late-stage-Reagan ... maybe not good, but not catastrophic.

On 01/11/2017 03:34 PM, Jochen Fromm wrote:
> Eric I believe you are wrong if you believe you can have a narcissistic 
> person on your site. A narcissist cares only for himself. The policy of Trump 
> boils down to "I'm great and you're not unless you are like me, myself and I, 
> you loser". There is no way how he can make the country great again. As Paul 
> Krugman said America will turn into some form of authoritarianism, into a 
> Trumpistan nightmare at best. 
> Mr. Trump does not only have a brand, he *is* a brand, a brand that says "I'm 
> great". If you stay in this Trump hotel you are great. If you play on this 
> Trump golf course you are great, too. But it is just a facade. It is based on 
> lies, and there is nothing behind the shiny facade except emptiness. 
> Therefore he seems to hit back immediately if someone damages his image and 
> his brand, because he ceases to exist if his image is destroyed. He and his 
> brand have become undistinguishable.
> Marketing is no way to make America great again, Google has already an OS for 
> ads, and the American corporations excel in marketing, especially the fast 
> food chains. What will he do, build a Trump hotel in every city, a Trump golf 
> course in every national park? This would be a total Trumpistan nightmare. 
> Better than the nuclear apocalypse, but who would want such a future...


-- 
☣ glen

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Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com
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Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
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