Trump Derangement Syndrome

What is T.D.S.?  Why do people get T.D.S.?  

Humorously, we may be seeing E.D.S. or M.D.S. (Elon Musk).  

Back to the question: why do people get so crazy about Trump?  Clarify: why do White people get like that?  Do Black people get it?  No; an increasing chunk of those Usicans is starting to go Republican.  Do Hispanic people get it?  No; the U.S. citizens and no the non-U.S. citizens don't.  They don't like Trump often, but they don't approach the issue with the eerie emotional sickness that Whites do.  

Why do White people get T.D.S.?  For the same reason they gradually begin to worship a Middle Eastern rabbi as an invisible, all powerful deity (Christianized): their craving for universalism.  As we said before, they are like an addict being willing to do anything for another hit.  That is why Christianity--the universalist underpinning of its philosophy--was perfectly designed to break open Europe.  

Are people who get weird like that swayed by logic?  By facts?  By mountains of evidence?  It's been over a hundred years, over four generations, since the U.S. version of slavery was ended.  There is no possible explanation for why standardized test scores are still different.  People have spent decades coming up with and supporting various theories that explain away why such a difference happen; they're now practically at nanoaggressions.  There's an accusation that racism is an excuse, and it's levied at people who personally know that they are not themselves racist.  At all.  They want Black employees, Black friends, etc., and they know that about themselves.  The imaginary thing foisted on them was the attempt at saying racism was unknown, expressed by Whites automatically, without them even knowing it.  That's nonsense, and it's nonsense where people knew that wasn't something they'd even accidentally expressed.  Their truest, most private, most genuinely felt, feelings, and the story about why things are really universalist is still there.  

What is this insanity like?  Can you think of any other imaginary things that are invisible, where you're supposed to believe things happened based on not evidence, not on observation, but just imagining?  Christianity.  

The narratives of Christianity affected culture.  The foundation of many Santa Claus stories is that faith is good.  The idea that it is good to believe in things which someone else imagined if they are popular is as directly inverse to what you learn as a newborn.  Thinking of something does not make it appear or disappear.  If you want something to drink, you can imagine that thing really hard, even a trillion trillion time, and it does not matter.  In the same way, if you want something scary to go away, you can imagine that thing going away as much as you like, but the real occurrence of the thing going away--of the matter affecting life--is what matters.  Imagination is just: imagination.  Jesus was the saver of people from matter--the Christ--because of that.  Christianity is fundamentally about matter not mattering; a philosophy about just that.  It really is savior-ity!  He's named Christ because he is the savior!    

A video was just shown where a mother lamented how the local school board voted 16 to 0 to have gender studied classes given to little kids, even after checking with parents in the community and finding out people didn’t want that.  What does that sound like?  Exactly.  Christianity yet again.  When the Middle Eastern philosophy infected Europe, one of the most troubling things that happened was that under the auspices of it being good, children were taken away from parent(s) regularly to be taught about this official wise man from the Middle East.  You think that things have changed, but they have not: Christianity rules.

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