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Leftists aren’t going to simply accept the results of the election and make peace with their friends and loved ones who support President-elect Donald J. Trump, at least not if one Yale University psychologist has any say in the matter.
The racists and basket cases at MSNBC have been in a deep funk after Kamala Harris failed to take advantage of a war chest stuffed with over a billion dollars and glowing coverage from the media, losing in a landslide as the American people rejected the “woke” tyranny of the modern Democratic party.
Even though the country overwhelmingly voted for Trump, embittered sore losers shouldn’t engage in self-reflection and mend ties with their conservative family members, but should double down on resentment over the holidays, Dr. Amanda Calhoun recommended during a Friday appearance on “The Reid Out” during a conversation with Joy Reid.
(Video: MSNBC)
“There is a societal push that, if somebody is your family, they are entitled to your time. And I think the answer is absolutely not,” Dr. Calhoun told the hateful host, responding to her question about whether aggrieved leftists should feel obligated to break bread with their Trump supporting kin during the holiday season.
“So if you are going to a situation where you have family members, where you have close friends who you know have voted in ways that are against you, like what you said, against your livelihood, it’s completely fine to not be around those people and to tell them why, to say, ‘I have a problem with the way that you voted because it went against my very livelihood, and I’m not going to be around you this holiday. I need to take some space for me,’” she advised.
Not that Calhoun’s advise should be a surprise to anyone considering that the elite Ivy League university that employs her is one of the prominent incubators of racist “woke ideology” along with anti-Semitism and hatred of America but it seems to be very close to tipping over the edge into medical malpractice, which was noticed by X users.
This is why people don’t trust doctors.
Here we have a Yale child psychiatrist telling young people to break ties with family over the holidays because they didn’t vote for your candidate of choice.
We have a mental health epidemic in young people, which worsens dramatically… pic.twitter.com/r9EEPFZ3du
— Dr. Danish (@operationdanish) November 9, 2024
Yale Psychiatrist: It ‘May Be Essential’ For Kamala Voters To Cut Off Trump-Voting Family For Holidays | The Daily Wire
“This is medical malpractice on a massive scale,” said psychology professor Geoffrey Miller.
A Yale psychiatrist said this week that it was “essential” for… pic.twitter.com/WZFoAamHu1
— Owen Gregorian (@OwenGregorian) November 10, 2024
Ridiculous. Don’t discuss differences with your family members. Don’t tell them you love them. Don’t try to communicate. Just cut them off if they don’t agree with your views on issues. Sounds like a great way to build strong family bonds.
— Tony Dungy (@TonyDungy) November 9, 2024
Amanda Calhoun is the chief resident at @YalePsych.
She oversees the other psychiatry residents.
In her published work, she writes approvingly of Ibram X. Kendi and Frantz Fanon, the latter of whom advocated revolutionary violence.
This is one of her publications: https://t.co/dQ01nD8U3C pic.twitter.com/KHyHkRj1fC
— Kevin Bass PhD MS (@kevinnbass) November 10, 2024
Yale psychiatrist Amanda Calhoun, a medical doctor and mental health expert
Mum, Dad, sorry I wont be seeing you anymore, I need space to come to terms with the fact that you didn’t vote the way I did, and the way I think you should have voted!
These people are clinically insane! https://t.co/Mz8vJU2mcP— Sammy Jo (@Sassy191919) November 9, 2024
There are no good guys trying to separate people from their families.
— John Hawkins (@johnhawkinsrwn) November 9, 2024
“There is another possibility. You can try to resolve those feelings with people who you previously liked or loved. It may actually help to discuss these issues outside of the echo chamber of your political associations,” wrote George Washington University Professor Jonathan Turley in his latest column on Dr. Calhoun’s call to shun family members.
“None of this is good for our nation’s mental health and suggesting that people retreat further into their silos does not mean particularly healthy advice,” added the constitutional law expert.
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