Projection:
We all know who the better hang is
Definition/projection:
Projection is one example of unconscious psychological processes called defense mechanisms. Some people find it hard to accept criticism or believe information that they wish were not true. So they seek – and then provide – another explanation for the difference between what’s happening in the world and what’s happening in their minds.
In general, this is called “motivated reasoning,” which is an umbrella phrase used to describe the array of mental gymnastics people use to reconcile their views with reality.
Some examples include seeking out information that confirms their beliefs, dismissing factual claims or creating alternate explanations. For example, a smoker might downplay or simply avoid information related to the link between smoking and lung cancer, or perhaps tell themselves that they don’t smoke as much as they actually do.
Motivated reasoning is not unique to politics. It can be a challenging concept to consider because people tend to think they are fully in control of their decision-making abilities and that they are capable of objectively processing political information. The evidence is clear, however, that there are unconscious thought processes at work, too.
Audiences are also susceptible to unconscious psychological dynamics. Research has found that over time, people’s minds subconsciously attach emotions to concepts, names or phrases. So someone might have a particular emotional reaction to the words “gun control,” “Ron DeSantis” or “tax relief.”
And people’s minds also unconsciously create defenses for those seemingly automatic emotions. When a person’s emotions and defenses are questioned, a phenomenon called the “backfire effect” can occur, in which the process of controlling, correcting or counteracting mistaken beliefs ends up reinforcing the person’s beliefs rather than changing them.
For instance, some people may find it hard to believe that the candidate they prefer – whom they believe to be the best person for the job – truly lost an election. So they seek another explanation and accept explanations that justify their beliefs. Perhaps they choose to believe, even in the absence of evidence, that the race was rigged or that many fraudulent votes were cast. And when evidence to the contrary is offered, they insist their views are correct.
Simple-minded reality:
President Obama says he has "a room" in Trump's head. "A suite in his head.""Look, first of all, when I was president, the last thing I had time to do was worry about what somebody said, or what my predecessor did. They're gone. I've got work to do."
— Kyle Griffin (@kylegriffin1.bsky.social) 2026-06-27T14:02:03.583Z
Missing — a head wound:
In an interview released Wednesday on the podcast “All The Smoke,” Mr. Obama was asked how he continues to “take the high road” under Mr. Trump’s unrelenting, yearslong preoccupation with him and his family.
“Look, you got to ask him what it is — the obsession,” Mr. Obama told the podcast hosts, former NBA players Matt Barnes and Stephen Jackson. “I obviously, you know, have a room in his head — a suite — in his head.”
He added: “If this — whoever you were talking about — was in front of me, which has happened a couple times, he don’t talk like that. Cause he knows better.”“And I think that filter of the phone creates a situation both where people just say kind of crazy stuff that they would never say to your face — with no consequences,” he said.
Weird as shit.
Closure:
Project green shit, or not, yet here we are once again …
(Illustration out front: Salvador Dali’s ‘Hell Canto 2: Giants,’ found here.)