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If Politics Look a Bit Crazy Recently... By: Arianna Huffington By all accounts, the battle within the Bush administration over just what information should have been used - or spun or hidden - to make the case that Saddam Hussein posed an imminent threat to the world was a knockdown, drag-out fight between the facts and a zealous, highly politicized "who needs proof?" mind-set. And the truth was left writhing on the floor. Hey, why let the facts get in the way of a perfectly good war? This pathological pattern of disregarding inconvenient reality is not just troubling - it's deadly. And it's threatening to drag us into a Sisyphean struggle against evildoers in Syria, Iran, North Korea, or whatever locale Karl Rove thinks would best advance "Operation Avoid 41's Fate". Since I'm not a psychiatrist, I consulted the work of various experts in the field in order to get a better understanding of the fanatical thinking that is driving the Bush administration's agenda - and scaring the daylights out of a growing number of observers. Dr. Norman Doidge, professor of psychiatry at the University of Toronto, lists among the telltale symptoms of fanatics: an intolerance of dissent; a doctrine riddled with contradictions; the belief that one's cause has been blessed or even commanded by God; and the use of reinforcement techniques, such as repetition, to spread one's message. Sound like anyone you know? George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, Don Rumsfeld, Karl Rove, Paul Wolfowitz, and Richard Perle, come on down! According to Doidge, one of the essential features of fanatics is their certainty that not only is their cause good "but that it is the only good, an absolute good". Or, as President Bush famously declared: "There is no in-between, as far as I'm concerned. Either you're with us or you're against us." This absolute intolerance of dissent, Doidge says, often extends beyond the fanatics' enemies, frequently leading to a "campaign of terror" against those within their own ranks. If you're wondering what this has to do with the Bush administration, you might want to give a call to GOP Sens. Olympia Snowe of Maine and George Voinovich of Ohio. After having the temerity to question the wisdom of the President's massive tax-cut plan, the senatorial pair became the targets of withering TV attack ads, sponsored by allies of the White House, that portrayed them as "so-called Republicans" and compared their opposition to the latest round of tax cuts to France's opposition against the war in Iraq. Another crucial element of a fanatic's faith, according to professor Dixon Sutherland, who teaches religion at Stetson University in Florida, is that: "[He] sees himself as acting for God. You have a circular logic that is very powerful that combines God's authority - through the Bible - with a messenger who carries out that authority." Tom DeLay, for example, saw the 2000 election as a choice between a "biblical worldview" and the worldview of "humanism, materialism, sexism, naturalism, post-modernism, or any of the other -isms". And the Republican Party, of course, represented the biblical worldview, God and all things good. Gustav le Bon, a social scientist known for his theories on crowd psychology, has stressed the importance of repetition as a weapon in the fanatic's arsenal. Repetition breeds blind acceptance and contagion. And James Moore, coauthor of Bush's Brain, notes that "If the President says it over and over, enough people will believe it, just as Karl Rove got him to say over and over that Saddam Hussein was involved in 9/11." The technique was so successful that one poll showed 66% of Americans believed that Hussein and Osama bin Laden were both behind the attacks. Wonder why the WMD are MIA? The answer may lie in the DSM - the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. I know it can sound a bit cheap to call people you disagree with nuts, which is why I refer you to the psychiatric literature. Just keep an open mind, something the Bush crowd stopped doing a long time ago. © Los Angeles Times All rights reserved. |