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care of human life and happiness, and not their destruction,
is the first and only object of good government."
~
Thomas Jefferson
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Editorial
The Man-Made Disaster
Published:
September 2, 2005
The
situation in New Orleans, which had seemed as bad as it
could get, became considerably worse yesterday with reports
of what seemed like a total breakdown of organized society.
Americans who had been humbled by
failures in Iraq saw that the authorities could not quickly
cope with a natural disaster at home. People died
for lack of water, medical care or timely rescues - particularly
the old and the young - and victims were almost invariably
poor and black. The city's police chief spoke of rapes,
beatings and marauding mobs. The pictures were equally heartbreaking
and maddening. Disaster planners were
well aware that New Orleans could be flooded by the combined
effects of a hurricane and broken levees, yet somehow the
government was unable to immediately rise to the occasion.
Watching helplessly from afar, many
citizens wondered whether rescue operations were hampered
because almost one-third of the men and women of the Louisiana
National Guard, and an even higher percentage of the Mississippi
National Guard, were 7,000 miles away, fighting in Iraq.
That's an even bigger loss than the raw numbers suggest
because many of these part-time soldiers had to leave behind
their full-time jobs in police and fire departments or their
jobs as paramedics. Regardless of whether they wear public
safety uniforms in civilian life, the guardsmen in Iraq
are a crucial resource sorely missed during these early
days, when hours have literally meant the difference between
evacuation and inundation, between civic order and chaos,
between life and death.
The gap is now belatedly being filled by units from other
states, though without the local knowledge and training
those Mississippi and Louisiana units could supply. The
Pentagon is sending thousands of active-duty sailors and
soldiers, including a fully staffed aircraft carrier, a
hospital ship and some 3,000 Army troops for security and
crowd control (even though federal law bars regular Army
forces from domestic law enforcement, normally the province
of the National Guard).
But it's already a very costly game of catch-up. The situation
might have been considerably less dire if all of Louisiana's
and Mississippi's National Guard had been mobilized before
the storm so they could organize, enforce and aid in the
evacuation of vulnerable low-lying areas. Plans should have
been drawn up for doing so, with sufficient trained forces
available to carry them out.
It's too late for that now. But the hard lessons of this
week must be learned and incorporated into the nation's
plans for future emergencies, whether these come in the
form of natural disasters or terrorist attacks. Every state
must now update its plans for quick emergency responses
and must be assured by the Pentagon that it will be able
to keep enough National Guard soldiers on hand to carry
out these plans on very short notice.
Things would have been even worse if a comparable domestic
disaster had struck last year, when an even greater percentage
of National Guard units were deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Some states had more than two-thirds of their Guard forces
overseas. After several governors protested, the Pentagon
agreed to adjust its force rotations so no state would be
stripped of more than half of its guardsmen at any one time.
That promise has been kept so far. But honoring it in the
months ahead will be extremely difficult with active-duty
forces so badly overstretched in Iraq, and prospects for
any significant early withdrawals looking bleak.
One lasting lesson that has to be
drawn from the Gulf Coast's misery is that from now on,
the National Guard must be treated as America's most essential
homeland security force, not as some kind of military piggy
bank for the Pentagon to raid for long-term overseas missions.
America clearly needs a larger active-duty Army. It just
as clearly needs a homeland-based National Guard that's
fully prepared and ready for any domestic emergency.
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| "We
cannot defend freedom abroad
by deserting it at home."
~ Edward
R.
Murrow |

Op-Ed Columnist
A Can't Do Government
By
PAUL KRUGMAN
Published: September 2, 2005
Before
9/11 the Federal Emergency Management Agency listed the three
most likely catastrophic disasters facing America: a terrorist
attack on New York, a major earthquake in San Francisco and
a hurricane strike on New Orleans. "The New Orleans hurricane
scenario," The Houston Chronicle wrote in December 2001,
"may be the deadliest of all." It described a potential
catastrophe very much like the one now happening.
Skip to next paragraph
So why were New Orleans and the nation so unprepared? After
9/11, hard questions were deferred in the name of national
unity, then buried under a thick coat of whitewash. This time,
we need accountability.
First question: Why have aid and security taken so long to
arrive? Katrina hit five days ago - and it was already clear
by last Friday that Katrina could do immense damage along
the Gulf Coast. Yet the response you'd expect from an advanced
country never happened. Thousands of Americans are dead or
dying, not because they refused to evacuate, but because they
were too poor or too sick to get out without help - and help
wasn't provided. Many have yet to receive any help at all.
There will and should be many questions about the response
of state and local governments; in particular, couldn't they
have done more to help the poor and sick escape? But the evidence
points, above all, to a stunning lack of both preparation
and urgency in the federal government's response.
Even military resources in the right place weren't ordered
into action. "On Wednesday," said an editorial in
The Sun Herald in Biloxi, Miss., "reporters listening
to horrific stories of death and survival at the Biloxi Junior
High School shelter looked north across Irish Hill Road and
saw Air Force personnel playing basketball and performing
calisthenics. Playing basketball and performing calisthenics!"
Maybe administration officials believed
that the local National Guard could keep order and deliver
relief. But many members of the National Guard and much of
its equipment - including high-water vehicles - are in Iraq.
"The National Guard needs that equipment back home to
support the homeland security mission," a Louisiana Guard
officer told reporters several weeks ago.
Second question: Why wasn't more preventive
action taken? After 2003 the Army Corps of Engineers sharply
slowed its flood-control work, including work on sinking levees.
"The corps," an Editor and Publisher article says,
citing a series of articles in The Times-Picayune in New Orleans,
"never tried to hide the fact that the spending pressures
of the war in Iraq, as well as homeland security - coming
at the same time as federal tax cuts - was the reason for
the strain."
In 2002 the corps' chief resigned, reportedly under threat
of being fired, after he criticized the administration's proposed
cuts in the corps' budget, including flood-control spending.
Third question: Did the Bush administration destroy FEMA's
effectiveness? The administration has, by all accounts, treated
the emergency management agency like an unwanted stepchild,
leading to a mass exodus of experienced professionals.
Last year James Lee Witt, who won bipartisan praise for his
leadership of the agency during the Clinton years, said at
a Congressional hearing: "I am extremely concerned that
the ability of our nation to prepare for and respond to disasters
has been sharply eroded. I hear from emergency managers, local
and state leaders, and first responders nearly every day that
the FEMA they knew and worked well with has now disappeared."
I don't think this is a simple tale
of incompetence. The reason the military wasn't rushed in
to help along the Gulf Coast is, I believe, the same reason
nothing was done to stop looting after the fall of Baghdad.
Flood control was neglected for the same reason our troops
in Iraq didn't get adequate armor.
At a fundamental level, I'd argue, our
current leaders just aren't serious about some of the essential
functions of government. They like waging war, but they don't
like providing security, rescuing those in need or spending
on preventive measures. And they never, ever ask for
shared sacrifice.
Yesterday Mr.
Bush made an utterly fantastic
claim: that
nobody expected the breach of the levees.
In fact, there had
been repeated warnings about exactly that risk.
So America, once famous for its can-do
attitude, now has a can't-do government that makes excuses
instead of doing its job. And while it makes those
excuses, Americans are dying.
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COVERAGE YOU WON'T FIND ON CNN OR FOXNEWS

Editorial
Waiting for a Leader
Published:
September 1, 2005
George
W. Bush gave one of the worst speeches of his life yesterday,
especially given the level of national distress and the need
for words of consolation and wisdom. In what seems to be a
ritual in this administration, the president appeared a day
later than he was needed. He then read an address of a quality
more appropriate for an Arbor Day celebration: a long laundry
list of pounds of ice, generators and blankets delivered to
the stricken Gulf Coast. He advised the public that anybody
who wanted to help should send cash, grinned, and promised
that everything would work out in the end.
We will, of course, endure, and the city of New Orleans must
come back. But looking at the pictures on television yesterday
of a place abandoned to the forces of flood, fire and looting,
it was hard not to wonder exactly how that is going to come
to pass. Right now, hundreds of thousands of American refugees
need our national concern and care.
Thousands of people still need to be rescued from imminent
peril. Public health threats must be controlled in New Orleans
and throughout southern Mississippi. Drivers must be given
confidence that gasoline will be available, and profiteering
must be brought under control at a moment when television
has been showing long lines at some pumps and spot prices
approaching $4 a gallon have been reported.
Sacrifices may be necessary to make sure that all these things
happen in an orderly, efficient way. But this administration
has never been one to counsel sacrifice. And nothing about
the president's demeanor yesterday - which seemed casual to
the point of carelessness - suggested that he understood the
depth of the current crisis.
While our attention must now be on the Gulf Coast's most immediate
needs, the nation will soon ask why New Orleans's levees remained
so inadequate. Publications from the local newspaper to National
Geographic have fulminated about the bad state of flood protection
in this beloved city, which is below sea level. Why were developers
permitted to destroy wetlands and barrier islands that could
have held back the hurricane's surge? Why was Congress, before
it wandered off to vacation, engaged in slashing the budget
for correcting some of the gaping holes in the area's flood
protection?
It would be some comfort to think that, as Mr. Bush cheerily
announced, America "will be a stronger place" for
enduring this crisis. Complacency will no longer suffice,
especially if experts are right in warning that global warming
may increase the intensity of future hurricanes. But since
this administration won't acknowledge that global warming
exists, the chances of leadership seem minimal.
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s democracy is perfected,
the office of President represents, more
and more closely, the inner soul of the people.
On
some great and glorious day
the plain folks of the land will reach their heart's desire
at last and the White House will be adorned
by
a downright
moron.
~
H. L.
Mencken
(1880 - 1956)
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I
REFUSE TO BE LIED TO - I REFUSE TO BE DECEIVED!
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