Frozen in place: when conciliation is a bad thing --

Former Vice President Richard Cheney is working on his memoirs and assuring its success with a good deal of news making prior to its publication. Thursday's Washington Post article by Barton Gellman adds to the breathless anticipation of Cheney's potential reading public by promising revelations of previously unreported opinions and events. Here's a Hit Tip to journalist Mark Knoller, who posted several insightful tweets about the article, along with a generous suggestion to "buy the paper" to read the story.
The Cheney piece heads the current list of "most viewed political articles" on the WaPo
website. And I read it immediately, too. Headlined, "Cheney uncloaks
his frustration with Bush," it reveals more little juicy tidbits
guaranteed to keep us all panting to read the published tome from cover
to cover. One of the most interesting to me was this aspect of Cheney's
frustration with Bush, whom he evidently thinks "went soft." To quote:
Cheney's disappointment with the former president surfaced recently in one of the informal conversations he is holding to discuss the book with authors, diplomats, policy experts and past colleagues. By habit, he listens more than he talks, but Cheney broke form when asked about his regrets.
"In the second term, he felt Bush was moving away from him," said a participant in the recent gathering, describing Cheney's reply. "He said Bush was shackled by the public reaction and the criticism he took. Bush was more malleable to that. The implication was that Bush had gone soft on him, or rather Bush had hardened against Cheney's advice. He'd showed an independence that Cheney didn't see coming. It was clear that Cheney's doctrine was cast-iron strength at all times -- never apologize, never explain -- and Bush moved toward the conciliatory."
. . . The former vice president remains convinced of mortal dangers that few other leaders, in his view, face squarely. That fixed belief does much to explain the conduct that so many critics find baffling. He gives no weight, close associates said, to his low approval ratings, to the tradition of statesmanlike White House exits or to the grumbling of Republicans about his effect on the party brand.
Cheney's intrigue -- What is it that keeps us all fascinated with this man, who guarded his privacy so jealously until now? As a retired psychotherapist, I am interested in his psychological make-up, particularly his apparently persistent paranoia. Others have their own reasons. But there is no doubt that his book will jump to the top of the charts when it comes out, which will please his daughter Liz, at whose suggestion Cheney is writing the book, despite past disdain for officials who wrote "tell all" books upon leaving office. It appears that he is not "frozen in place" on this issue.
Richard Cheney appears to have acquired fixed beliefs that are frozen in place, however. The first is in the concept of the "unitary" presidency, born after Richard Nixon resigned in disgrace. And the second is in a very dark world with enemies waiting to pounce and destroy him and the nation. With a model like that, is it any wonder that there is such fear mongering and craziness associated with Republican opposition to everything Obama.
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As a retired psychotherapist, I am interested in his psychological make-up, particularly his apparently persistent paranoia.
Even as somebody not in your field, I am fascinated by Cheney's world view that doesn't seem to change no matter what evidence is placed in front of it to the contrary. Even after Suskind described the One Percent Cheney doctrine it seemed that sooner or later Cheney would have to widen his view or at least re-stock it with new perceptions. But that didn't happen either. I have to wonder whether Cheney would have even tried to avoid the iceberg if he'd been captain of the Titanic, or if he would have just stuck to his course.
What is your psychotherapist perception?
Part of the 1% Doctrine:
Faced with changing one's mind, or proving that there is no need to do so, most people get busy on the proof. -- John Kenneth Galbraith
August 14, 2009 1:24 AM | Reply | Permalink
Seashell, I don't feel it is ethical to "diagnose," without having seen and talked to the subject/client. But I can tell you the way I would go about it if I were to do so. I would look at their behaviors and listen to what they say for indicators. For example:
One's basic "world view" is that the world out there is either safe or dangerous. Narcissism (being the center of one's own universe) is a personality disorder characterized by difficulty with empathy for others, difficulty putting oneself in another's shoes. Borderline personality disorder is somewhat opposite, meaning that a person has difficulty with boundaries and does not know where he/she begins and ends as related to others. Paranoia is characterized by behaviors indicating beliefs that enemies are out to get them, are plotting against them, etc. Add psychosis to it and someone is hearing voices, having visions, cannot differentiate between reality and has irrational beliefs that someone is actually spying on them, following them, inhabiting their bodies, etc. Add in depression or anxiety disorder and you have a whole range of mental health challenges.
Thanks for your comments. Good to "see" you!
August 14, 2009 9:25 AM | Reply | Permalink
I am not a Dr. so this is my observation based on what I am seen and what I have read that was written by people who did quality research into the life of this man.
I believe Cheney is a very dark person spiritually. The bleakness that he seems to filter the world through is very troubling. His own actions have had a negative affect on much more than may seem reasonable and probably more than even he realizes.
Human nature being what it is, some people are drawn to dark negative personalities like moths to a flame. There is also that looky-lou mentality of wanting to slow down to view the 10 car pile up as you go by. Unfortunately, that habit regularly impedes the flow for everyone.
I think some people are fascinated with his power, or at least the power he seemed to have drawn to himself over the past decade. Power and money seem to fascinate people, for some to a fanatical degree.
I enjoyed your post. Thanks.
August 14, 2009 7:32 PM | Reply | Permalink
Florence, thanks for your insightful observations. I was thinking just before I read your comment that this story has gotten crowded off the front page very quickly. As a matter of fact, I am about ready to be "over Cheney." He disturbs my peace of mind. And I don't have much room left to be disturbed, given all the destructive Right Wing crazies. As you say, the flow of health care reform is being impeded by those of us watching the Republican pile-ups of misinformation and rancor.
My intention is to spend more thoughts on sending good vibes President Obama's way. Peace :)
August 15, 2009 11:23 AM | Reply | Permalink