[Peace-discuss] Bush is nuts

C. G. Estabrook galliher at alexia.lis.uiuc.edu
Fri Jun 18 14:37:44 CDT 2004


[There continue to be stories from DC about Bush's mental state.  Of
course most of his recent predecessors from Nixon on were at least
half-mad when they left, but there are obvious dangers in having a wacko
chief magistrate: e.g., at the end of the Nixon administration Kissinger
as SOS informed the military that they were not to execute any attack
orders for the president without his (Kissinger's) approval...  --CGE]

	From Capitol Hill Blue
	Bush Leagues
	New Information Shows Bush Indecisive, Paranoid, Delusional
	By TERESA HAMPTON
	Editor, Capitol Hill Blue
	Jun 17, 2004, 08:47

The carefully-crafted image of George W. Bush as a bold, decisive leader
is cracking under the weight of new revelations that the erratic President
is indecisive, moody, paranoid and delusional.

"More and more this brings back memories of the Nixon White House," says
retired political science professor George Harleigh, who worked for
President Nixon during the second presidential term that ended in
resignation under fire.  "I haven't heard any reports of President Bush
wondering the halls talking to portraits of dead Presidents but what I
have been told is disturbing."

Two weeks ago, Capitol Hill Blue revealed that a growing number of White
House aides are concerned about the President's mental stability. They
told harrowing tales of violent mood swings, bouts with paranoia and
obscene outbursts from a President who wears his religion on his sleeve.

Although supporters of President Bush dismissed the reports as "fantasies
from anonymous sources," a new book by Dr. Justin Frank, director of
psychiatry at George Washington University, raises many similar questions
about the President's mental stability.

"George W. Bush is a case study in contradiction," Dr. Frank writes in
Bush On The Couch: Inside the Mind of the President.  "Bush is an
untreated ex-alcoholic with paranoid and megalomaniac tendencies."

In addition, a new film by documentary filmmaker, and frequent Bush
critic, Michael Moore shows the President indecisive and clearly befuddled
when he learned about the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center on
September 11, 2001.

While conservative critics who have not yet seen Fahrenheit 9/11 dismiss
the work as an anti-Bush screed, Roger Friedman of the normally pro-Bush
Fox News Network has seen the film and calls it "a tribute to patriotism,
to the American sense of duty -- and at the same time a indictment of
stupidity and avarice."

Friedman also says the film's "most indelible moment" comes when Bush,
speaking to a group of school kids in Florida, is first informed of the
9/11 attacks.

"Instead of jumping up and leaving, he instead sat in front of the class,
with an unfortunate look of confusion, for nearly 11 minutes,"  Friedman
says.  "Moore obtained the footage from a teacher at the school who
videotaped the morning program. There Bush sits, with no access to his
advisers, while New York is being viciously attacked. I guarantee you that
no one who sees this film forgets this episode."

Dr. Frank says the episode is typical of how Bush deals with death and
tragedy.  He notes that Bush avoids funerals.

"President Bush has not attended a single funeral -- other than that of
President Reagan. In my book I explore some possible reasons for that,
whether or not it is 'presidential.' I am less interested in judging his
behavior on political grounds than I am in thinking about its meaning both
to him and to the rest of us," Dr. Frank says.  "He has spent a lifetime
of avoiding grief, starting with the death of his sister when he was 7
years old. His parents didn't help him with what must have been confusing
and frightening feelings. He also has a history of evading responsibility
and perhaps his not attending funerals has to do with not wanting to see
the damage his policies have wrought."

In his book, Dr. Frank also suggests Bush resents those in the military.

"Bush's behavior strongly suggests an unconscious resentment toward our
own servicemen, whose bravery puts his own (nonexistent) wartime service
record to shame," he wrote.

Supporters of President Bush dismiss Frank's book as the work of a
Democrat who once headed the Washington Chapter of Physicians for Social
Responsibility, but his work has been praised by other prominent
psychiatrists, including Dr. James Grotstein, Professor at UCLA Medical
Center, and Dr. Irvin Yalom, MD, Professor Emeritus at Stanford University
Medical School.

Dr. Carolyn Williams, a psychoanalyst who specializes in paranoid
personalities, is a registered Republican and agrees with most of Dr.
Frank's conclusions.

"I find the bulk of his analysis credible," she said in an interview.
"President Bush grew up dealing with an absent but demanding father, a
tough mother and an overachieving brother. All left indelible impressions
on him along with a desire to prove himself at all cost because he feels
surrounded by disapproval. He behavior suggests a classic paranoid
personality. Additionally, his stated belief that certain actions are
'God's Will' are symptomatic of delusional behavior."

Ryan Reynolds, a childhood friend of Bush, concurs.

"George wanted to please his father but never felt he measured up,
especially when compared to Jeb," Reynolds said.

Dr. Williams wonders if the Iraq war was not Bush's way of "proving he
could finish something his father could not by deposing Saddam Hussein."

But Bush's desire to please his father may have backfired. Former
President George H.W. Bush has remained silent publicly about the war,
saying he will only discuss it with his son "in private."  Close aides say
that is because he disapproves of his son's actions against Iraq.

"Former President Bush does not support the war against Iraq," says former
aide John Ruskin. "It is as simple at that."

While current White House aides and officials would not allow their names
to be used when commenting about Bush's erratic behavior, others like
former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill confirm concerns about Bush's mood
swings.

O'Neill says Bush was moody in cabinet meetings and would wander off on
tangents, mostly about Saddam Hussein and Iraq. Bush, O'Neill says, seemed
more focused on Iraq than on finding Osama bin Laden and would lash out at
anyone who disagreed with him.

Harleigh says it is not unusual for White House staffers to refuse to go
public with their concerns about the President's behavior.

"We saw the same thing in the Nixon years," he says. "What is unusual is
that the White House has not been able to trot out even one staffer who is
willing to go public and say positive things about the President's mental
condition. That says more than anything else."

Dr. Frank, the Democrat, says the only diagnosis he can offer for the
President's condition is removal from office.

Dr. Williams, the Republican, says she must "reluctantly agree."

"We have too many unanswered questions about the President's behavior,"
she says. â"You cannot have those kinds of unanswered questions when you
are talking about the leader of the free world."

© Copyright 2004 Capitol Hill Blue





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