From: AlleyCat <katt@gmail.com>
Newsgroups: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,can.politics,alt.politics.trump,alt.politics.liberalism,alt.politics.democrats,alt.politics.usa.republican
Subject: OMFG! - Is Rudy Really THIS Psychotic? - It WAs a Blatant Lie in 2017 and It's STILL A Blatant Lie
Date: Sun, 28 Apr 2024 11:39:34 -0500
Organization: AlleyCat Computing, Inc.
WHY can't Rudy stop lying? (see bottom)
On Sun, 28 Apr 2024 09:18:33 -0700, Rudy Canoza lied when he said...
> since 2017, when I demolished you over the *fact* that Trump removed the MLK bust from the Oval Office.
Nope. You lie again, basement-dweller.
Did Trump Remove a MLK Bust from the Oval Office?
A Time magazine reporter erroneously tweeted that a bust of civil rights icon
Martin Luther King, Jr. was removed from display in the Oval Office by Donald
Trump. - snopes.com
Claim: Donald Trump had a bust of Marin Luther King, Jr. removed from display
in the Oval Office on his first day in the White House.
https://i.imgur.com/r9yQWlu.png
Newly inaugurated U.S. President Donald Trump and his staff began moving into
the White House on 20 January 2017, trailed by reporters and photographers
documenting Trump's first day in office. One of those reporters, Zeke Miller of
Time magazine, remarked upon entering the Oval Office that a Bush-era bust of
Winston Churchill that had been replaced with one of Martin Luther King, Jr. by
President Obama was once again on prominent display:
https://twitter.com/ZekeJMiller/status/822599949711998977
It appeared to Miller that the bust of MLK was now gone, an observation he also
tweeted, though it proved to be erroneous. A short while after first mentioning
the apparent bust exchange, Miller corrected himself:
Correction: The MLK bust is still in the Oval Office. It was obscured by an
agent and door. - Zeke Miller
https://twitter.com/ZekeJMiller/status/822613421288026112
Tweeting again: WH aide confirms the MLK bust is still there. I looked for it
in the oval 2x and didn't see it. My apologies to my colleagues - Zeke Miller
https://twitter.com/ZekeJMiller/status/822620050653937664
Meanwhile, word had gotten around to incoming White House Press Secretary Sean
Spicer that the whereabouts of the MLK bust were in question. In response, he
tweeted photographic proof that it was still there:
https://www.snopes.com/uploads/2017/01/spicer-tweet-1.png
Spicer also cited Miller's mistake as an example of the danger of not checking
one's facts:
https://www.snopes.com/uploads/2017/01/spicer-tweet-2.png
President Trump had the last word on the incident, citing it as an example of
"media dishonesty" during a 21 January speech at the Central Intelligence
Agency in Langley, Virginia:
So Zeke, from Time magazine, writes a story about, I took down - I would never
do that, because I have great respect for Dr. Martin Luther King. But this is
how dishonest the media is. Now, big story. The retraction was like, where?
For the record, the MLK bust dust-up never attained the status of a "big
story" in the media. Zeke Miller corrected his error - via Twitter - within an
hour of making it - via Twitter. There was never any published story to
retract.
You're such a fucking liar... no wonder you couldn't keep a job.
============================================================================
AlleyCat is one of the several people who dominate Rudy on a daily basis,
keeping their bootheels on his little pencil neck to the amusement of all.
There Are Several Theories For Why Rudy Can't Stop Lying
Rudy's An Undeserved Narcissist
Narcissists are often pathological liars, because they simply don't care about
the truth.
They prefer to tell lies and gain control over people than be honest.
Sometimes, compulsive liars are highly impulsive people who struggle to take
the time to think things through and tell the truth.
Lying doesn't necessarily make you a bad person, but it could be a sign of
something more sinister.
By the age of three or four, we all start to lie. At this point in our brain's
development, we learn that we have an incredibly versatile and powerful tool at
our disposal - our language - and we can use it to actually play with reality
and affect the outcome of what's happening.
Sooner or later we learn that lying is "bad," and we shouldn't really do it.
But if Jim Carey's "Liar Liar" taught us anything, it's that this just isn't
feasible. We all have to lie sometimes.
But some people are pathological liars, meaning they can't stop spreading
misinformation about themselves and others. The psychological reasons for why
some people are this way is a bit of a mystery, but in the third edition of the
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, pathological lying is a
disorder in its own right, as well as a symptom of personality disorders like
psychopathy and narcissism.
"I think it comes from a defect in the neurological wiring in terms of what
causes us to have compassion and empathy," psychiatrist Judith Orloff, author
of "The Empath's Survival Guide," told Business Insider. "Because narcissists,
sociopaths, and psychopaths have what's called empathy deficient disorder,
meaning they don't feel empathy in the way we would."
The Truth Doesn't Matter to Narcissists
When you don't care about other people, lies don't seem to matter. A lack of
empathy essentially means a lack of conscience, which is a hard concept to
grasp for a lot of people.
"When they lie it doesn't hurt them in the same way it would hurt us," Orloff
said. "So many people get into relationships with pathological liars, or just
can't understand why they're lying, because they're trying to fit these people
into the ordinary standards of what it means to be empathetic."
But they don't fit. In fact, they may not even realize they are lying half the
time, because they're not conscious of it. Orloff said they actually believe
they are telling the truth a lot of the time. It's not so much about the fact
itself, she said, as it is about wanting to have power over somebody.
This is extremely dangerous for highly sensitive people, because they attract
narcissists. Then when they see someone is lying, they try and figure it out,
or blame themselves. Once the lies start, it can end with the victim being
gaslighted, which is essentially when they are told over and over again that
their version of reality is incorrect, and they begin to believe the warped
truth of the abuser.
"The great power of relationships is when you can tell the truth to one
another, and trust each other, and be authentic - and with pathological liars
you can't trust them," Orloff said. "You can't base your life around them. It's
like a moral deficit, and there's no accountability. Someone who is a
pathological liar will not say I'm sorry for doing it. They will say it's your
fault."
The only way to escape the clutches of a pathological liar is to be strong
enough to say "no this is not my fault, this is not ringing true to me, so I
can't really trust you," she said.
Unfortunately, people tend to doubt themselves, because the lies can escalate
subtly. It may start with a small white lie, and a few months later the
victim's life with be a mess of confusion because of the web of tall tales that
has been woven.
"If somebody lies, don't try and make an excuse about it," Orloff said. "A lie
is a lie. And if you bring it up to the person and they say it's your fault, or
no it didn't happen, just know there's something very wrong going on."
Psychologist Linda Blair, an author of many psychology books, told Business
Insider some compulsive liars are simply too impulsive to tell the truth. The
impulsive-reflective scale is ingrained in our genes, and it's very hard for
someone highly impulsive to take the time to think things through, just as it
is a challenge for a reflective person to jump into something head first.
"If you're an impulsive person, it's really hard to break the habit, because
you have this terrible feeling inside you that you have to sort things out
right now," Blair said. "So when it comes to your head, you just say it. That
doesn't mean you necessarily lie, but it's a little harder for you to stop from
lying, more than it is for someone who's more reflective."
Pathological lying and narcissism aren't synonymous, they just sometimes go
hand in hand. In other cases, compulsive liars just might not have the capacity
to stop themselves blurting things out. And Blair said they just need to learn
to control their urges and compulsions. Their lies don't necessarily come from
a bad place.
"I don't think it's something they know how to deal with," she said. "We think
probably it has something to do with actual brain function and the way some
people's brains work, which makes it much harder for them to understand the
effect it will have on other people... We think, but we just don't know yet
for sure."