Who do we blame? Frankly, it's obvious
Molly Ivins, Creators syndicate
Published September 8, 2005
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/chi-0509080041sep08,1,2226896.story
AUSTIN, Texas -- President Bush has come up with his worst idea
since he decided to have the military investigate torture by the
military at Abu Ghraib prison. He, George W. personally, plans
to investigate to "find out what went right and what went wrong"
in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
It's hard to guess where Bush will look first, but maybe he
should start with the appointment of "Brownie" to head the
Federal Emergency Management Agency. Brownie is Michael Brown,
who was appointed by some president.
At the time, Brownie was deputy director of the federal disaster
relief agency under Joseph Allbaugh--because he was Allbaugh's
college roommate, you see, and Allbaugh was Bush's campaign
manager in 2000, you see, which made both of them qualified to
manage disasters.
The FEMA news release announcing Brownie's appointment started
with his other obvious qualification, "From 1991 to 2001, Brown
was the commissioner of the International Arabian Horse
Association." It's unclear whether Brownie was fired or resigned
from the organization in the wake of financial disarray and
lawsuits.
Hours after Hurricane Katrina made landfall, Brownie wrote his
boss, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, to ask
permission to send 1,000 FEMA employees to the scene to support
rescuers and to "convey a positive image" about the government's
response. Brownie said he expected the workers to be there two
days later. This apparently inspired Bush's comment, "Brownie,
you're doing a heckuva job."
FEMA was once considered one of our better federal agencies.
Exactly why the right-wing Republicans chose to make FEMA a
political football was never clear, unless you subscribe to the
theory that they particularly dislike any government agency that
helps people.
At any rate, going back to the Reagan administration,
conservatives have been hacking away at FEMA; they mostly just
underfunded it, one of their favorite tactics, unless a
hurricane hit Florida just before an election. Sorry to sound
boringly partisan, but that is the record, and the Clinton
administration did work hard at rebuilding the agency.
So now those on the liberal side are saying: "See, that's what
happens when you starve government in order to give rich folks
tax cuts. Government agencies can't do the jobs they were set up
to do."
Silly liberals see this as vindication that they have been right
all along. But the Bush administration officials are in full
blame-shifting mode: First, they announced repeatedly they don't
want to "play the blame game." Then they start blaming everybody
else.
According to The New York Times, Karl Rove and Dan Bartlett, the
White House communications director, began a campaign this
weekend to blame local and state officials. The "woefully
inadequate response," said "sources close to the White House,"
was the fault of "bureaucratic obstacles from state and local
officials."
The bottom line is they're playing the race card. As many of you
have noted, it is a racial issue that poor people suffer most in
any natural or economic disaster. Because Katrina hit the Deep
South, a great many of the poor people affected are black,
especially in New Orleans.
I'm not sure what to say about a cable news station that plays a
"loop" of black looters over and over--about 20 seconds of
actual footage, replayed for four minutes, while the voiceover
dwells on the looting problem. Obviously, there are some looters
in New Orleans and elsewhere, and equally obviously there are
lots of people who were without food or water for days.
The exhausted and desperate black mayor of New Orleans begged
for help in an interview late last week. "They're feeding the
public a line of bull and they're spinning, and people are dying
down here," Mayor C. Ray Nagin said, talking about the feds.
"It's politics, man, and they are playing games. ... They're out
there spinning for the cameras. ... I don't want to see anybody
do any more goddamned press conferences ... Excuse my French,
everybody in America, but I am pissed. ...
"Don't tell me 40,000 people are coming here! They're not here!
It's too doggone late ... Now ... do something, and let's fix
the biggest goddamned crisis in the history of this country.
People are dying."
The mayor was in tears. I heard two nice white American "ladies"
deploring this interview. "Well! He should remember there might
be children listening!" Children still without food and water.
What happens to people when they talk about race? Of course,
most of us don't actually talk about race any more, we refer to
it only indirectly, we talk "those people."
Watch carefully, listen carefully--minority groups have always
been blamed after natural disasters, since the days when the
Hungarians were supposed to have cut the fingers off bodies to
get the gold rings in the wake of the Johnstown Flood. Dirty
bohunks.
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Molly Ivins is a syndicated columnist based in Austin, Texas.
E-mail: info@creators.com
RESEARCHED INFO FROM: THE RANDI ROADS SHOW
"Don't play the BLAME GAME, it's the SHAME GAME!
http://www.therandirhodesshow.com/live/
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not refuse to do the something that I can do. What I can do,
I should do. And what I should do, by the grace of God,
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