-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.radix.net/~tarpley/bush25.htm
<A HREF="http://www.radix.net/~tarpley/bush25.htm">Bush book: Chapter -25-</A>
--[25c]--
August 14: Bush's rage profile was once more on display as he called for
an extension of the federal death penalty in a Pittsburgh speech that
was also full of racist overtones. Addressing the National Convention of
the Fraternal Order of Police, Bush ranted that "the time has come to
show less compassion for the architects of crime and more compassion for
its victims. Our citizens want and deserve to feel safe." "We must
remember that the first obligation of a penal system is to punish those
who break our laws....You can't turn bad people into saints." Bush
wanted courts to be able to use evidence that had been seized illegally:
"There's no reason -- none at all-- that good police officers should be
penalized and criminals freed because a judge or a lawyer bungled a
search warrant." Journalists noted that the speech and the setting were
typical of the standard campaign event of 1988, which was often a police
group endorsing Bush, courtesy of the CIA Office of Security. The photo
of Bush in the Washington Post is expressive of Bush's anger when making
the speech. [fn 57]

August 21: The Soviet putsch was a trying time for Bush, who staked a
great deal on his deal with Gorbachov. A remarkable flare- up by Bush
came in response to the opinion expressed by Zviad Gamsakhurdia, the
president of the Republic of Georgia, that Gorbachov was part of the
conspiracy behind the coup. Bush, asked for a reaction, was incensed:

Bush: --say to him he needs to get a little work done on the kind of
statements he's making. I mean that's ridiculous. There's a man who has
been also swimming against the tide, it seems to me, a little bit. And I
don't want to go overboard on this, but he ought to get with it and
understand what's happening around the world.

Q: Are you saying that--

Bush: To suggest that President Gorbachov would plot to put the people
of the Soviet Union through this kind of trauma and the rest of the
world through it just makes absolutely no sense at all. Now, I haven't
heard him say that, so I want to hedge it. You've told me he said it; I
haven't heard it. So, I've got to be very careful I don't react to
something that may not be true. I learned that one a long time ago.

Here we can see that Bush pulled himself together just enough to leave
himself an escape hatch after he had blown his top.

September 11: In a photo opportunity with Congressmen in which he was
asked about his demand that the Congress postpone a vote on loan
guarantees for Israel until January, 1992, so as to permit a Middle East
peace conference to take place in the meantime, Bush showed flareups of
rage. Bush's ploy was widely thought to be part of the preparation of an
Israeli "breakaway ally" scenario, in which Israel, defying the wishes
of Washington, would wage war against Jordan, mass-deport the
Palestinians, and possibly attack other Arab states. Bush had been
accused of anti-semitism by a minority member of the Israeli cabinet.
Was he going to lose a confrontation with the formidable Zionist lobby?
This issue was Bush's obsession of the moment; his reply was testy and
full of veiled threats: "Well, I don't know what you mean by lose on it.
What I'm for is the peace process to be successful, and we're working
diligently for that. [...] And so, what I'm suggesting is a simple delay
here, in my view and in the view of all of us in the administration, is
the best way to set the proper tone for these talks to start. And I feel
very strongly about it. So, it's not a question of winning or losing in
my view. Strong-willed people look at these matters differently. My view
is that a delay is in the interest, and I'm going to fight for it. And I
think the American people will back me on it if we take the case to the
people. But what we're really trying to do is work it out without
getting into a lot of confrontation." Was a confrontation not already
taking place ? Bush answered, with his rage quotient rising: "I can take
quite a few punches. We're talking about working harmoniously together
in the spirit of cooperation. And I've seen comments from abroad that I
didn't particularly appreciate. But we're the United States of America,
and we have a leadership role around the world that has to be fulfilled.
And I'm calling the shots in this question in the way that I think is
best. And I've got some selling to do with certain Members of Congress,
and that's understandable to me. So, we'll see how it comes out. But I'm
not approaching this in the spirit of confrontation if that's the
question. You haven't seen any real controversial statements coming out
of here up till now."

September 12: At a press conference, the issue of the Israeli loan
guarantee postponement was once again the central theme. Bush was in a
controlled rage state during his opening statement, and went ballistic
during the questioning. A questioner noted that Bush sounded "very
tough" on insisting on the delay. Bush:

I just sound principled. I am convinced that this debate would be
counterproductive to peace. And I owe it to the Member of Congress to
say it as forcefully as I can. I've worn out of the telephone in there
and one ear, and I'm going to move to the other ear and keep on it.
Because this is, peace is vital here, and we've worked too hard to have
that request of mine denied. And I think the American people will
support me. They know we support Israel. I've just detailed some of what
we've done. So, there should be no question about that. I am giving the
Congress -- and I did it with the leaders today, having an opportunity
here, thank you, to do it here- - to give my best judgment. And I'm up
against some powerful political forces, but I owe it to the American pe
ople to tell them how strongly I feel about the deferral.

Q: Are those powerful political forces ungrateful for what you've done
so far on a peace process? And why doesn't the peace argument sell with
them?

Bush: I think it will sell, but it's taken a little time. And we're up
against a very strong and effective, sometimes, groups that go up to the
Hill. I heard today there was something like a thousand lobbyists on the
Hill working the other side of the question. We've got one lonely little
guy down here doing it. However, I like this forum better too.

This last passage was suffused with apoplectic fury. In the next
question, Bush was asked if a columnist was right in commenting on
Bush's stance, "It's your obsession." Bush denied it, but it was clear
to all that he was both enraged and obsessed. [52 bis]

Later Bush and his handlers concluded that he had overdone it,
especially in his attack on the 1,000 Zionist lobbyists, and sent a
letter to the heads of several Jewish organizations repeating his demand
for the delay, but also saying that he was "concerned" lest his
September 10 comments might have "caused apprehension" in the Jewish
community; Bush reassured them that he "never meant to be pejorative in
any sense." In a news analysis published 8 days later, a Washington Post
 observer found that Bush's "ardor is fueled by his anger," and quoted
an unnamed official that for Bush the issue of Jewish settlements in the
occupied territories was "a visceral thing." [fn 58]

September 18: In a demagogic photo opportunity at the Grand Canyon, Bush
again threatened to renew the bombing of Iraq. In remarks that recalled
his psychotic rages against Saddam Hussein during the Gulf crisis, Bush
raved that he was "fed up" with Saddam. Bush said that Saddam "may be
testing and probing" his resolve, "but he knows better than to take on
the United States of America." "I think the man will see that we are
very serious about this, and he will do what he should have done in the
first place: disclose and comply."

October 11: Hoping that public attention was fixed on the Senate
testimony of Anita Hill, Bush vetoed a bill to extend unemployment
payments to more than 2 million Americans whose jobless benefits had run
out. Bush had prepared this veto with a furious outburst against such an
extension. At a $1000-a-plate Republican fundraising dinner in New
Brunswick, New Jersey, Bush had lashed out angrily at a Congress which
was "doing nothing but griping -- refusing to consider the new ideas and
sending me a bunch of garbage I will not sign. I'll continue to veto the
bad stuff until we get good bills." Bush's argument was that the
prolonged unemployment benefits were not needed because the recession
was over anyway. He stressed his responsibility not to break the
October, 1990 budget agreement, which by that time was producing a
budget deficit officially admitted to be over $1 billion per day. Later,
as the existence of the depression began to penetrate the public
consciousness, Bush had to backtrack on this tirade. [fn 61]

October 24: Attempting to focus public anger on Congress in the wake of
the Clarence Thomas hearings, Bush attacked the lawmakers as "a
privileged class of rulers." "When Congress exempts itself from the very
laws it writes for others, it strikes at its own reputation and shatters
public confidence in government," he said. This was a transparent bid to
increase police-state attacks on the Congress by subjecting the
legislative branch to the oversight of law enforcement agencies which
are part of the executive, a favorite Bush obsession. Bush demanded a
special prosecutor to investigate the leaks of FBI information during
the Thomas hearings, and said that FBI reports would henceforth only be
shown, not given to the Hill. As Bush read through his tirade, his face
twisted and tightened into a mask of rage and hate. At one point,
perhaps in response to signals from his handlers, he paused and
apologized to the audience for getting so worked up, but the issue meant
a lot to him. [fn 62]

October 30: Commenting on Bush's surprising acceptance of a compromise
civil rights bill, Evans and Novak report that "Bush's capitulation on
racial quotas has again chilled conservative Republicans still suffering
from the year-old wound of his tax retreat." The columnists quote
Democratic Rep. Vin Weber saying that "It's a sign that their reactions
in times of crisis are not good." [fn 63] For months, Bush had sought to
attack this legislation as a quota bill, and it was clear that he was
preparing to use this as a way to inject racism into his 1992 campaign.
Indeed, the racism/quota issue was widely seen as one of the few
domestic wedge issues Bush could use for his campaign: his plan was to
tell the white middle class that their economic decimation was the fault
of blacks and other minorities benefitting from affirmative action
programs. Then, in the wake of the Thomas hearings, he accepted a
compromise and lost the issue. Was this an impulsive, hyperthyroid
decision?

October 31: Bush held the first official event of his re-election
campaign on Halloween; it was a $1000-a-plate fundraiser at the Sheraton
Astrodome in Houston. Bush offered an irate defense of his tenure in the
presidency. But the audience of 800 GOP fat cats gave Bush only a tepid
response. In the words of Elizabeth Ray, a local Republican candidate
for district judge, "I thought the dinner was very subdued. Halfway into
[Bush's] speech, people were still not clapping at some of the
traditional times, and I thought to myself, 'This is a very odd crowd.'"
"It wasn't a pep rally," agreed her husband, a Houston business
consultant. The heart of Bush's highly piqued performance was in these
lines:

Anyone who says we should retreat into an isolationistic cocoon is
living in the last century, when we should be focused on the next
century and the lives our children will lead. And they should know
America's destiny has always been to lead. And if I have anything to do
with it, lead we will...I'm not going to let liberal Democratic carping
keep me from leading.

When Bush said "carping," he seemed to spit and hiss at the same time.
Then, with his bile and andrenaline building to a crescendo of rage,
Bush recalled the Gulf war and how far Schwarzkopf would have gotten if
Congress had been in command. "Thank God I didn't have to listen to
these carpers telling me how to run that war," Bush exploded in a
paroxysm of fury. The implication was also clear: to checkmate Congress,
go to war.

It was during this trip to Texas that Bush began spouting his favorite
anticyclical line, that it was a great time to buy a house and to buy a
car. Many people across America thought that they were having enough
trouble buying groceries.

Bush's outburst this time reflected the rising tide of public awareness
of the economic depression, and demands that he change his policy.
Senator Mitchell had assailed Bush with unusual energy, noting that
"President Bush's record for economic growth and job creation is worse
than for any other president since Herbert Hoover. During Bush's
presidency, our country has grown at a slower rate, with fewer jobs
created than during any other presidency in the past 60 years." That
hurt. Secretary Brady was later sent out to complain that he could not
"understand why it is a function of leadership to try and remind the
people in this country of the recession and Herbert Hoover." [fn 64]
Brady was afraid even of the word, "depression." Earlier the same day
Bush had taken part in a "virtual political brawl" in the cabinet room
over the impact of the depression on politics, with predictions of the
defeat of Bush's candidate, administrative fascist Richard Thornburgh,
in the all-important Pennsylvania senate race. Bush's response had been
primarily one of recrimination, judging from published accounts: he
excoriated Republican congressional leaders for not toeing his line in
the October, 1990 budget battles. Bush told these leaders that he did
not think he could depend on Congressional Republicans voting with him
if an economic package also contained new taxes. The meeting had been
tense and acrimonious. [fn 65]

A comment in Newsweek noted that "at a Houston fund-raising banquet last
week, the president sounded downright petulant discussing the economy,
as if he'd been forced to eat broccoli for dinner." [fn 66]

November 2: Bush's psychological stability was further impacted by the
devastation of his home at Walker's Point, in Kennebunkport, Maine, by a
severe Atlantic storm. Because he was under fire for representing only
the wealthy, he flew to Maine on a small executive jet, the military
equivalent of a Grumman Gulfstream, rather than using Air Force One, a
Boeing 747. The furniture and some walls on the ground floor were
destroyed, and there was a considerable loss of family memorabilia. Bush
found a photograph of father Prescott in a swampy area several hundred
feet from the house. "It's devastating." "I can't believe it," said
Bush. "A lot of this [was] stuff that you would call dear, not valuable,
but things we bought in China or different trips. It's personal. You'll
see 'em floating around out here." Bush also referred mystically to the
importance of rebuilding and keeping a home by the ocean: "We'll be
here. It means something to us. It's our family strength, being this
close to the ocean. We'll figure it out." Bushwatchers sensed that
Bush's mental instability could only be exacerbated by this trauma. [fn
67] Bush once again looked ghastly on this outing, and about as old as
King Canute.

November 5: This was election day, and exit polls in the late afternoon
showed a decisive defeat of Thornburgh in Pennsylvania, reflecting
rising popular resentment of the Bush regime. The next day, Bush was
scheduled to depart for a NATO meeting and Rome and then for a meeting
with the leaders of the European Community in The Hague. But, abruptly
and in time for the evening news programs, Bush announced that he was
cancelling a later 10-day trip that was scheduled to have taken him to
Japan, South Korea, Singapore, and Australia. The rationale offered for
this reversal was that Bush wanted to stay in Washington until the end
of November and work on getting his "domestic legislative package"
through Congress. This explanation was incongruous for at least two re
asons: first, the Congressional leadership clearly hoped to adjourn and
go home for Thanksgiving recess by the time that Bush's scheduled trip
to the Orient was to have begun. Secondly, Bush had no domestic
legislative package.

Some of Bush's closest associates were dismayed by his rapid collapse
under pressure. "It makes it look like the Democrats have us on the
total run," one senior administration official told the Washington Post.
"This is ridiculous. We look like we're running around like chickens
with our heads cut off," said a GOP official with close ties to the
White House. The impression was that Bush had panicked when he became
aware that the Democratic National Committee had produced a t-shirt
celebrating Bush's "Anywhere but America Tour," listing trips completed
and planned during 1991. Bush, who was watching his own support and
popularity decline inexorably in the polls, had apparently been
stampeded by the defeat of Thornburgh and wanted to propitiate public
opinion by staying home. It looked very much like a hyperthyroid
decision.

This impression was magnified by the chaotic way that Bush's
cancellation became known. According to the Washington Post "the shock
of Bush's decision was intensified in Washington and Asia by the manner
of its revelation. A White House official involved in trip planning said
he heard of the postponement late Tuesday after a high-level meeting and
just minutes before learning that NBC News had obtained the story, which
was broadcast on its evening news program. Several Asian embassies in
Washington heard the news from the press reports before receiving
official word from the White House." On the way to Rome the next day,
Bush was heard to complain about what he perhaps considered a leak: "You
got the message oozed out of the White House before we had a chance to
properly notify the parties," he berated the press on board Air Force
One. "You guys are too good." [fn 68]

Sometime during October, Bush had discussed with his handlers the
possibility of cancelling the Asia trip while simultaneously proposing a
set of measures allegedly designed to improve economic conditions, and
challenging the Congress to stay in town long enough to pass this
package. But Bush had been unable to assemble any such set of measures.
One GOP official complained that Bush's announcement late on election
day, 1991 was "a cancellation without a purpose. This is nuts." [fn 69]
This Asian trip, featuring a stopover in Japan, was later re-scheduled
to start on December 30 and to extend through the first week of the New
Year. It was during this trip that Bush vomited and collapsed to the
floor during a state dinner with Japanese Prime Minister Miyazawa.

November 6: On the morning after the election, Bush had announced a 6:40
AM press conference in order to put on a demagogic show of concern for
the plight of those born on the wrong side of the tracks before jetting
off to a NATO summit in Rome. He admitted that he was "depressed" over
the defeat of Thornburgh because the latter was such a good man. He
lamely tried to explain his decision to remain in Washington at the end
of the month as based on his experience that "all kinds of crazy things
can happen with this crowd that controls the Senate and House." But Bush
had another big flip-flop to offer: although he still denied the
existence of a "recession," he was now concerned about "people that are
hurting," and for these he was willing to "go the extra mile." He was
now seeking a compromise bill to extend unemployment benefits. Within a
week, a compromise had been reached with most of the concessions coming
from Bush, on the model of the civil rights bill. Was it another
impuslive, hyperthyroid moment? [fn 70]

November 7: During his address to the NATO summit of 16 heads of state
and heads of government, Bush departed from his prepared text and
inserted the following sentence off the cuff into his remarks:

If, my friends, your ultimate aim is to provide independently for your
own defense, the time to tell us is today.

This was in many respects the most astounding threat ever made by an
American president to the leaders of the North Atlantic Alliance, which
had always been considered, since 1949, as the cornerstone of US foreign
policy. Bush now called the Atlantic Pact into question, apparently in a
fit of rage. Press reports spoke of "clouds of suspicion" separating
Bush from France and Germany; the State Department and the British were
known to be hysterical about plans to expand the exisiting Franco-German
brigade into a larger unit. US officials told one reporter that Bush had
become "exasperated" by the Byzantine tactics of Tonton Mitterrand,
known in Paris as "Le Florentin" in a misguided tribute to Machiavelli.
These frictions apparently had contributed to Bush's outburst. James
Baker and other spin doctors tried to play down the importance of this
shocking episode. [fn 71]

November 8: At a press conference in Rome, Bush turned in yet another
furious tantrum. The basic issues were that his travel obsession had
been denied, and that he did not want to brook increasing criticism.
Bush "complained bitterly" that he had been forced to abandon his prized
trip to Asia owing to "some carping by people that don't understand" his
awesome responsibilities as world leader. Bush angrily maintained that
to be "driven away" from an Asia trip "by people holding up silly
T-shirts is ridiculous." As one journalist saw the scene, "Bush, his
voice rising and eyelids narrowing, talked at length about a president's
responsibilities in foreign policy and the importance of Japan to
American jobs. His passionate response contained an undercurrent of regr
et that he approved the cancellation that some Republicans said this
week was precipitous and too reactive to the Democrats." Had calling off
the trip somehow interfered with Bush's plans for unleashing the next
war? Bush reverted to his favorite theme of his war leadership: "If I
had had to listen to advice" of Congressional Democrats "to do something
about the Persian Gulf, we'd have still been sitting there in the United
States, fat, dumb, and happy, with Saddam Hussein maybe in Saudi
Arabia." Bush also continued to deny the depression: "I'm not prepared
to say we're in recession." For him, an alleged growth rate of 2.4% "is
not recession. It does not fit the definition of recession." [fn 72]

November 12: Bush's countenance was once more a mask of rage, venom, and
hatred as he stumbled through another $1000-a-plate Republican
fundraising dinner in Manhattan. He appeared thin and drawn. The take
for Bush's campaign was estimated at $2.2 million, but press reports
indicated that Bush's enraged monologue "prompted little applause or
enthusiasm as the president moved from one topic to another, rarely
devoting more than a few seconds to any theme." Bush's delivery was
halting and confused, with signs of evident dissociation and a truncated
attention span. The essence of the speech was a paranoid, self-righteous
defense against critics named and unnamed. Bush labelled his tormentors
as "tawdry," "phony," and "second- guessers." He pounded the lectern as
he ranted, "I'm not going to be the javelin-catcher for the liberals in
Congress anymore." "I am not going to apologize for one minute that I
devote to advancing our economic principles aborad or working for world
peace," postured the president of two wars and counting.

November 12: Bush, speaking in New York and fumbling for bits of
demagogy on the economic situation, expressed a vague desire to see
lower interest rates for credit card holders. Many observers say that
the two sentences on this topic uttered by Bush that day had been
interpolated by chief of staff Sununu; Sununu later accused Bush of
having ad-libbed the pronouncement on his own initiative. One day later,
the Senate overwhelmingly approved a bill to cap credit card interest
rates. With this, the secondary market in credit card debt collapsed,
threatening to blow off the coverup of the bankruptcy of the largest US
banks. On Friday, November 15, the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 4%
of its value within a few hours, the biggest collapse since October 13,
1989. Bush, running for cover, hastily despatched Treasury Secretary
Brady to denounce the interest cap as "wacky." It was yet another
impulsive volte-face by the erratic and unstable Bush.

November 20: With Bush scheduled to sign a civil rights bill containing
provisions which Bush had stigmatized as quotas and sworn he would
resist to the death, the White House circulated a directive to federal
agencies mandating the termination of all hiring policies designed to
favor minority groups or women. Bush had not wanted any civil rights
bill to be passed, preferring to keep the race issue in his quiver for
the 1992 election, but he had been intimidated by the threat that Sen.
Danforth and other Republicans would support a Democrat-sponsored bill,
leaving Bush painfully isolated. That had already been an impulsive
decision.

Now Bush's attempted sleight of hand, signing a bill and simultaneously
removing the hiring policies, caused a furore. "The president would have
to lose his mind to make this statement," said Kerry Scanlon, a lawyer
for the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund. Within hours, the
offending directive had been withdrawn, and blamed exclusively on Boy
Gray, the White House resident racist who had indeed drafted the
directive, but on instructions from Bush. It was yet another example of
an impulsive snap decision made by Bush under pressure. Intriguingly,
November 20 was also the day that Bush personally pronounced the
much-tabooed word: "DEPRESSION." "I don't want to emphasize just the bad
things, to talk us into a depression," he had told some television stati
ons owned by NBC. It was a landmark: presidents had made that word taboo
for many decades. [fn 73]

Towards the end of November, the pendulum of Bush's unpredictability had
swing back: the Asia trip was being rescheduled for about a month later
than originally planned. By now, the media were harping on the evident
"disarray" in the White House, but none seemed to recall the thyroid
episode of the springtime, nor the psychopathological trigger for the
thyroid condition.

Sometime during November, just about the time his approval ratings were
about to go below 50%, Bush apparently received urgent advice to
moderate his "mad dog" public profile in favor of a more conciliatory
and affable posture. This occurred during the same month. 0hatever the
details that led to the renovation of his image, he now began to exhibit
concern for the victims of the Bush depression who, according to his
litany, he now understood were "hurting." He began smiling more, and
hissing somewhat less. Photo opportunities began to depict him
fraternizing with the common people.

But that postponed Far East trip continued to loom as Bush's nemesis.
Because of his desire to be seen doing something to improve the lot of
the comman man, Bush's handlers repackaged this trip as a crusade to
open foreign markets to US exports, thus helping to defend American
jobs. Bush accordingly took along the widely discredited top executives
of GM, Ford, and Chrysler to symbolize his committment to the moribund
US auto industry. These figures functioned like a Greek chorus of
negative spin, pointing up Bush's misadventures and failures. The most
outspoken of the Big Three bosses was predictably Chrysler's Lee
Iacocca, of whom one reporter said that he would probably complain if
the sun came up.

Bush displayed decided mental instability during this trip. In Canberra,
Australia, he flashed a well-known obscene gesture to a group of farmers
who were protesting his "free trade" farm policies. Bush told a luncheon
cruise in Sydney harbor, "I'm a man that knows every hand gesture you've
ever seen-- and I haven't learned a new one since I've been here." As
the Washington Post reported, "Down here, holding up the first two
fingers to form a "V" with the back of the hand toward the subject is
the same as holding up the middle finger in the United States. And
that's just what Bush did from his limousine to a group of protesters as
 his motorcade passed through Canberra yesterday, apparently not knowing
its significance. Or maybe he did." [fn 74] One is reminded of Nelson
Rockefeller's antics on at least one occasion.

Then came Bush's visit to Japan, crowned by his seizure at a state
dinner in the official residence of Prime Minister Miyazawa. Bush had
vomited at least once before the dinner. "I got a preview in the
receiving line. I turned to the prime minister and said, 'Would you
please excuse me,' and I rushed into the men's room there. And I thought
that had taken care of it, but back I came. It hadn't been halted. It
was just the beginning." [fn 75] According to Treasury Secretary Brady,
Bush had been urged to skip the state dinner altogether by his personal
physician, Dr. Burton Lee, but Bush had rejected this advice out of
hand, saying that his absence would "disrupt" the proceedings. [fn 76]
After the vomiting and fainting scene was over, Bush was asked if he
intended to slow down. "Nope," Bush retorted. It's just a 24-hour flu."
[fn 77] The truth about Bush's collapse in Tokyo has yet to be told; but
it was clear that Bush had learned nothing, and was still determined to
impose his will on the universe. Bush's first efforts at campaign
oratory after his return from Japan indicated that rage was once again
winning the upper hand, which was not a good sign for Bush's ability to
function on the campaign trail.

In the light of the evidence reviewed here, it is evident that Bush's
marked tendency towards rage episodes, public fits of anger, and
obsessive fixations has not subsided. Indeed, Bush's uncontrollable
temper tantrums have been if anything more severe during October and
November, 1991, as his presidency began to buckle under the strain of
the economic depression Bush was unable and unwilling to overcome. We
must therefore conclude that the treatment received by Bush for his
thyroid condition during May, 1991 and the successive months has not
remedied the mental and cognitive disturbances which were at the root of
Bush's psychosomatic affliction, Basedow's disease. This means that
Bush's health, and most especially his mental health, must be considered
a decisive issue for the 1992 presidential campaign. Citizens must
accordingly set aside White House propaganda statements and carefully
consider the advisability of returning to the White House an individual
who has demonstrably experienced psychotic episodes during his tenure in
the White House, and who has presented no convincing evidence of
remission.



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NOTES:


1. "Tough and Tender Talk," People Weekly, December 17, 1990, p. 52.

2. Anton Chaitkin, Treason in America, (New York, 1985), p. 476 ff.

3. Cited in Chaitkin, p. 478.

4. Elizabeth Drew, Portrait of an Election, (New York, 1981), p. 106.

5. J.D. Salinger, The Catcher in the Rye, (New York: Bantam, 1986), p.
1.

6. F. Scott Fitzgerald, This Side of Paradise, New York: Scribners,
1960), p. 128.

7. Mary McGrory, "The Babbling Bush," Washington Post, September 29,
1988.

8. Mary McGrory, loc. cit.

9. Maureen Dowd, "The Language Thing," The New York Times Magazine, July
29, 1990.

10. Maureen Dowd, loc. cit.

11. Maureen Dowd, loc. cit.

12. David Hoffman, "Reading Bush's Lips," Washington Post, December 4,
1988.

13. Maureen Dowd, op. cit.

14. David Hoffman, op. cit.

15. David Hoffman, loc. cit.

16. David Hoffman, loc. cit.

17. Maureen Dowd, op. cit.

18. David Hoffman, op. cit.

19. Maureen Dowd, op. cit.

20. "Bush to News Media: Mum's Going to Be the Word," Washington Post,>
February 16, 1990.

21. "Bush Tells 'Slovenly' Press to Shape Up," Washington Post, May 13,
1990.

22. "Transitioning in Florida," Washington Post, November 12, 1988.

23. Gil Klein, "Bush Not Man to Sit Still," Media General Newspapers for
the Sherman, Texas Democrat, September 7, 1989.

24. Dan Balz, "The 18-Hole Drive to Play on Par With the President,"
Washington Post, Sept. 3, 1990.

25. David Hoffman, "See How He Plays," Washington Post, September 3,
1989.

26. "Peripatetic Bush to Break Nixon Travel Record," Washington Post,>
July 27, 1991.

27. George Bush and Vic Gold, Looking Forward (New York: Doubleday,
1987), p. 11-12.

28. "Bush Has 'Early Glaucoma' In Left Eye, Tests Disclose," Washington
Post, April 13, 1990.

29. "President Assails Silencing of Unpopular Viewpoints," Washington
Post, May 5, 1991.

30. "Bush Diagnosis: Thyroid Ailment," Washington Post, May 8, 1991.

31. "The Path to Diagnosis of the President's Ailment," Washington Post,
May 11, 1991.

32. Washington Post, May 10, 1991.

33. New York Times, May 29, 1991.

34. New York Times>, May 22, 1991.

35. Washington Times, May 29, 1991.

36. Mary McGrory, "China and an Imperial President," Washington Post,>
May 30, 1991.

37. Washington Post, September 6, 1991.

38. "Bush Gets 'Medical Stamp of Approval' for '92," Washington Post,>
September 14, 1991.

39. Lawrence K. Altman, MD, "President's Thyroid: Questions of Mood,"
New York Times, May 21, 1991.

40. Abigail Trafford, "Me, Bush and Graves' Disease," Washington Post,>
May 21, 1991.

41. Lillian Sholtis Brunner and Doris Smith Suddarth, >Textbook of
Medical-Surgical Nursing (Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1964), pp. 796, 798.


42. Statement issued May 29, 1991, in What Does Candidate LaRouche Think
of Bush's Mental Health (Washington: Democrats for Economic Recovery,
LaRouche in '92: 1991), p. 3.

43. William Safire, "After the Flutter," New York Times, May 20, 1991.

44. "President is Bouyant About Health, Work," Washington Post, May 23,
1991.

45. "Bush Drops Hint He Won't Run in '92," New York Post, June 17, 1991.


46. "Among Notables, Bush Plays One Tough Room," New York Times,> June
17, 1991.

47. Frank J. Murray, "First lady longs to have her husband to herself,"
Washington Times, June 17, 1991.

48. "First Lady: Bush Must Run Again," Washington Post, August 1, 1991.

49. "Lead Found in Quayles' Water Supply," Washington Post, June 23,
1991.

50. Washington Post, August 4, 1991.

51. Andrew Rosenthal, "Shedding Tears, Bush Tells Baptists of Praying as
Gulf War Neared," New York Times, June 7, 1991.

52. Andrew Rosenthal, "Among Notables, Bush Plays One Tough Room," New
York Times, June 17, 1991.

53. Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents, Vol. XXVII, No. 28
(July 15, 1991), pp. 941, 944-947.

54. "Peripatetic Bush to Break Travel Record," Washington Post, July 27,
1991.

55. "President Sounds Themes of Likely '92 Campaign," Washington Post,>
August 3, 1991. Photos of a furious Bush are on page A1 and page A4.

56. New York Times, July 25, 1991.

57. "Bush Anti-Crime Speech Echoes 1988 Campaign," Washington Post,>
August 15, 1991.

58. Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents, September 12, 1991,
pp. 1242, 1253-1254.

59. "Bush Tries to Ease Loan Crisis," Washington Post, September 20,
1991.

60. Washington Post, September 19, 1991.

61. "Bush Vetoes $6.4 Billion Bill to Extend Jobless Benefits,"
Washington Post, October 12, 1991.

62. "Bush Launches Strike at Congress," Washington Post, October 25,
1991.

63. Evans and Novak, "It was a Surrender on Quotas," October 30, 1991.

64. "Brady Favors Additional Interest rate Reductions," Washington Post,
November 8, 1991.

65. "President Hits Back at Critics," Washington Post, November 1, 1991.


66. "Dragging Bush Home For Broccoli," Newsweek, November 11, 1991.

67. "For the First Family, a Sense of Loss," Washington Post, November
3, 1991.

68. "Deferral of Trip Raises Problems for US Policy," Washington Post,>
November 7, 1991.

69. "Bush Cancels Pacific Trip," Washington Post, November 6, 1991.

70. Washington Post, November 7, 1991.

71. "Bush Challenges Europeans To Define US NATO Role," Washington
Post,> November 8, 1991.

72. "President Defends Foreign Policy, Attacks Congressional Democrats,"
Washington Post, November 9, 1991.

73. Washington Post, November 21, 1991.

74. Washington Post, January 3, 1992.

75. Washington Post, January 9, 1992.

76. Washington Post, January 11, 1992.

77. Washington Post, January 9, 1992.
--[fini]--
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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