[FONT face=Arial size=5]Study of Bush's psyche touches a nerve[/FONT]
[FONT face=Geneva,Arial,sans-serif size=2]Julian Borger in Washington
Wednesday August 13, 2003
[A href="vny!://www.guardian.co.uk/"][FONT color=#003366]The Guardian[/FONT][/A]
[/FONT]A study funded by the US government has concluded that conservatism can be explained psychologically as a set of neuroses rooted in "fear and aggression, dogmatism and the intolerance of ambiguity". As if that was not enough to get Republican blood boiling, the report's four authors linked Hitler, Mussolini, Ronald Reagan and the rightwing talkshow host, Rush Limbaugh, arguing they all suffered from the same affliction. All of them "preached a return to an idealised past and condoned inequality". Republicans are demanding to know why the psychologists behind the report, Political Conservatism as Motivated Social Cognition, received $1.2m in public funds for their research from the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health. The authors also peer into the psyche of President George Bush, who turns out to be a textbook case. The telltale signs are his preference for moral certainty and frequently expressed dislike of nuance.
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