by Lyndon LaRouche
from
LaRouchePub website
Sept. 27, 2004 (EIRNS)—With just two days to go before the first of
three Presidential debates between President George W. Bush
and Sen. John Kerry, Lyndon LaRouche, the former
candidate for the 2004 Democratic Party Presidential nomination,
issued the following statement today through the
LaRouche Political Action Committee.
The as-yet unspoken, but pivotal issue to be taken up in the
upcoming Presidential campaign debates between George W. Bush
and John Kerry is the mental illnesses from which
President Bush suffers. The most concise and frank, yet
compassionate account of George W. Bush’s multiple mental
disorders can be found in the 2004 book-length study by Dr.
Justin Frank,
Bush on the Couch: Inside the Mind of the
President (New York: HarperCollins, 2004). Dr. Frank
is a leading psychoanalyst who teaches at George Washington
University Medical Center. His professional credentials are
impressive, and his in-depth study of the President, based on
massive amounts of public documentation—autobiographical and
biographical accounts, countless hours of video footage of the
President, statements by close associates and relatives, spanning
nearly the entirety of George W. Bush’s lifetime—presents a
compelling case that Mr. Bush is in need of medical
assistance.
As Dr. Frank summarized the case in his opening chapter,
"If one of my patients frequently
said one thing and did another, I would want to know why. If I
found that he often used words that hid their true meaning and
affected a persona that obscured the nature of his actions, I
would grow more concerned. If he presented an inflexible
worldview characterized by an oversimplified distinction between
right and wrong, good and evil, allies and enemies, I would
question his ability to grasp reality. And if his actions
revealed an unacknowledged—even sadistic—indifference to human
suffering, wrapped in pious claims of compassion, I would worry
about the safety of the people whose lives he touched. For the
past three years, I have observed with increasing alarm the
inconsistencies and denials of such an individual. But he is not
one of my patients. He is our President."
In his 219-page clinical diagnosis of
the President’s mental condition, Dr. Frank concluded that
Mr. Bush suffers from a range of serious, albeit curable
conditions. These include:
-
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity
Disorder (ADHD)
-
untreated and uncured alcoholism
(what is frequently referred to in lay terms as "dry drunk")
-
an omnipotence complex
-
paranoia
-
an Oedipal Complex
-
sadism
-
a mild form of Tourette’s
Syndrome
-
a diminished capacity to
distinguish between reality and fantasy
These diagnosed mental disorders cannot
be swept under the rug. The future of the United States and
the world is going to be determined by the outcome of the
Nov. 2, 2004 U.S. Presidential elections. I urge all Americans to
read Dr. Frank’s alarming findings. I also call on those
responsible for the upcoming Presidential debates, including the
candidates themselves, to accept the fact that no serious policy
dialogue can take place, until this issue has been addressed,
squarely and publicly. The American people have the right to know
that the incumbent President, seeking re-election, is plagued by a
number of debilitating mental disorders that have already impacted,
gravely, on American national security, and have severely damaged
some of our most important international partnerships.
In their wisdom, the Members of the U.S. Congress proposed
and ratified the Twenty-Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution,
which established the procedures for the President to be
removed from office if it is determined that "he is unable
to discharge the powers and duties of his office."
In the case of the current President,
George W. Bush, we have the advantage of a Presidential
election, just weeks away. It would be a grave crime of omission to
cover over this admittedly sensitive Constitutional issue, and leave
the matter in the hands of a Vice President Dick Cheney, were
there to be a Bush-Cheney re-election and a subsequent,
inevitable mental breakdown crisis.
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