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Catastrophe in New Orleans the latest wakeup call for the "world's last superpower"
September 15, 2005
It only took him (Bush) four days to make a plan. . . . Unfortunately it is a faith-based plan that includes getting two of every animal on a big boat.
--Bill Maher
Anarchy reigns. Armed thugs roam the city looting, raping and killing. Hundreds of cadavers lie rotting in the streets. The elderly and infirm are left to slowly expire in hospitals and nursing homes. Citizens are herded through contaminated waist-deep water into coliseums where there is no electricity, no security, no waste disposal and little food or water. No, this is not Haiti, Darfur or Fallujah. This is New Orleans, a city destroyed and its citizens scattered to the four winds by the ineptitude of city, state and federal government officials; at least a decade of criminal neglect of its infrastructure; and dereliction of duty by our highest elected officials including the president. Our trust in government--already severely weakened by the spectacle of members of both political parties greedily gorging themselves at the trough of big business--has taken a hit from which it may take longer to recover than the reconstruction of the city of New Orleans itself.
I watched a lot of CNN, MSNBC, PBS and even a little FOX cable news in the week after Hurricane Katrina struck, sickened by the unfolding events in New Orleans yet unable to turn away. Here in the United States of America poor (mostly black) folks had been left behind in the wake of the worst natural disaster in this nation in the last century. They were hungry, thirsty and they were dying in front of our eyes while the whole world watched.
As the usually well-groomed, detached reporters lost their cool and broadcast the human suffering in excruciating detail, the facade of American exceptionalism, of our superpower status, of our credo that "all men are created equal" was ripped away exposing the underclass, the 37 million people who perform behind-the-scenes tasks, who aren't sought-after consumers, who have few spokespeople, and who are thus typically invisible. But no more.
Our governments' cavalier reaction to Hurricane Katrina
Questions arise about the response of our government institutions. In a nation with as many resources as ours, why weren't the 150,000 or so folks--the poor, the sick, the elderly who did not have the money or means of transportation to leave New Orleans--evacuated by bus when the order went out? It was clear that this was a powerful storm, a Class 4 hurricane with 140-mile-per-hour winds that would make landfall in the early morning on Monday, August 29. The director of the National Hurricane Center briefed President George W. Bush, former Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) Director Mike Brown and Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff on the storm's potential deadly effects before Hurricane Katrina made landfall. Thus they were both fully aware that a storm surge capable of overtopping levees around New Orleans was possible and that disastrous flooding could result. Why then did it take until Friday for the federal government to begin to secure the area and initiate effective relief efforts? Why did it take the vacationing Bush two days to even mention the disaster and four days to get to the scene?
These questions are still being debated around the water coolers, in churches, on the airways, over the Internet and just about everywhere else in this country and abroad. David Brooks, conservative columnist for The New York Times, had this to say on PBS' News Hour on Friday, September 2:
I think it is a huge reaction we are about to see. I mean, first of all, they (the government) violated the social fabric, which is in the moments of crisis you take care of the poor first. That didn't happen; it's like leaving wounded on the battlefield.
Another thing. I've talked with some people who seemed more concerned about the breakdown of law and order and the looting than about the human suffering. But I wonder: What would you do if you'd been deserted in a city (80 percent of which was underwater) and left to your own devices? This law-abiding citizen would have done what was necessary to take care of myself and my loved ones. And if that meant breaking into Wal-Mart or a grocery store for food, water and other essentials, you can bet your ass that I would have been right there.
Besides, hadn't the social contract really been broken long ago? Those left behind in New Orleans knew they were on their own before Hurricane Katrina and the flooding of their homes. But there is no denying it by anyone now except those who, for whatever reason, refuse to see.
What those who are afraid of civil society breaking down don't realize is that civil society has already broken down! This is not a civil society we live in, but a profiteering, every-man-for-himself, oligarchy. The democratic process is broken if not rigged; the largest-ever redistribution of wealth from the poor to the rich occurred over the last six years under the guise of economic stimulus; fear and disinformation were used to put the poorest of Americans onto a battlefield under false pretenses; those who seek to engage the current administration in meaningful dialogue are terminated.
--Douglas Rushkoff's weblog, www.rushkoff.com/blog.php
Successful responses to other hurricanes
About a year ago, a Category 5 hurricane hit Cuba with winds of up to 160 miles per hours. In advance of the hurricane, 1.5 million people were safely evacuated, and despite the destruction of more than 20,000 homes, not one Cuban citizen died. In contrast, our national governmental agencies--the Office of Homeland Security and FEMA--looked like the Keystone Kops, fiddle-fucking around before the hurricane struck and trying to decide who was actually in charge in its aftermath while people suffered extreme deprivation and died. The estimated deaths could likely have been avoided entirely with the expeditious implementation of the existing city and state evacuation plans. And the number of deaths could have been extensively reduced by a more rapid and effective response by the only government equipped to handle a four-state emergency--the feds. Our government at all levels is complicit in these deaths. Nonetheless, the buck stops with George W. Bush, who, when he finally did appear, was uninspiring, disingenuous and virtually incapable of communicating any real concern for those so deeply affected by the storm at his various staged photo ops in the afflicted region.
Out of the rubbles of (Republican Senator) Trent Lott's house--he's lost his entire house--there's going to be a fantastic house. And I'm looking forward to sitting on the porch.
--George W. Bush while touring the devastated Mississippi coast
One million people have been displaced in affected areas as the finger-pointing continues--local agencies blame the federal government, the feds blame the locals. It is obvious that a potential disaster of this magnitude required timely, effective, focused action from the highest government in the land. After all, it had done so in Florida just prior to the 2004 presidential election, according to Billmon's weblog (http://billmon.org/archives/002125.html).
It's instructive, on that score, to compare the current response to Hurricane Katrina (in which the Three Stooges apparently have seized control of the Federal Emergency Management Agency in a bloodless coup) with the administration's efforts on behalf of the voters of Florida following last year's triple storms--Charley, Frances and Ivan.
True, the 2004 disasters didn't completely take down a major metropolitan area by turning its urban center into a bowl of shit soup. But the difference in the federal government's performance before, during and after those storms had passed is still rather striking. It appears there's something special about years divisible by two--and particularly every other year divisible by two--that can inspire amazing feats of bureaucratic energy and competence, at least in large, populous swing states.
Here then, are some of the highlights from last year's relief efforts in Florida:
"Gov. Jeb Bush sought federal help Friday while [Hurricane] Charley was still in the Gulf of Mexico. President Bush approved the aid about an hour after the hurricane made landfall. By Monday afternoon, the cavalry seemed to be in place . . . Cargo planes were shuttling FEMA supplies from a Georgia Air Force base to a staging area in Lakeland, and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers had shipped 11 truckloads of water and 14 truckloads of ice. The first assistance checks to victims were to be shipped Monday night."
--St. Petersburg Times, August 17, 2004
As I'm sure you can imagine, this display of the good old American can-do spirit didn't go unnoticed by the people of Florida--nor did the millions of dollars in disaster relief and damage insurance checks that were cut by various federal agencies with record speed. FEMA officials must have been deeply gratified to see the effect their heroic efforts had in the place where they were most desperately needed -- Bush's poll numbers:
A nation asleep at the wheel
But as horrible as the tragedy in New Orleans and along the Gulf Coast is, we have awakened to a reality that is even more shocking: the fact that there is an underclass in this country that isn't regarded a great deal differently than the blacks and coloreds were in South Africa's system of apartheid before it was abolished. From 1990 to 2003, CEOs' salaries in the U.S. increased 313 percent while hourly workers' average wages increased 1.7 percent. Congress provides its members generous healthcare coverage while more than 45 million Americans have no healthcare insurance at all and approximately 100,000 citizens die annually due to lack of needed care. The infant mortality rate in the America in 2002 was 7.0 per 1,000 live births while infant mortality rates for black babies during that same period was 14.4 per 1,000 live births (By the way, Denmark, Japan, Norway, Iceland, Singapore and Sweden have reported fewer than four deaths per every 1,000 live births.)
Anyone who thinks we live in a nation of the people, by the people and for the people is asleep, in denial or mentally defective. We live in a nation of the corporation, by the corporation and for the corporation. It doesn't matter if we elect Republicans or Democrats. Both parties serve the same master. If we want to debate looting, maybe we should consider the looting done by Ken Lay at Enron, the looting by Halliburton in Iraq and the looting by the big oil companies at the gas pumps. And we might also want to consider the looting of our national treasury by the president and the Congress, taking our tax money and pumping it into the military/industrial/congressional complex to the tune of $437 billion a year (almost half of annual military expenditures by every nation on earth) and into other pork barrel projects while the infrastructure of this nation, including the levee system around New Orleans sinks and falls into disrepair, our schools lack the necessary funds to do the job intended for them and the sick, elderly and poor are pushed into the shadows. All of this while we go about our automatic daily routines of buying shit we don't need, chugging a few cool ones, popping some feel-good pills, numbing our minds with the drivel on TV and supporting self-serving politicians who have somehow convinced us that everything will be OK as long as they're in Washington to protect us.
No one is suggesting that mayors or governors in the afflicted areas, nor the federal government, should be able to stop hurricanes. Lord knows, no one is suggesting that we should ever prioritize levee improvement for a below-sea-level city, ahead of $454 million worth of trophy bridges for the politicians of Alaska.
But, nationally, these are leaders who won re-election last year largely by portraying their opponents as incapable of keeping the country safe. These are leaders who regularly pressure the news media in this country to report the reopening of a school or a power station in Iraq, and defies its citizens not to stand up and cheer. Yet they couldn't even keep one school or power station from being devastated by infrastructure collapse in New Orleans--even though the government had heard all the "chatter" from the scientists and city planners and hurricane centers and some group whose purposes the government couldn't quite discern... a group called The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
And most chillingly of all, this is the Law and Order and Terror government. It promised protection--or at least amelioration--against all threats: conventional, radiological, or biological.
It has just proved that it cannot save its citizens from a biological weapon called standing water.
--Keith Olberman, host of MSNBC's Countdown
Awakening and taking action
As ghastly as it was, Hurricane Katrina was merely a shot across the bow unless we get our houses in order--our own personal houses as well as the state of our nation. For we cannot merely point our fingers at our nation's leaders. We must also look at our complicity. Our hearts have been opened by this terrible tragedy, and there has been a generous outpouring of compassion and for the poor and afflicted of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama (and good for us for doing so). But where were we when the safety net for the poor was being dismantled during the Clinton presidency? Where were we when thousands of blacks and Hispanics were refused the right to vote in Florida during the 2000 presidential election because they were erroneously listed as felons? Where were we when funding for Medicaid was being cut?
Yes, let us provide food, housing and jobs for the evacuees of the Gulf Coast--for the long term, not merely the short term. Let us welcome the new arrivals into our communities with open arms. But let us do the same for those in our own hometowns and cities who need similar support--those who are hungry, those who are homeless, those who are unemployed. Do I wish that my government would use large amounts of the taxes I pay for this endeavor rather than on armaments, weapons of mass destruction and bridges to nowhere? Absolutely. But the time has come for us to take matters into our own hands.
We have been awakened. And, praise the Lord, the mainstream media have been awakened too. Regardless, it is up to us to speak up. It is up to us to make the horrors of poverty, injustice, preemptive war, political malfeasance and rule by the corporate bottom line visible for all to see.
Our nation, each of us, received an enormous wakeup call out of the tragedy in New Orleans last week--more undeniable than the catastrophe of 9/11, more unambiguous than the torture and rape at Abu Ghraib, more unarguable than the death and destruction in Iraq. There is more afoot here than human consciousness can typically perceive. Yet it has become apparent to many that the inequities and incongruencies in our society will not stand. Reality (or God or Allah or the Big Kahuna, as you prefer) will not permit us to continue on the path that we have taken. Thus, if we do not discern the deepest meaning of this most recent shock wave and change course accordingly, even larger such wakeup calls await us.
Out of every tragedy an opportunity. Let us seize this outrage as an opportunity to create a nation that truly lives up to its promises for all of our citizens. And let each of us not only speak the words of compassion, freedom and justice; let us commit to live those values every day of our lives.
I tremble for my country when I consider God is just, and that His justice shall not sleep forever.
--Thomas Jefferson
Posted by Bruce at September 15, 2005 02:35 PM
Thank you Bruce - you are soooo right on. I loved everything you said. This is a huge wake-up call - however, we have had many more recently, i.e the stolen election, the evisceration of the EPA, the invasion of Iraq and on and on ad nauseum. Americans it seems will have to have disaster staring them in the face to do anything. I do not have much faith in my fellow countrymen who refuse to travel and educate themselves.
Best regards,
Kent Peterson
Sarasota, FL
Posted by: Kent Peterson at September 17, 2005 02:34 PM
Bruce
Did you see the article, in October 2002, published in Science World, Volume 59 Number 3 (www.scholastic.com)- an article was written to notify us that New Orleans was very vunerable and could be wiped out by a savage storm. More federal money was sent to LA to prepare for such a disaster. Where did that money go? I can not recall the man's name, but he resigned because of misapproiation of funds. You might find a different view with a little more research.
I believe the local government is responsible for the loss of lives in New Orleans. The New Orleans Maror and the Louisiana Governor DID NOT follow their emergency plans! Remember, the buses were there (500 I believe) - the supplies were there but the local government did not want the people to get too comfortable so they did not allow the supplies (food and water) to be distributed. The Governor and the Mayor were fueding while people were dying, and President Bush gave them an ultimatium to end the fued and get on to helping the people. The other factor is these poor folks were depending on the government - the same government they depend on for housing, food stamps, etc. and as I understand it, this belief many buy into is from the Democratic party side of our government - it's a way of buying votes for the Democrats. Unfortunately, the mostly black people bought into this lie.....have a lot of babies (out of wedlock) and we will provide you with housing and food. I believe these poor black people need to have a wake up call that tells them quit voting for the Democrats, and quit looking to the government to supply your spiritual and physical needs and look to the one true God.
Bruce, perhaps you should read and listen to sources from all sides, then draw your conclusions. At this point, your views seem to be more in step with a media with a liberal agenda. Do you think that one man is responsible for the hurricane havoc comes across a little narrow minded? Here are some other sources you might want to tap into: Hannity.com,http://www.rushlimbaugh.com,www.cbnnews.com (my favorite-often this one presented in the worse light possible/out of context by liberal sources),www.bbc.com,(this source usually lines up with CNN, ABC, NBC & CBS)www.foxnews.com
Trust this helps to give you a more balanced perspective on events and issues.
Take care Bruce, and make it a GREAT day!
Posted by: Ray & Jacque at October 8, 2005 02:12 PM
It amazes me the number of folks who actually believe Republicans or Democrats are somehow "better" than the other. The fact is they're all bought and paid for by corporate money and power, and thus take their phone calls and do their bidding. As such the power of a good idea never sees the light of day, because the docket is packed full of corporate requests that must be fulfilled during the puppet's elected time served. They don't give those campaign contributions for nothing.
Every network mentioned is a corporation first, not a broadcaster of objective news, and are part of the whole corporate republic. So of course you have talking heads, like Hannity, and Limbaugh, as hired guns for corporate media agendas. These clowns will not say anything, much less do anything, to advance egalitarian values in our country. Their high paying jobs are to advance corporate goals, scream at the "liberal" boogeyman, and spin a tale that this abstract concept somehow is bad for America. So, turn off your TV, read more books and magazines, other than People (try The Economist), and THINK about why things happen the way they do. Use your brain God gave to you, not the one Pat Robertson has inside his intolerant, non-inclusive skull.
And how about our wonderful oil company executives. How much do they suffer? Their recent "testimony" on Capitol Hill to explain massive profits and feebly offering that they were negatively affected by the Hurricane. Who are they kidding? Well, apparently many. The real tragedy is our elected officials will do absolutely nothing, because they are beholden to these folks. So much for government by the people, for the people.
So unless you can come up with better ideas, other than listening to Rush Limbaugh and Pat Robertson, then stay in line.
Posted by: Mash at November 14, 2005 09:11 AM
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