SELECT LANGUAGE BELOW

Trump’s Political Opponents Suffering Guilt, Uncertainty, Despair 

President Donald Trump's political opponents have tried to jail him, made him bankrupt, removed him from the vote, rendering him politically irrelevant by introducing a partisan committee to investigate January 6th; Inflammatory rhetoric has created a ripe environment for two assassination attempts. Health experts say they are currently struggling with health issues.

Doctors say problems include anxiety, uncertainty, despair, guilt, depression, insomnia, sadness, fear and panic.

“There's an element of confusion right now,” Andrea Boniol, professor of psychology at Georgetown University. I said axios. “The feeling of not knowing what's coming and not being able to control what's coming is really difficult in a stress response.”

Trump took immediate action after taking the oath of office in January. In just three weeks, he signed 75 executive orders, memos and declarations, surpassing his previous president. Read more about these actions here.

When Trump took action quickly, Democrats enlisted psychologists to help them deal with it. Republicans laughed at the move.

“As humans, we don't love uncertainty,” said Boniol, who watches patients in Washington, DC. “It's something we don't tend to endure well, and when we're worried, it's unbearable.”

Dr. Glenn Burnett, a physician from Wyoming, told journalist Mark Halperin on Thursday that health issues “have a lot to do with Donald Trump and his fears of what he is about to do and what is happening,” he told journalist Mark Halperin. There's one,” he said.

“We deal with all sorts of medical issues related to depression, anxiety, insomnia, chest pain, chest pressure, and more,” he said. “And people are [sic] – There is real fear, panic. ”

Burnett said he would advise patients to turn off their computers and televisions to restore mental health.

“I think we can bring a lot of things in front of the human brain like Peters. They say, 'I can't keep up.'

“We are at an unprecedented time when so many collective stressors are ongoing and the rapid fires of media coverage of these policy changes. It is the broad collective stress. It's just increasing the number of people,” University of California Irvine University's Coping Research Institute.

October, Halperin said that if Trump wins the election, it would be “The cause of the biggest mental health crisis in the country's history. ”

He told Tucker Carlson:

I think tens of millions of people will question their connections with their people, their connections with other people, their futures and their children's vision for the future. And I think it would require a huge amount of access to mental health professionals. I think it will lead to trauma at work…I think you have alcohol addiction. I have a broken marriage.

Wendell Hussebo is a political reporter for Breitbart News and a former RNC Warroom analyst. He is the author of the politics of slavery morality. Follow Wendell “x” @wendellhusebø or on The true society @wendellhusebo.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
Telegram
WhatsApp

Related News