Toronto Star

Could Trump truly be mentally unstable?

- Bob Hepburn Bob Hepburn’s column appears Thursday. bhepburn@thestar.ca

As the long U.S. presidenti­al election unfolded, I marvelled at Donald Trump’s bizarre and at times seemingly unhinged approach to campaignin­g.

Trump was unpredicta­ble, vulgar, volatile, nasty, petty and thin-skinned. His supporters knew he was a liar, narcissist, a possible misogynist and racist, xenophobic and a raging egotist.

They didn’t care. They voted for him anyway. It was a crazy ride, for sure. Now, I’m convinced he’s just crazy. Some disability advocates will likely criticize me for calling Trump crazy. They will rightly note that mental illness is a serious health issue that should not be taken lightly or trivialize­d.

But the evidence is growing that Trump is losing touch with reality, with his childlike actions and aberrant behaviour prompting more and more concerned mental health profession­als to speak up.

So worried are these experts about Trump that they are ignoring the socalled Goldwater Rule establishe­d in 1973 by the American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n. The rule declares it unethical to diagnose a person without examining them personally. The policy was instituted after more than 1,000 psychiatri­sts told a magazine that 1964 Republican candidate Barry Goldwater was mentally unfit to be president.

The question of Trump’s mental state is extremely important. That’s because an unstable, erratic president could wreak havoc around the world, spelling trouble not only for Americans, but for Canadians and people in every other country.

Like peeling an onion, Trump reveals a bit more of his mental state with each passing day.

Here’s a small sample of what he has said and done since his swearing-in:

He’s lied about the size of his inaugurati­on crowd, failing to separate fantasy from reality.

He’s staged a 75-minute press conference where he even berated pro-Trump reporters.

Out of the blue at 6:30 a.m. on a Saturday morning, he tweeted the claim that former president Barack Obama wiretapped Trump Tower in New York during the election.

He has raged at staffers, refused to shake German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s hand during a photo session and instead sat glumly like a petulant little boy.

This week was no exception. On Monday, he was tweeting as FBI director James Comey was testifying before a congressio­nal hearing into possible links between the Trump campaign team and Russian authoritie­s. It was crazy, with Comey able to discuss Trump’s tweets as the FBI boss sat in the hearing room.

Earlier this week, Deepak Chopra, who trained as an endocrinol­ogist and is now one of the world’s best-known alternativ­e medicine promoters, asked Trump in a series of tweets to “please submit to a psychiatri­c and neurologic­al evaluation to restore our confidence.”

In a tweet, Chopra said: “I say this with trepidatio­n. Is @POTUS brain impaired? If so what does this mean for the future of the world? What can we do? God bless.”

Last month, John Gartner, a psychologi­st who works in Baltimore and New York, warned that Trump was “dangerousl­y mentally ill.”

Gartner, who has never examined Trump in person, claims Trump suffers “malignant narcissism,” which includes such things as paranoia, sadism, egocentris­m, grandiosit­y and a lack of conscience. Gartner also helped an online petition that has been signed by 40,000 U.S. mental health profession­als in less than a month.

The petition calls for Trump to be “removed from office” and says he “manifests a serious mental illness that renders him psychologi­cally incapable of competentl­y dischargin­g the duties of President of the United States.”

At the same time, 35 psychiatri­sts, psychologi­sts and social workers signed a letter to the New York Times saying Trump’s “speech and actions demonstrat­e an inability to tolerate views different from his own, leading to rage reactions,” adding this “grave emotional instabilit­y” made him “incapable of serving safely as president.”

Despite the growing evidence, though, some anti-Trump observers still believe he isn’t actually crazy. Instead, they insist he’s a brilliant — yet evil — manipulato­r who knows exactly what he’s doing and why. They also suggest Trump could be suffering a mental disorder but still be fit to serve.

I’d argue he’s both mentally unstable and evil — and it could get worse.

Clearly, he has been unable to make the transition from candidate to president.

He remains reckless, outrageous and hungry for attention.

And he has been blocked and frustrated at almost every major turn since entering the White House. He’s isolated and looks quite foolish because of his baseless Obama tweet and the congressio­nal investigat­ion into his campaign’s possible collusion with Russia.

Given all those issues and pressures, a speedy recovery from his mental problems seems unlikely.

An unstable, erratic president could wreak havoc around the world, spelling trouble not only for Americans, but for Canadians

 ?? DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Some mental health profession­als have ignored standard ethics to express their concerns about U.S. President Donald Trump.
DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO Some mental health profession­als have ignored standard ethics to express their concerns about U.S. President Donald Trump.
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