OT: Arianna Huffington



 Religions > Atheism > OT: Arianna Huffington

LINK TO THIS PAGE  


rating :  0   |  0


  Page 1 of 1

1

 
Topic: Religions > Atheism
User: "maff"
Date: 26 Oct 2004 02:14:02 AM
Object: OT: Arianna Huffington
Appealing To Our Lizard Brains: Why Bush Is Still Standing
October 13, 2004
Since the president's meltdown in the first debate — followed in quick
succession by Paul Bremer's confession, the CIA's no-al-Qaida/Saddam
link report, the Duelfer no-WMD-since-'91 report, and the woeful
September job numbers — I have been racking my brain trying to figure
out why George W. Bush is still standing.
The answer arrived via my friend Ed Solomon, the brilliant writer and
filmmaker, who explained that the conundrum could be solved by looking
at the very organ I'd been racking.
Arianna Huffington
http://news.google.com/news?num=100&hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&q=+%22Arianna+Huffington%22&sa=N&tab=gn
http://www.google.com/search?num=100&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&q=+%22Arianna+Huffington%22&sa=N&tab=nw
http://www.google.com/search?num=100&hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&q=+%22Arianna+Huffington%22&sa=N&tab=wd&cat=gwd%2FTop
http://groups.google.com/groups?as_epq=Arianna%20Huffington&safe=images&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&as_scoring=d&lr=&num=100&hl=en
.

User: "stoney"

Title: Re: OT: Arianna Huffington 27 Oct 2004 03:34:53 PM
On 26 Oct 2004 00:14:02 -0700,
(maff) wrote:
[snip all and pasting article]
http://www.yubanet.com/artman/publish/article_14328.shtml
From YubaNet.com
Columns
Arianna Huffington: Appealing To Our Lizard Brains: Why Bush Is Still
Standing
Author: Arianna Huffington
Published on Oct 14, 2004, 07:05
Since the president's meltdown in the first debate — followed in quick
succession by Paul Bremer's confession, the CIA's no-al-Qaida/Saddam
link report, the Duelfer no-WMD-since-'91 report, and the woeful
September job numbers — I have been racking my brain trying to figure
out why George W. Bush is still standing.
The answer arrived via my friend Ed Solomon, the brilliant writer and
filmmaker, who explained that the conundrum could be solved by looking
at the very organ I'd been racking.
Ed introduced me to the work of Dr. Daniel Siegel, a Harvard-trained
psychiatrist and author of the forthcoming book "Mindsight," which
explores the physiological workings of the brain.
Turns out, when it comes to Campaign 2004, it's the neuroscience,
stupid!
Or, as Dr. Siegel told me: "Voters are shrouded in a 'fog of fear'
that is impacting the way our brains respond to the two candidates."
Thanks to the Bush campaign's unremitting fear-mongering, millions of
voters are reacting not with their linear and logical left brain but
with their lizard brain and their more emotional right brain.
What's more, people in a fog of fear are more likely to respond to
someone whose primary means of communication is in the nonverbal
realm, neither logical nor language-based. (Sound like any
presidential candidate you know?)
And that's why Bush is still standing. It's not about left wing vs.
right wing; it's about left brain vs. right brain.
Deep in the brain lies the amygdala, an almond-sized region that
generates fear. When this fear state is activated, the amygdala
springs into action. Before you are even consciously aware that you
are afraid, your lizard brain responds by clicking into survival mode.
No time to assess the situation, no time to look at the facts, just:
fight, flight or freeze.
And, boy, have the Bushies been giving our collective amygdala a
workout. Especially ***** Cheney, who has proven himself an unmatched
master of the dark art of fear-mongering. For an object lesson in how
to get those lizard brains leaping, look no further than the
vice-presidential debate.
"The biggest threat we face today," said Cheney in his very first
answer "is the possibility of terrorists smuggling a nuclear weapon or
a biological agent into one of our own cities and threatening the
lives of hundreds of thousands of Americans."
Just in case we didn't get the point, he repeated the ominous
assertion, practically word for word, two more times — throwing in the
fact that he was "absolutely convinced" that the threat "is very
real." It was "be afraid, be very afraid" to the third power.
And when we are afraid, we are biologically programmed to pay less
attention to left-brain signals — indeed, our logical mind actually
shuts itself down. Fear paralyzes our reasoning and literally makes it
impossible to think straight. Instead, we search for emotional,
nonverbal cues from others that will make us feel safe and secure.
When our right brain is at Threat Level Red, we don't want to hear
about a four-point plan to win the peace, or a list of damning
statistics, or even a compelling, well-reasoned argument that the
policies of Bush and Cheney are actually making us less safe. We want
to get the feeling that everything is going to be all right.
In this state, our brains care more about tone of voice than what the
voice is saying. This is why Bush can verbally stumble and sputter and
make little or no sense and still leave voters feeling that he is the
candidate best able to protect them. Our brains are primed to receive
the kinds of communication he has to offer and discard the kinds John
Kerry has to offer, even if Kerry makes more "logical sense." Which,
of course, he does.
The strutting, winking, pointing and near-shouting that marked Bush's
town hall debate performance all sent the same subconscious message to
our fear-fogged brains: "I'm your daddy . . . I've got your back. So
just go to sleep and stop thinking. About anything."
"At the deepest level," Dr. Siegel told me, "we react to fear as
adults in much the same way we did as infants. It's primal. Human
babies have the most dependent infancy of any species. Our survival
depends on the caregiver. We instinctively look to authority figures
to comfort us and keep us safe."
As needy infants, this natural drive to be soothed and reassured is
what we looked for in our parents; as anxious adults in these
exceptionally unsettling times, it's what we are looking for in our
leaders.
Over the remaining three weeks of the campaign, as the anxiety level
reaches a fevered pitch — and you can be certain the Bush campaign
will do everything in its power to make sure that happens — the test
facing voters is no longer, "Which candidate would you rather have a
beer with?" It's "Which candidate would you rather give you your
blankie and a bottle and keep the boogeyman away?"
I know it sounds ludicrous that the most important election of our
lifetime is coming down to who can best pacify the electorate's inner
baby, but I can think of no better explanation as to why Bush is not
currently hovering at around 5 percent in the polls — a voting block
made up of those hardcore fanatics who are as utterly blind to reality
as he is.
As long as we're operating from our lizard brains — and reason takes a
back seat to more primal needs — George Bush will continue to survive
the logic-based attacks on his ever-escalating failures.
The only question that remains is: Can Bush, Cheney and Rove keep us
shrouded in the fog of fear long enough to brain John Kerry and win in
November?
Go to ariannaonline.com to read about Arianna's new book, " Fanatics &
Fools: The Game Plan for Winning Back America."
© Copyright 2004 by YubaNet.com
Send your letters to the editor to

--
Contempt of Congress meter reading-offscale.
Vote for Bush. Why vote for the lesser of two evils?
No matter the candidates the superstition industry wins.
'Jesus' is a sock-puppet Christians utilize to add 'authority' to
whatever action they intend on taking. -Stoney
And Duty Imp and Rapscallion
.


  Page 1 of 1

1

 


Related Articles
 

NEWER

pg.3585     pg.2749     pg.2106     pg.1612     pg.1232     pg.940     pg.716     pg.544     pg.412     pg.311     pg.234     pg.175     pg.130     pg.96     pg.70     pg.50     pg.35     pg.24     pg.16     pg.10     pg.6     pg.3     pg.1

OLDER