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New Yorker 8Packer 9

 

...Bush once told an elementary-school class in Crawford, Texas, "Is it hard to make decisions as president? Not really. If you know what you believe, decisions come pretty easy. If you're one of these types of people that are always trying to figure out which way the wind is blowing, decision making can be difficult. But I find that I know who I am. I know what I believe in." For Bush, making decisions is an identity question: Who am I? The answer turns Presidential decisions into foregone conclusions: I am someone who believes in the dignity of life, I am the protector of the American people, I am a loyal boss, I am a good man who cares about other people, I am the calcium in the backbone. This sense of conviction made Bush a better candidate than the two Democrats he was fortunate to have as opponents in his Presidential campaigns. But real decisions, which demand the weighing of compelling contrary arguments and often present a choice between bad options, were psychologically intolerable to the Decider. They confused the identity question....
-- George Packer, "Dead Certain: The Presidential memoirs of George W. Bush." New Yorker (November 29, 2010). http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/books/2010/11/29/101129crbo_books_packer
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