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To: SiouxPal who wrote (59031)10/7/2004 2:23:20 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Is He a Dope?
The Los Angeles Times | Editorial

Thursday 07 October 2004

Although neither group likes to say so, some Americans who support President Bush and many
who don't support him have concluded over four years that he may not be very bright. This suspicion
was not allayed by Bush's answers in the first presidential debate a week ago.

Even Bush's most engaged critics shy away from publicly challenging his intelligence for many
reasons, most of them good. To raise the issue seems snooty and elitist. This is an image no
American wants because seeming snooty is even worse than seeming stupid. Just ask Bush's
opponent, Sen. John Kerry. Furthermore, the concept of brainpower or IQ as a single, measurable
trait is generally, though not universally, rejected by scientists. And the obsession with IQ has been
responsible for all sorts of political mischief.

Then there is Ronald Reagan. We know now that he had incipient Alzheimer's for at least part of his
presidency. Many of his supporters at the time and even more of his retrospective admirers
acknowledge that he was a few jelly beans short of a jar. But he was a spectacularly successful
politician anyway, and many believe he was more than that: one of America's greatest leaders.

The smartest candidate is not necessarily the best candidate. The candidate's belief system and
character matter more. Similarly, the smartest surgeon is not necessarily the best surgeon. But if all
you knew about two surgeons was that one was smarter than the other, there's not much question
which one you'd pick for your operation.

Actually, we would not frame the question as one of abstract brainpower, a dubious concept. You
don't go through America's top schools, serve as governor of a major state and occupy the
presidency with even mixed results if you're not reasonably smart, no matter how thoroughly your
way is eased by others.

The issue might better be described as one of mental laziness.

Does this man think through his beliefs before they harden into unwavering principles? Is he open to
countervailing evidence? Does he test his beliefs against new evidence and outside argument? Does
his understanding of a subject go any deeper than the minimum amount needed for public display? Is
he intellectually curious? Does he try to reconcile his beliefs on one subject with his beliefs on
another?

It's bad if a president is incapable of the abstract thought necessary for these mental exercises. If
he is capable and isn't even trying, that's worse. It becomes a question of character. When a
president sends thousands of young Americans to kill and die halfway around the world, thinking
about it as hard and as honestly as possible is the least he can do.

Bush's Iraq policy is full of contradictions, often rehearsed on this page and elsewhere. But so is
Kerry's. It isn't routine political mendacity that makes many people - many more than will admit it -
wonder about Bush's mental engagement. It is a combination of things: his stumbling
inarticulateness, the efforts his advisors make to protect him from unscripted exposure, his extreme
reluctance to rethink anything.

Does it matter? Yes, it matters. There are those who say that Reagan's mental laziness was
actually a plus. It prevented a lot of competing signals from causing static on the lines, and kept his
principles clear. We do not buy that. We state boldly that thinking hard is a good thing, not a bad
thing, even in a president. If that sounds snooty, so be it. And maybe George W. Bush will reassure
us by his performance Friday night that he is thinking as hard as he should about the issues the
president will face in the next four years. Especially the issues resulting from his own failure to think
hard during the last four.



To: SiouxPal who wrote (59031)10/7/2004 5:58:06 PM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
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