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Polls open in Egypt elections Wednesday, September 7, 2005. 6:04pm (AEST)

Polling stations have opened for Egypt's first presidential elections with President Hosni Mubarak expected to win a fifth six-year term as the leader of the Arab world's most populous nation.

The 77-year-old President is facing nine contenders, but most of them are little known and their parties have few members.

The rules exclude the Muslim Brotherhood - the largest opposition group in the country - because the Government has never let it form a political party.

Several medium-sized opposition parties are boycotting the elections, saying the arrangements are unfair.

- Reuters



Bush's Obscene Tirades Rattle White House Aides
By Doug Thompson

Aug 25, 2005, 06:19
 

While President George W. Bush travels around the country in a last-ditch effort to sell his Iraq war, White House aides scramble frantically behind the scenes to hide the dark mood of an increasingly angry leader who unleashes obscenity-filled outbursts at anyone who dares disagree with him.

“I’m not meeting again with that goddamned bitch,” Bush screamed at aides who suggested he meet again with Cindy Sheehan, the war-protesting mother whose son died in Iraq. “She can go to hell as far as I’m concerned!”

 

Bush flashes the bird, something aides say he does often and has been doing since his days as governor of Texas.
Bush, administration aides confide, frequently explodes into tirades over those who protest the war, calling them “motherfucking traitors.” He reportedly was so upset over Veterans of Foreign Wars members who wore “bullshit protectors” over their ears during his speech to their annual convention that he told aides to “tell those VFW assholes that I’ll never speak to them again is they can’t keep their members under control.” 

White House insiders say Bush is growing increasingly bitter over mounting opposition to his war in Iraq. Polls show a vast majority of Americans now believe the war was a mistake and most doubt the President’s honesty.

“Who gives a flying fuck what the polls say,” he screamed at a recent strategy meeting. “I’m the President and I’ll do whatever I goddamned please. They don’t know shit.”

Bush, while setting up for a photo op for signing the recent CAFTA bill, flipped an extended middle finger to reporters. Aides say the President often “flips the bird” to show his displeasure and tells aides who disagree with him to “go to hell” or to “go fuck yourself.” His habit of giving people the finger goes back to his days as Texas governor, aides admit, and videos of him doing so before press conferences were widely circulated among TV stations during those days. A recent video showing him shooting the finger to reporters while walking also recently surfaced.

Bush’s behavior, according to prominent Washington psychiatrist, Dr. Justin Frank, author of “Bush on the Couch: Inside the Mind of the President,” is all too typical of an alcohol-abusing bully who is ruled by fear.

To see that fear emerges, Dr. Frank says, all one has to do is confront the President. “To actually directly confront him in a clear way, to bring him out, so you would really see the bully, and you would also see the fear,” he says.

Dr. Frank, in his book, speculates that Bush, an alcoholic who brags that he gave up booze without help from groups like Alcoholics Anonymous, may be drinking again.

“Two questions that the press seems particularly determined to ignore have hung silently in the air since before Bush took office,” Dr. Frank says.  “Is he still drinking? And if not, is he impaired by all the years he did spend drinking? Both questions need to be addressed in any serious assessment of his psychological state.”

Last year, Capitol Hill Blue learned the White House physician prescribed anti-depressant drugs for the President to control what aides called “violent mood swings.” As Dr. Frank also notes: “In writing about Bush's halting appearance in a press conference just before the start of the Iraq War, Washington Post media critic Tom Shales speculated that ‘the president may have been ever so slightly medicated.’”

Dr. Frank explains Bush’s behavior as all-to-typical of an alcoholic who is still in denial:

“The pattern of blame and denial, which recovering alcoholics work so hard to break, seems to be ingrained in the alcoholic personality; it's rarely limited to his or her drinking,” he says. “The habit of placing blame and denying responsibility is so prevalent in George W. Bush's personal history that it is apparently triggered by even the mildest threat.”

© Copyright 2005 Capitol Hill Blue


Unfair and unbalanced
By Jay Ambrose
Aug 31, 2003, 18:35
 

Al Franken's idea of humor and political incisiveness seems to be to say people are liars and to point to a well-known conservative as fat, but if that sort of juvenilia is something short of praiseworthy, so was a Fox News lawsuit.

The cable channel took umbrage at the title of a Franken book, "Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them: A Fair and Balanced Look at the Right." Fox claimed in court that it used the phrase "fair and balanced" to promote its shows and that it therefore belonged to Fox and should not be used by Franken.

Oh, come on. The phrase is a common part of the English language, and using a lawsuit as a means of hitting back in political debate is despicable. The suit has been dropped now, thanks to a discouraging judge, but the fact it was filed can hardly enhance the reputation of a news outlet that has actually done some first-rate work.

A better idea in the future would be for Fox News to relax and enjoy the joke of another celebrity pretending to know something about politics.

© Copyright 2005 Capitol Hill Blue