George W. Bush substance abuse controversy

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President George Bush
President George Bush

Allegations of substance abuse have arisen during the political career of George W. Bush leading to controversy. Bush admits to abusing alcohol until age forty.

Contents

[edit] Alcohol

Bush has described his days before his religious conversion in his 40s as his "nomadic" period and "irresponsible youth" and admitted to drinking "too much" in those years. In Fortunate Son: George W. Bush and the Making of an American President by James Hatfield, Bush is quoted as saying that "alcohol began to compete with my energies ... I'd lose focus". Although Bush states that he was not an alcoholic, he has acknowledged that he was "drinking too much",[1] and that he couldn't remember a day when he hadn't had a drink, including his stay at Phillips Academy, where not only was he underage but alcohol was prohibited on campus, as well as at Yale where, conversely, "hard drinking" was considered a badge of honor (Hatfield).

Bush's drinking may not have caused problems were it not for his tendency to become excessively uninhibited, according to reports of friends. In the article referenced above, Kristof quotes Bush's cousin Elsie Walker as saying, "He was a riot. But afterward, when you're older, that can wear thin", and gives the example of Bush asking a "proper" female friend of his parents at a family cocktail party, "So, what's sex like after 50, anyway?"[1]

  • In December, 1966 (age 20), he was arrested for disorderly conduct after he and some friends had "a few beers" and stole a Christmas wreath from a hotel.[2] The charges were later dropped.
  • On September 4, 1976 (age 30), Bush was arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol near his family's summer home in Kennebunkport, Maine. He admitted his guilt, was fined US$150, and had his driving license in the state suspended for two years. The White House had claimed 30 days, the document shows two years.[3] This incident did not become public knowledge until it was reported in the press in the week before the 2000 election.

The most notorious episode, reported in numerous diverse sources including U.S. News & World Report, November 1, 1999, Secrecy & Privilege: Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq by Robert Parry, First Son: George W. Bush and the Bush Family Dynasty by Bill Minutaglio, and W: Revenge of the Bush Dynasty by Elizabeth Mitchell, has 26-year-old George W. Bush visiting his parents in Washington, D. C. over the Christmas vacation in 1972, shortly after the death of his grandfather, and taking his 16-year-old brother Marvin out drinking. On the way home George lost control of the car and ran over a garbage can, but continued home with the can wedged noisily under the car. When his father, George H. W. Bush, called him on the carpet for not only his own behavior but for exposing his younger brother to risk, George W., still under the influence, appears to have retorted angrily, "I hear you're looking for me. You wanna go mano-a-mano right here?" Before the elder Bush could reply, the situation was defused by brother Jeb, who took the opportunity to surprise his father with the happy news that George W. had been accepted to Harvard Business School.[4]

During the 2000 presidential campaign, Bush said that he gave up drinking after waking up with a hangover after his 40th birthday celebration: "I quit drinking in 1986 and haven't had a drop since then." He ascribed the change in part to a 1985 meeting with Reverend Billy Graham, after which he began serious Bible study, as well as to gentle but firm pressure from his wife, Laura.[5][6][7] Friends recall that Bush said nothing of his decision, even to Laura, until many weeks later when they realized that he had not had so much as a single beer in the interim.

An editorial letter by Graydon Carter in Vanity Fair for January, 2008, quotes a new book about Bush:

"a new book by former British foreign secretary Lord Owen may supply a clue. In The Hubris Syndrome: Bush, Blair, and the Intoxication of Power (ISBN 1842752197), Owen recalls the time in 2002 when the commander in chief collapsed while sitting on a sofa watching a football game. (Official cause: he’d choked on a pretzel.) The presidential head hit a table on the way to the floor, he suffered an abrasion on the left side of his face, and a blood sample was rushed to Johns Hopkins, in Baltimore. Owen says he was told by a British doctor who had visited Johns Hopkins that lab technicians there found that the blood contained significant amounts of alcohol."[8]

Since then, a photo[9] was taken on June 7, 2007 of Bush drinking what appears to be a beer at the G8 Summit in Heiligendamm, Germany. However, a German newspaper, citing White House sources, has said it was Buckler, a non-alcoholic beer.[10]

During an official visit in Rome, on 12 June 2008 Bush had an official lunch with Italian President Giorgio Napolitano, and during the lunch were served both white and red wine. [11]

[edit] Illegal drugs

Bush has refused to discuss speculation that he has used illegal drugs, but has said that when his father became president in 1989, and required White House employees to affirm that they had not used illegal drugs for 15 years, he would have passed that test.[12][13]

A conversation between Bush and an old friend and author, Doug Wead, touched on the subject of use of illegal drugs. In the taped recordings of the conversation, Bush explained his refusal to answer questions about whether he had used marijuana at some time in his past. “I wouldn’t answer the marijuana questions,” Bush says. “You know why? Because I don’t want some little kid doing what I tried.” When Wead reminded Bush that the latter had publicly denied using cocaine, Bush replied, "I haven't denied anything."[14]

In 1999, St. Martin's Press published a book[15] claiming that Bush had been arrested for cocaine possession and that he had the record expunged. The publisher claimed at the time that the book had been "carefully fact-checked and scrutinized by lawyers",[16] but soon afterwards recalled it and pulped all copies after it came to light that the author, James Hatfield, had been convicted in 1998 of attempted murder and in 1992 of embezzlement, had spent five years in prison, and had falsely claimed that his vanity novel about James Bond was authorised by the copyright holder.

In February 2004, Eric Boehlert in Salon magazine claimed that Bush's cessation of flying in April, 1972 and his subsequent refusal to take a physical exam came at the same time the Air Force announced a Medical Service Drug Abuse Testing Program, which, he wrote, was officially launched on April 21, 1972. He further claimed that while the drug testing took years to implement, "as of April 1972, Air National guardsmen knew random drug testing was going to be implemented."[17] Other sources indicate that the U.S. military did not introduce drug testing until the 1980s.[18]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Kristof, Nicholas, How Bush Came to Tame His Inner Scamp, The New York Times, July 29, 2000.
  2. ^ George W. Bush's Journey: Ally of an Older Generation Amid the Tumult of the 60's
  3. ^ The Smoking Gun: Archive
  4. ^ Salon Books | The mediocrity that roared
  5. ^ Washingtonpost.com: Bush - The Making of a Candidate
  6. ^ Washingtonpost.com: Bush's Life-Changing Year
  7. ^ CNN.com - Bush acknowledges 1976 DUI charge - November 2, 2000
  8. ^ http://www.vanityfair.com/magazine/2008/01/graydon200801 Vanity Fair web site
  9. ^ BBC NEWS | Europe | Bush's Europe tour diary: Day Four
  10. ^ Alkoholfreies Bier für Bush
  11. ^ Bush. Concluso il colloquio col presidente Napolitano (Italian). Retrieved on 2008-06-12.
  12. ^ Bush denies using any illegal drug during the past 25 years - August 19, 1999
  13. ^ Harnden, Toby. "US: Fresh Drug Claims Hit Bush's Hopes For White House", The Daily Telegraph, 20 October 1999. 
  14. ^ Bush feared past ‘mistakes’ would cost him - Politics - MSNBC.com
  15. ^ Fortunate Son (ISBN 1-887128-84-0)
  16. ^ Salon News | Publisher halts George W. Bush bio
  17. ^ Did Bush drop out of the National Guard to avoid drug testing? - Salon.com
  18. ^ Employee Drug Testing is Effective. National Bureau of Economic Research.;
    Crawley, James W.. "Military Sees Drug Use Rise Despite Tests", Union-Tribune, July 29, 2002. ;
    Gene Tinelli, Lee Hamlett, and Mike Smithson. "Fit For Duty...Or Is It?", National Air Traffic Controllers Association Voice, February 1999. ;
    Col. William Campenni. "Bush and I Were Lieutenants", The Washington Times, August 25, 2004. 

[edit] External links