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The Lawfare Podcast

Chatter: Manic Depression and Crisis Leadership with Nassir Ghaemi

The Lawfare Podcast

The Lawfare Institute

Politics, Terrorism, National Security, News, Foreign Policy, Diplomacy, Intelligence, Rule Of Law, Military, Constitutional Law, Current Events, International Relations, History, International Law, Government, Law

4.76.4K Ratings

🗓️ 12 October 2023

⏱️ 84 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Conventional wisdom has long held that countries, and even businesses, should not be run by those suffering from mental illness, especially during times of war or other dramatic challenges. Dr. Nassir Ghaemi, Director of the Mood Disorder Program at Tufts Medical Center and Professor of Psychiatry at Tufts University School of Medicine, disputes this notion. In his book A First-Rate Madness and other writings, he lays out a compelling case that in times of crisis, we are actually better off being led by mentally ill leaders than by mentally normal ones.


David Priess and Nassir talked about the challenges (and surprising advantages) of assessing the mental illnesses of historical figures; the lingering impact of Freudian psychoanalysis within the psychiatric community; why the best crisis leaders are either mentally ill or mentally abnormal; the differences between mental illness and extreme personality; the indicators of manic depression; the cases of Winston Churchill, Abraham Lincoln, Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King, William Sherman, Franklin Roosevelt, John Kennedy, and Adolf Hitler; enduring stigmas associated with mental illness; Nassir's father's political activism and its influence on his son; the American Psychiatric Association's "Goldwater Rule" against offering a professional psychiatric opinion without a patient examination and proper authorization; and more.


Among the works mentioned in this episode:


The book A First-Rate Madness by Nassir Ghaemi


Memoirs of Emil Kraepelin


The book Bipolar General: My Forever War with Mental Illness by Gregg Martin



Chatter is a production of Lawfare and Goat Rodeo. This episode was produced and edited by Cara Shillenn of Goat Rodeo. Podcast theme by David Priess, featuring music created using Groovepad.

Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/lawfare.


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Transcript

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0:00.0

The following podcast contains advertising to access an ad-free version of the LawFair

0:07.2

podcast become a material supporter of LawFair at patreon.com slash LawFair, that's patreon.com slash

0:16.8

LawFair. Also check out LawFair's other podcast offerings, rational security, chatter, LawFair

0:25.6

no bull, and the aftermath.

0:32.6

Little things like taking a shortcut through the park on your way to work each day can make

0:47.1

a big difference to your mental health.

0:54.1

Find your little big thing, at every mind matters.

1:04.1

Welcome to chatter, I'm David Priest. This week, Psychiatrist Naseer Gami on Manic Depression

1:16.4

and Crisis Leadership.

1:20.4

One of the interesting things about First Raid Nannis was that the chapters on the more recent

1:25.4

leaders always got resistance from whatever ethnic group or country the leader was from.

1:31.4

So the British didn't like the Churchill chapter and the Germans didn't like the Hitler chapter

1:35.4

and the Indians didn't like the Gandhi chapter.

1:42.4

They don't say you can't know because they're dead, actually the truth is the more dead they

1:46.4

are, the more you know. We don't know the truth about Bill Clinton and Donald Trump, but we do know the truth

1:51.4

about John Kennedy and Winston Churchill.

1:56.4

It's factually wrong that mental illnesses are harmful or bad, actually they're beneficial in some ways

2:03.4

and that's often hard for professionals to accept.

2:11.4

Naseer, welcome to chatter.

2:13.4

Thanks, nice to meet you.

2:15.4

You work at a fascinating intersection, York's Parties that we'll get into deals in psychiatry particularly

2:22.4

with mental illness and I still don't understand what the right term is now.

...

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