Did anybody watch the interview he did yesterday on CNN? More of the same.
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Ben Carson
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I'll be honest, I'm starting to think Carson is a pathological liar. From wikipedia:
Defining characteristics of pathological lying include:- The stories told are usually dazzling or fantastical, but never breach the limits of plausibility, which is key to the pathological liar's tact. The tales are not a manifestation of delusion or some broader type of psychosis; upon confrontation, the teller can admit them to be untrue, even if unwillingly.
- The fabricative tendency is chronic; it is not provoked by the immediate situation or social pressure so much as it is an innate trait of the personality. There is some element of dyscontrol present.
- A definitely internal, not an external, motive for the behavior can be discerned clinically: e.g., long-lasting extortion or habitual spousal battery might cause a person to lie repeatedly, without the lying being a pathological symptom.[2]
- The stories told tend toward presenting the liar favorably. The liar "decorates their own person"[3] by telling stories that present them as the hero or the victim. For example, the person might be presented as being fantastically brave, as knowing or being related to many famous people, or as having great power, position, or wealth.
All of these stories are embellishments that serve to make him look better. He wasn't just a smart medical student, no, he was also highly prized by the military. When people called him out for looking meek, he reveals his diabolical evil past that he atoned from by plunging into his faith, simultaneously looking tough and appealing to the Christian base. IMHO, this fits the pathological liar description very well. Semi-plausible stories with zero evidence that serve only to embellish him, whose inaccuracies can be explained away as a function of bad memory. And when accused of lying, just yell and blame the liberal media; it works. The Republican base loves when people call out the media, and after the Cruz incident at the last debate they are particularly attuned to it.
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Originally posted by CBB_Fan View PostI'll be honest, I'm starting to think Carson is a pathological liar. From wikipedia:
That sounds exactly like what I'm seeing with Carson, especially the last bit. None of his stories breach the limits of plausibility, but when pressed you see that most of them have issues. He met with General Westmoreland who offered him a scholarship to West Point, except Westmoreland wasn't in Detroit at the time and West Point isn't a normal university with tuition. He got held up a Popeye's, except the story wasn't in his biography, he is a vegetarian, and there is no records of that any such event at that Popeye's.
All of these stories are embellishments that serve to make him look better. He wasn't just a smart medical student, no, he was also highly prized by the military. When people called him out for looking meek, he reveals his diabolical evil past that he atoned from by plunging into his faith, simultaneously looking tough and appealing to the Christian base. IMHO, this fits the pathological liar description very well. Semi-plausible stories with zero evidence that serve only to embellish him, whose inaccuracies can be explained away as a function of bad memory. And when accused of lying, just yell and blame the liberal media; it works. The Republican base loves when people call out the media, and after the Cruz incident at the last debate they are particularly attuned to it.
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Originally posted by wufan View PostPathological liar? What? You all are nuts!People who think they know everything are a great annoyance to those of us who do. -Isaac Asimov
Originally posted by C0|dB|00ded
Who else posts fake **** all day in order to maintain the acrimony? Wingnuts, that's who.
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Originally posted by wufan View PostIt's not a scholarship, but I can see where a kid that didn't apply would view it as one.
I know the Naval Academy used to contact me a lot after I took the ASVAB the first time around. I don't remember much of the context that went into that, though, and I'm much younger than Dr. Carson. I also had a lot of contact with Duke when I was in middle school -- at this point I have no clue what that was about. I could probably do some research into what kind of outreach programs Duke has with middle schools to find out, but hell if I remember now. (Edit: And with a quick Google search that was really easy to figure out: Duke's TIP Summer Studies Program.)
Now if the meeting with that specific General never happened, I would consider that a warning sign.Originally posted by BleacherReportFred VanVleet on Shockers' 3-Pt Shooting Confidence -- ' Honestly, I just tell these guys to let their nuts hang.'
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Originally posted by shock View PostThey misspelled Clinton.
- The stories told tend toward presenting the liar favorably. The liar "decorates their own person"[3] by telling stories that present them as the hero or the victim. For example, the person might be presented as being fantastically brave, as knowing or being related to many famous people, or as having great power, position, or wealth.
Lying is the act of both knowingly and intentionally/willfully making a false statement.[7] Most people do so out of fear.[8] Normal lies are defensive, and are told to avoid the consequences of truth telling. They are often white lies that spare another's feelings, reflect a pro-social attitude, and make civilized human contact possible.[4] Pathological lying is considered a mental illness, because it takes over rational judgment and progresses into the fantasy world and back.[9]
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Originally posted by Play Angry View PostI think some of you are confusing General Westmoreland with the actual service academy.
If he tells a kid to apply and allegedly offers to write a rec, that doesn't mean the kid was offered admission.
Does an “I can get you in” from a 4 star general equal signed paperwork of admission? Close, but no, technically not equal.
Does being the top ROTC high schooler in the city of Detroit automatically get you in? Should be a near slam dunk, but no, not quite automatic.
Is it possible that Carson is legally, technically, nit-pickingly wrong to say he “was offered a full ride”? I guess a reasonable person could stand by that technical assessment.
But what difference does that all make?
A: I had a 99% chance of getting into West Point, but I chose medicine at Yale instead.
B: I had a 100% chance of getting into West Point, but I chose medicine at Yale instead.
We are literally having a national debate into the complex, precise meaning of words and phrases to determine if A or B is most correct. Yet at the end of the day, in both cases, Ben Carson was a highly qualified high schooler who had a choice between two respected institutions that he was fully qualified for, and he chose Yale over West Point and now looks back at that choice as a major milestone in his life.
Talk about a scandal!!!
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I mean, if a KU basketball player said “I was offered a full ride at Yale, but I chose KU basketball instead”, I think we could call that a serious exaggeration to make himself look better than he really is.
A world famous neuro-surgeon who was very highly ranked at ROTC in high school claims he was offered a scholarship to West Point and half the country gets all “No way you lie!”
I would be rolling on the floor laughing if this whole thing wasn’t so depressing.
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Originally posted by Jamar Howard 4 President View PostI would be rolling on the floor laughing if this whole thing wasn’t so depressing.
The only reason we know anything damaging to Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, is because the new media of conservative internet and radio forced the mainstream media kicking and screaming to acknowledge all of these scandals."Don't measure yourself by what you have accomplished, but by what you should accomplish with your ability."
-John Wooden
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Originally posted by Jamar Howard 4 President View Post
You also didn't address any of the other points. He was absolutely, without a doubt, never admitted so he was not "offered a scholarship." At the most, he was offered a recommendation letter.
I think most of these statements, (scholarship stuff, the stabbing portrayal), are probably half truths that were slightly fictionalized to sell more copies of his book at a time when he never expected to run for president. Like I said (and you ignored) a reasonable mind could think it's not a big deal and a reasonable mind could think it is a big deal. What I don't get is someone like you who was super worked up about the supplement company but super supportive of this one.
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