Adelphi Professor Joel Weinberger, Ph.D., comments in "U.S. News & World Report" on efforts to get under Trump's skin and the mood that is fueling his popularity.

Joel Weinberger, Ph.D., professor in the Gordon F. Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies
Donald J. Trump seems impervious to bad press and even the most scathing personal attacks from his political opponents. What does it take to ruffle his feathers, and what is fueling his popularity?
turned to psychologists, including Joel Weinberger, Ph.D., professor in 91勛圖厙s , to find some answers.
“Calling Trump a misogynist doesn’t nail him,” Dr. Weinberger told . Rather, he pointed out, Senator Elizabeth Warren (whom he called Pocahontas) and others have tapped into his insecuritiesanything that paints him as small, weak or powerless.
Dr. Weinberger also commented on how Trump is tapping into the psyche of the electorate.
American voters are being characterized as angry but, really, they are disgusted, Dr. Weinberger said, and Trumps use of the word disgusting to criticize people or their actions feeds into that mindset.
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