January 4, 2025

My take on The Washington Post spiking an Ann Telnais editorial cartoon and her quitting in protest, by Hal M. Brown

 

Above is my way of expressing what RawStory conveyed in the illustration for 

WaPo staffer resigns after paper spikes cartoon that jabbed billionaires cozying to Trump



Ann Telnaes is one of my favorite editorial cartoonists. Her overseers at The Washington Post spiked a cartoon for expressing an opinion they objected to. Then she resigned in protest.

Ironically, now more people will see the cartoon than would have seen it in the Post. They spiked her, but in the other meaning of the word, interest in her work will no doubt spike. I for one just subscribed to her substack (here.)


The cartoon depicted Mark Zuckerberg/Facebook & Meta founder and CEO, Sam Altman/AI CEO, Patrick Soon-Shiong/LA Times publisher, the Walt Disney Company/ABC News, and Jeff Bezos/Washington Post owner bringing bags of cash to Trump. I doubt too many people would be able to identify all, or even any of them, from the drawing. She didn't even need to draw Trump's face since it is obvious who he is from the fat belly and long tie. 

The brilliant part of the cartoon as far as I'm concerned is the dead Mickey Mouse. I am sure it representing cartoons in general. It was drawn in color. I have no doubt many cartoonists of all kinds were inspired as children to take up their profession by Disney. Before beginning her career as an editorial cartoonist, she worked for several years as a designer for Walt Disney Imagineering (reference). 

I have been active on BlueSky for over a month but I didn't know that Ann Telnaes was also there. Now I am following her.

Below are the BlueSky posts from three well known people (click to enlarge).

  Thanks to Telnaise I know know that there's a Freedom Cartoonists Organization (she's on their advisory board) and an organization called Cartoonists Rights (she's a former member of their board).

On a personal note, I am a frustrated cartoonist who aspired to draw cartoons for The New Yorker, which my parents subscribed to, when I was a child. Unfortunately, I couldn't draw very well. Now, with the advent of AI, as my readers know I like to use it and photo manipulation technology to make illustrations for my blogs. 

The only good thing that I see coming out of this is that this kind of censorship by media oligarchs doesn't go unnoticed. In the old days before social media and the internet few people would ever know about something that wasn't published.

How many people, for example, would have known that the Los Angeles Times was owned by Patrick Soon-Shiong who was behind its refusal to make a presidential endorsement? He met privately with Trump during between 2016–2017 in an unsuccessful attempt to obtain a position in the administration.

When The Washington Post editors weren't allowed by Jeff Bezos to endorse a candidate and staff members resigned in protest, their disappearance might have gone unnoticed if it wasn't for social media and the internet.

Ann wrote in her substack  "I doubt my decision will cause much of a stir and that it will be dismissed because I’m just a cartoonist." She wrong. It isn't being dismissed and it is causing a stir. Here's the Google News search for the story. Click below to enlarge image.




It even was reported on in The New York Times which doesn't even have a regularly pubished editorial cartoonist.



It must be noted that when The New York Times stopped publishing editorial cartoons in 2019 The Washington Post published The New York Times cuts all political cartoons, and cartoonists are not happy.

Excerpt:

Some political artists view the Times’s decision to end daily political cartoons as a repudiation of the art form.

“It is their clarity and pointedness, the sharpness of their satire, that make them such powerful vehicles for expressing opinion,” Association of American Editorial Cartoonists President Kevin Siers, a Pulitzer-winning cartoonist for the Charlotte Observer, said in a statement Tuesday.

“There is no ‘on the other hand’ in an editorial cartoon,” the AAEC continued. “This power, understandably, makes editors nervous, but to completely discontinue their use is letting anxiety slide into cowardice.”

Speaking to the larger landscape, Matt Wuerker, the Pulitzer-winning cartoonist for Politico, said: “The collapsing space for political cartoons and satirical commentary because editors don’t have the spine to stand up to social-media outrage campaigns is bad for free speech, and bad because political debate benefits from a little humor now and again."

Taking a similar view on the bigger issue is Daryl Cagle, head of the syndicate Cagle Cartoons, which distributes Chappatte’s (he published in the International Times) work to about 800 subscribing clients.

“By choosing not to print editorial cartoons in the future, the Times can be sure that their editors will never again make a poor cartoon choice,” Cagle said. “Editors at the Times have also made poor choices of words in the past. I would suggest that the Times should also choose not to print words in the future — just to be on the safe side.”


There have been quite a few cartoons depicting the Statue of Liberty crying over the loss of democracy in the United States. My own idea for a cartoon about the death of a vital part of our democracy, Freedom of the Press, is a graveyard with a flag flying at half-staff with tombstones with the names of the publications whose content is controlled the corporate owners.





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January 3, 2025

Am I the only anti-Trump shrink who thinks Trump may not have dementia? By Hal M. Brown, MSW


Many mental health professionals are absolutely, positively convinced Trump has dementia. I seem like a lone voice among them saying we need more evidence. 

Most mental health professionals who are saying this are not neurologists, let alone neurologists who specialize in dementia. 

I am not an expert, but because I live in a continuing care retirement community I have seen a lot of people with dementia in all stages. 

In my training there was no mention of considering dementia in making a differential diagnosis. In my 40 years of practice I never treated anyone with dementia. I did, however, have three clients who I thought had temporal lobe epilepsy which I knew about having read the book "Seized" by Eve LaPlante. I referred them to a behavioral neurologist who did sleep deprived EEGs with them and it turned out two of the three did have this disorder. When I began practice nobody was conversant about another brain disorder, the autism spectrum. My point is that mental health professionals must be aware that there are sometimes physiological and neurological explanations for behavior. This certainly applies to trying to discern explanations for what seems to be aberrant behavior in Trump. The unanswered question is whether is this behavior psychological, physiological, or a combinaiton of the two.

I have seen the  photos and illustrations of Trump's leaning forward posture countless times as if this was absolute proof of dementia. Lots of people his age stand that way at times. 

His word salad could be an indication of mania, not dementia, or it could be, as he claims, a kind of improv which he calls the weave. 

Many mental health professionals are digging in on the Trump dementia position. I think this is, in a way, wishful thinking couched in science.

We, meaning shrinks, have all the evidence we need to say Trump is a malignant narcissist, but then perhaps desperate to find more to justify saying Trump is unfit, they added dementia to bolster the argument that he was dangerous. I think mental health professionals need to be more self-critical and open minded in our judgments and not succumb to confirmation bias. It is easy to cherry pick from all the evidence when there's so much Trump, Trump, Trump just about every hour of the day.

Is anybody keeping track of every bit of Trump's behavior to find indications that he doesn't have dementia?

We have ample examples of Trump going on for one or two hours without exhibiting any unambiguous signs of dementia. Much of his extemporaneous sidetracking can just as easily be considered a manifestation of his malignant narcissism as of dementia.

There's currently a Change.org petition online  "Our Diagnostic Impression of Trump is Probable Dementia: For Licensed Professionals Only."

The petition begins:

We, the undersigned licensed medical and mental health professionals (INCLUDE YOUR ADVANCED DEGREE IN YOUR LAST NAME WITH NO PUNCTUATION) concur: From our years of training and experience, we are convinced that, while a definitive diagnosis would require further testing, Donald Trump is showing unmistakable signs strongly suggesting dementia, based on his public behavior and informant reports that show progressive deterioration in memory, thinking, ability to use language, behavior, and both gross and fine motor skills. 

I highlighted the part that jumps out at me. First, the "years of training and experience" should apply to those who were in fields like neurology, particularly behavioral neurology, and neurosciense. It is true that a definitive diagnosis would require testing, however the use of the word "unmistakable" along with "strongly suggesting" shows a bias. Leave that word out and I can accept this sentence.

The petition then goes on to list diagnostic indices in these categories:

1) Decline from baseline

2) Memory:

3) Language

4) Motor:

5) Behavior: 

The list reads like someone went over a text on dementia and then found things in Trump's behavior and managed to make a case that he had this disorder. It wasn't that long ago that splotches seen on Trump's hands during the E. Jean Carroll led to rampant speculation that he had syphillis. Even before that the syphillis theory was in the news and no social media. This was from 2017: Trump’s ‘Unhinged’ Behavior Could Be Due To ‘Untreated Syphilis,’ Expert Claims. 

There is a reasonably good case to be made that Trump might be suffering from some stage of dementia. However, reasonably good isn't good enough as far as I am concerned.

I think the list lacks the scientific rigor necessary to reach a foregone conclusion. This being said, I agree with the conclusion whether or not he has dementia:

This represents a unique danger because of Trump's pre-existing Malignant Narcissistic Personality Disorder. As he continues to deteriorate he will become even more erratic, impulsive, paranoid, and aggressive than he already is. A demented malignant narcissist as president of the United States would have unimaginably catastrophic consequences.

Not only is Trump unfit, but he cognitively incapable of carrying out the duties of president. Under normal circumstances, relatives of such a patient would be seeking consultation with experts, and considering long term care, as he continues to deteriorate.

We feel an ethical obligation to warn the public, and urge the media to cover this national emergency.


The media must report objectively on anything that suggests Trump may have a cognitive impairment and bring in true experts from the appropriate fields. We can't allow another Goldwater Rule fiasco to occur. When there were obvious examples of his being  a malignant narcissist and mental health professionals spoke up about this  they were debunked by many and accused of breaking some sacrosanct professional rule. 

Anti-Trumpers who make the news warning about the dangers of Trump wielding the power of the presidency have been accused of having a psychiatric disorder the name of which has been used to discredit them. You know what it is: Trump derangement syndrome. We must not feed into this narrative.

When mental health professionals go public about the possiblity that Trump has dementia they must do this by emphasizing that this is a possiblity not a certainty. They must write or speak with gravitas and always allow for the chance that they are wrong. 

Time will be the ultimate decider regarding this since dementia always gets worse. There may come a time during his presidency that his symptoms are so obvious you don't need to be an expert in dementia to reach this conclusion.

This is when the 25th Amendment becomes a real possibility. Then we will be dealing with J.D. Vance. Nobody has suggested he has dementia.

More of my thoughts on this subject:


This was in Salon (I'm the clinical social worker in the title): Clinical social worker: "With the Trump Bible, one must consider dementia"

I also wrote I’m not the only mental health professional who says that Trump needs a rigorous neuropsychiatric evaluation to rule out a cognitive illness.



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January 2, 2025

It would be better to have a calculating liar as president than one who doesn't get all the facts before making a major decision, by Hal M. Brown

Even thinking that Trump would be a model for a modern day Rodin to turn into a 21st century version of The Thinker is no doubt a stretch for most of my readers. I would venture to say most of you would more likely think that if an artist, a cartoonist for example, wanted to depict where Trump would rank on a scale of thoughtful to impulsive, they'd draw him screaming into a cellphone.

Below is the Truth Social post from Trump that made the news on New Years Day after the New Orleans terrorist drove a truck into a crowd of revelers.

"When I said that the criminals coming in are far worse than the criminals we have in our country, that statement was constantly refuted by Democrats and the Fake News Media, but it turned out to be true. The crime rate in our country is at a level that nobody has ever seen before. Our hearts are with all of the innocent victims and their loved ones, including the brave officers of the New Orleans Police Department. The Trump Administration will fully support the City of New Orleans as they investigate and recover from this act of pure evil!" 

This post was followed that night when Trump had to have had all the information about 
Shamsud-Din Jabbar, the driver of the truck.

I do not know whether he knew the name of the attacker was  Shamsud-Din Jabbar or that there was an ISIS flag on the truck when he made the first post. He very well might have known these things and figured that this meant he wasn't born here. 

Of course we now know that Jabbar was born in Texas and a military veteran. The only border he crossed before the attack was the one between Texas and Louisiana. If this is another example of Trump lying to support a narrative I have to say is "merely disturbing."  This is how inured I am to Trump being a liar. Even Fox News had to issue a correction regarding that comment:

A Fox News reporter read the statement on air Wednesday afternoon after federal officials identified the suspect, and fact-checked the president-elect.

"Now the former president said criminals coming in in a statement, meaning into our country, but to be clear Molly [Line] and Brian [Llenas] the suspect was born in the United States, he served in the United States Army, he was a veteran, the FBI is the lead agency in this investigation going through the social media and any other accounts associated with the suspect," said Justice Correspondent David Spunt. (Reference)

My point is that if Trump didn't wait until more information about who the driver of the truck was, and he impulsively made this statement, this is more evidence that we have a president who cannot control his emotions and his thought process. This would mean he wanted something to be true so he reacted without waiting for confirmation.

Perhaps in his arrogance and his ability to engage in gaslighting with little negative consequences to himself, he thought he could do this again.

In this world of social media and with Trump having the ablity to persuade people, this New Years Day post could have influenced one or more people to commit acts of violence against people they presumed to be here illegally.

Trump gave what many attending his speech perceived as his order to do anything possible to stop the certification of the election on Jan. 6th. It makes sense to think he can post something that is seen by some as a directive to become a hero to him by going on an immigrant hunt with the AR-15 they'd been hoping to have a chance to use against human targets.

Trump is the person who will be in the Situation Room in a time of crisis. He will be the decider-in-chief when it comes to launching a nuclear attack. If he makes decisions impulsively without getting all the information the ramifications could be disastrous.

It would be a better for the country if  this is another example of Trump once again disrespecting the American people and was, as Sen. Chris Murphey posted on X, intentionally lying:

Trump is making the most of this. Even a day later when the fact, the real and not fake fact, that this act had nothing to do with open borders is out there he is still posting lies to score political points.

With the Biden “Open Border’s Policy” I said, many times during Rallies, and elsewhere, that Radical Islamic Terrorism, and other forms of violent crime, will become so bad in America that it will become hard to even imagine or believe. That time has come, only worse than ever imagined. Joe Biden is the WORST PRESIDENT IN THE HISTORY OF AMERICA, A COMPLETE AND TOTAL DISASTER. What he and his group of Election Interfering “thugs” have done to our Country will not soon be forgotten! MAGA

Trump's lies are certainly potentially dangerous, but at least his lies can be called out with real time fact checking and countered by both journalists and Democratic politicians. 

As I wrote this the subject of Trump's post was being discussed on CNN. Jim Acosta's two guests were a Trump apologist and an anti-Trumper.


The Trumper, Neil Chatterjee, tried to justify Trump's Truth Social post, but the host got the last word. This is how the segment ended with Acosta getting the last word:

Chatterjje said "He's talking about securing the border, and he's been talking for years about securing the border. And I think the data bears out that he won the election, partially because —"

Acosta interjected, "I mean, I just have to say, here he goes again! He talks about everybody else being fake news, and he's the one peddling fake news."


You can read the entire exchange on RawStory here.

Two points were being made. What they had in common was the assumption that Trump made his post on purpose. Nobody brought up that he might have made it impulsively out of wishful thinking.

Since he Trump is surrounding himself with toadies, if he impulsively decides to, for example, invade Mexico because he thinks that after an attack like New Orleans it would be the perfect time to have at least some public opinion supporting this, there won't be anyone to stop him.

I would not label my bronze statue of Trump The Thinker. I would called it The Plotter. He gets an idea and then plots on ways to make it happen without getting input from objective  experts who will help him look at the short and long term ramifications. He needs to listen to people who are familiar with the concept of unintended consequenses in real world situations.

Some unintended consquences have been, and could be, a lot worse than rabbits being introduced as game animals to Australia, and that was really bad. This is the illustration used in Wikipedia.

Considering that Trump may try to implement Project 2025 it is worth looking at what it is by reading the Wikipedia entry about it (here). Consider that if some or most of it was implemented what the unintended consequences could be. 

Related: This column from Steve Benen is well worth reading: Trump flunks 3 key tests following deadly New Orleans attack.

These are the tests he failed:

First, he flunked a test of accuracy, pushing misinformation within hours of a deadly attack.

Second, he flunked a test of decency, trying to exploit the attack to advance an ugly and misguided agenda.

And third, Trump flunked a test of credibility, reminding everyone anew that when tragedy strikes, Americans just can’t count on the incoming president for reliable and trustworthy information.





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I post my blogs on Stressline.org where you can subscribe (for free everywhere) and on Substack where, if you want to submit your email, you can be notified of all new blog posts. I also post them on Medium because this enables them to be easily found on internet searches.

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January 1, 2025

The "dignified "Trumps are going to Jimmy Carter's funeral. This is as it should be, however this is what they will be feeling. By Hal M. Brown.


"Asked about it as he walked into a New Year’s Eve party at his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida, Trump responded, 'I’ll be there.' Pressed on whether he’d spoken to members of Carter’s family, Trump said he’d rather not say." (Reference

It is true that when one uses "dignified" and "Trump" in the same sentence the context has to be scrutinized since this could be an oxymoron. 

If Trump was a newly elected first term president who was yet to take office, I think he might have found an excuse not to attend the funeral. Since he is a former president, attending the funeral of another former president this is the proper and dignified thing to do. 

Trump, being Trump, wouldn't give up the chance to sit in the row along with other former presidential couples. I expect we'll see photos of Trump and Melania sitting with the Bidens, Clintons, Obamas, and Bushes. Everyone will have their funeral faces on. Ever the performers, Donald and Melania should be able to pull this off.

For Trump this won't be a Truth Social post where he finds it impossible not to interject MAGA talking points and his true feelings into a solemn message. He's not going to begin to shake hands with any of the former presidents and pull his hand back and make the go to hell gesture with his thumb.

He may wish he would make this juvenile gesture. It would signify his distain for them. It would be like his giving Biden, Obama, and Clinton the middle finger. Trump finds it difficult to resist making it all about him and his toxic message.

A case in point is his post about the horrible attack in New Orleans.

On Truth Social, he first wrote, "When I said that the criminals coming in are far worse than the criminals we have in our country, that statement was constantly refuted by Democrats and the Fake News Media, but it turned out to be true. The crime rate in our country is at a level that nobody has ever seen before."

He then got around to what was his secondary thought, the victims and their families. He wrote "Our hearts are with all of the innocent victims and their loved ones, including the brave officers of the New Orleans Police Department. The Trump Administration will fully support the City of New Orleans as they investigate and recover from this act of pure evil!"

Even Trump's most ardent supporters don't believe he really cares about celebrating the memory of Jimmy Carter. They know he's there to remind everyone what a great president Donald Trump was, and to rub it in to the Carter family and the other former presidents who will be in attendance that he won the election.

If he was to wear his feelings on a coat he'd have to have one made. I doubt Melania particularly cares, although I think she does have feelings, so she may not have to work that hard to appear to be moved by the funeral service. She may actually experience genuine feelings.

It may be unfair to suggest via an AI image that she'd even consider wishing she could have a designer "I really don't care, do U?" dress coat like this made:


 It is more likely that if she wanted to express her feelings on a coat it would say this:


I post my blogs on Stressline.org where you can subscribe (for free everywhere) and on Substack where, if you want to submit your email, you can be notified of all new blog posts. I also post them on Medium because this enables them to be easily found on internet searches.

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December 31, 2024

Is Trump like an angry caged monkey throwing feces at the fence? By Hal M. Brown



Click to read above article 

This was my comment:


I wrote:

 This is clearly a diversion.  I wrote about how he does this here: Trump is throwing yet another dead cat on the table.There's nothing that really needs to change as far as creating something like the EU. With smaller countries in Europe this made sense. Let's suppose that Canada even considered this. I see no way that they would agree to not having their citizens vote. They would have to be represented in Congress. It they became a 51st state they would be allocated two Senate seats since this is mandated in the Constitution. As far as the House went by whatever formula was used it is likely that when the representative got there they would most likely vote with the Democrats and this would totally change the balance of power. As for our Constitution, there's the pesky problem of the fact that  Canada has its own constitution. Like with states and their constitutions, things like their socialized medicine would be available to people who lived there.

Nobody outside of Trump's inner circle knows where, how, and when Trump comes up with these ideas. This Truth Social message appears to have been posted at 11:42 AM which doesn't mean he didn't get the idea at 2:00 AM. 

Perhaps Trump has a muse in his head that gives him these ideas. Or it's possible there's a real person who comes up with some or most of them. If it's a real person my bets are on Stephen Miller or Elon Musk who we know are with him in person. It could be Tucker Carlson,  Steve Bannon, Alex Jones or anyone who he comes across in social media. It's possible he has multiple maniacal and malevolent muses. He could be one of the biggest plagerizers of pointless pissantery in modern history.

I am basically blowing smoke on the Canada matter because I am not conversant with the issues involved. I am just spitballing, or perhaps better put as shitblogging, when I suggest that of the three ideas: common currency, open trade, and a EU type passport, at first blush only open, or more open, trade seems to make sense. It seems that this could accomplished with the usual kinds of trade treaties. We can't change to a common currency like the Euro without huge complications. It seems to be doable if this would benefit trade. There's no need for any change in how citizens of each country travel across the border.

Being charitable to Trump, I see that being able to entertain new and radical ideas (the cliche "out of the box thinking" applies) can be a positive. I think of how the best sitcom writers put together a show by being unhibited and even unhinged when they throw out ideas. The saying about throwing spaghetti at the wall to see what sticks applies.

With comedy writers, for example, the crappy ideas never get to see the light of day. For example, unfunny ideas never made it onto a Seinfeld episode or into a Monty Python skit. Trump's 2:00 AM waking fever dreams are in the news within hours.

When Trump throws his spaghetti at the wall and it doesn't stick it can have negative national and international ramifications. Even when it does stick with some people because, well, because he is The Donald, he can start a process that will end up in a disaster. There are times where one can give him the benefit of the doubt and say there's method in what seems like madness. Perhaps it is all intentional, however with this supposition the saying "when pigs can fly" comes to mind. Pigs are one of the smartest mammals, but the only time a pig can fly is when it runs off a cliff.

If he is being calculating and deliberate I think at least some of the time he is using the dead cat strategy, which if you haven't already looked it up, is a "thing."


Unfortunately, if Trump actually was strategic, while as terrifying as this possiblity is,  frequently he is like an angry caged zoo monkey throwing feces at the fence. Nothing sticks, but he sure puts on a show.

If by some magical spell he turned into a monkey he'd probably sell simian Trump turds. These aren't available though you can get this on eBay.



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I post my blogs on Stressline.org where you can subscribe (for free everywhere) and on Substack where, if you want to submit your email, you can be notified of all new blog posts. I also post them on Medium because this enables them to be easily found on internet searches.

The halbrown.org platform includes a Disquis comment section. To use it you have to register on Disquis






My take on The Washington Post spiking an Ann Telnais editorial cartoon and her quitting in protest, by Hal M. Brown

  Above is my way of expressing what RawStory conveyed in the illustration for  WaPo staffer resigns after paper spikes cartoon that jabbed ...