Bush: "I Do A Lot Of Crying In This Job"

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First Posted: 12-16-08 04:37 PM   |   Updated: 01-16-09 05:12 AM

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Robert Draper, author of the George Bush biography "Dead Certain," has written an article for GQ on the interviews that shaped the book. Some highlights:

On interviews with other White House staff:

I had spoken to pretty much every senior official in the White House except the president. Karl Rove had sat for about a dozen such sessions--on one occasion, while he was autographing a stack of White House photographs. Dick Cheney had spoken to me for an hour, and then, when I concluded by asking him if we could do a follow-up at some point, he consulted a schedule in his jacket pocket before grunting, "How 'bout three hours from now?" (Cheney was surprisingly voluble, unlike his wife, Lynne, who received me at their sumptuous Naval Observatory home but then seemed affronted by my every question--except for the ones that gave her an opportunity to say what an asshole John Edwards was.) Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings and I conducted one of our sessions over margaritas; Bartlett and I, over enough wine to paralyze a rhinoceros. Josh Bolten quaintly served midafternoon snacks in his office. Condi Rice: cheerfully unforthcoming, but great legs. Colin Powell: sorry, o the record. Deputy chief of staff Joe Hagin: best storyteller in the White House. Harriet Miers: the opposite. (But great legs!) Don Rumsfeld, whom I interviewed in a semi-abandoned Pentagon annex after his resignation: flawless impersonation of Captain Queeg in The Caine Mutiny. (Bush later asked me about the interview, saying, "I'm worried about Don. I hear he's gonna write a settling-scores book. It's not me I'm concerned about--hell, I went out on a limb for the guy!--but others.")

On his legacy and leadership style:

"Robert, you can't possibly figure out the history of the Bush presidency--until I'm dead," he began as soon as I sat down. "And I don't presume to figure it out, sir," I said. "That's the right answer," he acknowledged gruffly. "Well, I've been saying all along to people that--" "You've been saying that all along, but you haven't been saying that all along to me." Over the course of that first hour, he talked at length about the trajectory of his political career, about his father ("I don't call him up and say, 'What are the five things you would do if you were me?' "), about Iraq ("I am immersed in this war," he said, looking a thousand years old), about his drinking problem ("I still remember the feeling of a hangover")--and, most expansively, about his leadership style: "I don't know what the fancy word for it is, but I argue a lot. In the process of arguing, I'm really testing the argument. And I listen. And I'm open-minded--much more so than people may think until they look at some of the decisions I've made. I mean, Bartlett plenty of times has come in [to see me]--and it's a test, sometimes because I'm irritable."

When asked why his version of Rumsfeld's resignation contradicted other accounts:

"You're presuming to know how I make my decisions," he said.


"I'm not, sir. I just know you didn't make this particular decision the way you told me you did."

"And this meeting," he went on. "I don't even remember it. But--I mean, you think I make my decisions by a show of hands?"

"No, sir. If your presidency were run as a democracy, then Rumsfeld would've been fired that April, because most of the people at that meeting raised their hands to get rid of him."

Bush simmered down--though in truth I don't think he was really that hot to begin with. He enjoyed testing people, seeing if they would hold their ground. McKinnon called the experience "walking into the propeller"; another former senior aide, "walking into the valley of the shadow of death." But it wasn't just a test to see if you were a wuss; this was Bush's way of determining a person's integrity. Was the speaker just trying to sound clever, or did he really believe what he was saying? "Okay, then let's go off the record," he said, and thereupon laid out Rumsfeld's demise in a way more in keeping with the facts as I knew them.

And other topics:

[T]he range of topics discussed reflected our shared attention-deficit disorder: entertaining the Queen of England (he enjoyed "bantering with her"); his opinion of Iraqi prime minister Nouri al-Maliki ("He wants more authority...He's not ready"); what he envisioned for ongoing American involvement in Iraq (a continued troop presence "to remind certain actors that the United States is something to be reckoned with--Iran, for example, if they continue on the course they're doing"); why he was relying on General Petraeus to be the chief spokesman for Iraq policy ("Because I've been here too long--every time I start painting a rosy picture, it gets criticized"); the origins of legislative gridlock ("Big-money special-interest politics, particularly from the left, is having a lot of influence"); and his emotions ("I do a lot of crying in this job"). A fly buzzed around us, and Bush took some vicious swings at it. "Damn, I woulda had it, Draper," he moaned as he missed again.
Robert Draper, author of the George Bush biography "Dead Certain," has written an article for GQ on the interviews that shaped the book. Some highlights: On interviews with other White House staff: ...
Robert Draper, author of the George Bush biography "Dead Certain," has written an article for GQ on the interviews that shaped the book. Some highlights: On interviews with other White House staff: ...
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- MarkVA71 I'm a Fan of MarkVA71 17 fans permalink
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Crying that nobody likes him... GO FIGURE!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:37 AM on 12/17/2008

I wonder how many people in America as well as in Iraq have cried and are crying over what he has done.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:52 AM on 12/17/2008
- wanked I'm a Fan of wanked 9 fans permalink

Right? This creature is the most wreched living thing on the planet.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:13 AM on 12/17/2008
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cry me a river....be gone already...pack your bags fool.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:33 AM on 12/17/2008
- democracy7 I'm a Fan of democracy7 12 fans permalink

So when he said in a later interview that "he sleeps just fine", it was a lie? imagine that. Or may be he learned to seek solace in his bottle. Pathetic.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:09 AM on 12/17/2008
- naeldwyck I'm a Fan of naeldwyck 20 fans permalink
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"you can't possibly figure out the history of the Bush presidency--until I'm dead"

Well, Georgie, you might just have given some people a nice idea there.

On the other hand, most of us are just a bit more intelligent than you give us credit for, and we've figured out years ago more than we'd even want to know about the history of your p!$$poor presidency.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:01 AM on 12/17/2008

What a coincidence, I cried too, practically every step of the way.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:55 AM on 12/17/2008
- LovingHope I'm a Fan of LovingHope 14 fans permalink
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I will forgive this man, because I chose not to waste any more energy on this man. Let's see how well he sleeps at night. What a pathetic life. He's even afraid of shoes now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:41 AM on 12/17/2008
- AliMB I'm a Fan of AliMB 78 fans permalink
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i assume he sleeps pretty well at night. IMO, i think bush has an air of arrogance and stubborness that allows to rest comfortably knowing that what he has done, despite its unpopularity, was the right thing to do. I wouldn't call his life pathetic... he was the 43rd president of the United States, a remarkable achievement for any american citizen. I he wasn't affraid of shoes... he seemed to handle the incident well, especially considering the embarassment it brought to him

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:51 AM on 12/17/2008
- democracy7 I'm a Fan of democracy7 12 fans permalink

The presidency was given to him, everything else he has touched in his miserable life has been a failure. He bungled his business, bungled at being a president. You can not be an effective president if you are constantly in search of your next vacation.
He has been an absentee president.
And yes I believe he sleeps well at night because I dont think he has the ability to self examine, his id would not stand for it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:14 AM on 12/17/2008

You are a wiser or bigger person than me. While I will not dwell on the whole episode, I will never forgive what he, his administration, and for that matter the conservative movement has done to damage my country and to imperil the world. It is, frankly, unforgivable.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:54 AM on 12/17/2008
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I am trying to forgive him for all the destruction, homes, and families he has wrecked in American and around the world. It is hard to have sympathy for the devil....uhhhh.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:02 AM on 12/17/2008

awwwwwww. Cry me a river, georgie.

Excuse me while I throw up a little in my mouth.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:37 AM on 12/17/2008
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Forgive him? N E V E R. Cry me a river, war criminal.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:35 AM on 12/17/2008
- daisydukes I'm a Fan of daisydukes 2 fans permalink

Folks, you don't kick someone when he is down, even Bush. While one realizes that the yesterdays defined the todays, let us look forward. We have voted in a new prez that will make history along the way. He has surrounded himself with good and intelligent minds ( and I'm adding Hillary in here as well) and Prez Obama will help us reclaim what we have lost. Sadly not the lost brave lives, but we can work towards building a new tomorrow so that those soldiers did not die in vain, even if they were not supposed to be there to begin with. Let us forgive this man, at least he is doing a lot of soul searching and I am sure he is very cognizant of the harm his administration done. Like Obama, he does not walk on water and I am sure at some point his heart was in the right place. Remember, we are a forgiving nation.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:56 AM on 12/17/2008

Sorry - there is a line that when crossed, makes the person crossing it deserving of utter contempt. And that line is ordering our armed forces into battle for no good reason (after selling the war to the American people on LIES no less). Whereupon over 4,000 and counting of those honorable men and women DIE, and tens of thousands of them come home brain-damaged and missing limbs. Not to mention being responsible for carnage due to his deluded, looky-here-ahma-outdoin'-my-daddy, war that kills hundreds of thousands of Iraqis, makes millions of them homeless, inflames the entire Muslim world against us, creates MORE terror and terrorist as a result, and makes the United States LESS safe.

When someone does all those things (and that's just the SHORT list, of the most egregious acts), then THAT president DESERVES to be "kicked when he's down", more than ANY other president in American history.

So there.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:43 AM on 12/17/2008
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What soul?? The man HAS no soul.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:46 AM on 12/17/2008
- timm553 I'm a Fan of timm553 7 fans permalink

Has he asked for forgiveness? No, so I won't consider it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:15 AM on 12/17/2008
- darker I'm a Fan of darker 43 fans permalink

FRATBRAT BUSH's job performance has been a CRYING SHAME!

BOO HOO...
Narcissist-in-Chief cries ONLY for himself. Yikes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:54 AM on 12/17/2008

Bush need to ask God for forgiveness..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:41 AM on 12/17/2008
- pepper47 I'm a Fan of pepper47 16 fans permalink
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I don't think he will do that. were there reports of him believing that he was annointed. doing God's will. help me out, because I don't have any referances. .

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:56 AM on 12/17/2008

Amen to that

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:02 AM on 12/17/2008

Bush crying don't meant anything to me, I don't think i would believe him even if I see him crying

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:40 AM on 12/17/2008
- SSF I'm a Fan of SSF 35 fans permalink
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Millions have cried because of the way you've done your job, Dubya!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:33 AM on 12/17/2008
- ZellaBee I'm a Fan of ZellaBee 14 fans permalink

I bet he doesn't cry as much as the families of n! ne ele ven.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:11 AM on 12/17/2008
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