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Skeptic
19th October 2004, 19:36
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Has Bush lost his reason?

The President's apparent mental fragility should give US voters pause for thought at the ballot box

Andrew Stephen
Sunday October 17, 2004
The Observer

It will, we are confidently told, be the most important American election for generations. In the words last week of Dick Cheney, the voice of what passes for gravitas in the Bush Administration, Americans will have to make 'about as serious a decision as anybody is ever asked to make' when they go to the polls in 17 days' time.
The prophets of doom, whom Cheney exemplifies, are precisely right about the importance of this election. But the momentous decision awaiting Americans is not whether they return to power a President who is uniquely qualified to protect the US against terrorism, as Cheney et al would have us believe. It is whether they re-elect a man who, it is now clear, has become palpably unstable.

The evidence has been before our eyes for some time, but only during the course of this election campaign has it crystallised - just in time, possibly, for the 2 November election. The 43rd US President has always had a much-publicised knack for mangled syntax, but now George Bush often searches an agonisingly long time, sometimes in vain, for the right words. His mind simply blanks out at crucial times. He is prone, I am told, to foul-mouthed temper tantrums in the White House. His handlers now rarely allow him to speak an unscripted word in public.

Indeed, there are now several confusing faces to the US President, and we saw three of them in the live, televised Presidential debates with John Kerry that culminated last Wednesday night in Tempe, Arizona. In the first debate on 30 September, watched by more than 62 million viewers, we saw Bush at his most unattractive: slouching, peevish, pouting, pursing his lips with disdain at what his opponent was saying. But he was unable to marshal any coherent arguments against Kerry and merely spewed out prepared talking points - in what, even his ardent supporters concede, was Bush's worst-ever such performance.

In the second debate on 8 October in St Louis, Bush could not stay on his stool and leapt up to dispense what were - certainly in contrast to Kerry's cogent recital of statistics and arguments - frequently defensive, shouting rants. I assume that he was told by his handlers not to show displeasure at Kerry's words this time around, but, instead, he revealed his anger by blinking repeatedly.

The moderator tried to stop him talking at one point (both campaign organisations had agreed the order in which the candidates could speak, with time limits imposed on both), but Bush insisted on riding roughshod over the briefly protesting moderator, Charles Gibson. (What, I wonder, would have happened if Gibson had kept to the rules and insisted that Bush stop talking? We will never know.)

By the time of the third debate on 13 October, this one witnessed by more than 50 million people, Bush had adopted yet another baffling persona. This time, he was peculiarly flushed, leading a colleague to speculate whether he was on something. He had clearly been told to look positive - that was his main thrust of the evening, with frequent assertions that 'freedom is on the march' - and spent the evening with a creepy, inane grin on his face, as though he was red-faced after a festive Christmas dinner.

So what is up with the US President, and why is this election so crucial not only for America but for the world? I have been examining videos of his first 1994 debate with Ann Richards, the Governor of Texas, who he was about to supplant, and of his 2000 debates with Al Gore. In his one and only debate with Richards a decade ago, Bush was fluent and disciplined; with Gore, he had lost some of that polish but was still articulate, with frequent invocations of his supposed 'compassionate conservatism'.

It is thus hard to avoid the conclusion that Bush's cognitive functioning is not, for some reason, what it once was. I am not qualified to say why this is so. It would not be surprising if he was under enormous stress, particularly after the 9/11 atrocities in 2001, and I gather this could explain much, if not everything.

But I have heard wild speculation in Washington that he is suffering from a neurological disorder, or that the years of alcoholism might finally be taking their toll on his brain.

I think it unlikely that Bush was wearing a bug so that he could be fed lines in at least one of the debates, but it is indicative of how his capabilities are regarded these days that the suggestion that he needed advice is given credence, as well as passing mentions in the powerful Washington Post and New York Times .

It does not help that Bush now lives in a positively Nixonian cocoon. He does not read newspapers; he sees television only to watch football; he makes election speeches exclusively at ticket-only events, and his courtiers consciously avoid giving him bad news. When he met John Kerry for their first bout on the debating platform, it was almost a new experience for the President to hear the voice of dissent.

A senior Republican, experienced and wise in the ways of Washington, told me last Friday that he does not necessarily accept that Bush is unstable, but what is clear, he added, is that he is now manifestly unfit to be President.

This, too, is a view that is widely felt, but seldom articulated and then only in private, within the Republican as well as Democratic establishments in Washington. Either way, the choice voters make on Tuesday fortnight should be obvious: whether he is unstable or merely unfit to be President - and I would argue that they amount to much the same - he should speedily be turfed out of office.

But Bush and his handlers like Cheney are driven, if nothing else, by a primal and overriding need to win, to destroy enemies who are blocking their way (shades, again, of Nixon?). Thus the speeches Bush now reads to the Republican faithful at his campaign meetings reflect their intent to demonise and annihilate Kerry's character in the eyes of the electorate; policy statements made by Kerry are wilfully distorted and then endlessly repeated so that, in the end, the distortions gain a credence among the majority who do not follow such matters closely.

Whether the American electorate choose to see the mounting, disturbing evidence about their President or whether they rally to Cheney's obscenely manipulative appeals for their patriotic support is still up in the air.

Kerry is a poor candidate who has only recently woken to the need to fight. Bush manages to maintain a peculiarly American, ordinary bloke image - mystifyingly so, given that he is the privileged product of Andover, Yale and Harvard - that still contrasts well, in the eyes of many Americans, with Kerry's patrician manner.

The polls taken since Wednesday night's debate are infuriatingly contradictory, too. The only consoling thought is that soon we should know the result of that very serious decision the American people have to make on polling day. There are not many occasions when I agree with anything that Dick Cheney says, but this is one of the rare moments when I concur totally with those chilling words.

Invader Zim
19th October 2004, 19:49
link?

The usual format with articals is to post a link and an outline of the story. A story such as this certainly needs a link.

Freedom Writer
19th October 2004, 20:42
http://observer.guardian.co.uk/comment/sto...1329254,00.html (http://observer.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,6903,1329254,00.html)

I think. <_<

redstar2000
20th October 2004, 01:58
I&#39;ve had the impression for some time that "the presidency" is not really "all that important" in the sense of who has the actual position.

Beginning in the Reagan years, it&#39;s unlikely that the "President" ever makes any substantive decisions without the concurrence of his "handlers"...who may or may not be public officials themselves.

In the case of the current administration, I strongly suspect that Dick Cheney is the "real functional president" insofar as there is one...and that figures like Rumsfeld, Ashcroft, Rice, etc. are much more significant than Bush himself.

When you think about it, that&#39;s not at all unusual in imperial regimes. There&#39;s a joke that Gore Vidal inserts into the pages of his great novel Julian.

If you need a favor, says one, the best person to petition is the Emperor, as he is reputed to have some influence with the Court Chamberlain.

:redstar2000:

The Redstar2000 Papers (http://www.redstar2000papers.fightcapitalism.net)
A site about communist ideas

Zingu
20th October 2004, 03:15
Well, before I even read this, I already had the feeling that we have a lunatic for a president. I mean, come on, mini-nukes? Personally I don&#39;t know who would have a plan to use nuclear weapons as bunker busters.....but if Bush wins, lunatic or not, I&#39;ll be convinced that the American populace is either insane or incrediably stupid.

KrazyRabidSheep
20th October 2004, 05:17
Well, before I even read this, I already had the feeling that we have a lunatic for a president. I mean, come on, mini-nukes? Personally I don&#39;t know who would have a plan to use nuclear weapons as bunker busters.....but if Bush wins, lunatic or not, I&#39;ll be convinced that the American populace is either insane or incrediably stupid.

stupid

Valkyrie
20th October 2004, 17:20
That guy Nailed it&#33;&#33;&#33;

Good article Sceptic&#33;

I made the same observation myself -- that he came off like three different people, espcecially in the last debate, talking very low and contained. I attributed that to his being coached for each debate, though. I can see why they don;t want him to talk in public&#33; During the second debate -- the Town meeting type thing, when he was asked who he would appoint as Supreme Court Justice --- he just blurted out sounding like a big assed baby --- "I&#39;m Not Tellin&#39;&#33;"

during his nomination acceptance speech he said to his inebriated daughters.. "Oh, I&#39;m so glad you&#39;ve come on the campaign trail with me.. it&#39;s like the camping trip I was always going to take you on, but never did." Hahaha&#33;&#33;&#33;&#33;&#33;&#33; Dysfunctional Father, Dysfunctional President. Dysfunctional human being.

Eleven states are voting NOW&#33; Never heard of that ever being done before. Looks like the election is going to be fixed again. In New York, the people who have recently registered are getting things back saying they are eligible to vote after Nov. 11&#33;&#33;&#33;&#33; I tell ya... if revolution isn&#39;t ripe now... I don&#39;t know when it will ever be.

cormacobear
20th October 2004, 17:59
Maybe thafter they&#39;ve nursed him through the election, they&#39;ll say he had a nervous breakdown.

That means cheney gets to rule up front for a while. He may be hoping that be called up to the presidency will halt the federal investigations against him, for trading with Iran as CEO of haliburton, and possibly outing an undercover intelligence agent to get back at her husband for publicly calling the pre-Iraq war intelligence into question.

Let&#39;s face as the man in charge he would be better able to mess up their investigations

Gringo-a-Go-Go
20th October 2004, 22:30
Dick Cheney makes Alexander Haig and Henry Kissinger look like choir boys. This man is more than dangerous: he&#39;s had more than a few people killed.

Skeptic
21st October 2004, 21:11
Originally posted by Gringo&#045;a&#045;Go&#045;[email protected] 20 2004, 09:30 PM
Dick Cheney makes Alexander Haig and Henry Kissinger look like choir boys. This man is more than dangerous: he&#39;s had more than a few people killed.
You said a mouthful about Dick Cheney,Gringo-A-go-go, but the situation is more desperate than you are saying:

The associated press has told us that fighter aircraft were scrambled and flying beside errand commercial and private air traffic within minutes of the slightest deviation some 67 times in the calendar year preceding June 1, 2001. This is one of many where the Kean Commission not only fail to look, but actually altered evidence, in the preparation of its final report.

For me, the pivotal evidence absolutely demonstrating direct government complicity in, and management of, the attacks was found in a number of undisputed, yet virtually unaddressed wargames that I will show were being conducted, coordinated and/or controlled by Vice President Dick Cheney or his immediate staff on the morning of September 11th. The names of those wargames are known to include: Vigilant Guardian, Vigilant Warrior, Northern Guardian, Northern Vigilance, and Tripod II. All Have been reported on by major press organizations relying on undisputed quotes from participating military personnel. They have also been confirmed by NORAD press releases. All except for Northern Vigilance and Tripod II had to do with hijacked airliners inside the continental United States, specifically within the Northeast Air Defense Sector where all four 9/11 Hijackings occurred.

According to a clear record some of these exercises involved commercial airline hijackings. In some cases false blips were deliberately inserted onto FAA and military radar screens and they were present during (at least) the first attacks. This effectively paralyzed fighter response because, with only eight fighters available in the region, there were as many as 22 possible hijackings taking place. Other exercises, specifically Northern Vigilance had pulled significant fighter resources away from the Northeast U.S.--Just before 9/11--into Northern Canada and Alaska. In addition, a close reading of key news stories published in the spring of 2004 revealed for the first time that some of these drills were "live-fly" exercises were actually aircraft, likely flown by remote control--were simulating the behavior of hijacked airliners in real life. All of this as the real attacks began. The fact that these exercises had never been systematically and thoroughly explored in the mainstream press, or publicly by Congress, or at least publicly in any detail by the so-called independent 9/11 Commission made me think they might be the Holy Grail of 9/11.

1. I will name Richard Cheney as the prime suspect in the mass murders of 9/11 and will establish that, not only was he a planner in the attacks, but also that on the day of the attacks he was running a completely separate command control and communications system which was superseding any orders being issued by the NMCC, or the White House situation room. To accomplish that end he relied on a redundant and superior communications system maintained by the US Secret Service in or near the Presidential Emergency Operations Center--The bunker to which he and National Security advisor Condeloeezza Rice were reportedly "rushed" after Flight 175 struck the WTC&#39;s South tower.

Excerpt from a Speech by Michael Ruppert: "Address to the San Francisco Commonwealth Club August 31st, 2004"

Skeptic
21st October 2004, 21:13
Here is the link to the Observer story I posted:

http://observer.guardian.co.uk/comment/sto...1329254,00.html (http://observer.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,6903,1329254,00.html)