By Kevin D. Williamson
Tuesday, February 21, 2023
There is in psychiatry something called the “Goldwater
rule,” which holds that it is unethical for a psychiatrist to offer a
psychiatric evaluation of a person he has not examined and received
authorization to speak publicly about. I am not a psychiatrist, but, in the
spirit of the rule: I am happy—proud, even—that Joe Biden went to Kyiv and said
(or tried to say) all the right things, but his halting, sometimes slurred
speech did not do him any favors with Americans who worry that he is not up to
the job with which he has been entrusted.
What Biden sounded like, to my ear, was drunk.
Of course, he wasn’t drunk—like his immediate predecessor in the office, he is
a teetotaler. But Biden is 80 years old and is not what any honest observer
would call an astoundingly sharp 80-year-old. There
are such men, but Biden is not one of them. He stumbles, mumbles, and
wanders. He has better and worse days. There is—I think even such admirers as
he has must agree—good reason to think that, even with the most liberal
assumptions, he is not fit for the job.
When Sen. Barry Goldwater ran for president in 1964, many
psychiatrists—most of them cowards speaking from behind the veil of
anonymity—exploited and abused the prestige of the medical profession to
electioneer against the Republican standard bearer. They offered very
specific-sounding diagnoses, as psychiatrists (and their bastard offspring,
psychoanalysts) often do: One diagnosed Goldwater with “chronic psychosis”;
another charged that he was a “paranoid schizophrenic”; another claimed that
“Goldwater has the same pathological makeup as Hitler, Castro, Stalin, and
other known schizophrenic leaders.” Many of these opinions were offered in
response to a Fact magazine survey asking psychiatrists about
Goldwater’s psychiatric fitness for the presidency. The American
Psychiatric Association lambasted the magazine and its “purported
‘survey’” and promised that it would “take all possible measures to disavow its
validity.”
The psychiatric profession’s long and horrifying history
of allowing itself to be coopted by repressive regimes—or happily doing their
dirty work—was a common theme in the history of the 20th century,
particularly in the Soviet Union, where dissent from official socialist
ideology was often repressed by means of psychiatric “diagnosis” and coercive
“treatment.” The wider tendency of the medical profession to seek to use
its medical authority as a political weapon
(see, for example, the attempted medicalization of the gun-control debate) is
all too frequently observed in the United States, which is one of the reasons
that Nikki Haley’s loose talk about imposing medical “competency” tests on
political candidates is a foolish piece of demagoguery. Consider the education
establishment’s redefinition of “competency” (in this case “cultural
competency”) to mean the unquestioning submission to certain political
orthodoxies.
There are people who insist that Biden is “senile”
because they are his political rivals and they want to hurt him, but there are
also people who in good faith believe that he is not up to the job and that
this presents real risks to the country and its government. Unlike the armchair
diagnoses of Goldwater, we need not assert that Biden is suffering from any
specific malady, such as Alzheimer’s disease or Lewy body dementia. Because
many of us wish to be liberated from the burden of our own judgment by the act
of deputizing experts to do our thinking for us, there is a tendency to want a
specific, clinical diagnosis before we come to a judgment on Biden. But it is
unlikely that such a diagnosis will be forthcoming and, in any case, it is
unnecessary: Biden is old and weak and often unfocused, and we have the
evidence of our own eyes and ears to attest to this.
I am not suggesting that we get into the 25th Amendment
process for removing Biden from the office to which he was, owing to the
political unseriousness of the American people, legitimately elected. But we
must be honest with ourselves about the state of the administration.
Speaking of the 25th Amendment, there is
a part of it with which many Americans are not familiar: If Biden wants to
nominate a new secretary of state or a Supreme Court justice, this requires the
approval of the Senate—but if the president wishes to choose a new vice
president, this requires the approval of both the Senate and the House of
Representatives, which currently is under Republican control. There are many
Democrats who wish to be rid of Vice President Kamala Harris, whom they have
rightly judged to be a political liability with no likely political future of
her own, but the only way Biden is getting rid of Harris is by dumping her from
the ticket and getting reelected in 2024. It is very difficult to imagine House
Republicans voting to approve any new vice president Biden might conceivably
choose. Mitch McConnell took a lot of heat for running out the clock on Merrick
Garland but, far from paying a political price for this, he harvested a bumper
crop of political benefits. Kevin McCarthy, who serves at the mercy of a dozen
or so howling moonbats, would have no incentive at all to help Biden replace
Harris—and with the vice presidency vacant, McCarthy would be second in line to
the presidency with only the oldest-ever incumbent between him and the Oval
Office. That’s a storyline more appropriate to a political thriller, but it is
something to keep in mind if your current Kremlinology tells you Harris is
going anywhere.
Biden is stuck with Harris, and Democrats—and the
country—are, it seems, stuck with the both of them, however doddering the man
in charge of the executive branch of the federal government may be. It is
tempting to write that with only a little sensible political calculation,
Republicans could put themselves in an unbeatable situation. But if you think
the coming election is foolproof, then you don’t know the fools in question.
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