"Spare us your predictable response". LMAO

What's that?  Our predictably logical, sane response. 


--- Virgil Bierschwale <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> So now he's responsible for katrina...
> Boy oh boy are ya'll grasping at straws...
> 
> Seems to me that the powers that be were democrats
> and the second amendment.
> 
> Oh well, I should have expected something along
> these lines. 
> 
> 
> Virgil Bierschwale
> http://www.virgilslist.com
> http://www.tccutlery.com
> http://www.bierschwale.com
> http://www.bierschwalesolutions.com
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
> Of Ed Leafe
> Sent: Wednesday, January 03, 2007 4:57 PM
> To: ProFox Mailing List
> Subject: [OT] Sociopath?
> 
>       Interesting analysis of Bush as a sociopath:
> 
> http://www.buzzflash.com/articles/interviews/049
> 
>       If you love GW Bush, you can just skip this, and
> spare us your
> predictable responses.
> 
> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
> - - - - - - - - - Justin
> A. Frank, M.D.: I think there’s a lot of grounds to
> follow your theory.
> First of all, I think that -- and I wanted to link
> with, since you made the
> link in your response to my book, to his sister’s
> death at an early age, and
> then jumped right into the present day, December
> 27th, I think that there’s
> a way to make a link between those two things
> straightaway -- namely, that
> he was left alone to manage a catastrophe. His
> parents abandoned him
> psychologically and emotionally, both because of
> their own grief and their
> own way of dealing with their grief, but also
> because of how they were as
> parents in general. Barbara was very preoccupied not
> just with the loss of
> her daughter, but with the fact that there was a
> newborn at home -- Jack,
> who was only a few months old. So he was left alone
> to solve a terrible
> catastrophe of loss, evoking anxiety and all kinds
> of things.
> 
> You can fast-forward that to the present day, and he
> is now feeling very
> much in the same situation. Even Scarborough talks
> about how isolated Bush
> is, and how it's like a bunker mentality. I think he
> has had a bunker
> mentality all of his life, and that he has covered
> it over and compensated
> for it with a tremendous amount of affability and
> charm. That may be partly
> because he had trouble reading, so he couldn’t like
> retreat and become
> isolated the way some people perhaps do, by hiding
> in books, or drugs, or
> whatever. He hid from various things, you know, with
> alcohol and things.
> But, mainly, he used his affability and his charm to
> be able to brush away
> anybody who might get to the core pain and terror
> that existed inside of
> him.
> 
> I think that that’s what’s happening now. I think
> somebody -- the voters,
> the public, the Baker Commission, various people
> --have tried to turn the
> light on. And he is very terrified of any kind of
> truth that will intrude
> into his need to cling to preconceptions, because
> they make him feel safe,
> and they allow him to stay in his bunker. He looked
> disgruntled this
> morning. I was watching his statement about
> President Ford, who died last
> night. I was really struck by how ill- at-ease he
> seemed, and like he didn’t
> want to be doing it. There are historical reasons
> for his being ill-at-ease,
> of course, and that was that Gerald Ford and his own
> father, H.W., didn’t
> like each other very much, and there was a lot of
> conflict between Ford and
> Bush Senior during the Reagan days, early on. But
> that -- and Bush Junior,
> certainly, is famous for holding grudges.
> 
> But I think, more than that, it’s like being told
> that he has to do
> something he doesn’t want to do. He developed an
> attitude from very early on
> of converting being neglected into a virtue. His
> having been neglected as a
> child was turned into a virtue, which is that he’s
> not going to ever be told
> what to do by anyone, and he’s going to be
> stubbornly defiant, no matter
> what, because anybody who pays attention to him is
> obviously not doing it
> out of love, but out of authority and trying to
> control him.
> 
> This is one of the things that has happened during
> his Presidency -- the way
> he’s conducted himself as President, for instance,
> with Katrina, with not
> preparing the troops, with various examples of
> failure of empathy and of
> failure of concern, and a failure to act and take
> care of people. It has to
> do with a replay of his own childhood that he is
> imposing on the rest of us,
> and we are all paying for that. I think the power of
> his psychology is such
> that he really has flipped his own failure or pushed
> his own failures or his
> own conflicts onto the rest of us. He’s gotten all
> of us to sort of live as
> potential Katrina victims. That’s how he is, because
> he was a Katrina victim
> in his own psyche when he was a child.
> 
> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
> - - - - - - - - -
> 
> 
> -- Ed Leafe
> -- http://leafe.com
> -- http://dabodev.com
> 
> 
> 
> 
[excessive quoting removed by server]

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