-Caveat Lector-

Bush, brain damage and the State of the Union
http://www.onlinejournal.com/Commentary/MickeyZ013003/mickeyz013003
.html
By Mickey Z.
Online Journal Contributing Writer

"One can lie with the mouth, but with the accompanying grimace, one
nevertheless tells the truth."�Nietzsche

January 30, 2003�President-Select George W. Bush delivered the yearly
State of the Union address Tuesday night. While members of Congress
appeared to be auditioning for a Ritalin commercial, bouncing up and
down to applaud and yell at the slightest provocation, Bush talked of
"dramatically improving the environment" and the importance of "visiting
prisoners."

"This Nation fights reluctantly," he told us. "We exercise power without
conquest, and sacrifice for the liberty of strangers . . . Americans are a
free people, who know that freedom is the right of every person and the
future of every nation."

"We seek peace," he assured the folks who tuned in, before warning: "If
war is forced upon us, we will fight in a just cause and by just
means�sparing, in every way we can, the innocent. And if war is forced
upon us, we will fight with the full force and might of the United States
military�and we will prevail."

At this juncture, I was reminded of a chapter from Oliver Sacks' remarkable
book, "The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and Other Clinical Tales,"
in which Sacks detailed the reactions of people with aphasia and agnosia
as they viewed a televised speech by President Ronald Reagan.

While the multiple language and speech problems of aphasia can be caused
by any disease or injury to the brain, the most common cause is stroke.
"The hallmark of aphasia," explains Dr. Antonio Damasio, a behavioral
neurologist at the University of Iowa, "is the use of words that are off-
target, words that are related but not quite correct." Therefore, this
condition can often be masked and difficult to diagnose.

This can also be true when treating those with agnosia. Agnosia, while it
can present an extremely broad range of symptoms, sometimes causes
aphasia-like speech and language problems. Such a person with agnosia
may suffer from tonal problems and be unable to recognize the tone,
timbre, feeling, or character of a voice, but can understand the words and
grammatical constructions perfectly.

Sacks, a noted neurologist, has been in the position to encounter many
rare cases of agnosia. "Such tonal agnosia (or 'atonias') are associated with
disorders of the right temporal lobe of the brain," he explains, "whereas
the aphasiacs go with disorders of the left temporal lobes." According to
Sacks, people with atonia may sometimes be found in an aphasia ward.
Therefore, as it is for patients with aphasia, treating someone with aphasia
can occasionally become more complex because many patients will display
a level of understanding that seemingly belies their condition.

In addition, Dr. Sacks found that some people with aphasia, when
addressed "naturally," could grasp some or most of the meaning of one's
words. Thus, he was compelled to utilize an unusual approach in his
treatment. In order to satisfactorily confirm their condition as aphasia, Dr.
Sacks stated that he had to go to "extraordinary lengths, as a neurologist,
to speak and behave unnaturally, to remove all the extra-verbal
clues�tone of voice, intonation, suggestive emphasis or inflection, as well
as all visual cues (one's gestures, one's entirely unconscious, personal
repertoire and posture)."

Such depersonalizing of voice renders speech devoid of tone or color. It is
this machine-like way of talking that will usually be unrecognizable to
people with aphasia and quite possibly cause them to laugh at the
incomprehensible sounds being uttered. The words mean nothing, it is the
way they are spoken that matters. Through such unusual treatment, Sacks
was able to truly demonstrate his patients' aphasia.

Quite unexpectedly, this peculiar method exposed a rather fascinating
side effect: political savvy. In the mid-eighties, Sacks studied the reaction
of people with aphasia as they watched a televised speech by the former-
actor-turned- president. Despite being unable to grasp the skillful
politician's words, the patients were convulsed in laughter.

"One cannot lie to an aphasiac," Dr. Sacks noted. "He cannot grasp your
words, and so cannot be deceived by them; but what he grasps, he grasps
with infallible precision, namely the expression that goes with the words,
that total spontaneous, involuntary expressiveness which can never be
simulated or faked, as words alone can, all too easily."

So, why did those patients with aphasia cackle at Reagan's speech?

"It was the grimaces, the histrionics, the false gestures and, above all, the
false tones and cadences of the voice which rang false for these wordless
but immensely sensitive patients," explained Sacks.

Conversely, Sacks remarked on a woman with tonal agnosia who was also
watching the address�stony-faced. Emily D., a former English teacher and
poet, was deprived of any emotional reaction to the speech but was able
to judge it in the opposite way the patients with aphasia did. Her
response? "He does not speak good prose," Emily D. told Sacks. "His word-
use is improper. Either he is brain- damaged or he has something to
conceal."

"We normals," concluded Dr. Sacks, "aided, doubtless, by our wish to be
fooled, were indeed well and truly fooled. And so cunningly was deceptive
word-use combined with deceptive tone, that only the brain-damaged
remained intact, undeceived."

Those "well and truly fooled" lined up yesterday to demonstrate who
remained intact after George W. Bush's State of the Union address.

A New York Times editorial declared, "No one watching the somber Mr.
Bush's delivery could doubt his determination," Bush's "obvious sincerity."

Times reporter, Todd S. Purdum: "He spoke feelingly."

CNN.com stated Bush looked "determined and focused" as he presented a
"powerful State of the Union address."

In Japan, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuo Fukuda called Bush's speech "a
forceful, strong message," while Sweden's Prime Minister Goeran Persson
found the address to be "an important signal'' A Houston Chronicle editorial
explained: "Bush is good at conveying confidence and strength, and
certainly did last night," arguing, "Few would quarrel with Bush's
conclusion: 'We exercise power without conquest, and sacrifice for the
liberty of strangers.'"

The New York Post weighed in, declaring it "a remarkable speech" that
Bush delivered "precisely, tactfully and with an occasional twinkle in the
eye."

"Either he is brain-damaged or he has something to conceal."

The words of Emily D. rang in my ears, and I couldn't help wondering if, last
night, there was laughter echoing down the corridors of the hospital
where Dr. Oliver Sacks once worked.

Mickey Z. is the author of The Murdering of My Years: Artists and Activists
Making Ends Meet and an editor at Wide Angle. He can be reached at:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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