After Katrina fiasco, time for Bush to go
By Gordon Adams - gkohls@cpinternet.com
Originally published September 8, 2005
http://www.baltimoresun.com
WASHINGTON - The disastrous federal response to Katrina exposes
a record of incompetence, misjudgment and ideological blinders
that should lead to serious doubts that the Bush administration
should be allowed to continue in office.
When taxpayers have raised, borrowed and spent $40 billion to
$50 billion a year for the past four years for homeland security
but the officials at the Federal Emergency Management Agency
cannot find their own hands in broad daylight for four days
while New Orleans and the Mississippi Gulf Coast swelter, drown
and die, it is time for them to go.
When funding for water works and levees in the gulf region is
repeatedly cut by an administration that seems determined to
undermine the public responsibility for infrastructure in
America, despite clear warnings that the infrastructure could
not survive a major storm, it seems clear someone is playing
politics with the public trust.
When rescue and medical squads are sitting in Manassas and
elsewhere in northern Virginia and foreign assistance waits at
airports because the government can't figure out how to insure
the workers, how to use the assistance or which jurisdiction
should be in charge, it is time for the administration to leave
town.
When President Bush stays on vacation and attends social
functions for two days in the face of disaster before finally
understanding that people are starving, crying out and dying, it
is time for him to go.
When FEMA officials cannot figure out that there are thousands
stranded at the New Orleans convention center - where people
died and were starving - and fussed ineffectively about the same
problems in the Superdome, they should be fired, not praised, as
the president praised FEMA Director Michael Brown in New Orleans
last week.
When Mr. Bush states publicly that "nobody could anticipate a
breach of the levee" while New Orleans journalists, Scientific
American, National Geographic, academic researchers and
Louisiana politicians had been doing precisely that for decades,
right up through last year and even as Hurricane Katrina passed
over, he should be laughed out of town as an impostor.
When repeated studies of New Orleans make it clear that tens of
thousands of people would be unable to evacuate the city in case
of a flood, lacking both money and transportation, but FEMA
makes no effort before the storm to commandeer buses and move
them to safety, it is time for someone to be given his walking
papers.
When the president makes Sen. Trent Lott's house in Pascagoula,
Miss., the poster child for rebuilding while hundreds of
thousands are bereft of housing, jobs, electricity and security,
he betrays a careless insensitivity that should banish him from
office.
When the president of the United States points the finger away
from the lame response of his administration to Katrina and
tries to finger local officials in New Orleans and Baton Rouge,
La., as the culprits, he betrays the unwillingness of this
administration to speak truth and hold itself accountable. As in
the case of the miserable execution of policy in Iraq, Mr. Bush
and Karl Rove always have some excuse for failure other than
their own misjudgments.
We have a president who is apparently ill-informed,
lackadaisical and narrow-minded, surrounded by oil baron
cronies, religious fundamentalist crazies and right-wing
extremists and ideologues. He has appointed officials who give
incompetence new meaning, who replace the positive role of
government with expensive baloney.
They rode into office in a highly contested election, spouting a
message of bipartisanship but determined to undermine the
federal government in every way but defense (and, after 9/11,
one presumed, homeland security). One with Grover Norquist, they
were determined to shrink Washington until it was "small enough
to drown in a bathtub." Katrina has stripped the veil from this
mean-spirited strategy, exposing the greed, mindlessness and
sheer profiteering behind it.
It is time to hold them accountable - this ugly, troglodyte
crowd of Capital Beltway insiders, rich lawyers, ideologues,
incompetents and their strap-hangers should be tarred, feathered
and ridden gracefully and mindfully out of Washington and
returned to their caves, clubs in hand.
Gordon Adams, director of security policy studies at the Elliott
School of International Affairs at George Washington University,
was senior White House budget official for national security in
the Clinton administration.
gkohls@cpinternet.com
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