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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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are blonds, are really light--yet two-thirds of every senior council are light. We looked at<br />

pictures of ten years of them, mind you; that means that out of every fifteen light-haired<br />

men in the senior class one is on the senior council, and of the dark-haired men it's only<br />

one in fifty. [fn 6]<br />

<strong>The</strong> other figure from F. Scott Fitzgerald who shares traits with <strong>Bush</strong> is Nick Carraway,<br />

the recent Yale graduate who is the narrator of <strong>The</strong> Great Gatbsy. Nick Carraway was<br />

fascinated by Jay Gatbsy and other denizens of the demi-monde of organized crime,<br />

recalling <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>'s long personal friendship with Don Aronow and others of the<br />

Meyer Lansky milieu in Florida.<br />

Other aspects of <strong>Bush</strong>'s outlook and mode of expression can be traced back to Dink<br />

Stover at Yale, a series of boy's novels by Owen Johnson which began coming out after<br />

the First World War, just after the Harriman brothers, Prescott <strong>Bush</strong>, and Neil Mallon had<br />

graduated. Dink Stover was a preppy from Lawrenceville who talked about democracy<br />

and equality during his first three years at Yale. He always helped old ladies and did the<br />

right thing. When Tap Day rolled around, Dink Stover was tapped by Skull and Bones.<br />

Key elements of <strong>Bush</strong>'s public mask, or persona, correspond to the community-service<br />

oriented do-gooder Dink Stover, an early addition to the thousand points of light.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s language is the mirror of his personality, and it merits more than cursory<br />

examination. <strong>The</strong> most outstanding quality of <strong>Bush</strong>speak is first of all its garbled<br />

incoherence and lost syntax. In one of his debates with Dukakis on September 25, 1988,<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> commented on the number of the homeless who are mentally ill:<br />

But-- and I-- look, mental-- that was a little overstated-- I'd say about 30 percent. [fn 7]<br />

Some may claim that the most dissociated utterances by <strong>Bush</strong> are not his own<br />

responsibility, but result rather from <strong>Bush</strong>'s attempt to regurgitate the contents of verbal<br />

briefings and briefing books. This assertion has a specious credibility. In hyper-prepared<br />

appearances like the debate with Dukakis, <strong>Bush</strong> does have a tendency to spout lines that<br />

mix up phrases and one-liners that he has drilled. In an answer on defense policy during<br />

the same debate with Dukakis, <strong>Bush</strong> stated: "We are going to make some changes and<br />

some tough choices before we go to the deployment on the Midgetman missle, or on the<br />

Minuteman, whatever it is. We're going to have to- - the MX. We're going to have to do<br />

that." And then he added: "It's Christmas." And then, as the audience laughed, "Wouldn't<br />

it be nice to be the iceman so you never make a mistake?" <strong>The</strong> reference to Christmas<br />

was intended to be self- ironic; on September 7, 1988, <strong>Bush</strong> had announced that it was<br />

Pearl Harbor Day; now, on September 25, he was announcing that it was Christmas.<br />

But garbled incoherence is so much a staple of <strong>Bush</strong>'s spoken discourse that it cannot be<br />

attributed solely to the pressure of his handlers; it is a life-long habit which has become<br />

more accentuated during the years of his presidency. In February 1988, <strong>Bush</strong> told<br />

prospective voters in the New Hampshire primary:

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