An AP Essay: Is This Happening in America?
By JIM LITKE, Associated Press Writer1 hour, 6 minutes ago
Image after image of unrelenting sorrow, layered one atop
the other like a deck of haunting cards. A baby held aloft,
inches above a sea of desperate faces, gasping for air. The
dead left where they've fallen, in plain view, robbed of
even the simple dignity of a shroud. Survivors waiting, then
begging, then fighting, finally, over food and water.
Here.
While the images of natural disasters and man-made ones
alike, from Sri Lanka or Baghdad, cause despair, the
pictures from New Orleans inspire not just helplessness, but
disbelief. The richest, most powerful nation in the world
can build schools, hospitals and shelters halfway around the
globe, but it can't provide the basic necessities for its
own days after a disaster that everybody saw coming?
Here?
Usually, we shudder, change the channel or turn the page,
awaiting better news. But there is something too compelling
about these pictures. The distance between us and the people
in them has been narrowed, rendered uncomfortably close, and
not just for those who are family, friends or neighbors. We
recognize them. We all see people like them.
Here.
Authorities can't make the waters that did that retreat.
They can't begin to rebuild the levee or the homes and
businesses made uninhabitable, at least not now. They will
never be able to restore much of what was washed away in the
flood.
But if a reporter can interview a man standing outside a
looted drugstore, and record his reluctance at having to go
inside and steal pads for incontinence, why couldn't someone
get medical supplies to the people huddled at the Superdome
or the convention center in time, or the buses promised to
evacuate them?
There are more questions than answers, and will be for years
to come. That's the nature of disaster, and its aftermath.
They expose our fragility, overwhelm our best intentions,
mock our attempts to impose the sense of calm and order that
prevails when life proceeds according to some rough plan.
Yet, ultimately, that's what is most unsettling about the
constant stream of images: The suffering goes on not just
for hours, but for days after we should have and could have
ended it. And for all the commissions, reports and bravado
that passes for preparedness, we didn't. It was a hand we
never expected to be dealt.
Here.
There will be time enough, too, to assess blame, for
politicians to point fingers, find and fire those deemed
accountable. And maybe even to figure out how a handful of
Southeast Asian governments, whose economies, armies and
emergency resources could all be folded comfortably several
times inside those of the United States, responded to a
tsunami much larger and fiercer than Hurricane Katrina with
swiftness and efficiency, and we could not. And so the
frustration builds, not so much over what happened, but what
did not.
Here.
In the meantime, the disturbing images keep rolling in,
interrupted now and then by more hopeful ones. The trucks,
jeeps, buses and helicopters so scarce the past few days are
out moving in force. Police and National Guardsmen are on
the streets, rescue workers are getting in place. The babies
in the latest pictures are contentedly emptying bottles,
pallets filled with water and food are being unloaded by
human chains. One administration official after another
turns up on the screen to offer reassurances and soothing
words.
But the damage has been done, and it's no longer limited to
the lives lost and ruined, or the property destroyed. Those
are things, sadly enough, that can be totaled up over time.
Much harder to measure is the cost of all those searing
images burned into the national conscience, and what they've
done to the sense of security that was our last refuge when
disasters wreaked havoc, and then, unnecessary suffering, in
distant lands — the certainty that it couldn't happen here.
Now we know better.
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