Bush’s Mental State Raises Serious
Questions
By Diana
Lee
October 31, 2005
| UNIORB: REALITY CHECK: POLITICS |
 |
| George W.
Bush |
With his
job-approval ratings drastically dropping for handling domestic woes and the
increasingly unpopular Iraq war, President Bush nevertheless persists on
“staying the course” — disconnected from reality. Mr. Bush’s display of
inconsistencies, indifference, and denial to the deteriorating circumstances of
America — domestically and internationally — raises serious questions about his
mental state and his abilities to continue as a leader of a
nation.
According
to his book, Bush on the Couch: Inside the Mind of the President (New
York: HarperCollins, 2004), and two subsequent interviews on July 26, 2004 and
Jan. 20, 2005 with Executive Intelligence Review, Dr. Justin Frank
presented an alarming revelation — Bush has multiple mental illnesses. Once
headed the Washington Chapter of Physicians for Social Responsibility, Dr. Frank
is a leading psychoanalyst who teaches at George Washington University Medical
Center. In 2002, he became concerned about Bush’s abnormal behavior. Using
applied psychoanalysis, a scientific method of studying historical figures and
foreign leaders, Dr. Frank reached his conclusions based on massive amounts of
public documentation — autobiographical and biographical accounts, public video
footage of the President, and statements by Bush’s associates and relatives.
This is the first case study of applied psychoanalysis on a sitting
president.
Dr. Frank
diagnosed the President suffering from Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
(ADHD); an Oedipal Complex; untreated and uncured alcoholism (“dry drunk");
paranoia; sadism; psychical reality; and a megalomania complex. He keenly
observed that Bush throughout his entire life has been struggling to manage his
anxiety. It is through various ways of managing anxiety that Bush has revealed
his psychoses. Dr. Frank explained, “…[1] first to manage anxiety is through
alcohol. But, by being a born-again Christian, [2] he can also manage anxiety by
being connected to God, by feeling that he'll be saved in any kind of a rapture,
by feeling that he's always on the side of the Good…[3] to make other
people anxious, so he can project his anxiety into the rest of us…[4] to
simplify things; to divide the world, his own inner world, into good and
bad, into black and white…[5] to be cruel to other people, by making them
anxious, and by gratifying your own sense of power to compensate for feeling
helpless…[6] to become detached from the consequences of his
behavior.”
Erratic Behavior
White
House aides have been increasingly worried about Bush’s wide mood swings and
tirades. They report obscene outbursts, cancelled meetings and a shrinking
number of aides who have direct access to Bush. According to Capitol Hill
Blue, Col. Richard J. Tubb, the White House physician, has prescribed
anti-depressant drugs for Bush to control his erratic behavior, depression and
paranoia.
Untreated
alcoholism
It is
known that Bush is an admitted alcoholic, although he never sought treatment in
a formal program, and that his allegedly cocaine abuse in the earlier years
haunted his campaigns for Texas governorship and for his first-term presidency.
When Bush turned 40 years old, he substituted religion for alcohol, which is
common among untreated alcoholics. Since 2001, the White House has tried to
dispel the rumors that Bush is back on the bottle by claiming that Bush’s
recurring facial bruises, bodily injuries, and loss of consciousness had been
caused by falling off his bike or choking on a pretzel.
Hearing God’s
Voice?
In Bob
Woodward’s book, Plan of Attack (Simon & Schuster, 2004), Bush
confessed to Woodward that he asked God for advice before starting the Iraq war
and that God wanted him to be president. And the White House promoted this very
book when it came out in print. In a recent BBC documentary series, Palestinian
Prime Minister Abu Mazen, and his Foreign Minister, Nabil Shaath, recounted
their first meeting with President Bush in June 2003, when Bush declared that
God had told him to invade Afghanistan and Iraq and to solve the problem in the
Middle East.
Paranoia
It has
become a standard practice for Bush to search and screen everybody and
everything whenever he appears at a town meeting or in a public building in the
United States. His photo-ops had often been choreographed and prepared
beforehand because he was so afraid of having any questions or comments that
might have disagreed with him. Bush’s paranoia heightened when he demanded the
Chilean government to screen invited guests (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation
summit leaders) to a dinner for weapons before entering the presidential palace
on November 21, 2004. To placate Bush, President Ricardo Lagos of Chile
“disinvited” more than 200 guests, according to New York Times (Nov. 22,
2004).
Streak
of Sadism
Although
Bush often portrayed himself as a compassionate conservative, his actions have
proven otherwise — indifference to human suffering. When he was a child, he used
firecrackers to explode frogs. At the annual Radio and Television Correspondents
Dinner in March 2003, Bush made jokes about the failure to find the weapons of
mass destruction, while tens of thousands of Iraqis and a thousand American
soldiers died by his lies about WMD. Although the Pentagon tried to pin the
sadistic tortures at Abu Ghraib on a handful of undisciplined soldiers, it’s now
obvious that Bush, as the Commander-in-Chief, had approved the systematic brutal
tortures to be carried out in prisons throughout Afghanistan, Iraq and in
Guantanamo Bay. More recently, the U.S. Senate approved 90-9 a bill banning
military and Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) to use torture, nevertheless, a
presidential waiver has been proposed in that bill to allow the CIA to continue
to do so on foreign detainees in U.S. custody outside the United
States.
Disconnected from
Reality
Dr.
Frank’s assessment of Bush’s psychical reality and megalomania complex has been
made credible by the President’s recent actions in dealing with the Hurricane
Katrina disaster, the nomination of Harriet Miers to the Supreme Court, and
talks of not ruling out military actions against Iran and Syria — the former
accused of developing nuclear weapons and the latter suspected of harboring
terrorists.
As for
the Hurricane Katrina catastrophe, Bush would always be remembered for two
candid shots — a photo of him laughing and playing a guitar at a speaking event
in California the day after New Orleans nearly submerged under water; and a
video of him viewing the hurricane-ravaged area on Air Force One, while
people below were crying for help and dying.
Even with
the recent debacle of Hurricane Katrina’s relief efforts managed by his cronies’
Michael Brown of Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) and Michael Chertoff of Homeland Security, President
Bush nominated another crony, Harriet Miers, who lacks experience as a judge, to
the highest court of the land — the Supreme Court. He’s not only mocking other
prominent sitting Supreme Court judges with years of experience, but also
attempting to degrade the judicial system of the United States. Under
severe criticisms from Congress — both Democrats and
Republicans — Miers withdrew from her nomination a few days
ago.
It’s now
known that Bush had lied to the Congress and the public into a war with Iraq
based on false evidence of Iraq possessing weapons of mass destruction and of
Iraq being a terrorist state threatening the U.S. Yet, Bush and his henchmen are
now using the same accusations to incite war with Iran and
Syria.
Grandiose
Schemes
Dr. Frank
points out that Bush’s condition will get worse because a megalomaniac person
wants to control more things and challenge more traditions to feed his
desperation to manage anxiety.
On the
domestic front, Bush has tried to push for Social Security reform even though
the program is working well; introduced Intelligent Design to be taught in
classrooms as an alternative to the scientific theory of evolution; and
(ironically) launched a nationwide mental illness screening program in
government institutions, including all public school students from
kindergarten to the 12th grade.
On the
international front, Bush has claimed that he is trying to spread democracy in
the Middle East (by military force) and that he’s campaigning for a global war
against terrorism (an enemy without an army, nation, or borders).
From what
we have seen of Bush for more than four and a half years, could we honestly say
he’s fit to be the President of the United States? And could we
realistically say he's good for America, for the world, and for humanity?
In Dr. Frank’s warning words, “Bush will not stop of his own choosing.
He will only have to be stopped.” And Bush can be stopped by invoking
the constitutional Twenty-fifth Amendment — removal of a sitting president for
his inability to conduct presidential duties.
Copyright © 2005
UniOrb
*Note: You may copy this article without permission. The only
requirement is to include the byline and the URL like this:
By Diana Lee
UniOrb (Reality Check)
(http://uniorb.com)
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