November 30, 2025

200 New Yorkers tell Trump and ICE "not in my city!" This is why I love New York and New Yorkers. I'm an example of the saying "you can take a New Yorker out of The City, but you can't take The City out of a New Yorker."



 Reading the Time Magazine article about New Yorkers and ICE (here) made me realize just how much I identify as a New Yorker and how much I love what anyone who lives there or nearby calls “The City.” 

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I lived on West 87th Street for two years when I dropped out of college after the first semester of my junior year at Michigan State when I went home to live after my mother got terminal cancer. My girlfriend, then and a year later my first wife, and I lived in two apartments on West 87th Street. They were across the street from each other. We were just steps away from Central Park. 

Above is a current Google Images stret view of one of the apartments where we lived.

When my mother had brain surgery it was at Mt. Sinai Hospital which was just across from Central Park where I lived. When I would visit her in the evening I would run home as fast as I could through the park even though it wasn’t the safest place to be at night. I figured that if someone wanted to mug me they’d have to catch me first.

I worked at the Yeshiva University Graduate School of Education library on 57th Street. It was close enough to home that I could walk to work. My wife worked as a secretary for a famous physicist at Rockefeller University, next to The United Nations.

Those who grow up NYC bedroom communities as I did (I lived in Mt. Vernon, which borders on the Bronx) feel like New Yorkers even if they don’t live in The City. My father worked in White Plains as an upholsterer but most other fathers on my street had high paid jobs in Manhattan. They commuted there by train.

The term “New Yorker” can refer to someone who lived, say, in Albany or further away in Buffalo. However, generally how it is used in the media and among others it refers to residents of New York City.

This is how “New Yorkers” is used in the Time Magazine article.

At the age of 17 I went off to Michigan State where I lived in a dorm as a freshman. Some kid on my floor asked me “what are you?” This took me aback. He was reacting to my New York accent and perhaps how I looked. 

I didn’t know what to say in response. If I grasped the meaning of what he was asking I might have said “I’m a New York Jew.”

Living in The City for two years made me feel even more like a New Yorker. 

I took the photo above in Time Square when I lived there.

When I say “I love New York” I mean I love everything about the city, but mostly I mean I love the New Yorkers who live there. I really, really love the 200 or so who risked dire consequences to themselves to put themselves in harm’s way to protest the ICE invasion of their city.

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November 29, 2025

Is this who we want to be?

 




As a psychotherapist, retired after 40 yrs. of practice, I only occasionally thought about depth psychology. Then Trump came along as a clear and present danger to democracy in 2017. I was one of the first members of the “Duty to Warn” group started by Dr. John Gartner. In USA Today he wrote “Donald Trump’s malignant narcissism is toxic

He wrote that mental health professionals had a duty to warn about a leader who may be unfit to serve. We look back to say and want to change the phrase “may be unfit to serve” to “manifestly not only unfit to serve but a danger to all things lovers of democracy cherish.”

Duty to Warn went on to become a name for a group he founded. Here’s a Psychology Today article about it:

Like Gartner I began to write about how Trump was a malignant narcissist who was not only unfit to be president but also dangerous to democracy.

In 2018 I wrote a column for Capitol Hill Blue titled “Trump’s sadistic malignant narcissism” I moved from writing there to Daily Kos where I put all my posts about Trump’s psychopathology under the heading Trumpology (you can read them here if you want to torture yourself). I left there (okay, I was kicked off and suspended for life - this is another story), to my publishing my own blog. Then when Substack became popular for political writing I moved there and continued to write many articles about this.

What I wrote in 2018 is so relevant today that I am republishing my Capitol Blue column. (The Doug Thompson Capitol Hill Blue website is still online here.

Below is my old article with several updates.

I am hearing more and more commentators on MSNBC talk about Trump’s narcissism when they address his self-centered response to the MAGA bomber. (Cesar Sayoc, known as the “MAGA Bomber,” was arrested for sending 16 mail bombs to critics of President Trump in 2018, including prominent figures like Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton. He was sentenced to 20 years in prison for these actions, which were classified as domestic terrorism.) It is true as far as it goes. However, Trump is not a garden variety narcissist.

His narcissism is so extreme that it overrides any awareness that this is a time to at least pretend that he is presidential. His sarcastic dog whistles at his rallies showing his supporters he doesn’t mean what he reads off a teleprompter are proof of this.

Just this morning, when asked by reporters for his response to the Squirrel Hill synagogue murders (The Squirrel Hill synagogue murders refers to the tragic mass shooting that occurred on October 27, 2018, at the Tree of Life – Or L’Simcha Congregation in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where 11 worshippers were killed and several others were injured. This attack is considered the deadliest antisemitic incident in U.S. history, perpetrated by Robert Bowers, who was motivated by hate against the Jewish community. Trump’s rambling unscripted answers show a lack of empathy. He focused on how he thought having an armed guard inside the temple could have prevented any deaths, and how we should have the death penalty for such crimes. He refused to answer questions about gun control and the NRA.

I am sure that what was on Trump’s mind was that he again lost control of a news cycle, and that coverage of this was going to be linked to his inciting his followers to act violently.

Wikipedia explains that “a notable difference between “narcissists” and “malignant narcissists” is the “feature of sadism, or the gratuitous enjoyment of the pain of others. A narcissist will deliberately damage other people in pursuit of their own selfish desires, but may regret it and will in some circumstances show remorse for doing so, while a malignant narcissist will harm others and enjoy doing so, showing little empathy or regret for the damage they have caused.”

Malignant is one of the most frightening words many of us have ever heard. It usually refers to cancer which has spread and may be life-threatening. When the preface malignant is applied to the word narcissism it describes Donald Trump.

Nearly two years ago one of the first mental health professionals to warn about the dangerousness of Donald Trump because of his psychopathology was clinical psychologist John D. Gartner. Over two years ago he started an online petition Mental Health Professionals Declare Trump is Mentally Ill And Must Be Removed which eventually had over 70,000 signatures.

On Jan. 27, 2017 US News and World Reports published Temperament Tantrum: Some say President Donald Trump’s personality isn’t just flawed, it’s dangerous

The article had numerous quotes from John Gartner. This was the first mainstream media article to address the alarming situation of having a president so psychologically unfit he represented a grave danger to the nation. Here’s an excerpt:

“Donald Trump is dangerously mentally ill and temperamentally incapable of being president,” says Gartner, author of “In Search of Bill Clinton: A Psychological Biography.” Trump, Gartner says, has “malignant narcissism,” which is different from narcissistic personality disorder and which is incurable.

Gartner acknowledges that he has not personally examined Trump, but says it’s obvious from Trump’s behavior that he meets the diagnostic criteria for the disorder, which include anti-social behavior, sadism, aggressiveness, paranoia and grandiosity. Trump’s personality disorder (which includes hypomania) is also displayed through a lack of impulse control and empathy, and “a feeling that people … don’t recognize their greatness.

“We’ve seen enough public behavior by Donald Trump now that we can make this diagnosis indisputably,” says Gartner.

On May 4, 2017, in USA Today, Gartner had an article published titled “Donald Trump’s malignant narcissism is toxic: Psychologist” 

Gartner explains what he means by malignant narcissism.

Much has been written about Trump having narcissistic personality disorder. As critics have pointed out, merely saying a leader is narcissistic is hardly disqualifying. But malignant narcissism is like a malignant tumor: toxic.

Psychoanalyst and Holocaust survivor Erich Fromm, who invented the diagnosis of malignant narcissism, argues that it “lies on the borderline between sanity and insanity.” Otto Kernberg, a psychoanalyst specializing in borderline personalities, defined malignant narcissism as having four components: narcissism, paranoia, antisocial personality and sadism. Trump exhibits all four.

His narcissism is evident in his “grandiose sense of self-importance … without commensurate achievements.” From viewing cable news, he knows “more about ISIS than the generals” and believes that among all human beings on the planet, “I alone can fix it.” His “repeated lying,” “disregard for and violation of the rights of others” (Trump University fraud and multiple sexual assault allegations) and “lack of remorse” meet the clinical criteria for anti-social personality. His bizarre conspiracy theories, false sense of victimization, and demonization of the press, minorities and anyone who opposes him are textbook paranoia. Like most sadists, Trump has been a bully since childhood, and his thousands of vicious tweets make him perhaps the most prolific cyber bully in history.

One of the most aptly titled books about the psychopathology of Donald Trump was published in the Fall of 2017: The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump.

In 27 essays by mostly mental health professionals, the book explained how Trump was affecting the mental health of the people of the United States, how he put the country at grave risk of involving it in a war and of undermining democracy itself because of his psychopathology.

I think that what “The Art of the Deal” author Tony Schwartz (he is the co-author of “The Art of the Deal,” a book published in 1987 that is credited to Donald Trump. Schwartz has expressed regret about writing the book, stating that he feels it contributed to Trump’s public persona and success) told MSNBC host Ari Melber is part and parcel of Trump’s malignant narcissism:

“Given the time you’ve spent with him, what do you see as his relationship with the specter of violence?” MSNBC anchor Ari Melber asked. “Explain what you understand to be his fascination of violence and the way he’s infused that in his politics.”

“So when I go back to the late 1980s, his obsession were — he had two obsessions, one was with football … and the other boxing,” Schwartz recalled. “He was a huge boxing fan and boxing promoter.”

“He loved black people to commit violence against other black people — while he watched,” he explained.

Schwartz summed up Trump’s view as, “You do the violence, I’ll watch the violence. I wouldn’t go near it because it would terrify me, but I love watching it.”

“Why? Because underneath that is rage,” Schwartz concluded. “This is a man of great rage and the rage is, he’s aggrieved.”

“He’s in the business of being aggrieved, and he’s using that in these 10, 12 days leading up to the midterms in trying to bring it out in all the people that are possibly going to vote on the Republican side in this next phase,” he explained. AlterNet

Added to his malignant narcissism where those so inclined can find examples of every diagnostic criterion are the following other behaviors:

  • lack of any demonstration of having the ability to empathize

  • total lack of introspection

  • history of pleasure touching women’s private parts against their will (clinically called Frotteuristic Disorder)

  • his pathological lying

  • his impaired reality testing often to the level of having paranoid beliefs

  • his lack of verbal impulse control

  • his reckless ideas (as leaked from White House) stopped before he could act on them

  • and other characteristics that lead me to suggest he needs a diagnosis of his own.

One can argue about the clinical accuracy or ethics of making a distant diagnosis of a president, however, his behavior this week should dispel any doubt that there is something severely amiss in the psychological functioning of Donald Trump.

——–—

P.M. Update:

On Day Of Mass Shooting, Trump Jokes He Nearly Canceled Speech Due To ‘Bad Hair Day’: Trump made the comment at the Future Farmers of America Convention in Indianapolis.

He recalled for the crowd (at the Future Farmers convention) that earlier in the day, he had been holding a news conference about the mass shooting ― which he referred to as a “very unfortunate news conference” ― when he became drenched from the wind and rain. The elements apparently left his hair looking not exactly the way he likes it.

“I said, ‘Maybe I should cancel this arrangement because I have a bad hair day,’” he told the crowd. “And the bad news ― somebody said, ‘Actually it looks better than it usually does.’”

Though he drew laughter from the crowd, many people found the joke to be in poor taste, given the circumstances. Read some of the social media reaction here.

Recently I wrote about how he met the criteria for being in the Dark Triad. Then I discovered the Dark Tetrad. This adds sadism to the triad of Machiavellianism, being a psychopath and an extreme narcissist. He fits this too.

I wrote this in March: “Sadists ® U.S: Trump and The Dark Tetrad,”

Today Sabrina Haake wrote the following:

Below is the gist of the comment I posted on her Substack:

Of course Trump will ignore the law and relish the use of the military to satisfy his need for power, control, and cruelty --- without getting blood on his hands or taking any personal risk. That is for his soldiers to do whether they are in ICE, Customs and Border Patrol, the National Guard, or the active service currently murdering people on boats.

If they have guns Trump will make them part of his combined Gestapo/SS. As long as they obey illegal orders he will be able to use them to enforce his brutal will and forward his diabolical agenda.

Yesterday I wrote “Half the country has a moral compass and thinks that Trump is the worst president in history. Half have no moral compass and think he is the greatest.”

Today I ask whether those in the country who have lost their moral compass - or never even had one - want us to be the kind of country Trump and his associates want it to be.

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November 28, 2025

Half the country has a moral compass and thinks that Trump is the worst president in history. Half have no moral compass and think he is the greatest. By Hal M. Brown

 

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You can watch the video from a link in the RawStory article here. It was their No. 1 trending story this morning. You can also watch it here:

Trump said these words at a time when a president should be calling for calm. Instead he is inflaming emotions and lasping into his malevolent mode, a psychological state he is only NOT in when he’s bragging about himself or being fawned over. 

Trump and just about every other MAGA Republican is looking to make political hay over the shooting of the two members of the National Guard by an Afghani who was allowed to emigrate to the United States because he helped our country fight the Taliban when he wokded for an elite CIA unit.

As I wrote yesterday they are desperate to blame Biden because the shooter came here under his watch. They omit saying he was offcially granted permanent asylum during Trump’s presidency.

Trump’s kneejerk reaction, which includes the announced review of all green card holders from 19 countries, was the subject of a Wall Street Journal article summarized here: ‘Collective punishment’: WSJ warns MAGA panic over Afghans will hurt America.”

Basically it says what should be a no-brainer: The United States counts on citizens of foreign countries where we are engaged in military actions to help our fighters as Rahmanullah Lakanwal helped the CIA in Afghanistan. (See CNN article.) Being discussed on MSNOW as I write this is how Trump is saying he will order the ground invasion of Venezuela and that if this happens he will want some of their citizens to help us. Are they going to want to help us if they can’t believe any promises made to those who work closely with our side to get them out and relocate them to the United States?

Add this (my emphasis) - clicking will just enlarge image:

You can also read it here.

I want to write about the half of the country who are like Sam. 

Here’s Sam’s X page:

According to their commercial website Sam and Donna live in Northern Decatur County in Southern Iowa. They post on their website:

We offer Spring Flower and Summer Flower Subscriptions.

Did you know, currently 80% of the flowers sold in the USA come from outside the country.

We are hoping to change that!

Okay, they are selling MAGA flowers, nothing much wrong with that. 

What is wrong with them is embodied in what Sam posted on X. 

What is terrifying is that half the country, a bit more or less, agree with Sam and probably Donna.

It is impossible for me not to compare our country today to Germany in the 1930’s.

I’m a Jew, but I hope everyone with a functional moral compass also thinks about this. A majority of Afghans, approximately 99.7%, practice Islam, with about 90% being Sunni Muslims and around 7% identifying as Shia Muslims. Most immigrants to the United States are Christian. They make up about 70% of the immigrant population. Other religious groups include Muslims (7%), Hindus (5%), Buddhists (3%), and Jews (1%). (Reference)

Obviously the Christians aren’t villainized because of their religion. Trump and MAGA will turn people into demons to be deported using whatever excuse they can find.

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Trump psychology

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200 New Yorkers tell Trump and ICE "not in my city!" This is why I love New York and New Yorkers. I'm an example of the saying "you can take a New Yorker out of The City, but you can't take The City out of a New Yorker."

  Reading the Time Magazine article about New Yorkers and ICE (here ) made me realize just how much I identify as a New Yorker and how much ...