If you think that you have it bad, if you think that America’s
national mood is foul and fetid, look across the ocean to France.
Perhaps it’s not an accident that the word malaise is
French. If you suspect that the French are really good at malaise you are
right.
After all, a nation that still clings to psychoanalysis and
that manages to consume more psychiatric medication per capita than anyone else
is not likely to be in a very good mood.
The French Interior Ministry recently analyzed the French
malaise:
A
climate of pain and a feeling of despondency reign, which block any
self-projection into a better future. It's the compost in which a possible
social explosion is fermenting. Attention is called to the difficulty elected
officials are having in creating a sense of proportion and inspiring
confidence. This climate of pessimism and defiance is feeding extremist
arguments about the impotence of the authorities.
Writing in the Wall Street Journal John Vinocur says that
the French are suffering from a “self-inflicted grief.” What could that mean
except that they are suffering the consequences of their votes? Or perhaps the
French are discovering that socialist policies undermine initiative and deprive
people of the chance to earn success.
All the world’s love and debauchery will not overcome the
torpor inflicted by a socialist government.
With unemployment hovering at 11% French men and women are
despondent about their socialist president, Francois Hollande, the man that
they all voted for:
Vinocur explains:
Seventy-four
percent of the French think France is on the decline and 83% think that
President François Hollande's blurry reform policies are
"ineffectual," according to reputable polling organizations. Mario
Draghi, president of the European Central Bank, says "French
competitiveness remains insufficient and strengthening public finances can no
longer rely on tax increases."
You might imagine that the French psychoanalytic
establishment knows what it takes to improve everyone’s mental health. And yet,
French analysts supported Hollande’s candidacy to a man and to a woman. Some
prominent French analysts were happy to tell the world how much they detested former
president Nicolas Sarkozy.
Of course, anyone who still believes that psychoanalysis
shows the way to mental health needs to grow out of that illusion. It's probably not an accident that the French have lost the ability to project themselves into the future. After all, Freudian psychoanalysis teaches you primarily to focus on the past.
I do not emphasize French psychoanalysis because I know
it so well. The French press did not need me to ask whether President Hollande can
be cured by a few thousand hours on the couch.
I have no information about President Hollande’s experience
with mental health professionals, but I would venture that he has spent some
time consulting with psychoanalysts. In his world everyone does it. Why shouldn’t
he?
Vinocur described the way the story is being told by French
newsmagazines:
This
plays into newsmagazine covers like one that portrayed Sigmund Freud staring at
President Hollande across the page with a headline reading: "Hollande, as
Shrinks See Him—Can He Change?"; or another with a picture of a
troubled-looking Mr. Hollande and the accompanying line, "At the Edge of
Chaos: From A to Z, the Inventory of His Failures."
Of course, they have gotten the story wrong. Voting for a
psychoanalyst’s favorite candidate will do nothing to improve anyone’s mental
health. Haven’t the French figured out that psychoanalysis neither treats nor
cures?
In France psychoanalysis is not the solution; it's the problem.
What has psychoanalysis done for France? It has infected the public mood with the dysthymia
that it has long since been selling.
3 comments:
Kinda like here, except no self-respecting shrink would stoop so low as to psychoanalyze Obama. THAT would be raaaaacist! Bush(!!!111!!!), no problem.
O/T but thought you would enjoy -
http://sultanknish.blogspot.ca/2013/12/the-left-is-too-smart-to-fail.html
A great view on this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=0M7ibPk37_U
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