“Political language … is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.” George Orwell in Politics and the English Language, 1946.
In the closing month of the federal election for President,
I think it is useful to consider my previous comments on the Goldwater Rule and Does the Insurrection End The Debate on the Goldwater Rule. The rule was promulgated by the American
Psychiatric Association to prevent casual comments about psychiatric
diagnoses of candidates when they had not been examined and given permission
for those diagnostic evaluations.
I have always been in favor of this rule largely because it
is outside the scope of psychiatric practice and like many forensic settings
there can be a prominent conflict of interest based on political
affiliations. It also turns the
diagnostic process on its head in that it is no longer used for the benefit of
the patient, but the benefit or lack of benefit falls to third parties. And finally, whenever psychiatric diagnosis is
used in the press or other forms of common usage they lose their real meaning.
They are no longer useful observations but, in many cases, become ad hominem
attacks.
I have not counted the number of comments about narcissistic
personality disorder, but it has grown significantly since the 2020
Presidential election and several commentaries that Trump had that
disorder. Antisocial personality
disorder and psychopathy (a trait rather than a formal disorder) have also been
used to describe him. Since the terms
became more visible, they have been widely applied. You Tube and TikTok videos
suggest how to make the diagnosis yourself or at least recognize it. They describe typical speech patterns and how
you should respond. Many describe the red
flags. After watching this material
none of it seems useful to a psychiatrist who makes the diagnosis and provides
treatment.
There seems to be a significant overlap with people who are
difficult to get along with – often in asymmetrical roles like
employer-employee. Do the conflicts that
typically happen in these situations rise to the level of a psychiatric
diagnosis? Do conflicts and
misunderstanding that occur in other interpersonal relationships rise to that
level? Probably not. But there is a
whole lot of videos encouraging people to make that diagnosis.
The original arguments for making a psychiatric diagnosis on
former President Trump were basically threefold. First, that it was a professional
obligation. Psychiatrists were obliged
to warn the American people about the dangers of any diagnosis basically as a
public service. There are several
problems with that approach – the most significant being that diagnoses are
associated with a wide range of behavior of varying severity and not predictive
of anything specific. It is unlikely
that any diagnosis would have predicted the wide variety of significant
problems that Trump exhibited following the election. The other problem of
course is that it removes the Constitutional threshold for action by the
Cabinet and replaces it with a much lower threshold – the psychiatric
diagnosis. It is basically the reason
why people do not undergo civil commitment or guardianship proceedings based on
a diagnosis. The law requires obvious
behavior that can be observed by any lay person. The 25th Amendment
standard is “ a written declaration that the President is unable to discharge
the powers and duties of his office” from either the President himself or a “majority
of either the principal officers of the executive department or of such other
body as Congress…” The determination is
strictly based on lay observation and not medical or psychiatric evaluations. Second that it provided additional
information for voters that they could use in making their decision. And finally, the somewhat grandiose
assumption that it may be a superior method than the judgment of officials mentioned
in the 25th Amendment. All of those assumptions have failed at
multiple levels.
Rather than be concerned about Trump’s diagnosis this
may be a question of voter capacity or competence. In other words, is the voter using available
information to make a rational choice? And can the available information be analyzed rationally? That requires more than just stating a preference. It requires a rationale for casting the vote.
This is also a difficult measure because there is a value system baked in to
some of these decisions. For example,
some votes are based on single issues or traditions like always voting for
members of a certain party. Some votes are based on issues like abortion, guns,
and censorship even when it is clear the results have been worsening medical
care for women, gun extremism, and book banning that includes shutting down
some school libraries. The value system can also include extremism like guns, racism
and antisemitism. Even though most
reasonable people would agree those values have no place in modern society –
they do not disqualify people who value those ideas and vote on that basis. All of this illustrates why voting is a
semi-rational process. On that basis you can also ignore all the negatives that
members of the same party or Cabinet say about a candidate’s intellect and
character.
The only inconsistency in the law that occurs is that
capacity to vote is considered in guardianship and conservatorship
decisions by the court. In my experience
I have seen the county forms, but in the hundreds of assessments that I have
done – capacity or competency to vote was never a dimension that I commented
on. Associated capacities for entering
marriage and contracts were also typically listed but not commented on. In practice it may be that people who are
under guardianship or conservatorship are not offered a trip to the polls or a
contract but I cannot say for sure.
The polls themselves handle the issue like everything else
in the law and politics as a contentious issue.
For example, these are direct quotes from Minnesota
Statutes regarding election procedures:
“Mental capacity is a question of fact for judges of
election.” Op. 82, Atty. Gen. Rep. 1942, October 22, 1942. p. 26
and
“Provision of Minnesota Constitution prohibiting a person
under guardianship from voting at any election in the state did not violate the
Equal Protection
Clauses of the U.S. and Minnesota Constitutions, since
pursuant to Minnesota statute, persons under guardianship were presumed to
retain the right to vote, and the constitutional prohibition against voting
based on guardianship status applied only when there had been an individualized
judicial finding of incapacity to vote. Minnesota Voters Alliance v. Ritchie,
890 F. Supp.2d 1106 (D. Minn. 2012).” p.
43
The county auditor shall mail a notice indicating the
person's name, address, precinct, and polling place to any registered voter
whose civil rights have been restored after a felony conviction; who has been
removed from under a guardianship of the person under which the person did not
retain the right to vote; or who has been restored to capacity by the court
after being ineligible to vote. The notice must require that it be returned if
not deliverable”. P. 386
I have never heard of a single situation where an election
judge challenged a voter based on their mental capacity and do not understand
how that would happen unless they were exhibiting signs of severe mental
illness and were disruptive.
All these considerations point to the fact that voting and
politics in the United States and elsewhere is a semi-rational process. It was designed that way by the founders. There are minimal qualifications to run for
office - basically age, citizenship, and in some cases residency requirements. It
is interesting that you cannot vote in many states if you are convicted of a
felony but that does not disqualify you from running for President. The top issues for most voters are not rational
decisions. I wrote a recent post on the
fact that the President has little to do with the economy and an academic
analysis showing Democrats were much better for the economy could not be
explained rationally. That type of analysis can be applied to any of the top
issues that voters are considering. There is one candidate who has been severely
criticized for intellectual and character defects that include ignoring an
attempt to overthrow the US government, lying for 4 years about an election
outcome, lying more recently about disaster relief, and being convicted of multiple
felonies. A significant number of voters and politicians in his own party elect
to ignore these facts. On the other hand
members of his own party have endorsed the opposition candidate and actively campaigned
for her. Forty of 44 cabinet and staff members of his own administration have
said he should never be in the White House again.
This election exposes all the ugliness of American democracy
that was previously not discussed. All
it took was a candidate who was more focused on himself and a few people at the
highest income levels, disingenuous antiestablishment rhetoric, a lot of name calling, and some active obstructionism to real solutions.
My guess is the Founders of the Republic – did not see that coming.
George Dawson, MD, DFAPA
References:
1: 2024 MINNESOTA
ELECTION LAWS Office of the Minnesota Secretary of State, Elections Division. Annotations
provided by Minnesota Attorney General.
Accessed on October 11, 2024. https://www.sos.state.mn.us/media/5067/minnesota-election-laws-statutes-and-rules.pdf
Graphics Credit:
1: Trump Photo: Gage Skidmore from Surprise, AZ, United
States of America, CC BY-SA 2.0
<https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0>, via Wikimedia
Commons" https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Donald_Trump_(52250930172)_(cropped).jpg
2: Harris Photo: Lawrence Jackson, Kamala Harris Vice
Presidential Portrait. Public domain,
via Wikimedia Commons" https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Kamala_Harris_Vice_Presidential_Portrait.jpg
George, I continue to enjoy and benefit from your thoughts, even though we don't work together any more. Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteMany thanks - I am also open to suggestions about what to write about.
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