Dateline: NEW YORK CITY—On Monday, Feb 15, the New York
Times published a letter signed by 37 psychiatrists who expressed severe doubts
about President Trump’s mental health.
Trump “appears to have had the fragile mind of a two-year
old implanted into his 70 year-old brain,” said the psychiatrists. “Our
expert medical opinion is that President Trump is off his rocker. More
specifically, he’s fallen off his rocker, landed on the floor, rolled off the
floor and out the front door, down the steps and down the mountain side,
splashed into the ocean and sank into a volcano at the bottom of the sea.”
Thanks to the technological services of an anonymous group
of hackers, 200 million Americans were able to simultaneously pipe their
response to the letter directly into the bedrooms of all 37 psychiatrists. Transmitted at a
deafening decibel, the response was, “No shit, Captain Obvious!”
Two days later, the NY Times published a letter signed by 37
different psychiatrists who reached the opposite conclusion, that Trump’s
mental state is as healthy as anyone’s can be.
Curiously, both letters were signed by 20 men and 17 women.
One of the male psychiatrists who signed the first letter is a little person,
and one who signed the second is also a little person.
Three of the men who signed the first letter, and three of the
different men who signed the second all have 9 inch-long scraggly beards that
have the same mixed shades of brown and grey.
Two of the women who signed the first letter, and two of the
different women who signed the second have had mastectomies.
This has led one physicist to blame the mirroring effect on
spillover from other universes in the multiverse.
Another physicist, Eugene Nerdopolous, has posited what he calls the “Of Course Principle” to explain the puzzling phenomenon of professionals who cancel each other out in psychiatry and in several other sciences.
Another physicist, Eugene Nerdopolous, has posited what he calls the “Of Course Principle” to explain the puzzling phenomenon of professionals who cancel each other out in psychiatry and in several other sciences.
“To paraphrase Isaac Newton,” he says, “for every
psychiatrist there’s an equal and opposite psychiatrist.
“And the same holds in any scientific field in which a lot
of money is at stake for the scientist. If one blood spatter expert is willing
to testify that the blood left at the crime scene was caused by a gruesome act
of murder, of course another will
testify that the red fluid isn’t blood at all, but raspberry filling from a
squashed donut.”
The differences aren’t due merely to the ambiguity of the
subject matter, which could allow for different rational interpretations. “It’s
more a question of the world mocking our vain attempts to understand and
control it. When 37 psychiatrists think anyone needs them to state the obvious
about Trump, and then the universe throws up 37 equal and opposite
psychiatrists, something’s having a laugh at our expense.”
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