The Thamnophobia Crisis

name and address

Because the deadly scourge of thamnophobia moves slowly, many of its social, political, and economic effects have yet to be understood. The impact is hard to overstate. But we must be up to the task.
The other day, I was talking to a colleague, a highly educated and intelligent person who is usually capable of insightful logic, understatement, and restraint, when the topic turned to President G.W. Bush. Suddenly, the conversation began to sound like this:
"That g@#$#$%#$%^m@$n Bush #$#$%^ !!!! 2#$^@ damn 3 f$%^@k$%^@$%g neocons s#o$n%@of# b$%t@#c%h hitler!!!!! @#$%@$%^#$ Karl Rove a@s#$s%h@ #ol$%e hell in a handbasket !!!!!"
My friends, as Rush Limbaugh would say, you have just witnessed a tragic case of thamnophobia (sometimes known as "Bushophobia" or "Bush Derangement Syndrome" (BDS)). The word comes from the Greek thamnos or 'bush', and phobos, or 'fear of'. Fear of Bush.

In the past year or so, I have documented numerous cases of this tragic and heretofore unrecognized disease. Previous researchers have estimated that there may be as many as 59,028,112 cases of thamnophobia in the US alone. This would make thamnophobia the worst epidemic since the epidemic of mass motion sickness that occurred after the opening of the movie Star Wars in 1977 (which, oddly enough, no one but me seems to remember). However, this estimate, which includes everyone who voted for John F. Kerry in 2004 plus the three people who non-accidentally voted for Ralph Nader, includes not only severe cases like Helen Thomas, whose rating on the Schenck-Borelli Bush-Hater's Index was among the highest ever recorded, but also cases of people who are, in most other respects, practically normal. While patients with mild cases may suffer few if any ill effects other than a mild case of hyperbole, severe cases of thamnophobia can produce semantic incoherence and misplaced metonymy on a scale approaching that of Cynthia McKinney. These tragic victims are predominantly political activists, politicians, news reporters, and people in left-wing Internet chat rooms. In this article, we will explore the causes, symptomology, and possible treatment for this dreaded affliction.

Diagnostic Criteria

The onset of thamnophobia is insidious. The following lifestyle traits are highly correlated with the incidence of thamnophobia, or TP:

Take this self-quiz to determine if you are a TP sufferer:
True False
I believe World War III is just around the corner and it's Bush's fault.
The Dan Rather National Guard memo showed a deeper truth about the Bush administration.
Name-calling is just another form of intellectual debate.
Karl Rove is stupid and evil.
Dick Cheney is stupid and evil.
All Republicans are stupid and evil.
Anyone who does not share my beliefs is stupid and evil.
President Bush was responsible for the 2004 tsunami.
President Bush was responsible for Hurricane Katrina.
If you answered yes to any of the above questions, you may well be suffering from TP. Or, if you just clicked on "Compute Score" to see what would happen, you may be suffering from Excessive Internet Test Taking Syndrome (EITTS).

Hermione Slatkin reported that the American Psychiatric Association (APA) approves the inclusion of "political paranoia" in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). You may be suffering from that, too. (Political paranoia that is, not the APA. We all suffer from the APA.)

Famous celebrities suffering from thamnophobia

Epidemiology and Possible Causes

So far, the causes of thamnophobia have remained mysterious. Most cases of thamnophobia have been found in the so-called "blue states" of New York and California. Colfax (2002) speculated, on the basis of similarities between the geographic distributions of thamnophobia and West Nile fever, that the causal agent was transmitted by mosquitoes. However, as Knipe (2004) pointed out, this theory has received little experimental support. Another theory, first postulated by Rotzschke and Siegel (1997a), suggested that rat bites are the cause. Povis and colleagues (2001) reported isolating a mutant viral protein known as GP277 from TP sufferers, suggesting the possibility that TP may be the first example of a genetically engineered disease created by a foreign power intent on destroying America.

The alternative hypothesis is that TP is a purely psychiatric condition. Chief among proponents of this theory is commentator Michael Savage, who classified liberalism as a mental disorder in his classic treatise titled Liberalism is a Mental Disorder. However, the APA has not yet accepted Savage's proposed taxonomy.

Then there is the Kool-Aid theory, proposed by Bush supporters and made popular by Rush Limbaugh and Bill O'Reilly. According to this theory, TP is caused by excessive self-medication with psychotropic drugs.

Thamnophobia in the News Media

The problem with clinical psychiatry is that it's hard to tell which ones are the nuts and which ones just have screws loose. Take the New York Times, for example, where TP exists in epidemic proportions. Maureen Dowd, the man-starved political columnist of the New York Times, is a classic long-term sufferer of TP. She has documented the years of torment caused by her descent into the madness of thamnophobia in a book called Bushworld: Enter At Your Own Risk. Dowd's obsession with President Bush marked the beginning of her descent from mere cattiness and superficiality into cattiness, madness, superficiality, and really bad writing. Typical of the paranoid ideation symptomatic of TP is the column in which she compares her opponents to

... a vengeful mob -- revved up by rectitude -- running around with torches and hatchets after heathens and pagans and infidels.

Closely associated with TP is a disease cluster known as Anti-Religious Antagonism Syndrome (ARAS), also known as Christophobia. This is again exemplified by a quote that Maureen Dowd made upon hearing that some religious conservatives were opposed to the state killing of Terry Schiavo:

Oh my God, we are really in a theocracy.
Discussing the same events, the great New York Times thinker Paul Krugman wrote
Liberal politicians, and even conservatives who aren't sufficiently hard-line [may someday have to fear assassination from religious believers] unless moderates take a stand against the growing power of domestic extremists.

In other words, the New York Times believes that Christianity is evil and stupid, and that Western civilization is in danger from rampaging hordes of wild-eyed Episcopalians with blocks of Semtex strapped to their chests [1]. Although technically this is not TP, the symptomology is sufficiently related as to justify defining a new disease complex: Anti Religious and Anti Bush and Anti Republican Antagonism Syndrome, or ARABARAS.

Here is a poignant example of TP in a patient named Molly Birnbaum, a poet who is clearly in the terminal stages of TP:

Imagine a way to erase that night four years ago when you [President G. W. Bush] savagely raped every pandemic woman over and over with each vote you got, a thrust with each state you stole. A smack with each bill you passed, a tear with each right you took until you left me disenfranchised with my hands shackled and my voice restrained.
This poem is typical of advanced TP, showing florid paranoid ideation, irrationality, and fully-developed victim mentality, along with a severe case of mixed metaphors and bad, bad analogies.

Treatment

Treatment options are currently limited to two:

Prognosis

Grim.


[1] I borrowed this joke from somewhere else (can't remember original source).
 Last updated September 7, 2005

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