home / subscribe / about us / books / archives / search / links / feedback

 

New Print Edition of CounterPunch Available Exclusively to Subscribers: The Real Scandal at the Times: Why Not Give Jayson Blair a Pulitzer? After all They Gave Them to Safire and Gerth; What About the Framing of Wen Ho Lee? Falling for the Jessica Lynch Fraud? Judy Miller's Missing WMDs? Blair, the Early Years; Meet the Minister of Sleaze: Deputy Interior Secretary Steve Griles; He Still Works for Big Oil and Strip Miners; Uses 90-Year Old Women as Human Shields; The Crash of the American Economy; Smearing Rachel Corrie's Memory; The Origins of Chalabi: Is He a Creature of Israeli Intelligence? Remember, the CounterPunch website is supported exclusively by subscribers to our newsletter. Our worldwide web audience is soaring, with more than 60,000 visitors a day. This is inspiring news, but the work involved also compels us to remind you more urgently than ever to subscribe and/or make a (tax deductible) donation if you can afford it. If you find our site useful please: Subscribe Now!

Or Call Toll Free 1-800-840 3683 or write CounterPunch, PO BOX 228, Petrolia, CA 95558

Coming Soon!
From Common Courage Press

Recent Stories

May 20, 2003

Linda Heard
The Cage of Occupation

Edward Said
The Arab Condition

 

May 19, 2003

CounterPunch Wire
"Terror" Slut Steve Emerson Eats Crow

Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity
A Letter to Kofi Annan on Powell's Missing Evidence

Ross Vachon
Dennis Miller's New Gig: the Last Refuge of Goofy?

John Chuckman
Blair's Awkward Lies

Matt Vidal
Corporate Media and the Myth of the Free Market

Michael S. Ladah
The Fine Print to Bush's Road Map

Robert Fisk
Bush's Eternal War Backfires

Elaine Cassel
Clarence Thomas, Still Whining After All These Years

Jonathan Freedland
Ann Coulter's Appalling Magic

Steve Perry
Play It Again, O-Sam-a

 

May 17 / 18, 2003

Uri Avnery
The Children's Teeth

Peter Linebaugh
An American Tribute to Christopher Hill

Gary Leupp
Nepal Today

Rock and Rap Confidential
The Republican Plot Against the Dixie Chicks

Walter Sommerfeld
Plundering Baghdad's Museums

Ron Jacobs
Condy Rice's Yipping Tirades

Thomas P. Healy
Dubya Does Indy

Tarif Abboushi
Bush, Sharon and the Roadmap

Francis Boyle
Debating US War Crimes in Iraq

Mark Davis
An Interview with Richard Butler

Richard Lichtman
American Mourning

Michael Ortiz Hill
Overcoming Terrorism

Adam Engel
Uncle Sam is YOU!

Alan Maas
The Best News Show on TV

Poets' Basement
Reiss, Guthrie, Albert

Elaine Cassel
Good Enough for an Alien

Website of the Weekend
The 37 Americans Who Run Iraq

Song of the Weekend
Talkin' Sounds Just Like Joe McCarthy Blues

 

May 16, 2003

Leah Wells
In Iraq Water and Oil Do Mix

Ben Tripp
Fear Itself

Sharon Smith
The Resegregation of US Schools

Ramzy Baroud
Does Defeat Have to be So Humiliating?

Sam Hamod
A Nation of Fear

Phil Reeves
Baghdad Pays the Price

Robert McChesney
The FCC's Big Grab

Mark Engler
Those Who Don't Count

Steve Perry
We're All Extras in Bush's Movie

Website of the Day
Iraq and Our Energy Future

 

May 15, 2003

Ayesha Iman and Sindi Medar-Gould
How Not to Help Amina Lawal: The Hidden Dangers of Letter Writing Campaigns

Julie Hilden
Moussaoui and the Camp X-Ray Detainees: Can He Get a Fair Trial?

Tanya Reinhart
Bush's Roadmap: a Ticket to Failure

Laura Carlsen
Here We Go Again: NAFTA Plus or Minus?

Kenneth Rapoza
The New Fakers: State Dept. Undercuts New Yorker's Goldberg

Stew Albert
A Story I Will Tell

Steve Perry
Bush's Little Nukes

Website of the Day
Strip-o-Rama

 

May 14, 2003

Cindy Corrie
A Mother's Day Talk: the Daughter I Can't Hear From

Jason Leopold
The Pentagon and Hallburton: a Secret November Deal for Iraq's Oil

David Lindorff
Fighting the Patriot Act: Now It's Alaska

John Chuckman
Giggling into Chaos

Jack McCarthy
Twin Towers of Journalism: Racism and Double Standards

Wayne Madsen
Assassinating JFK Again

M. Junaid Alam
The Longer View

Paul de Rooij
The New Hydra's Head:
Propagandists and the Selling of the US/Iraq War

James Reiss
What? Me Worry?

Steve Perry
More on Saudi Arabia Bombings

Website of the Day
A Tribute to Ted Joans

 

May 13, 2003

Saul Landau
Clear Channel Fogs the Airwaves

Michael Neumann
Has Islam Failed? Not by Western Standards

Uri Avnery
My Meeting with Arafat

Steve Perry
The Saudi Arabia Bombing

Jacob Levich
Democracy Comes to Iraq: Kick Their Ass and Grab Their Gas

William Lind
The Hippo and the Mongoose: a Question of Military Theory

The Black Commentator
Fraud at the Times: Blaming Blacks for White Folks' Mistakes

Stew Albert
Asylum

Hammond Guthrie
An Illogical Reign

Website of the Day
Sy Hersh: War and Intelligence

 

May 12, 2003

Chris Floyd
Bush, Bin Laden, Bechtel, and Baghdad

Dave Lindorff
America's Dirty Bombs

Sam Hamod and Elaine Cassel
Resisting the Bush Administration's War on Liberty

Uzi Benziman
Sharon and Sons, Inc.

Jason Leopold
The Decline and Fall of Thomas White

Rich Procter
George Jumps the Shark

Federico Moscogiuri
Going to Israel? Sign or Else

Steve Perry
Bush's War Web Log 5/12

Book of the Day
Fooling Marty Peretz

Website of the Day
T-Shirts to Protest In

 

 

 

 

 

Hot Stories

Cindy Corrie
A Mother's Day Talk: the Daughter I Can't Hear From

Elaine Cassel
Civil Liberties Watch

Michel Guerrin
Embedded Photographer Says: "I Saw Marines Kill Civilians"

Uzma Aslam Khan
The Unbearably Grim Aftermath of War: What America Says Does Not Go

Paul de Rooij
Arrogant Propaganda

Gore Vidal
The Erosion of the American Dream

Francis Boyle
Impeach Bush: A Draft Resolution

Click Here for More Stories.

 

Subscribe Online


Search CounterPunch

 

May 21, 2003

Graham's God and George's Evolution

Depression and Devotion: the Bush Pathology

By Dr. GERRY LOWER

George W. Bush was appointed into the White House as a proudly born-again "Christian," and his "compassionate" conservative administration entered the White House accordingly, as if it had a mandate from the gods, when it didn't even have a mandate from the people. Following the terrorist attacks of September 11th, George has answered to a higher calling and signed America up in the millennial religious struggle against "evil" in the world. George's self-proclaimed "crusade" against terrorism has become the new and larger American assignment, having entirely eclipsed America's centuries-long struggle to become a democracy.

Operationally, George's vision translates into the Orwellian notion of preserving American "freedom" by eliminating American rights, maintaining a self-righteous, neo-imperialistic attitude toward the "old" world's democracies, and promoting a militaristic expansion of American power in the name of America's war on terrorism. All of this is brought to you, as they say on Sesame Street, by the letter "C," "compassionate" conservatism, consumerism and corrupt crony capitalism.

In light of George's dynastic family past, it is possible to wonder why George would feel so duty bound to nourish the conservative sociocultural world which caused him decades of dysfunction as a young man. Why would he invest in a sociocultural world which provided him with no interest in education, a good deal of interest in alcoholic escapism, and little or no ability to survive on his own in the business world of his social class?

Having finally found sobriety in Billy Graham's concept of deity, George learned to accept as personal fact that he had largely wasted two decades of his life jagging around as the spoiled son of money, privilege and power. Having achieved this personal epiphany, it was by giving himself over to Graham's god, that George has been able to rid himself of alcoholic indecision and indirection. In return, Graham's god has provided George with righteous self-justification. While one might hope for a president who is knowledgeable, thoughtful and caring, George doesn't need to be any of these things, because George is right in the eyes of the god who keeps him sober.

George's devotion to his Grahamic god has saved him from a life of alcoholic failure and chronic bailouts, no doubt. George has found his theological calling as a "dry drunk,", now able to be smug and belligerent without drinking a drop, as testimony to the great healing power of Graham's god. From this self-righteous mindset, George has declared that America (and the crony capitalism for which it has come to stand) is transcendent of all traditional western notions of morality, no compassionate forgiveness, no religious vengeance, just raw unprovoked military aggression. America's dominant position in the world is assumed to reflect the wishes of Graham's god and America is, therefore, justified in contemplating pre-meditated and unprovoked violence against all who are seen as a threat to the new unilateralist "American Way."

In the course of this personal evolution, George has come to accept that he was a black sheep in the Bush dynastic family, that he was saved from himself by Graham's god, and that he has since been blessed by that god with a transcendent, religious reason for being in power. Given that George's dynastic family has made his survival and his "success" possible, it is necessarily in George's interest to see himself as duty bound to those responsible. George, the prodigal son, has found his way back home to make his family proud. It was he who was out of line all along wasn't it now, all praise Graham's god. This approach to the comprehension of causation in one's life is, by now, classically "American" in that it only goes back one step in thought. Under the aegis of consumerism, for example, food comes from grocery stores and housing comes from real estate agencies, nevermind the farms and ranches and timberlands. For decades now, American consumers have believed that they need only go back one step in thought, to the retail outlets and to the common denominator required at all of them, i.e., money.

Likewise, personal causation in George's life did not start one step ago with his devotion to Grahamism, nor did it start with his earlier devotion to alcoholism. As with even "common" people, personal causation in George's life started back in the family, where the parenting which he experienced must be considered as a factor in his early lack of self-discipline and self-respect and, therefore, his lack of parental respect.

In other words, if George took a natural historical look at his situation, beginning with his beginnings, he would see that there are necessarily direct and indirect reasons for his having spent his first two adult decades in alcoholic failure, both as a dis-interested student and as a would-be businessman. George must know that he was not really such a "bad" kid, that there were home-bound reasons for his depression and his penchant for alcoholic escape, his inability to find a mature footing upon which to grow.

From what kind of world do you suppose George was so desperately and for so long seeking to escape? What was the nature of the parental world that would drive a young man into a life style of alcohol and meaningless relationships? What parental impositions would produce a young man with little interest in personal growth and self-improvement? What sins of commission? What sins of omission?

This is the introspective subject area to which George ought really devote considerable personal attention in the interest of self-comprehension. It would certainly make him a better president to better know himself. Do you suppose that George turned to alcohol and "good" times because he was raised in a world in which he was personally insignificant and inconsequential? Do you suppose that George lost his way because he was exposed to nothing that had meaning for him, nothing that made sense to his nascent self? Do you suppose that George's wealthy and powerful parents were so busy with matters of pomp and circumstance, matters of security and securities, that George's needs were oftentimes treated with benign neglect (which is never very benign)? Do you suppose young George went off the deep end because he got everything he wanted and very little he needed?

Do you suppose that if George thought about his life on the whole, from the beginning, that he might see that his youthful depression and escapism were understandable if not justifiable, given his dynastic family experience? Do you suppose that George might come to see that he was perhaps not all that wrong as a rebellious youth, more like over-protected, over-pacified and neglected? Do you suppose that George might come to see that had he been provided what all young people need at home, a loving, honest and time-intense parental relationship, he might have avoided two decades of meaningless escapism? Is it not entirely possible that George could have departed the parental nest to do just fine as an adult, not as a politically-appointed and manipulated president, not as a self-ordained religious hack, but as an honest, thoughtful and caring individual making honest contribution to the country and the people he could love?

Think back, George, to the days before you sold yourself out. What exactly about your home life was bothering you?

Dr. Gerry Lower lives in Keystone, South Dakota. He can be reached at: tisland@enetis.net

Today's Features

CounterPunch Wire
"Terror" Slut Steve Emerson Eats Crow

Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity
A Letter to Kofi Annan on Powell's Missing Evidence

Ross Vachon
Dennis Miller's New Gig: the Last Refuge of Goofy?

John Chuckman
Blair's Awkward Lies

Matt Vidal
Corporate Media and the Myth of the Free Market

Michael S. Ladah
The Fine Print to Bush's Road Map

Robert Fisk
Bush's Eternal War Backfires

Elaine Cassel
Clarence Thomas, Still Whining After All These Years

Jonathan Freedland
Ann Coulter's Appalling Magic

Steve Perry
Play It Again, O-Sam-a

 

Keep CounterPunch Alive:
Make a Tax-Deductible Donation Today Online!

home / subscribe / about us / books / archives / search / links /