When Not to Trust Your ‘Gut' | Jackson Free Press | Jackson, MS

When Not to Trust Your ‘Gut'

Maureen Dowd's column today talks the uninformed George Bush revealed in his former press secretary's new book—and the problem with "trusting your gut" when it is filled with ignorance:

How did W. start out wanting to restore honor and dignity to the White House and end up scraping all the honor and dignity off the White House? It turns out that our president is a one-man refutation of Malcolm Gladwell's best seller "Blink," about the value of trusting your gut. Every gut instinct he had was wildly off the mark and hideously damaging to all concerned.

It seems that if you trust your gut without ever feeding your gut any facts or news or contrary opinions, if you keep your gut on a steady diet of grandiosity, ignorance, sycophants, and peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, those snap decisions can be ruinous.

We already know What Happened, but it feels good to hear Scott say it. His conscience was spurred by hurt feelings. [...]

McClellan did not realize the value of a favorite maxim — "The truth shall set you free" — until he was hung out to dry by his bosses in the Valerie Plame affair, repeating the lies Karl Rove and Scooter Libby brazenly told him about not being the leakers.

"Clearly," McClellan says, sounding like the breast-heaving heroine of a Victorian romance, "I had allowed myself to be deceived." He felt "something fall out of me into the abyss."

And that was even before "the breaking point," when he learned the worst about his idol — that the president who had denounced leaks about his warrantless surveillance program, who had promised to fire anyone leaking classified information about Plame, was himself the one who authorized Dick Cheney to let Scooter leak part of the top-secret National Intelligence Estimate.

"Yeah, I did," Mr. Bush told his sap of a press secretary on Air Force One. His tone, the stunned McClellan said, was "as if discussing something no more important than a baseball score."

Previous Comments

ID
130358
Comment

Maureen Dowd has a great sense of humour. I can't think of any other political satirist who can match up with her.

Author
FreeClif
Date
2008-06-01T16:13:40-06:00

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