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Americans who tuned in for one of President George W. Bush’s
rare press conferences saw a cornered animal trying to squirm his way out of
trouble by doing what he has always done - evading the truth.
Bush’s attempt to showcase himself as a leader who could handle tough questions
from the press corps fell just as flat as his unscripted town-meeting style appearance
in Cleveland the day before.
His eyes darted from side-to-side as he fielded questions about his real reasons
for invading Iraq. He stammered. Stalled. Used the word "uh" more
times than a suspect caught red-handed. He still claimed his reasons for invading
Iraq were just, even though those reasons have been proven wrong. He claims
the war can be won, a view not shared by many of his generals. He claimed a
lot of things - few of them true.
"President Bush exhibited symptoms of pathological prevarication,"
says Dr. Stephanie Crossfield, a psychologist who treats people who have trouble
telling the truth and who watched Bush’s performances on Monday and Tuesday
at my request. "His eye movements, gestures, and changes in voice tone
all display traits of consistent evasion of the truth."
This isn’t the first time I’ve asked Dr. Crossfield to study a
politician. She watched several of former President Bill Clinton’s press
conferences and came to similar conclusions about Clinton disassociation with
reality.
When studying a subject, she watches the eyes.
"Eye movement is difficult to control," she said. "You find
that the eyes dart away in specific patterns when a person is not telling the
truth. The President’s eyes dart a great deal. He is not comfortable facing
the truth."
Dr. Justin Frank, author of the book, Bush on the Couch: Inside the Mind of
the President, agrees with Dr. Crossfield.
"President Bush marches deeper and deeper into a world of his own,"
says Dr. Frank. "Central to Bush’s world is an iron will which demands
that external reality be changed to conform to his personal view of how things
are."
Republicans reluctantly admit Bush has lost touch with the truth. Sen. Chuck
Hagel says the President is "disconnected from reality."
Venture out beyond the Beltway and you find conservative Republicans shaking
their head and wondering the same thing.
Dennis Dalbey cuts the hair of Camp Pendleton’s young Marines, giving
them the regulation haircut before they head to combat in Iraq. His barbershop
on the Coast Highway near the base in California is covered with painted yellow
ribbons, flags and "We support our troops" banners. But Dalbey, a
Republican and a self-described conservative who voted for Bush, says he is
fed up with the President’s lies.
"Enough is enough," he says. "It’s time to bring the boys
home."
In San Marcos, retired Navy veteran Herb Ranquist, 77, sits in the local VFW
hall and says Bush is a failure.
"I voted for him two times, and I wish I hadn’t," Ranquist
says. "It was probably one of the worst mistakes I ever made."
Dr. Crossfield says it doesn’t take a degree in psychology or advanced
training in spotting liars to realize the President plays fast and loose with
the truth.
"More and more ordinary Americans see the evidence clearly every day,"
she says. "It is difficult to ignore."
Dr. Frank says Bush can’t change his ways.
"Taking responsibility has always been hard for George W. Bush,"
he says. "Taking responsibility for inflicting harm on others, a major
step in the development of maturity, is a step President Bush has yet to make.
Instead, he persists in lying to himself."
And to the American people.