Unhinged rants from political consultant show extremism from Democratic old guard
Editor:
Recently, political consultant, James Carville, displayed obvious symptoms of Trump Derangement Syndrome and admitted he has the malady. His words: “I want to hate him more,” exposed not only his anger but his acute loathing.
His profane and utterly disgusting rant very accurately confirms that when hatred this intense threatens the well being of the hater, it has become pathological.
In his position as a political influencer, he has the responsibility to maintain composure and decorum, not only for his audience but for his party – in this case the Democrats. His words arose as a significant hypocrisy because his own failure to display diplomacy weakened his attack on Trump.
He then beckoned people who were listening to his tirade to pray to God to intensify their hatred to the point where “…we can’t see straight.” Imagine praying to God with a heart laden with hatred. It opposes the very foundation of who God is – a God who so loved the world, he gave his only begotten Son to die for our sins.
His insults against Trump continued as he rattled on his putrid condemnations against our President. He displayed a false consensus that his Democratic Party agreed with everything that poured out of his vile mouth; at one point stating: “This is what we believe.”
This is the same idiot that told everyone before the 2024 election that Harris would be the winner. In 2025 he declared his support for AOC if she won the Democratic nomination. I wonder if he still maintains this claim as she made a fool of herself on the world stage in Munich, displaying both incompetence and inexperience. Her gaffes and pauses exposed her vulnerability. Undoubtedly, her credibility was obviously questioned after her ignorance on foreign policy.
Both Conservative analysts and social media users rapidly called out Carville’s unhinged behavior. His despicable and combative delivery was indicative of extremism within the Democratic old guard.
Mary Mager
Fairport, formerly of Albion






