Tuesday, October 25, 2016

Trump Anxiety - 2016 elections and mental health - News Review

Trump Anxiety In Brief

Trump Anxiety



2016 elections and mental health

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It's Actually Fine for Doctors to Speculate About Trump's Mental Health - Slate Magazine
Wed, 12 Oct 2016 23:24:15 GMT

Slate Magazine



It's Actually Fine for Doctors to Speculate About Trump's Mental Health
Slate Magazine
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump holds a campaign rally on October 10, 2016 in Wilkes ... While do-it-yourself diagnosing of a certain presidential candidate has become a cottage industry in this electionthe consensus about Donald Trump ...

2016 elections and mental health - Minneapolis Star Tribune

elections - Google News




2016 elections and mental health
Minneapolis Star Tribune
The choice of voting for a candidate transcends politics. A presidential candidate represents a dominant set of beliefs, social interests and philosophies; however, in the contestation of major concerns, the rest are often ignored. Thus, here I take ...

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The Opinion Pages | OP-ED COLUMNIST





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A Trump campaign event in Ohio last week. CreditDamon Winter/The New York Times

We’ve had a tutorial on worry this year. The election campaign isn’t really about policy proposals, issue solutions or even hope. It’s led by two candidates who arouse gargantuan anxieties, fear and hatred in their opponents.
As a result, some mental health therapists are reporting that three-quarters of their patients are mentioning significant election-related anxiety. An American Psychological Association study found that more than half of all Americans are very or somewhat stressed by this race.
Of course, there are good and bad forms of anxiety — the kind that warns you about legitimate dangers and the kind that spirals into dark and self-destructive thoughts.
In his book “Worrying,” Francis O’Gorman notes how quickly the good kind of anxiety can slide into the dark kind. “Worry is circular,” he writes. It may start with a concrete anxiety: Did I lock the back door? Is this headache a stroke? “And it has a nasty habit of taking off on its own, of getting out of hand, of spawning thoughts that are related to the original worry and which make it worse.”
That’s what’s happening this year. Anxiety is coursing through American society. It has become its own destructive character on the national stage.
Worry alters the atmosphere of the mind. It shrinks your awareness of the present and your ability to enjoy what’s around you right now. It cycles possible bad futures around in your head and forces you to live in dreadful future scenarios, 90 percent of which will never come true.
Pretty soon you are seeing the world through a dirty windshield. Worry dims every sunrise and amplifies mistrust. A mounting tide of anxiety makes people angrier about society and more darkly pessimistic about the possibility of changing it. Spiraling worry is the perverted underside of rationality.
This being modern polarized America, worry seems to come in two flavors.
Educated-class anxiety can often be characterized as a feeling overabundant of options without a core of convicting purpose. It’s worth noting that rich countries are more anxious than poorer ones. According to the World Health Organization, 18.2 percent of Americans report chronic anxiety while only 3.3 percent of Nigerians do.
Today, when you hear affluent people express worry, it’s usually related to the fear of missing out, and the dizziness of freedom. The affluent often feel besieged by busyness and plagued by a daily excess of choices. At the same time, there is a pervasive cosmic unease, the anxiety that they don’t quite understand the meaning of life, or have not surrendered to some all-encompassing commitment that would bring coherence and peace.
Many affluent people use money to buy privacy, and so cut themselves off from both the deep relationships that could give them purpose and the neighborly support systems that could hold them up if things go south.
This election has also presented members of the educated class with an awful possibility: that their pleasant social strata may rest on unstable molten layers of anger, bigotry and instability. How could this guy Trump get even 40 percent of the votes? America may be not quite the country we thought it was.
Among the less educated, anxiety flows from and inflames a growing sense that the structures of society are built for the exploitation of people like themselves. Everything is rigged; the rulers are malevolent and corrupt.
Last weekend’s “Black Jeopardy” skit on “Saturday Night Live” did a beautiful job of showing how this sensation overlaps among both progressive African-Americans and reactionary Trumpians.
It is a well-established fact that people who experience social exclusion have a tendency to slide toward superstitious and conspiratorial thinking. People who feel exploited by, and invisible to, those at the commanding heights of society are not going to worry if their candidate can’t pass a fact-check test. They just want someone who can share their exclusion and give them a better story.
Anxiety changes people. We’ve seen a level of thuggery this election cycle that is without precedent in recent American history. Some of the anti-Trump demonstrators seem more interested in violence than politics. Some of the Trumpians are savage.
David French wrote a shocking essay for National Review describing the appalling online abuse he suffered because of his anti-Trump stance. His anonymous assailants Photoshopped pictures of his daughter’s face in a gas chamber and left GIFs of grisly executions on his wife’s blog.
Some of the things that have made us vulnerable to this wave of anxiety are not going away — the narratives of fear, conspiracy and the immobilizing stress. America’s culture may be permanently changed for the worse.
But the answer to worry is the same as the answer to fear: direct action. If the next president starts enacting a slew of actual policies, then at least we can argue about concrete plans, rather than vague apocalyptic moods.
Furthermore, action takes us out of ourselves. Worry, like drama, is all about the self. As O’Gorman puts it, the worrier is the opposite of a lighthouse: “He doesn’t give out energy for the benefit of others. He absorbs energy at others’ cost.”

If you’re worrying, you’re spiraling into your own narcissistic pool. But concrete plans and actions thrust us into the daily fact of other people’s lives. This campaign will soon be over, and governing, thank God, will soon return.
Hakuna matata.
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Selected Links - added on 10.26.16

Election 2016: Politics affects campus issues - Yale Daily News (blog)
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Election 2016: Politics affects campus issues
Yale Daily News (blog)
While there was broad support for increasing mental health resources and improving Yale's career services, views on controversial issues pertaining to race and class were correlated with respondents' political ideologies. “I think these issues are at ...

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Because of #Election2016, Facebook, Twitter stink now - USA TODAY

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Because of #Election2016, Facebook, Twitter stink now
USA TODAY
“There are some countries where the election process is limited time wise. Ours is, too, to some extent but probably not enough,” said Kellams, medical director at Eskenazi Health Midtown Mental Health here. “It's taken a year out of our life, starting ...

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Why Trump Voters' 'Economic Anxiety' Isn't Just Secretly 'Racism' - Fortune

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Why Trump Voters' 'Economic Anxiety' Isn't Just Secretly 'Racism'
Fortune
Yet there may be a third explanation for what's moving Trump's voters: it's not economic anxiety or racial resentment, it's both. For that view, see The Populist Explosion, the new book by John B. Judis. Writing from the left, with a qualified ...

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Mental healthcare and the 2016 election - The Hill (blog)

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Mental healthcare and the 2016 election
The Hill (blog)
Approximately 1 in 5 adults and adolescents experience a diagnosable mental illness in a given year. From my perspective as a medical sociologist conducting national research with working Americans and local research with women who cycle through ...

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2016 elections and mental health - Minneapolis Star Tribune

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NG News

Topeka Capital Journal

2016 elections and mental health
Minneapolis Star Tribune
Thus, here I take one such issue, which nonetheless is the reality of thousands of Americans who suffer from it: mental health. Below, I will explore the policies on mental health issues from both candidates. According to the National Alliance on ...
Advocates of Kansas' mental health courts say lives improved, taxpayer dollars savedTopeka Capital Journal
Students perform poetry for mental healthDaily Trojan Online

Guest Column: For mental health, vote for NielsenThe Daily Iowan
Models for Mental Health returning for third year

NG News
all 75 44 news articles »
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No, It's Not Just You: This Election Is Stressing People Out - KPBS

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KPBS

No, It's Not Just You: This Election Is Stressing People Out
KPBS
The 2016 election is taking a toll on American's mental health. A survey this month from the American Psychological Association found the election is a very or somewhat significant source of stress for 52 percent of American adults. Both Democrats and ...
APA Survey Reveals 2016 Presidential Election Source of Significant Stress for More Than Half of AmericansAmerican Psychological Association

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The 7 Best Ways to Beat Election Stress - TIME

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TIME

The 7 Best Ways to Beat Election Stress
TIME
For many Americans, that day can't come soon enough—for the sake of their mental health. A recent survey from the American Psychological Association (APA) found that 52% of American adults say the 2016 election is a somewhat significant—or very ...
Does negative campaigning affect mental health?York Dispatch
You're Not Alone: This Election Is Seriously Stressing Everyone OutGlamour

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Talking to Your Therapist About Election Anxiety - New York Times

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New York Times

Talking to Your Therapist About Election Anxiety
New York Times
It has been described as one of the most contentious, tawdry and angry presidential elections in history. And it's taking a toll on our mental health. “I've been in private practice for 30 years, and I have never seen patients have such strong ...

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Survey Shows Voters Getting Stressed Out By Election 2016 - CBS Local

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CBS Local

Survey Shows Voters Getting Stressed Out By Election 2016
CBS Local
And the campaign is triggering emotions for just about every group. According to the survey, the election stress cuts across demographics and party lines. The anxiety is so bad for some they are turning off their computers and phones and turning away ...

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America's election is giving the world some serious anxiety - Washington Post

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Washington Post

America's election is giving the world some serious anxiety
Washington Post
Making predictions three weeks before the U.S. election is risky, but the likeliest bet right now is that the center will hold in American politics and Hillary Clinton will be elected president. That's important for lots of reasons, the biggest of ...

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Donald Trump Is Triggering - Cosmopolitan.com

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Cosmopolitan.com

Donald Trump Is Triggering
Cosmopolitan.com
The dizziness and brain-buzzing I feel watching Trump are symptoms I recognize as symptoms of an anxiety attack. In him, I ... Trump used two common gaslighting techniques, as outlined by the National Domestic Violence Hotline, in that response. The ...

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Donald Trump Is a Human Trigger - Slate Magazine

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Slate Magazine

Donald Trump Is a Human Trigger
Slate Magazine
According to the Rape, Abuse, and Incest National Network, the weekend after the release of the Trump tape saw a 33 percent increase in people turning to its National Sexual Assault Hotline for support. Traffic to the group's ... Her clients, she says ...
Trump as Trigger: How His Misogyny and Hatred Are Literally Causing Millions Mental and Physical PainAlterNet

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Are you struggling with election anxiety syndrome? - Inman.com

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Are you struggling with election anxiety syndrome?
Inman.com
Election anxiety syndrome (EAS) has gripped the country, destroying friendships, causing major rifts in families and severing business relationships. If you're in the grip of EAS, you can overcome it. The 2016 presidential election has been unlike ...

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Taking Trump voters' concerns seriously means listening to what they're actually saying - Vox

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Vox

Taking Trump voters' concerns seriously means listening to what they're actually saying
Vox
I can remember literally no one in 2012 dwelling on the importance of taking the concerns of Mitt Romney voters seriously, even though they made up a considerably larger share of the population than Trump supporters. No one talks about taking the ...

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Sexual Assault Hotline Calls Up in Wake of Donald Trump Allegations - ABC News

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Sexual Assault Hotline Calls Up in Wake of Donald Trump Allegations
ABC News
With sexual assault accusations against Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump continuing to make headlines, the sexual assault hotline run by the Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network (RAINN) has seen a spike in calls. Starting last Saturday ...

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How To Deal With Election Anxiety05:15 - Here And Now

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Here And Now

How To Deal With Election Anxiety05:15
Here And Now
Supporters gather for a chance to see Republican vice presidential candidate Mike Pence at a rally in Johnstown, Pa., on Oct. 6, 2016. (Jeff Swensen/Getty Images). This election season has gotten many voters fired up — some so much so that now they're ...

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Health and the 2016 Election: Implications for Women - Kaiser Family Foundation

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Kaiser Family Foundation

Health and the 2016 Election: Implications for Women
Kaiser Family Foundation
For women, a key provision of the ACA has been the requirement that all new private insurance plans and Medicaid expansion programs cover certain categories of benefits, including maternity care, mental health, and prescription drugs, that were ...
What Bipartisan Opportunities Will The Next Congress And President Have To Improve Health Policy?Health Affairs (blog)
Here's where Donald Trump stands on healthcareBusiness Insider
2016 Employer Health Benefits SurveyKaiser Family Foundation
Wisconsin Office of the Commissioner of Insurance - State of Wisconsin
all 188 news articles »
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Poll Shows Male Trump Supporters Feel Persecuted - The Atlantic - The Atlantic

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The Atlantic

Poll Shows Male Trump Supporters Feel Persecuted - The Atlantic
The Atlantic
Several recent surveys suggest that when men feel persecuted, they turn to Donald Trump for affirmation.

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Friday, October 21, 2016

Trump, Putin The Mob, and Terrorism

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Trump, Putin The Mob, and Terrorism

Trumpism - Putinism rears its ugly double head. Machismo, authoritarianism, greed, double dealings, criminal connections, and cheap but skillful populism and demagoguery  are their common body. The Russian Mafia State and The Underworld International play their "Samson and Delilah games" with the West, using Trump as their "unwitting agent" and "playing him like a fiddle". These are the games of deception, betrayal, domination and conquest.

The similarities in personalities, both general and political, of Trump and Putin, are striking. Theirs is what Theodor Adorno called the "authoritarian personality" ("a personality type that involved the "potentially fascistic individual") or what the Russian criminals call "avtoritet" ("the authority") or "vor-v-zakone" ("the thief-in-law").

Both Trump and Putin possess the same pungent bouquet of personality traits and styles with criminal tendencies and juvenile delinquency at its core: easy and frequent, habitual, artful lying (which they probably could not separate from truth themselves), lifelong skill of camouflage, "pathological narcissism", grandiosity, risk taking (gambling), superficial psychopathic charm, bullishness and brazenness, etc., etc. The difference between them is that Putin is more adept, skillful and experienced in politico-criminal matters, which would allow him to invisibly outsmart and play his bromance buddy "like a fiddle".

Trump-Samson destroyed the GOP, singlehandedly, alarmingly, tragically, destructively and self-destructively, acting not only as an "unwitting agent" but also as an unwitting and destructive Trojan, who burrowed his way into the country's social and political life and delivered the party which adopted him, blood drained, confused and incapacitated, on a silver platter to its traditional geopolitical foreign opponents. Very much in the style of the "Fancy Bears", his Russian cyber-patrons. 

The Republican party will be reborn from this crisis and this bitter lesson. But Trump will not be able to destroy the country. This is the consolation. And with all this, he still is pretty much "unwitting" and still is unaware of the "inner workings" of not Russia only but, apparently his own. 

Trump: "Russia, if you're listening, I hope you're able to find the 30,000 emails that are missing!" 

Mother Russia responds: "O.K., sunny, I've heard you; we'll do. We will do anything to get you elected, the whole world knows this. Don't you ever doubt me, my boy, yeah! Didn't I find a good new wife for you? And don't you worry about the costs either, we will put them on your credit account, you can pay it back later, at our convenience... Because you are my kind!" 

Trump (pulling at $11M pinky "pussy bow", pensively): "Finally! I have nothing to lose except my capitalist GOP shackles! This is my last and the most resolute battle! The Oligarchs of the World, unite! Putin, if you hear me, leak, leak, leak! Leak more! Right on their heads! And keep whispering your sweet Melania somethings into my ears at night (just like this mantra: "Oh, wouldn't it be nice to get along with Russia, Trump-ik?"), it is like the two of them have merged into The One. It's so erotic, who needs to grab pussies...
"The iconic intensely aggressive style, for which Trump would become world renown, began in his youth. By the age of 13, he became a bit more than his parents could handle. They determined the best avenue for the young Donald was to send him to military school. So, off he was shipped to the college preparatory, military style boarding school of the New York Military Academy (NYMA)."

Did young Donald perceive his "shipping off" to military school ("shape up or ship out") as an act of betrayal by his parents? Did this start the never ending cycles of rage and the desire for revenge? What role did this circumstance play in the formation of his adult character? Did it contribute into his deeply felt ambivalence about the rules, authority, and power? Are these feelings of ambivalence and rage the sources of his potential capacity for betrayal, which alarmed so many experienced people who declared him the present and the future danger to National Security

“When I look at myself in the first grade and I look at myself now, I’m basically the same,” the 70-year-old presumptive Republican nominee once told a biographer. “The temperament is not that different.”
At the same time, his adaptive capacity for change (the ability to be "reformed", among other factors, by the political-military establishment), has to be assessed also. His hypothetical need for this reform might also be viewed as the maladaptive psychological replay ("repetition compulsion") of the old drama. It probably was one of the key moments in his early and later life history. 

The present and future historians and political scientists will try to analyze and understand the 2016 Presidential Elections in depth. It looks like some of the major contributing factors, among others, of the GOP looming defeat, are the "technical issues": Trump's lack of the personal and political maturity and professionalism, and his campaign managers' lack of the political acumen, in comparison with the much better prepared, experienced and strategically adept Democratic party operatives, in addition to the substantive issues: the nature and character of the political appeals of the candidates and the structures of their respective electorates. 

Now Trump looks more like Laocoon, tied up in painful and torturing knots by the serpents of truth that he himself has unleashed. The defeat looks inevitable and well deserved.


Both Trump's and Putin's connections with organized crime are well documented

"Security Analysts Issue Dire Warning: Trump Is The ‘Manchurian Candidate’ Of The Russian Mafia... The stunning article reveals that Trump’s connections inside Russia go far deeper than what has been discussed in the mainstream media to date, and along a much darker path."
"Putin’s power is founded on his links to organised crime. Putin has a close circle of criminal oligarchs at his disposal and has spent his career cultivating this circle."
"The Republican candidate’s links to Russia are a mix of bling, business and bluster spanning 30 years. The FT has compiled this account from a variety of sources, tracing Trump's fascination for Russia from its beginnings in Soviet times, through the Putin era to the US presidential campaign." 

How should the future President deal with Russia?
"There will be no ‘reset’ with Russia"
"Russia is now a threat. The U.S. should treat it like one". 
"The best answer to Russian aggression is containment". 
On a somewhat deeper level, the question is, how to deal with the powerful and hidden forces that are behind the "mafia state", and I venture a guess. 

Destroy or at least control the Russian - International "Mafia" - organised crime, in which Russia plays now a major role, and with which the Russian Intelligence services are most inextricably linked and intertwined, and use them as the conduit, the operational tools and the means of subversive activity, (hypothetically) from terrorism to mass shootings, war on police, and other "active measures" and "special operations", to covert and overt political interference, that we know and do not know aboutand you will solve at least half of the problem. This is the area with which law enforcement is the most familiar with and could be potentially most successful, in comparison with the direct counterintelligence work, which is complex, intricate, often operates outside the official realm of law enforcement, and should be left to the highly specialized and trained security services. 

What are the roots of this phenomenon of "authoritarianism", descending historically to the times immemorial, from ancient Greek tyrants, to more recently, Hitlerism and Stalinism, among many other historical figures and examples, large and small?
Its association with criminality, in many aspects and respects, seems to be evident and logical; it is a crime to deny and suppress the personal liberties of others.

Just by the way, Stalin was a direct product of the criminal world, in which he grew up, matured and acquired his skills which he later used in his political struggles, the main among them, the old familiar "divide and conquer". This circumstance shaped the Soviet Union and the history of the post-WW2 world.

What are the psychological and social underpinnings of this phenomenon of authoritarianism, and what are their vicissitudes?
Why does this political mechanism work so well in the countries like Russia, where Trump and Putin are supported by the majority, and why, hopefully, it will never work in America? 
What are the political immunity factors?
Free speech, free press, pluralism, healthy intellectual honesty and civic duty.

Michael Novakhov


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Trump, Putin The Mob, and Terrorism - News Review and Links





Thursday, October 20, 2016

Nobel Laureate and Columbia professor Dr Eric Kandel discusses the nature of good and evil via the Trump candidacy



Nobel Laureate and Columbia professor Dr Eric Kandel discusses the nature of good and evil via the Trump candidacy, and his own devastating childhood experiences in Austria. Kandel's latest book is "Reductionism in Art and Brain Science: Bridging the Two Cultures" (https://goo.gl/z9xUXK).

Read more at BigThink.com: http://bigthink.com/videos/eric-kande...

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Transcript - I find the Trump phenomenon so shocking, and if you look at my life, for example, coming here at nine and then here at age 87, I'm four weeks shy, having this interview with you having really a privileged life in the United States, I can only say good things about the United States. I think it's – sure it has weaknesses. You have weaknesses. I have weaknesses. That's intrinsic to life. But if you look at the overall balance of what this country has achieved, it's remarkable.

I was born in Vienna and Jews were being driven out and if they stated they were killed. So I had to get out in 1939 one year after Hitler came. And I wanted to understand how people could listen to Hyden and Mozart and Beethoven one day and beat up the Jews the next. So I thought I would do this through intellectual history. And there was a wonderful major called History and Literature, which was an honors major. Everybody taking that major, a small group of people, had to write a dissertation. And I wrote my dissertation on the attitude toward National Socialism of three different writers who were in different positions on their political spectrum.
Read Full Transcript Here: https://goo.gl/RZo54C.

Wednesday, October 12, 2016