Life as a Spectator Sport

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Saturday, September 03, 2005

Where were they supposed to go?

If nothing else comes out of the Katrina disaster, it may be the country's realization that not only was their government not prepared for civil emergencies, but that many of their fellow citizens don't give a rat's ass about the people who were affected.

Read the right wing blogs, and the comments on other blogs, and you come away with the impression that America's poor chose to be that way, that they would be above the poverty line if only they were willing to work 40 hours a week, that most of them own cars and have the money to put gas in them, and that they chose to stay in New Orleans, where they could be rescued afterward by someone else, or loot and rob.

I'd like to where the HELL these pompous asses think the poor of New Orleans were supposed to go even if they did have a car, managed to come up with the money for gas, didn't break down on the way out, and got far enough to be out of immediate danger from the wind? There were public shelters in outlying areas, but not for hundreds of thousands of people.

On NBC's Today Show yesterday morning, Chris Mathhews opined that President Bush would have to "fire people" over the lack of disaster preparedness and emergency management. I snorted when I heard him say that, because Bush's consistent response to bungling has been to promote the person, not fire him or her. Sure enough, Bush said of Michael Brown, director of FEMA, "Brownie, you're doing a heck of a job."

What else did we expect from someone who took more than 24 hours to even comment on the situation and who said, "I don't think anyone anticipated there might be a breach in the levee" (interview with ABC's Diane Sawyer on September 1).

And what else did we expect from someone who appointed a former horse show manager, with no experience whatsoever in disaster management, to be the head of FEMA? Horse show manager, that is, before he was fired. I guess that since FEMA has been stripped of its disaster management function it doesn't matter much whether its director knows anything about what he is doing, or whether he thinks people chose not to leave.
"I don't make judgments about why people chose not to leave but, you know, there was a mandatory evacuation of New Orleans," he said.
And while New Orleans sinks into the water, Condoleeza Rice went shopping for shoes, Dick Cheney continued his Wyoming vacation, and Dennis Hastert attended a fundraiser.

Doesn't it just make you proud to live in America?
posted by Liz @ 11:36 AM     |


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