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Buy beleaguered, overworked White House aides enough drinks and they tell
a sordid tale of an administration under siege, beset by bitter staff infighting
and led by a man whose mood swings suggest paranoia bordering on schizophrenia.
They describe a President whose public persona masks an angry, obscenity-spouting
man who berates staff, unleashes tirades against those who disagree with him
and ends meetings in the Oval Office with “get out of here!”
In fact, George W. Bush’s mood swings have become so drastic that White
House emails often contain “weather reports” to warn of the President’s
demeanor. “Calm seas” means Bush is calm while “tornado alert”
is a warning that he is pissed at the world.
Decreasing job approval ratings and increased criticism within his own party
drives the President’s paranoia even higher. Bush, in a meeting with senior
advisors, called Senator Majority Leader Bill Frist a “god-damned traitor”
for opposing him on stem-cell research.
“There’s real concern in the West Wing that the President
is losing it,” a high-level aide told me recently.
A year ago, this web site discovered the White House physician prescribed
anti-depressants for Bush. The news came after revelations that the
President’s wide mood swings led some administration staffers to doubt
his sanity.
Although GOP loyalists dismissed the reports an anti-Bush propaganda, the reports
were later confirmed by prominent George Washington University psychiatrist
Dr. Justin Frank in his book Bush on the Couch: Inside the Mind of the President.
Dr. Frank diagnosed the President as a “paranoid meglomaniac”
and “untreated alcoholic” whose “lifelong streak of sadism,
ranging from childhood pranks (using firecrackers to explode frogs) to insulting
journalists, gloating over state executions and pumping his hand gleefully before
the bombing of Baghdad” showcase Bush’s instabilities.
“I was really very unsettled by him and I started watching everything
he did and reading what he wrote and watching him on videotape. I felt he was
disturbed,” Dr. Frank said. “He fits the profile of a former drinker
whose alcoholism has been arrested but not treated.”
Dr. Frank’s conclusions have 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.
As a recovering alcoholic (sober 11 years, two months, nine days), I know all
too well the symptoms that Dr. Frank describes and, after watching Bush for
the past several years, I have to, unfortunately, agree with him.
Conversations over the last few weeks with longtime friends who work in the
Bush White House confirm even more what Dr. Frank says and others have suggested.
The President of the United States is out of control. How long can
the ship of state continue to sail with a madman at the helm?