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The president's warmongering remarks on the Iranian threat suggest he is psychotic. Really.

by "Kayid Al-Kuffar" <Kayedhom@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Jul 8, 2008 at 11:03 AM

The president's warmongering remarks on the Iranian threat suggest he is 
psychotic. Really.

Forget impeachment.

Liberals, put it behind you. George W. Bush and Dick Cheney shouldn't be 
treated like criminals who deserve punishment. They should be treated like

psychotics who need treatment.

Because they've clearly gone mad. Exhibit A: We're in the middle of a 
disastrous war in Iraq, the military and political situation in
Afghanistan 
is steadily worsening, and the administration's interrogation and
detention 
tactics have inflamed anti-Americanism and fueled extremist movements
around 
the globe. Sane people, confronting such a situation, do their best to
tamp 
down tensions, rebuild shattered alliances, find common ground with
hostile 
parties and give our military a little breathing space. But crazy people? 
They look around and decide it's a great time to start another war.

That would be with Iran, and you'd have to be deaf not to hear the war 
drums. Last week, Bush remarked that "if you're interested in avoiding
World 
War III . . . you ought to be interested in preventing [Iran] from having 
the knowledge necessary to make a nuclear weapon." On Sunday, Cheney
warned 
of "the Iranian regime's efforts to destabilize the Middle East and to
gain 
hegemonic power . . . [we] cannot stand by as a terror-sup****ting state 
fulfills its most aggressive ambitions." On Tuesday, Bush insisted on the 
need "to defend Europe against the emerging Iranian threat."

Huh? Iran is now a major threat to Europe? The Iranians are going to
launch 
a nuclear missile (that they don't yet possess) against Europe (for
reasons 
unknown because, as far as we know, they're not mad at anyone in Europe)? 
This is lunacy in action.

Writing in Newsweek on Oct. 20, Fareed Zakaria, a solid centrist and
former 
editor of Foreign Affairs, put it best. Citing Bush's invocation of "the 
specter of World War III if Iran gained even the knowledge needed to make
a 
nuclear weapon," Zakaria concluded that "the American discussion about
Iran 
has lost all connection to reality. . . . Iran has an economy the size of 
Finland's. . . . It has not invaded a country since the late 18th century.

The United States has a GDP that is 68 times larger and defense
expenditures 
that are 110 times greater. Israel and every Arab country (except Syria
and 
Iraq) are . . . allied against Iran. And yet we are to believe that Tehran

is about to overturn the international system and replace it with an 
Islamo-fascist order? What planet are we on?"

Planet Cheney.

Zakaria may be misinterpreting the president's remark about World War III 
though. He saw it as a dangerously loopy Bush prediction about the future 
behavior of a nuclear Iran -- the idea being, presumably, that possessing 
"the knowledge" to make a nuclear weapon would so empower Iran's
repressive 
leaders that they'll giddily rush out and start World War III.

But you could read Bush's remark as a madman's threat rather than a
madman's 
prediction -- as a warning to recalcitrant states, from Germany to Russia,

that don't seem to share his crazed obsession with Iran. The message: Fall

into line with administration policy toward Iran or you can count on the 
U.S.A. to try to start World War III on its own. And when it comes to 
sparking global conflagration, a U.S. attack on Iran might be just the 
thing. Yee haw!

You'd better believe these guys would do it too. Why not? They have
nothing 
to lose -- they're out of office in 15 months anyway. Après Bush-Cheney,
le 
déluge! (Have fun, Hillary.)

But all this creates a conundrum. What's a constitutional democracy to do 
when the president and vice president lose their marbles?

The U.S. is full of ordinary people with serious forms of mental illness
--  
delusional people with violent fantasies who think they're the president,
or 
who think they get instructions from the CIA through their dental
fillings.

The problem with Bush is that he is the president -- and he gives 
instructions to the CIA and military, without having to go through his 
dental fillings.

Impeachment's not the solution to psychosis, no matter how flagrant. But 
despite their impressive foresight in other areas, the framers
unaccountably 
neglected to include an involuntary civil commitment procedure in the 
Constitution.

Still, don't lose hope. By enlisting the aid of mental health
professionals 
and the court system, Congress can act to remedy that constitutional 
oversight. The goal: Get Bush and Cheney committed to an appropriate 
inpatient facility, where they can get the treatment they so desperately 
need. In Wa****ngton, the appropriate statutory law is already in place: If
a 
"court or jury finds that [a] person is mentally ill and . . . is likely
to 
injure himself or other persons if allowed to remain at liberty, the court

may order his hospitalization."

I'll even serve on the jury. When it comes to averting World War III, it's

really the least I can do.

http://tinyurl.com/2n9kyz
 




 2 Posts in Topic:
The president's warmongering remarks on the Iranian threat sugge
"Kayid Al-Kuffar&quo  2008-07-08 11:03:00 
Re: The president's warmongering remarks on the Iranian threat s
"Frank Arthur"   2008-07-08 11:51:25 

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tan12V112 Fri Dec 5 4:26:04 CST 2008.