Justin Frank M.D. is an expert in the field of psychoanalysis. A clinician with more than thirty year's experience, Dr. Frank has also been a former columnist for Salon magazine and is a frequent writer on topics as diverse as politics, film, and theater. He is the co-director of the Metropolitan Center for Object Relations in New York, a clinical professor in the Department of Psychiatry at George Washington University Medical Center, and a teaching analyst at the Washington Psychoanalytic Institute.


Dr. Frank used the principles of applied psychoanalysis to assemble a comprehensive psychological profile of President George W. Bush in his book Bush on the Couch: Inside the Mind of the President (ReganBooks).


Dr. Frank did his psychiatric residency at Harvard Medical School and was chief resident at the Cambridge Hospital. Dr. Frank was also awarded the DuPont-Warren Fellowship by Massachusetts General Hospital..


Dr. Frank lives in Washington D.C. where he teaches and practices psychoanalysis.

Blog Entries by Justin Frank

John McCain Needs a Permanent Time Out

8 Comments | Posted October 15, 2008 | 12:22 PM (EST)


On the eve of the final presidential debate for 2008, the question about who John McCain "really" is needs to be addressed carefully and clearly.

Since the financial crisis, McCain has called himself a regulator who seeks to eliminate earmarks and to regulate Wall Street in other ways.

But for...

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Race and the Race

8 Comments | Posted October 7, 2008 | 07:03 AM (EST)


Many people are afraid and don't know it - they are afraid of having a black man in the White House, a black family as the first family. It is hard to estimate their level - conscious or unconscious - and degree - racist or cultural - of discomfort, but...

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John McCain: Suffering from Irregularity

5 Comments | Posted September 24, 2008 | 10:41 PM (EST)


John McCain lurches from plan to plan, from statement to statement, from action to action. His behavior reminds me of my most manic patients when I was chief of the psychiatric in-patient ward.

Manic patients, now called bi-polar, are unable to manage their feelings, and their behavior is often...

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Pay no attention to the old man in the corner

Posted September 11, 2008 | 06:00 PM (EST)



The Republican Party is still crazy after all these years. They brought in Alan Keyes to run against Obama in 2004; and now they've chosen Sarah Palin to accomplish what Keyes couldn't. The Republican Party can't find anyone normal to run against that black guy with the Muslim...

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Georgy Girl

Posted September 7, 2008 | 04:29 PM (EST)


This just went up on YouTube.
Worth a visit, for sure.

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The Trojan Horses of Sarah Palin and Clarence Thomas

Posted September 1, 2008 | 11:10 AM (EST)


Since Governor Sarah Palin arrived on the national stage, people have been comparing her to others. Some say Dan Quayle (who actually DID become Vice-President). Some say Tina Fey. Some say watching her is like watching a "chick flick". Some say she proves McCain has faulty judgment. Some say -...

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Politics on the Couch: Projection is Nine-Tenths of the Law, as Defined by McCaIn's "Hail Sarah" Pass

Posted August 29, 2008 | 08:39 PM (EST)


What follows is the last post for the interactive book, Politics on the Couch. It is inspired by John McCain's VP choice. Readers' comments are welcome and an integral part of this experiment.

This book is about to be "put to bed," but one last post seems fitting -- a...

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The New Yorker Cover -- Opportunity Knocks for Obama

Posted July 14, 2008 | 07:00 PM (EST)


The New Yorker cover is not only evidence of arrogance; it expresses contempt for people who actually do fear the Obamas. This kind of mocking ridicule will only make it more difficult for people to share their fears and what to them are legitimate concerns. By satirizing most all...

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Politics on the Couch: Opposites Detract or Listening to the Unsaid

Posted July 10, 2008 | 07:34 PM (EST)


What follows is the eighth post for the interactive book, Politics on the Couch. Readers' comments are welcome and an integral part of this experiment.

POC: Opposites Detract - Listening to the Unsaid

One aim of this project is to help us all -- myself included -- pay attention...

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Politics on The Couch: July 4, 2008 -- It's The Truth that Sets Us Free

Posted July 3, 2008 | 05:10 PM (EST)


What follows is the seventh post for the interactive book, Politics on the Couch. Readers' comments are welcome and an integral part of this experiment.

July 4th 2008 -- It's the truth that set us free

As we celebrate Independence Day, we acknowledge that the only way to become truly...

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Politics on the Couch: Hating the Haters

Posted June 27, 2008 | 03:44 PM (EST)


What follows is the sixth post for the interactive book, Politics on the Couch. Readers' comments are welcome and an integral part of this experiment.


POLITICS ON THE COUCH: Hating the Haters

"No snowflake in an avalanche ever felt responsible."
- Voltaire

Large groups are more...

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Politics on the Couch: Splitting and Reparation Two

Posted June 23, 2008 | 07:01 PM (EST)


What follows is the fifth section of my new book, Politics on the Couch. Because we live in an interactive world and this election is an interactive process, I am conducting a new experiment - posting sections of the manuscript twice weekly on my blog at HuffingtonPost.com and inviting readers'...

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Politics on the Couch: Splitting and Reparation -- Part One

Posted June 16, 2008 | 02:43 PM (EST)


What follows is the fourth section of my new book, Politics on the Couch. Because we live in an interactive world and this election is an interactive process, I am conducting a new experiment - posting sections of the manuscript twice weekly on my blog at HuffingtonPost.com and inviting readers'...

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Politics on the Couch: Paranoid Anxiety, Splitting, and Racism

Posted June 9, 2008 | 07:43 PM (EST)


What follows is the third section of my new book, Politics on the Couch. Because we live in an interactive world and this election is an interactive process, I am conducting a new experiment - posting sections of the manuscript twice weekly on my blog at HuffingtonPost.com and inviting...

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Politics on the Couch: Splitting

Posted June 5, 2008 | 09:42 AM (EST)


What follows is the second section of my new book, Politics on the Couch. Because we live in an interactive world and this election is an interactive process, I am conducting a new experiment -- posting sections of the manuscript twice weekly on my blog at HuffingtonPost.com and inviting readers'...

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Politics on the Couch: Projection

Posted June 2, 2008 | 06:15 AM (EST)


What follows is the first chapter for the interactive book, Politics on the Couch (the introduction can be read here). Readers' comments are welcome and an integral part of this experiment.

PROJECTION

Pogo got it right in 1970 when he said, "We have met the enemy and he...

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Politics on the Couch: Introduction

Posted May 27, 2008 | 06:47 PM (EST)


What follows is the introduction to my new book, Politics on the Couch. Because we live in an interactive world and this election is an interactive process, I am conducting a new experiment: I'm posting sections of the manuscript twice weekly on my blog here at HuffingtonPost.com and am inviting...

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Mother's Day Musings, 2008

Posted May 11, 2008 | 07:37 PM (EST)


Each of us, even identical twins, has his own unique mother. So the relationship each child in a family has to his mother is different from that of every other child in that family - even though the mother is the mother to every one of her children.

Each of...

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What Obama should have said

Posted April 18, 2008 | 08:42 AM (EST)


At the end of Wednesday's PA debate - disastrous on many fronts - Obama needed to make his own version of the following closing statement - written the day before that debate and sent to his staff at that time:

My fellow Americans, particularly those who will vote in...

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ee cummings and HillaryandBarack and DeFazio

Posted March 14, 2008 | 07:39 AM (EST)


ee cummings knew how to play with words, with love. He wrote often about the number one, and once said that one is not half two but that two is half one. It is in that spirit, not of love but of believing that two is half one, that I...

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