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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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statement," said Kerry Scanlon, a lawyer for the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational<br />

Fund. Within hours, the offending directive had been withdrawn, and blamed exclusively<br />

on Boy Gray, the White House resident racist who had indeed drafted the directive, but<br />

on instructions from <strong>Bush</strong>. It was yet another example of an impulsive snap decision<br />

made by <strong>Bush</strong> under pressure. Intriguingly, November 20 was also the day that <strong>Bush</strong><br />

personally pronounced the much-tabooed word: "DEPRESSION." "I don't want to<br />

emphasize just the bad things, to talk us into a depression," he had told some television<br />

stations owned by NBC. It was a landmark: presidents had made that word taboo for<br />

many decades. [fn 73]<br />

Towards the end of November, the pendulum of <strong>Bush</strong>'s unpredictability had swing back:<br />

the Asia trip was being rescheduled for about a month later than originally planned. By<br />

now, the media were harping on the evident "disarray" in the White House, but none<br />

seemed to recall the thyroid episode of the springtime, nor the psychopathological trigger<br />

for the thyroid condition.<br />

Sometime during November, just about the time his approval ratings were about to go<br />

below 50%, <strong>Bush</strong> apparently received urgent advice to moderate his "mad dog" public<br />

profile in favor of a more conciliatory and affable posture. This occurred during the same<br />

month. 0hatever the details that led to the renovation of his image, he now began to<br />

exhibit concern for the victims of the <strong>Bush</strong> depression who, according to his litany, he<br />

now understood were "hurting." He began smiling more, and hissing somewhat less.<br />

Photo opportunities began to depict him fraternizing with the common people.<br />

But that postponed Far East trip continued to loom as <strong>Bush</strong>'s nemesis. Because of his<br />

desire to be seen doing something to improve the lot of the comman man, <strong>Bush</strong>'s handlers<br />

repackaged this trip as a crusade to open foreign markets to US exports, thus helping to<br />

defend American jobs. <strong>Bush</strong> accordingly took along the widely discredited top executives<br />

of GM, Ford, and Chrysler to symbolize his committment to the moribund US auto<br />

industry. <strong>The</strong>se figures functioned like a Greek chorus of negative spin, pointing up<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s misadventures and failures. <strong>The</strong> most outspoken of the Big Three bosses was<br />

predictably Chrysler's Lee Iacocca, of whom one reporter said that he would probably<br />

complain if the sun came up.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> displayed decided mental instability during this trip. In Canberra, Australia, he<br />

flashed a well-known obscene gesture to a group of farmers who were protesting his "free<br />

trade" farm policies. <strong>Bush</strong> told a luncheon cruise in Sydney harbor, "I'm a man that<br />

knows every hand gesture you've ever seen-- and I haven't learned a new one since I've<br />

been here." As the Washington Post reported, "Down here, holding up the first two<br />

fingers to form a "V" with the back of the hand toward the subject is the same as holding<br />

up the middle finger in the United States. And that's just what <strong>Bush</strong> did from his<br />

limousine to a group of protesters as his motorcade passed through Canberra yesterday,<br />

apparently not knowing its significance. Or maybe he did." [fn 74] One is reminded of<br />

Nelson Rockefeller's antics on at least one occasion.

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