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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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`` Prescott <strong>Bush</strong> was a thrifty man.... He had no sympathy for the nouveau riches<br />

who flaunted their wealth--they were without class, he said. As a sage and strictly<br />

honest businessman, he had often turned failing companies around, making them<br />

profitable again, and he had scorn for people who went bankrupt because they<br />

mismanaged their money. Prescott's lessons were absorbed by young<br />

<strong>George</strong>....''@s5<br />

When he reached the age of five, <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> joined his older brother Pres in attending<br />

the Greenwich Country Day School. <strong>The</strong> brothers' `` lives were charted from birth. <strong>The</strong>ir<br />

father had determined that his sons would be ... educated and trained to be members of<br />

America's elite.... Greenwich Country Day School [was] an exclusive all-male academy<br />

for youngsters slated for private secondary schools....<br />

``Alec, the family chauffeur, drove the two boys to school every morning after dropping<br />

Prescott, Sr. at the railroad station for the morning commute to Manhattan. <strong>The</strong><br />

Depression was nowhere in evidence as the boys glided in the family's black Oldsmobile<br />

past the stone fences, stables, and swimming pools of one of the wealthiest communities<br />

in America. ''@s6<br />

But though the young <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> had no concerns about his material existence, one<br />

must not overlook the important, private anxiety gnawing at him from the direction of his<br />

mother.<br />

<strong>The</strong> President's wife, Barbara, has put most succinctly the question of Dorothy <strong>Bush</strong> and<br />

her effect on <strong>George</strong>: `` His mother was the most competitive living human. ''@s7<br />

If we look here in his mother's shadow, we may find something beyond the routine<br />

medical explanations for President <strong>Bush</strong>'s `` driven '' states of rage, or hyperactivity.<br />

Mother <strong>Bush</strong> was the best athlete in the family, the fastest runner. She was hard. She<br />

expected others to be hard. <strong>The</strong>y must win, but they must always appear not to care about<br />

winning.<br />

This is put politely, delicately, in a `` biography '' written by an admiring friend of the<br />

President: `` She was with them day after day, ... often curbing their egos as only a<br />

marine drill instructor can. Once when ... <strong>George</strong> lost a tennis match, he explained to her<br />

that he had been off his game that morning. She retorted, `You don't have a game.' ''@s8<br />

According to this account, Barbara was fascinated by her mother-in-law's continuing<br />

ferocity:<br />

<strong>George</strong>, playing mixed doubles with Barbara on the Kennebunkport court, ran into a<br />

porch and injured his right shoulder blade. `` His mother said it was my ball to hit, and it<br />

happened because I didn't run for it. She was probably right, '' Barbara told [an<br />

interviewer].... When a discussion of someone's game came up, as Barbara described it, ``<br />

if Mrs. <strong>Bush</strong> would say, `She had some good shots,' it meant she stank. That's just the

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