URGENT!
Please, forward this link to everyone you know....
http://www.results.gov/leadership/potomacfever.html
and download the pages BEFORE they disappear.
Potomac Fever?
We need your help to better diagnose and treat a major DC malady.
The end of summer brings on health concerns such as fall allergies, common colds, sore throats, the coming flu season, and even holiday weight gain. While these concerns are by no means trivial there is an even more significant health concern that may be impacting you or some of the people you love and respect. It's called Potomac Fever. Following is some information to assist you in recognizing, preventing, and combating Potomac Fever.
General Symptoms include: Extreme disorientation, memory loss, and occasional delusions of grandeur.
Symptoms can present as follows: An individual suffering from Potomac Fever may have an inflated notion of self worth and may use phrases such as:
- "let's get one of the cars and drivers here to take us to dinner"
- "hello, I'm THE Assistant Secretary of ________" (vs. President Bush's Assistant Secretary of ____________ )
- "this issue is very important to MY agenda"
- "this hotel room is not big enough for the Assistant Secretary of _________"
- "I have the ugliest building in Washington"
The individual may suffer from delusions of grandeur:
- words like million and billion no longer seem so large
- the individual may believe he/she could be effective if only OMB would loosen up on the budget strings
- the individual may get upset at related industry gatherings when other people don't immediately know who he/she is
- the individual may be continually focused on his or her next position/appointment
- the individual has more material and pictures of themselves on their "I love me" wall than paper in their policy files
- office hallway pictures and blow-ups are two times life size
The individual may have incoherent speech. They may:
- frequently use words like paradigm and synergy
- frequently use acronyms and code words when talking about government programs……at home or at social occasions.
The individual may suffer bouts of memory loss:
- they may forget who appointed them to their position, the person whose name is on their appointment paper
- they may forget that they serve at the pleasure of the President
Prevention/Treatment: Frequently listen to or reading the President's vision for America. Also review the writings and remarks of past Presidents such as Theodore Roosevelt, Ronald Reagan, and George H. W. Bush. Listen to their principles, message, and vision.
Visit any small town outside the DC media market, go into a local store or restaurant to ask how many Cabinet officials and senior staff members the person waiting on you can name. Watch the local news in the same small town, notice how many seconds they devote to the most important issue you are currently working on.
Ask your children or siblings if they know how important a person you are.
Consider the following two questions.
Which of the following describes the picture above?
A. An American four door sedan
B. A common government vehicle
C. MY car
Which of the following describes the picture above?
A. A holiday dinner setting
B. A formal dinner setting
C. Everyday lunch
If you answered C to both questions and/or if you suffer from any of the symptoms described above, you may indeed be suffering from Potomac Fever. Please carefully review the suggested preventions/treatments.
Also please help us identify other symptoms and treatments for this terribly debilitating DC disease. You've all known people inflicted with the illness. Use the email feedback system to suggest other symptoms and treatments that we haven't thought of; so we can publish the expanded list for everyone's benefit.
We appreciate your help in this important effort.
Signed,
Clay Johnson
Kay Coles James
Additional Symptoms of Potomac Fever
After reading about Potomac Fever, members of the President's team have identified additional symptoms.
Symptom: "I'm too busy to attend that meeting -- I'm sending my confidential assistant to take notes."
Symptom: Excessive concern about the size of one's office space. Evidenced by the counting of tiles above cubical spaces to ensure the size of the cubical matches the entitled space.
Symptom: "Them" as in career staff versus "Us" as in political appointees.
Symptom: The desire to construct entire speeches out of acronyms.
One last note of warning, the young may be more susceptible to Potomac Fever. As one team member notes,
"The affliction often attacks the young who have yet to discover who they are as individuals. They believe that Senators, Mayors, Governors, etc. rush to take their telephone calls because it is they who are calling. They fail to understand, it is the office they represent that gets their calls answered. These individuals go through a difficult adjustment period once they leave an Administration and suddenly no one returns their call. Many crash and burn once they leave."
Please, forward this link to everyone you know....
http://www.results.gov/leadership/potomacfever.html
and download the pages BEFORE they disappear.
Potomac Fever?
We need your help to better diagnose and treat a major DC malady.
The end of summer brings on health concerns such as fall allergies, common colds, sore throats, the coming flu season, and even holiday weight gain. While these concerns are by no means trivial there is an even more significant health concern that may be impacting you or some of the people you love and respect. It's called Potomac Fever. Following is some information to assist you in recognizing, preventing, and combating Potomac Fever.
General Symptoms include: Extreme disorientation, memory loss, and occasional delusions of grandeur.
Symptoms can present as follows: An individual suffering from Potomac Fever may have an inflated notion of self worth and may use phrases such as:
- "let's get one of the cars and drivers here to take us to dinner"
- "hello, I'm THE Assistant Secretary of ________" (vs. President Bush's Assistant Secretary of ____________ )
- "this issue is very important to MY agenda"
- "this hotel room is not big enough for the Assistant Secretary of _________"
- "I have the ugliest building in Washington"
The individual may suffer from delusions of grandeur:
- words like million and billion no longer seem so large
- the individual may believe he/she could be effective if only OMB would loosen up on the budget strings
- the individual may get upset at related industry gatherings when other people don't immediately know who he/she is
- the individual may be continually focused on his or her next position/appointment
- the individual has more material and pictures of themselves on their "I love me" wall than paper in their policy files
- office hallway pictures and blow-ups are two times life size
The individual may have incoherent speech. They may:
- frequently use words like paradigm and synergy
- frequently use acronyms and code words when talking about government programs……at home or at social occasions.
The individual may suffer bouts of memory loss:
- they may forget who appointed them to their position, the person whose name is on their appointment paper
- they may forget that they serve at the pleasure of the President
Prevention/Treatment: Frequently listen to or reading the President's vision for America. Also review the writings and remarks of past Presidents such as Theodore Roosevelt, Ronald Reagan, and George H. W. Bush. Listen to their principles, message, and vision.
Visit any small town outside the DC media market, go into a local store or restaurant to ask how many Cabinet officials and senior staff members the person waiting on you can name. Watch the local news in the same small town, notice how many seconds they devote to the most important issue you are currently working on.
Ask your children or siblings if they know how important a person you are.
Consider the following two questions.
Which of the following describes the picture above?
A. An American four door sedan
B. A common government vehicle
C. MY car
Which of the following describes the picture above?
A. A holiday dinner setting
B. A formal dinner setting
C. Everyday lunch
If you answered C to both questions and/or if you suffer from any of the symptoms described above, you may indeed be suffering from Potomac Fever. Please carefully review the suggested preventions/treatments.
Also please help us identify other symptoms and treatments for this terribly debilitating DC disease. You've all known people inflicted with the illness. Use the email feedback system to suggest other symptoms and treatments that we haven't thought of; so we can publish the expanded list for everyone's benefit.
We appreciate your help in this important effort.
Signed,
Clay Johnson
Kay Coles James
Additional Symptoms of Potomac Fever
After reading about Potomac Fever, members of the President's team have identified additional symptoms.
Symptom: "I'm too busy to attend that meeting -- I'm sending my confidential assistant to take notes."
Symptom: Excessive concern about the size of one's office space. Evidenced by the counting of tiles above cubical spaces to ensure the size of the cubical matches the entitled space.
Symptom: "Them" as in career staff versus "Us" as in political appointees.
Symptom: The desire to construct entire speeches out of acronyms.
One last note of warning, the young may be more susceptible to Potomac Fever. As one team member notes,
"The affliction often attacks the young who have yet to discover who they are as individuals. They believe that Senators, Mayors, Governors, etc. rush to take their telephone calls because it is they who are calling. They fail to understand, it is the office they represent that gets their calls answered. These individuals go through a difficult adjustment period once they leave an Administration and suddenly no one returns their call. Many crash and burn once they leave."
2 Comments:
wow, you picked this up, cool.
i'd like to see this item get the widest dissemination possible, since, well the source is our White House servers.
it is clearly an admission on their end that they've got a problem with mental issues over at 1600 Pennsylvania that manifests itself, to use their very own werds, in:
'delusions of grandeur.'
not the kind of issue one wants to see emanating from those that are running the country, but there it is.
nwa
By
Nyc Labretš, at 12:41 AM
I am totally baffled by this. Is this REAL? If this is a case of cyber-protest..PLEASE TELL ME!
By
Anonymous, at 8:51 AM
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