Que Mala on the Couch A Psychological Profiler Analyzes This Freudian Basket Case
Que Mala on the Couch A Psychological Profiler Analyzes This Freudian Basket Case
Que Mala on the Couch A Psychological Profiler Analyzes This Freudian Basket Case
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Politics is psychology. | |
It's behavior. | |
It's behaviorism. | |
It has nothing to do with ideology. | |
It has nothing to do with facts and figures and truth or anything like that. | |
What motivates us to do what we do, not only in politics, but in life in general, has to do with our psychology. | |
That psychology is based upon how we're raised, our parents, our childhood, particular trauma that we've endured, but also just plain old learning. | |
Think more Skinnerian, more operant conditioning. | |
What you've learned, just in a non-traumatic way, just what you've learned, what experience has taught you. | |
How certain behaviors are extinguished, certain traits are encouraged, and that sort of thing. | |
And when you look at people running for president, you have to ask, what is it that motivates them? | |
Now, give me an empty shell of a person that I can mold, and I will be the happiest person in the world. | |
The secret to success, the secret to power, is not to be the president, but to pick the president. | |
To find the president that will take all of the problem, all of the bullets and the blame and the acclaim, let them go out there. | |
As I get older and as I become wiser, I am more convinced than ever that the real power are in people whose names you don't know. | |
In fact, in fact, I have a very simple rule. | |
I can tell you who is not involved in something by the fact that you know their name. | |
If you know their name, they're not involved. | |
I promise you. | |
And how a president is, psychologically, is fascinating. | |
Look at Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Trump, and now Kamala Harris. | |
Go back to Clinton. | |
Go back to Barack Obama. | |
Do you know what it's like when you start off and you are of the opinion that people are of the opinion that you were created? | |
That you're not real? | |
That you're not legitimate? | |
That you're hiding? | |
Are you black? | |
Are you white? | |
Who's your father? | |
Who's your daddy? | |
Who's your father? | |
Where are you from? | |
Who are you again? | |
You were a community organizer? | |
How come people don't remember you wherever the particular college was? | |
Columbia, they don't remember? | |
Who are you? | |
Were you some kind of a CIA candidate plucked out of obscurity? | |
You get those things. | |
Are you black? | |
Are you white? | |
Who is this? | |
Who was your father? | |
There is a duality. | |
I don't have to tell you. | |
That when you are raised and you are presented to people in your life that represent not just mommy and daddy, but men and women, authority and nurturing, success and pride, I mean, it is a mess. | |
At its very best, having Ozzie and Harriet or June and Ward Cleaver as your parents do not ensure any kind of normalcy, but not having that can really be A prescription for disaster. | |
Bill Clinton never knew his father. | |
Was he blind or whatever his name was? | |
His mother, he always tried to protect. | |
And in the case of, if you think about it, Obama and Clinton, their mothers, you know, sort of remarried. | |
The father connection was tenuous. | |
Okay. | |
Again, interesting to note. | |
Bill Clinton probably more psychologically connected or psychologically fascinating. | |
Especially his relationship to women and his, as we all say now, the patented need to be loved. | |
George W. Bush. | |
Strong family. | |
The wild child. | |
The drunk. | |
The ne 'er-do-well. | |
You know, Jubb was the one. | |
That's the guy. | |
And who's this George W. Bush? | |
Cheerleader? | |
You know, did blow and this and... | |
Ah, whatever. | |
Well, it turned out he was a two-timer. | |
Vindicating, in many respects, some people say the failure of his father, one would say. | |
Sort of. | |
Donald Trump. | |
A wild child at first. | |
Sent to some military boarding school. | |
Straightened him up. | |
Strong, successful fathers. | |
George Herbert Walker Bush, son of Prescott Bush. | |
Look at that. | |
Kind of look at these interesting things. | |
Now, what does all this mean? | |
Well, we can sit around and we can write the most labyrinthine of psychological profiles. | |
I'm just saying, take into account, look at it, and pay attention to it. | |
Think about it. | |
That's all. | |
Don't dwell. | |
Because I promise you, there are people from psychological services Who have done dossiers, they have done reviews, and they know exactly the motivations, the thinking patterns behind these people. | |
And believe me when I tell you this, there are reviews and dossiers, they know exactly what their hot buttons are and the like. | |
Now let's talk about Kemala. | |
Fascinating. | |
Absolutely fascinating. | |
Her image is still protean. | |
Who is her, loves her mother, loved her mother, always talks about her mother, not dad. | |
Dad wrote a fascinating essay. | |
In fact, you can get it. | |
Online, you can read it. | |
And it's called, I think, Confessions of a... | |
What is it called? | |
I've got it up here. | |
Confessions of a... | |
Oh, sorry. | |
Reflections of a Jamaican father. | |
Fascinating. | |
His background. | |
An esteemed economist. | |
You can call him Marxian. | |
This is no slouch. | |
He and mother left. | |
I don't want to reiterate the allegations made by him because I might get it wrong. | |
But I'm just saying it doesn't matter that we understand each of the granular indictments or charges or allegations or the gravamen of his problems or his complaints or what have you. | |
But understand how that is. | |
She was very upset with him when she talked about how she's Jamaican. | |
And they'd ask about weeds. | |
He was on a breakfast club or something. | |
And they talked about weed and, you know, did you smoke dope? | |
Did you smoke weed? | |
Did you smoke ganja? | |
Well, you know, I'm Jamaican. | |
And he was furious. | |
As she was reiterating and reinforcing this notion of, you know, the Rastaman, these dreadlocked ne 'er-do-wells blowing their brains out with wheat. | |
He was very upset with this. | |
This was an esteemed academician who came from a long lineage of Jamaican politicians and manly... | |
Anyway! | |
He was upset with that. | |
So she's trying to find who she is and her relationship with men. | |
Always seeking to reconnect, to establish, to provide, to allow for that connection, that platform of men, of Father. | |
You can talk about Willie and Montel. | |
I don't know the first thing about Willie Brown and he made her. | |
Look, a lot of people have benefited not from sexual ways, but you go to a certain school, become a member of a certain club, and you become friends with this guy. | |
We're a social animal and some people help others for a variety of reasons. | |
Whether you've enjoyed sexual dalliances with others or whether it's Because of your academic and scholastic pedigree and provenance, I have no idea. | |
But just think about this. | |
Think about what she is. | |
This was a hardcore, she was, as some people say, she was a cop. | |
She was a brutal prosecutor who took almost sadistic pleasure after going after truant mothers and throwing men in prison for, I mean, excessively. | |
Drugs and the like. | |
Denying, road-blocking attempts to seek exoneration and acquittals of people on death row. | |
I mean, this woman, who is she? | |
And that is what I find to me most interesting. | |
She's this empty vessel. | |
I keep telling you, she's the sock puppet, the wind sock. | |
She's whatever you want her to be. | |
Is she black? | |
Is she... | |
Is she not white? | |
I mean, is she Asian? | |
Is she Jamaican? | |
She makes up stories about how she listened to rap stars during college who weren't even in existence then. | |
I mean, she's lies. | |
She creates this storyline that's always been. | |
To an extent, the storyline, the idea, you know, the Abe Lincoln story, the rail splitter who rustled, who might have been gay. | |
He might have been, remember the story where he might have been depressed because he gave Mary Todd Lincoln syphilis, which caused her to lose her mind that he was depressed. | |
There's all kinds of stuff about him. | |
And he slept with his partner and they said, well, you know, it was very common for men to sleep together. | |
Oh, really? | |
Just like Cary Grant and Randolph Scott. | |
Well, you know, they were bachelors. | |
And anyway, you hear these complicated stories and the produced and manufactured Hollywood version of who these people are. | |
To understand Gay Mala. | |
You have to understand who she is. | |
And you may never get to know that. | |
Because she's not going to let you. | |
She hides it from you. | |
She doesn't want you to know. | |
Look at Doug, her husband. | |
I'm sure he's a fine guy. | |
So cosmically boring. | |
No hits, no runs, no errors. | |
He is the perfect vice president husband. | |
Meaning, you want somebody who never overshadows you. | |
Never challenges you. | |
Never gets in the way. | |
I know what I'm talking about. | |
I know exactly what I'm talking about. | |
Now, does this matter? | |
Not if they rig it fair and square. | |
Not if they steal the election fair and square. | |
All this stuff doesn't mean any difference if somebody comes along and says, great, you talk about that and she's going to be president. | |
Either way. | |
But it's nonetheless fascinating. | |
You have to understand who these people are because when you are pulling their strings, acting as Geppetto to their Pinocchio, you've got to know from whence they've come. | |
And you have to know their idiosyncratic hotspots, pressure points, and sensitivities. | |
After you subscribe to this, after you like this, think very carefully of what I've been saying. |