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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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course, and questions about his health were raised once again by his ghastly personal<br />

appearance, which was best conveyed by a photograph appearing on the front page of the<br />

London Financial Times of Thursday, May 30.<br />

After the beginning of June, references to <strong>Bush</strong>'s atrial fibrillation and thyroid crisis<br />

become exceedingly rare, a tribute to the power of the Brown Brothers, Harriman/Skull<br />

and Bones networks. On September 5, Burton Lee announced that he had halted <strong>Bush</strong>'s<br />

daily doses of procainamide and digoxin shortly after the middle of August. But <strong>Bush</strong><br />

continued to take daily doses of coumadin to prevent blood clots, medication to replace<br />

lost thyroid hormore production, and aspirin every other day, also to prevent blood clots.<br />

This announcement came at the end of <strong>Bush</strong>'s 29 day vacation in Kennebunkport. <strong>The</strong><br />

White House spin was that <strong>Bush</strong> "appears to have overcome weight loss and fatigue<br />

associated with the thyroid condition, called Graves' disease, and treatment for it." [fn 37]<br />

<strong>The</strong>n, in mid-September, <strong>Bush</strong> underwent a two-hour medical examination designed to<br />

provide a "medical stamp of approval" for <strong>Bush</strong>'s health as he prepared to run for re-<br />

election in 1992. "I gotta prove I'm well," said <strong>Bush</strong> as he went in for the checkup.<br />

According to Dr. Burman, "the president has been restored to his normal vigorous state of<br />

good health." Lee said that all tests had showed <strong>Bush</strong>'s heart functions to be normal; he<br />

also claimed that there had been no recurrence of atrial fibrillation after May. <strong>Bush</strong> had<br />

commented in August that the only thing that could keep him from running for a second<br />

term would be a health problem. He now described his own condition as "100 percent.<br />

Perfect bill of health." [fn 38] And that, as far as the regime was concerned, was that.<br />

Despite the claims of Dr. Lee that political considerations played no role in his treatment,<br />

it is clear that all statements by White House physicians about <strong>Bush</strong>'s physical and mental<br />

health must be regarded with the greatest skepticism; such pronouncements are likely to<br />

be as reliable as the censored war bulletins of Operation Desert Storm. Was there still a<br />

problem with <strong>Bush</strong>'s health, including his mental health? <strong>The</strong> answer is an emphatic yes,<br />

a yes buttressed by the observation of continued paroxysms of obsessive rage on the part<br />

of <strong>Bush</strong>, who has not calmed down at all. <strong>Bush</strong> remains on an emotional roller-coaster,<br />

complete with the snap decisions so typical of the hyperthyroid personality. In short,<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s thyroid and mental disorders have the most devastating implications for his ability<br />

to govern.<br />

<strong>The</strong> first question regards the nature and even the name of <strong>Bush</strong>'s malady. According to a<br />

leading Baltimore psychiatrist who could not be described as politically hostile to <strong>Bush</strong>, it<br />

is clear that the man in the White House is suffering from the full-fledged symptoms of<br />

Basedow's disease. <strong>The</strong> difference between Graves' disease and Basedow's is more than a<br />

technical quibble: the term Graves' disease as used in the English-speaking world is<br />

misleading in that it plays down the symptoms of mental disturbance which are more<br />

explicitly associated with Basedow's disease. According to this specialist, it is pointless<br />

to test the water in the White House, the Naval Observatory, Kennebunkport, and Camp<br />

David, since it is well established that Basedow's disease is emotionally triggered. An<br />

emotional upheaval, psychic shock, or other mental trauma stimulates the master<br />

endocrine gland of the body, the pituitary gland, into an overproduction of its hormone,<br />

which in turn provokes an overactivity of the thyroid, speeding up overall metabolism

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