Trump’s unbelievably miserable, tacky and solipsistic low class post seems sufficient indication that Trump does indeed have ‘Derangement Syndrome’.
Should I be embarrassed? His name meant nothing to me, although I have seen WHMS. I did think I might have had some support from an unlikely source - the Daily Mail. Their headline wasn’t “Death of Rob Reiner” but “Death of WHMS director”.
I don’t read the Daily Wail but see from NYT that the son has been arrested. Apparently, a heroin addict. Tragic end for the parents.
Well he wasn’t a mega-famous director like (say) Spielberg or Scorsese, but he had a certain following.
He actually appeared in “This is Spinal Tap” as the director of the mockumentary, a character called Marty DiBergi.
The authorities rescinded the $4,000,000 bail originally set for the accused. He’s behind bars at least until the trial finishes.
That doesn’t happen very often.
Anyone of a remotely sensitive disposition shouldn’t be searching for details of how the Reiners died.
Well, my son’s chin hit the ground when I told him.
You looking on the dark web or something I haven’t seen anything with details other than stabbed
Apparently the Obama’s were due there for dinner that evening!
I can barely use the Beige Web, let alone the Dark one.
Then how about the Pantone Cloud Dancer Web, even paler than beige? It’s ‘a billowy, balanced white imbued with a feeling of serenity’ and so 2026, or so I’ve been told…
Trump’s reaction is beyond unspeakable. Even the obnoxious Piers Morgan, who once declared himself ‘a friend’ of Trump said Trump’s comment/rant “crosses every basic line of human decency”
When you tot up Piers Morgan’s record of crossing ‘basic lines of human decency’, that’s saying something.
He is right, tho’
For anyone interested, this from the NYT
Our Petty, Hollow, Squalid Ogre in Chief
Dec. 16, 2025
Though I tend to think it’s usually a waste of space to devote a column to President Trump’s personality — what more is there to say about the character of this petty, hollow, squalid, overstuffed man? — sometimes the point bears stressing: We are led by the most loathsome human being ever to occupy the White House.
Markets will not be moved, or brigades redeployed, or history shifted, because Rob Reiner and Michele Singer Reiner were found stabbed to death on Sunday in their home in Los Angeles, allegedly at the hands of their troubled son Nick.
But this is an appalling human tragedy and a terrible national loss. Reiner’s movies, including “Stand by Me,” “The Princess Bride” and “When Harry Met Sally…,” are landmarks in the inner lives of millions of people; I can still quote by heart dialogue and song lyrics from his 1984 classic, “This Is Spinal Tap.” Until last week, he and Michele remained creative forces as well as one of Hollywood’s great real-life love stories. Their liberal politics, though mostly not my own, were honorable and sincere.
To which our ogre in chief had this to say on social media:
“A very sad thing happened last night in Hollywood. Rob Reiner, a tortured and struggling, but once very talented movie director and comedy star, has passed away, together with his wife, Michele, reportedly due to the anger he caused others through his massive, unyielding and incurable affliction with a mind crippling disease known as TRUMP DERANGEMENT SYNDROME, sometimes referred to as TDS. He was known to have driven people CRAZY by his raging obsession of President Donald J. Trump, with his obvious paranoia reaching new heights as the Trump Administration surpassed all goals and expectations of greatness, and with the Golden Age of America upon us, perhaps like never before. May Rob and Michele rest in peace!”
I quote Trump’s post in full not only because it must be read to be believed, but also because it captures the combination of preposterous grandiosity, obsessive self-regard and gratuitous spite that “deranged” the Reiners and so many other Americans trying to hold on to a sense of national decency. Good people and good nations do not stomp on the grief of others. Politics is meant to end at the graveside. That’s not just some social nicety. It’s a foundational taboo that any civilized society must enforce to prevent transient personal differences from becoming generational blood feuds.
That is where history will record that the deepest damage by the Trump presidency was done. There is, as Adam Smith said, “a great deal of ruin in a nation,” by which he meant that there are things in almost any country that are going badly wrong but can still be mended. Foolishly imposed tariffs can be repealed. Hastily cut funding can be restored. Ill-thought-out national security strategies can be rewritten. Shaken trust can be rebuilt between Washington and our allies.
But the damage that cuts deepest is never financial, legal or institutional. As one of Smith’s greatest contemporaries, Edmund Burke, knew, it lies in something softer and less tangible but also more important: manners. “Manners are what vex or soothe, corrupt or purify, exalt or debase, barbarize or refine us,” Burke wrote. It is, he warned, through manners that laws are either made or unmade, upheld or corrupted.
Right now, in every grotesque social media post; in every cabinet meeting devoted, North Korea-like, to adulating him; in every executive-order-signing ceremony intended to make him appear like a Chinese emperor; in every fawning reference to all the peace he’s supposedly brought the world; in every Neronic enlargement of the White House’s East Wing; in every classless dig at his predecessor; in every shady deal his family is striking to enrich itself; in every White House gathering of tech billionaires paying him court (in the literal senses of both “pay” and “court”); in every visiting foreign leader who learns to abase himself to avoid some capricious tariff or other punishment — in all this and more, our standards as a nation are being debased, our manners barbarized.
I wonder if we are ever getting them back — and if so, what will it take. As Trump was unloading on Reiner, James Woods, probably the most outspoken Trump supporter in Hollywood, lovingly remembered Reiner as a “godsend in my life” who saved his acting career when it was at a low point 30 years ago.
“I think Rob Reiner is a great patriot,” Woods said Monday on Fox News. “Do I agree with some of, or many of, his ideas on how that patriotism should be enacted, to celebrate the America that we both love? No. But he doesn’t agree with me either, but he also respects my patriotism.” Woods is right, but how that spirit of mutual respect and good faith can be revived under a man like Trump is a question he and the rest of the president’s supporters might helpfully ask of themselves.
The Reiner murders took place on the same weekend that an assailant, still at large, murdered two students at Brown University, and when an antisemitic massacre at Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia, gave every Jew in America a pit-of-our-stomachs sense that something like it may soon happen here again, as it did in Pittsburgh seven years ago. It’s been only three months since Charlie Kirk was shot in cold blood in Utah, and barely a year since the health care executive Brian Thompson was murdered in Manhattan by an alleged assailant who is now a folk hero to the deranged reaches of the left.
This is not a country on the cusp of its “Golden Age,” to quote the president, except in the sense that gold futures are near a record high as a hedge against inflation. It’s a country that feels like a train coming off the rails, led by a driver whose own derangement was again laid bare in that contemptible assault on the Reiners, may their memories be for a blessing.
Thanks for posting in full.
My concern in all of this is what I see as the failure in preceding presidents - notably Obama - to have addressed the social issues in the US that left the door open for Trump to be elected.
Obama is seen as the exemplar of a good president - and I would agree. And yet … and yet …
It is not enough to be a good boss of company. It is also about what is put in place, what is created, so that the next boss and the next is also “a good boss”. That is Obama’s huge failing.
Obama could not have turned himself white. That is the social issue the country has been dealing with since its inception.
I wonder - I think that’s too glib an explanation. Surely he would not have been voted in in the first place if that was the case.
Brexit ! Can it still be mended?
Is this the Weimar Republic version in America? That led to conflict amongst the population, depression and war after a demagogue - who gave many Germans hope and pride back - stepped into the gap.
Presidents can only enact real change when they have sufficient support in both Houses of Congress.
IIRC Obama did not have that.
He did in his first 2 years- that is how Obamacare came to be. That program is now under fire from the right as being too expensive. Of course, the Republicans undermined it at every turn and IMO are responsible for its failure, if it is a failure. It is far better than nothing and keeps people from going bankrup (somewhat), but the underlying costs of doctors , hospitals and pharma are the problems. They will never get those under control, and I can’t even see it happening if somehow Medicare for All passes.
