Apparently, this Tweet led to an NY Post and UK Daily Mail article.
According to clinical psychologist Suzanne Lachmann, who was a consultant for the NYC Fire Department, she once met Trump at a fashion event and when she complemented him he said:
‘Why would I want to talk to you? Look at all the beautiful women in here.
I wouldn’t let you s–k my d–k.’”
Excerpt from NY Post, the city tabloid owned by Rupert Murdoch:
Lachmann told The Post she spotted the famous developer standing alone at a Missoni fashion event — filled with models — on the heels of his 1992 divorce from first-wife Ivana.
She approached The Donald to introduce herself as “a neighbor,” and tell him she enjoyed his recent interview on the Howard Stern show.
“He interrupted me and said, ‘Why would I want to talk to you? Look at all the beautiful women in here. I wouldn’t let you s–k my d–k.’”
Stunned, she said, she walked away without a response.
Lachmann described the incident in a March 2017 article posted by Psychology Today.
The conservative NY Post doesn’t address what the psychologist said. Instead, like those who attack psychiatrists for breaking the Goldwater rule when they express their clinical opinion that Trump’s psychopathology makes him unfit for office, they attack the appropriateness of her saying what she said:
Lachmann may have violated the FDNY’s social media policy, which states: “Employees who identify themselves as FDNY employees, or hold positions with the FDNY that are known to the general public … should make a clear disclaimer that the statements and views expressed … do not reflect the views of the FDNY.”
This is from the U.K. Daily Mail which credits Lachmann in their headline as a high profile clinical psychologist.
Part of Dr. Lachmann’s duty with the FDNY was to evaluate fire fighters for fitness to return to duty when they were taken off line due to mental duress. Of course she interviewed them in person, and bases her assessment of Trump on numerous almost uncountable observations. In this she is like all the other mental health professionals who have decided they had an ethical duty to warn the public about Trump’s dangerous psychopathology which is often described as malignant narcissism
Here are some excerpts from Lachmann’s Psychology Today article which was written in March, 2017. That was then. This is now, and Trump has demonstrated his psychopathology more times than anyone can count since then.
- When you have the power and funds to make your visions real, your delusions build momentum, becoming more intractable and toxic. It is enough to make anyone believe they are god, or god-like, and invincible.
- He demonstrates little to no capacity for insight or empathy, and seems unable to understand the ramifications of impulsive actions and communications, as stated in a 60 Minutes interview when Trump said, “When I think I’m right, nothing bothers me.”
- In nearly every forum, President Trump's ability to exercise self-control evaporates when anyone, especially the press, breaks through his rigorously protected delusional system by challenging him.
- Grandiosity is the most prevalent of President Trump’s delusions. In claiming to know more than the intelligence community does, with regard to Russian hacking, Trump remarked: "I don’t have to be told, you know, I’m, like, a smart person. I don’t have to be told the same thing and the same words every single day for the next eight years,” continuing on that he knew “things that other people don’t know.”
- The more access the public has to seeing President Trump in both scripted and unscripted situations, the more obvious it becomes that there is a marked deterioration in Mr. Trump’s cognitive functioning. The person who holds this office must have the mental capacity and endurance to withstand the pressure, responsibility, and exposure that comes with this role. Mr. Trump cannot uphold the duties of this office because even in his first 100 days, his insight and judgment have disintegrated to the point at which his public statements, accusations and tweets seem delusional. Delusions are fiercely protected by their holders.
- His distorted thinking, disorganized conduct, and erratic, impulsive behavior, combined with his fixation on his own importance directly imperils our safety as citizens of the United States and he must be removed from the line of duty.
Note again, that this was written in when Trump had been president for about 100 days.
A longer similar version of this article was published on Lachmann’s website in March 0f 2017.
Excerpts:
The President of the United States has a psychiatric disorder that requires his immediate removal from office. Thus far, many psychiatric practitioners have noted President Trump’s erratic, impulsive, paranoid, self-consumed thought patterns, communications, and behaviors and are increasingly alarmed by his altered judgment. He demonstrates an inability to grasp details, and an insistence that his beliefs, no matter how skewed or inconsistent, are what is real and true, despite significant and extensive evidence to the contrary.
Like most psychiatric disorders, tense situations exacerbate symptoms. Being President of the United States means the stakes cannot be higher. The person who holds this office must have the mental capacity and endurance to withstand the pressure, responsibility, publicity and fame that come with this role. Donald J. Trump cannot uphold the duties of this office because he appears to have a Delusional Disorder. In its most heightened state, it grossly impairs judgment, insight, and the capacity to understand ramifications of impulsive actions and communications (crucial for anyone in a position of leadership).
………..
Clinicians have identified Mr. Trump as being Pathologically Narcissistic. Narcissistic Personality Disorder (DSM-V code 301.81). His level of narcissism intensifies his distorted belief system – his delusions about himself and the world. Mr. Trump’s inability to control himself from talking about himself admiringly in so many inappropriate situations, ranging from Twitter outbursts to overstating his inauguration crowd size while standing in front of the CIA’s wall of stars honoring members who have died in the line of duty, are just a few examples of his level of mental illness. His narcissistic personality further pollutes his thinking and further strains his grasp on reality. As such, Donald Trump’s personality disorder exacerbates his delusional beliefs, and vice versa.
President Trump’s distorted thinking, disorganized conduct, and erratic, impulsive behavior, combined with his fixation on his own importance and demonstrated desire to seek revenge directly imperils our safety as citizens of the United States.
Addendum:
It turns out that the original article was removed from Psychology Today because they thought it violated the Goldwater rule:
Dr. Lachmann,
You are probably already aware of this, but access to your excellent (and critically important) article, “Why Donald J. Trump is Unfit to be President,” has been blocked on Psychology Today’s website. It has also been removed from Google search when using the terms ‘trump’ and ‘psychology today’. Had I not read it the day after it was published I would probably have never known about it.
Was this done because of political pressure?
-
Suzanne Lachmann
Thanks for asking, Ed – They adhere to the Goldwater rule, so my language was too specific. i am in the process of toning down that version, but please pass the version you find here along. i believe that the duty to warn the public because he is a direct danger to others trumps Goldwater, and Goldwater is terribly outdated. but, of all arguments to pick, that one is the least of my worries
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Monday, Jun 18, 2018 · 3:17:52 PM +00:00 · HalBrown
More publicity:
Excerpt:
Lachmann’s allegation of Trump’s crude and offensive insult toward her dates from an era when, according to accounts women who have made serious allegations of sexual misconduct against him, Trump appears to have been particularly aggressive in his mistreatment of women, as The Guardian recounted in a compilation of all 20 sexual assault or harassment allegations made against Trump during the 2016 presidential campaign.
Seven of those 20 incidents are alleged to have occurred in the 1990s, such as account from the early 1990s — around the same period that Trump would have made his crude remark to Lachmann — from photographer Kristin Anderson, who says that Trump sat next to her in a fashionable New York nightclub and without speaking or even looking at her, reached his hand under her miniskirt and touched her genitalia. Read The Inquisitr account of that incident at the previous link.
Also on these websites:
Angle News | Viralmount | Zerohedge
and YouTube: