Roshan wrote: ↑Thu Oct 19, 2023 10:00 am
This interview went viral. He is NeFi, no? I get it that he is a comedian/political commentator, and that he moved to the US where he comfortably both repudiates Egypt and criticizes US (Israeli) Middle Eastern policy.
Yes, he certainly seems to be NeFi to me too. Regardless of how good his points are and how strongly one wants to agree with him, he still radiates the "i'm high on the ladder and at the top of my game" self-satisfaction so common in delta extraverts. It's quite significant that with all that charisma and intensity he still doesn't reach true Gravitas on a topic like this one and still comes across as a Roman Senator discussing the affairs of the world at some banquet with his peers while the rest of the Empire is already burning.
His impersonation of a Israeli zionist at the end is also quite typical of Ti polr "team switching". We definitely have seen this before.
But thirteen years as a cardiothoracic surgeon? How? Why? Is it common for NeFi's (assuming that's what he is) to become surgeons? That's a lot of Te agenda and Si seeking and I don't really see it in his presentation.
Well, in that video, he is sitting at the Banquet table, so he is sitting mostly in his two first functions (plus mega demonstrative Fe). He isn't pushing himself much here and he would probably feel very different in an emergency room.
Anyway, i don't think it's very common for NeFi in general to become surgeons, but i suspect it might be relatively common for the urbane intellectual elite of the Levant to go for medical professions. If that's right, then Cairo University might have served him as some kind of anchor for achieving Te and finding Si. He might even kind of see himself as the heir of Al-Razi, Avicenna, Ibn Rushd and all the muslim doctor-philosophers of the past.
Another thing (that my anesthesiologist father never fails to point out) is that many surgeons have some kind of God Complex. And THAT is very common among Ne dominants.