Trump's mental decline is undeniable -- so what now? (Chris Truax/The Hill)
by Chris Truax, opinion contributor - 08/01/25 11:00 AM ET
Confabulation. Its a word you are going to be hearing a lot in the coming months.
President Trump has always been willing to mislead people when it was to his advantage. Even his supporters recognize this. Hence the famous admonition to take Trump seriously, not literally.
But what Trump is doing now is something different. Confabulation is sometimes called honest lying, because the person doing it genuinely believes what hes saying, even if it is obviously and patently false. A person confabulates when they are telling completely invented stories that dont provide them any particular tangible benefit. In other words, its not like lying to try and get out of a speeding ticket.
Confabulation isnt misremembering a date or forgetting something. The mistakes of memory we are all subject to become confabulation when people remember false information in vivid detail detail so vivid and complete that people who dont know otherwise often believe what they are hearing is true.
In older people, confabulation is one of the clearest early signs of dementia. The day you witness someone confabulate is often the day you are forced to admit to yourself that a beloved parent needs help, and that all the little slips and oddities youve been seeing can no longer be rationalized away.
***
more: https://thehill.com/opinion/campaign/5429516-trump-confabulation-dementia-signs/
I've sort of quit paying attention to The HIll, with their constant "both sides do it" take on the utterly unprecedented, outrageous, ahistorical, catastrophic, absolutely both-sides-do-NOT-do-it current situation, but someone there is finally interrupting the sermon to say "that's not the Bible you're preaching from, it's a mashup of Mein Kampf and The 120 Days of Sodom". Still, the references to the Biden administration are, at best, thoroughly back-handed praise of how they "handled" Biden, rather than that Biden was a better President on his absolutely worst days than Turnip could ever hope to be -- and he wouldn't hope, because he DOES NOT understand what being President means, and has no interest whatsoever in learning. All he cares about is "EVERYONE LOOK AT ME!!", which is all his whole life and career has been about. For all the damage, future history will treat him as a blip on the radar, with no principles, no great plans, no innovations, nothing but vacuous, undeserved self-praise.

littlemissmartypants
(29,674 posts)as part of an opinion piece are despicable.
If he had an actual medical degree and professional license, after such claims, he might find himself to be unemployed and subsequently unable to find another job.
He claims in his assertions, "Thats not a medical diagnosis." Thats exactly what it is. The claim he should have prefaced this entire piece with, which consists of nothing but the rehashing of everything we already know, is this: "I am not a doctor."
I don't like 47. In fact, I despise him. But I also don't believe that it's appropriate to misrepresent your professional competencies.
Lawyers, just like every other licensed professional, need to recognize where their own turf ends and the turf of another profession begins.
It may be an "opinion" piece, but it's also pretentious and misleading. It's behavior akin to that of politicians who believe they should legislate a woman's right to choose, and it's not appropriate under any circumstances.
But that's just my opinion.
Irish_Dem
(74,391 posts)He clearly states he is not a mental health professional and these are his layman opinions.
Yes he is a bit wobbly on some of it, but the basic premise of the article is sound.
It is a clear and observable fact that Trump is showing signs of dementia. And more people
need to speak out about it.
The mental health professionals have been warning about how dangerous Trump is for years
but no one cares or listens to them. Perhaps if non professionals speak out more, people
will pay attention.
BTW Attorneys often like to pretend to be psychologists, which used to irritate me in clinical practice.
I used to tell attorneys that I won't practice law with our mutual clients if they won't practice psychology.