George W. Bush is suffering from a peculiar but not that uncommon form of madness in which a pathological part of his psyche has co-opted all of the healthy parts into its service. An unknown condition, where ‘something’ has taken possession of a smaller or greater portion of the psyche and asserts its hateful and harmful existence undeterred by all our insight, reason, and energy, thereby proclaiming the power of the unconscious over the conscious mind, the sovereign power of possession. Bush has been taken over by an unconscious complex of the collective unconscious. We speak of a mother complex, or a father complex, but Bush has what we could call a savior complex. Inflated by the power, Bush is suffering from delusions of grandeur, and has become megalomaniacal. He is unconsciously identified with the archetype of the Messiah. Bush told an Amish group in 2004 that “God speaks through me.”
Bush imagines that God actually speaks to him as well; in 2003 he told Palestinian ministers that God told him to invade Iraq. “One should listen to the inner voice attentively, intelligently and critically, (Probate spiritus!) [test the spirits], because the voice one hears is the influxus divinus consisting, as the Acts of John aptly state, of “right” and “left” streams, i.e., of opposites. They have to be clearly separated so that their positive and negative aspects become visible.” John 4:1 says, “Do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits whether they are of God.”
Just because one hears an inner voice doesn’t necessarily mean it is the voice of God. Listened to uncritically, we could just as easily be seduced by the Devil. Bush has become inflated with an archetype of the collective unconscious, which is an expression of madness.
He has become identified with one side, the light, of an inherently two-sided polarity, and projects out the other, dark side, which he then tries to destroy. By shadow projecting in this manner, Bush has become possessed by the very evil he is projecting outside of himself.
This is to fall under the spell of the Devil, who is rightly called “the deceiver.” A clearer case of madness is hard to imagine.
Bush is responsible for the death of at least 250,000 civilians (not including certain of Iraq), reveals a compilitation of scientific studies and corroborated eyewitness testimonies.
The majority of these deaths, which are in addition those normally expected from natural causes, illness and accidents, have been among women and children.
Below is a running total of the U.S. taxpayer cost of the Iraq War. The number is based on Congressional appropriations.
The War in Iraq Costs
$308,001,640,753
See the cost in your community
Or compare to the cost of:
PRE-SCHOOL
KIDS' HEALTH
COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIPS
PUBLIC HOUSING
PUBLIC EDUCATION
http://nationalpriorities.org/index.php?option=com_wrapper&Itemid=182
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article11674.htm
Get The Book: The madness of G W Bush
http://www.awakeninthedream.com/indexx.html
2006-08-21 04:06:49
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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You have to remember what Bush said " if you are not with me you are against me" He is a control freak !Bush is in a crazy rage about all the resistance he has been facing. He believes very firmly that he is acting on the orders of God Almighty and that anyone, be it the head of the CIA or some rogue reporter, must be punished for daring to thwart the Will of God!The President will never admit he is wrong. How could he be when God appointed him to be President? He has said, once in my presence, that God put him in the White House. He will never fire Rice or Rumsfeld because he would be totally lost without them…now we are stuck with a brain-damaged weirdo in the Oval Office, surrounded by a pack of vicious war criminals…. Bush's popularity has sunk to an all-time low. Americans are beginning to wake up, but not to the most frightening facts. The media is finding it more difficult to fool the public, distract them and cover-up for Bush. But his mental problems and deficiencies, extreme dangers to the world, and major crimes remain unexposed and not discussed. The mass media have ruled such topics out-of-bounds' so to speak.Psychopathology of Bushism, present a comprehensive portrait of Bush's mental condition and symptoms.
2006-08-21 04:52:40
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answer #2
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answered by jdfnv 5
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I watched it myself and I thought he kept repeating himself. He seemed to be upset that the reporters were asking similar questions. And the question about the gas prices, he gave the standardized answer. I'm sorry if he would listen to the American public and so would all his "people" they might really find out what the public really wants. And when he said that elections are won on the thing he said (can't really remember exactly), what I see is that elections are won by people voting for the person they believe that will get done what the public wants. And I think your right, he seemed a little rude and angry at times.
2006-08-21 04:08:54
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answer #3
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answered by Cheryl 2
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Um........ I hate to point out the obvious here. Shouldn't the president of this great country be "on his game" a majority of the time? Also, Earnest you almost imply here, that if you do not support or believe in what our country's leader says or does (no matter what on earth that may be) , you are against and even hurting your country. Are you an American? Wouldn't be bashing if we didn't have a reason to.
2016-03-26 23:59:05
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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He never cared for doing his job anyhow... Only time he likes to talk is when it is something he can read off and not have questions asked... many videos of him cussing the press, trying to walk off stage when asked something (and failing bacause opening doors escapes him)... answering questions WITH the question asked.
But, I'm sure some BushBot Zomies will say it has something to do with all the fake news about him.. any news that doesn't make him seem like a god is fake or lilberal to his 'followers'... even if shown world wide, caught on video... just remember ALIENS made that video!
2006-08-21 04:01:17
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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I tend not to think anything when it comes to Bush...
I mean, he's such an immature person: who else from the political world do you know that has said 'Yo Blair' to address Tony Blair??
He's the worst thing that could have happened to America after 9/11....we need someone much trustworthy and intelligent
2006-08-21 04:01:40
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answer #6
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answered by Angel_like 3
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It has nothing to do with him personally. Alot of times the press are just too pushy when it comes to asking questions that he really cannot and should not answer, because of national security. the press already show and talk about more than they should. you have to realize that americans are not the only ones watching the news...
always think 'Security'...
2006-08-21 04:02:11
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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I didn't see the news conference but did someone ask him about a big word - like in this past news conference?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kNe4GWxos2s
2006-08-21 04:17:15
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answer #8
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answered by Dastardly 6
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He is only human. Ask a rude question get a rude answer I say. You can't please every one. I compare the USA to Sodam and Gamora. He is the president of a country of a nation that is headed by a bunch of people who don't believe in God. Want same sex marriage. Want to attack Christians and totally separate church from state, example the 10 commandments and the Pledge of Allegiance.
2006-08-21 04:07:17
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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I'm not watching - I'm at work. But it's a fine line between being forceful and being nasty.
For both the President AND the press.
2006-08-21 03:58:26
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answer #10
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answered by American citizen and taxpayer 7
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Why is its always the press who is at fault. Bush tries to be funny he is no comedian. He has no one to blame but himself when you hold a press conference you must take bad with the good.
2006-08-21 04:28:42
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answer #11
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answered by murraystate69 3
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