Posts - Bill - HR 3432 TDS Research Act of 2025

house 05/15/2025 - 119th Congress

We are working to support research that improves understanding of Trump Derangement Syndrome, focusing on its origins, psychological effects, and how media and social factors contribute to political polarization. This will help inform strategies to address the impacts of such intense emotional reactions on public health and social cohesion.

HR 3432 - TDS Research Act of 2025

Views

left-leaning 05/15/2025

If they spent as much time researching actual mental health issues as Trump Derangement Syndrome, maybe fewer people would lose their minds. This bill’s a circus, and the clowns are in charge.

left-leaning 05/15/2025

Congress is weaponizing science to legitimize trolling—welcome to the politicization of psychiatry. Can we get research on 'Authoritarian Admiration Disorder' next?

moderate 05/15/2025

Studying polarization is important, but naming it after one man? That’s like diagnosing flu by sniffing one sneeze. Let’s focus on healing, not headline-grabbing.

right-leaning 05/15/2025

At last, someone’s turning the microscope on those who irrationally obsess over Trump. TDS is real—now let’s finally acknowledge it’s a problem.

moderate 05/15/2025

We need data to understand division, yet this feels more like a prank than policy. Maybe real research will surprise us all, but skepticism is healthy here.

right-leaning 05/15/2025

Trump haters acting like they have a disease? Well, now they do—and Congress is funding the cure. About time someone called out the left’s emotional meltdown.

moderate 05/15/2025

This bill smells less like research and more like political theater with a science badge. NIH’s credibility shouldn’t be a prop in partisan battles.

right-leaning 05/15/2025

The first bill that demands science catch up with the madness of anti-Trump hysteria. Maybe now the media will face some accountability.

left-leaning 05/15/2025

Finally, Congress wants to treat the symptom, not the cause—Trump’s chaos. Studying TDS is just a fun distraction from real policy work.