What We Can Learn From The Sweden Incident

I was half paying attention when Donald Trump when speaking on terrorism in Melbourne, Florida, mentioned the Sweden Incident. Sweden and terrorism didn’t quite go together in my mind. I wound the DVR back thinking I must have misheard. Maybe he was referring to the Scandinavian country as being a great example of superb public health care, state benefits and flat packed furniture. But no, I hadn’t misheard. The Sweden Incident When talking about terrorism Trump was urging his supporters to, ‘look what is happening last night in Sweden. Sweden of all places’. And just in case you think I don’t know my past from my present tense that’s an exact quote. ‘Wow’ I thought, I had no idea that sleepy Sweden home of the Volvo, Abba and furniture that NASA cannot assemble correctly had been home to a terrorist attack. I was shocked. I needn’t have been, because like the Bowling Green Massacre mentioned numerous times by the hapless Kellyanne Conway and the terrorist attack in Atlanta mentioned by Sean Spicer, it never happened other than Trump’s increasingly fragile mind. After Kellyanne Conway mentioned The Bowling Green massacres, there was a lot of press coverage. That coverage diminished somewhat when Spicer mentioned Atlanta in interviews on ABC and MSNBC and then again in a White House press briefing. Earlier this week Trump claimed in a live TV press conference that was much closer to being an 80-minute rant by a naughty child, that he had had t...
Source: A Daring Adventure - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Tags: Controversial Life Coaching sweden incident Source Type: blogs