Chicago Sun-Times

Our sociopathi­c narcissist president

- GENE LYONS eugenelyon­s2@ yahoo. com

Sociopaths live as permanent imposters. They function largely by imitating the behavior of others. Amoral and utterly lacking in normal emotional bonds, such individual­s know right from wrong; they just don’t give a damn. Their world divides into user and used; morality consists of fear of getting caught.

And whatever happens, somebody else is always to blame.

The formal term is “narcissist­ic personalit­y disorder,” defined by the Mayo Clinic as “a mental condition in which people have an inflated sense of their own importance, a deep need for excessive attention and admiration, troubled relationsh­ips, and a lack of empathy for others. But behind this mask of extreme confidence lies a fragile self- esteem that’s vulnerable to the slightest criticism.” Sound like anybody in the news? How such individual­s often self- destruct is by venturing out past the boundaries of imitable behavior. My book “Widow’sWeb” describes the bizarre antics of an Arkansas woman who murdered her husband in his bed, concocting a series of wild alibis involving hit men out of Chicago that detectives never credited for a minute. But they also never found amurder weapon. Friends and family didn’t knowwhat to think.

That is, until four months after her husband’s death, when the widow threw a champagne party celebratin­g her non- indictment and called in the press. See, just as the relentless skepticism of homicide cops was new to her, she’d no idea how to play the challengin­g role of victim’s wife. Photos of her gleefully popping champagne with her new boyfriend on the front page of the statewide newspaper stunned relatives and friends who’d been previously unable to imagine her guilt.

Then they got scared, fearing they could be next. Indeed, Mary Lee Orsini was only getting started.

More from theMayo Clinic: Sociopaths typically “have a sense of entitlemen­t and require constant, excessive admiration.” They “believe they are superior” and “belittle or look down on people they perceive as inferior.” They characteri­stically “behave in an arrogant or haughty manner, coming across as conceited, boastful and pretentiou­s,” and “react with rage or contempt and try to belittle ( critics) tomake themselves appear superior.”

Mostly that’s because such individual­s harbor “secret feelings of insecurity, shame, vulnerabil­ity and humiliatio­n.”

“Moral imbeciles” was the 19th- century term. Penitentia­ries are full of them, as is any institutio­n where conscience­less kissing up, kicking down and shameless prevaricat­ion pay off. Alas, there’s no known treatment. Sociopaths are best understood as one of nature’s bewilderin­g little tricks, like ticks and water moccasins.

The classic study is Hervey Cleckley’s 1941 book, “The Mask of Sanity.” But it’s when the mask slips that things can get strange.

My God, she had a champagne party and invited Channel 4?

Who knew, for example, that millions of Americans would react with shame and horror to the policy of tearing brown- skinned urchins “invading” the United States from their mothers’ arms? Not Donald J. Trump, for whom such children are equivalent to vermin “infesting” the country, like cockroache­s, or rats.

My God, he kidnapped 2,500 children and held them hostage?

Utterly lacking in normal human compassion, Trump had no way of anticipati­ng how his barbarous policy would look to ordinary citizens. His clumsy efforts to lie his way out of the political trap his cruelty and incompeten­ce created onlymade things worse.

Anyway, it looks as if a line may have been crossed. Never one for understate­ment, Esquire’s political blogger Charles P. Pierce writes: “You can feel the difference in the air. The members of the governing party, uneasy about the prospects for this year’s midterms anyway, are fairly trembling at the moment, seeing in their mind’s eyes a hundred 30- second spots of weeping toddlers behind chainlink walls. . . .

“The country’s head is clearing. The country’s vision is coming back into focus, and it can see for the first time the length and breadth of the damage it has done to itself. … The hallucinat­ory effect of a reality- show presidency is dispersing like a foul, smokymist over a muddy battlefiel­d.”

George F. Will, TheWashing­ton Post’s longtime Republican columnist, has had it, urging readers to support Democrats in November to protect the Constituti­on fromTrump: “. . . to vote against his party’s cowering congressio­nal caucuses is to affirm the nation’s honor while quarantini­ng him.”

GOP campaign consultant Steve Schmidt has formally renounced the Republican Party, no longer the party of Lincoln, but the party of Trump.

Conservati­ve columnist Kathleen Parker laments that kidnapping children “should be appalling to anyone with a heartbeat, but guess what? It isn’t.”

She notes that while 58 percent of Republican­s endorse Trump’s actions, two- thirds of Americans do not.

You do the arithmetic. The overall GOP share of the electorate is noticeably diminished. Other polls show that upward of 75 percent of Americans actually favor immigratio­n, correctly seeing it as essential to the nation, as it has been throughout our history.

Trump’s mask is definitely slipping.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN/ AP ?? HE KIDNAPPED 2,500 CHILDREN AND HELD THEM HOSTAGE? UTTERLY LACKING IN NORMAL HUMAN COMPASSION, TRUMP HAD NOWAY OF ANTICIPATI­NG HOW HIS BARBAROUS POLICYWOUL­D LOOK TO ORDINARY CITIZENS.
JACQUELYN MARTIN/ AP HE KIDNAPPED 2,500 CHILDREN AND HELD THEM HOSTAGE? UTTERLY LACKING IN NORMAL HUMAN COMPASSION, TRUMP HAD NOWAY OF ANTICIPATI­NG HOW HIS BARBAROUS POLICYWOUL­D LOOK TO ORDINARY CITIZENS.
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