TRUMP’S OBSERVABLE PERSONALITY TRAITS
While Donald Trump does not exhibit observable personality traits that qualify as mental health disorders, professionals have identified the following traits based on his public behavior:
High Extraversion: Outgoing, energized by crowds, thrives in spotlight (e.g., rallies, unscripted remarks).
Low Agreeableness: Confrontational, low empathy, uses insults (“losers,” “fake news”), zero-sum style.
Low Conscientiousness: Impulsive, undisciplined (e.g., Twitter rants, norm-breaking), low task focus.
Dominant/Ambitious: Controlling, self-serving, shades truth for advantage (bordering aggressive/exploitative).
Malignant narcissism: A particularly severe form of narcissism that mixes narcissistic personality traits with antisocial behavior, paranoia, and often sadistic enjoyment of hurting others. People with this pattern may be grandiose, ruthless, and vindictive, showing little remorse for the harm they cause.
Sociopathy: Often used as a lay term overlapping with antisocial personality disorder: a long‑term pattern of violating others’ rights, breaking rules, and disregarding social norms. Common features include chronic lying, impulsivity, aggression, and lack of guilt or remorse after harming others.
Sociopathy/Paranoia: Sociopathy is the antisocial pattern described above—chronic rule‑breaking, deceit, and disregard for others’ rights. Paranoia: excessive suspiciousness and mistrust, including the belief that others are out to harm, undermine, or humiliate them, often leading to hostile or retaliatory behavior.
Extreme impulsivity: A strong tendency to act quickly without thinking through consequences, with behavior that is risky, poorly planned, or inappropriate to the situation. This can show up as angry outbursts, reckless spending, substance use, or sudden decisions that repeatedly create problems in work, relationships, or the law.
Grandiosity: An exaggerated sense of one’s own importance, superiority, or specialness, often combined with fantasies of unlimited success, power, or brilliance. Grandiose people expect admiration and may react with rage or contempt when they are not treated as exceptional.
Lack of empathy: Difficulty or unwillingness to recognize or care about other people’s feelings, needs, or perspectives. In a pathological form, this allows someone to exploit, manipulate, or harm others with little or no guilt.
Pathological lying: A chronic, often compulsive pattern of lying that goes beyond ordinary self‑serving lies, sometimes even when the truth would work as well. These lies may serve to maintain a grandiose self‑image, avoid responsibility, or manipulate and control others.
Vindictiveness: A strong, persistent drive to “get even” or punish those perceived as having slighted or criticized them. Can involve grudges, retaliation, and using power or influence to damage others’ reputations, opportunities, or relationships.
Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD): A diagnosable personality disorder marked by pervasive grandiosity, need for admiration, and lack of empathy starting in early adulthood. Typical features include entitlement, exploiting others, envy, and intense sensitivity to criticism beneath a confident or arrogant exterior.
Sadism: Deriving pleasure or satisfaction from inflicting physical or psychological pain, humiliation, or suffering on others. In a psychological context, sadistic traits can include cruelty, enjoyment of others’ distress, and deliberate, calculated harm.
Emotional fragility/immaturity: A tendency to have very brittle self‑esteem and intense emotional reactions to perceived slights, criticism, or rejection. Emotionally immature people may swing quickly from confidence to rage, shame, or despair, and may need constant reassurance or admiration to feel stable.
Each of these traits which will be discussed in detail throughout this website.
If any of these traits were evident in a family member, friend or coworker to the same degree that they are evident in Donald Trump, it would be a matter of great concern and perhaps cause for intervention with mental health professionals. Designing and implementing a workable strategy for intervention for President Trump is a very sensitive proposition to say the least.
Who would take the initiative for such an intervention? Surely not his family, friends, coworkers, business associates, or political allies! If any of these people cared enough and had courage enough, they would have initiated an intervention long ago. If they haven’t done it yet, they are not likely do so now — even though the need for such an intervention has amplified greatly in Trump’s second term as President. Who is left to do the right thing for President Trump and America?
The only other logical body that has the resources and concern to intervene in the matter of President Trump’s mental is an independent, anonymous, courageous, thoughtful, non-partisan/bi-partisan, caring, ad hoc assortment of true patriots.
Initiating an intervention of this scale and consequence is a matter of extreme sensitivity. It must be done anonymously by individual true patriots — not as an organized effort. It cannot be promoted or revealed as an intervention in public spaces. It must be covert, sustained and thoughtful. Casual, emotional patriots need not apply for this duty.
Candidates for this dangerous, patriotic offensive begin their training by reading this website. Then, if they believe they want to go further, they will send an email to truepatriotsusa@proton.me. (See CONTACT SITE AUTHOR) in right sidebar.