Julian Sanchez | September 3, 2005
Via Majikthise, the mind boggles at stuff like this:
A visibly angry Mayor Daley said the city had offered emergency, medical and technical help to the federal government as early as Sunday to assist people in the areas stricken by Hurricane Katrina, but as of Friday, the only things the feds said they wanted was a single tank truck.
[...]
Daley said the city offered 36 members of the firefighters' technical rescue teams, eight emergency medical technicians, search-and-rescue equipment, more than 100 police officers as well as police vehicles and two boats, 29 clinical and 117 non-clinical health workers, a mobile clinic and eight trained personnel, 140 Streets and Sanitation workers and 29 trucks, plus other supplies. City personnel are willing to operate self-sufficiently and would not depend on local authorities for food, water, shelter and other supplies, he said.
Help Reason celebrate its next 40 years. Donate Now!
Try Reason's award-winning print edition today! Your first issue is FREE if you are not completely satisfied.
Last night Koppel interviewed a pissed-off Louisiana congressman
who described how he found National Guardsmen sitting on their
hands waiting for orders to move out. Amazing.
Tragically, I fear most people will miss the point, saying "if only
we had the right people in charge," instead of realizing that
waiting for government to bail you out at anytime is a sucker's
bet.
Not that I am any fan of FEMA but it is very difficult to just
plug people into any large scale operation if no prior planning for
them exist. There has to be communications, fuel for vehicles,
knowledge of capabilities etc. before you actually use somebody. A
disaster area isn't the place to just randomly throw people
into.
On the other hand, I wouldn't put it past FEMA to be unable to
accept help because they didn't have all the right forms filled
out.
That organization needs a little more touch of the cowboy.
I dunno Julian, people keep posting reports and facts here at
Hit & Run, and a lot of recent visitors are finding it really
confusing.
...Apparently, all we need to know is that pointing out government
ineptitude is Bush bashing.
Jim, Aren't the NG's the state militia's that are there,
empowered by the people to help in just such instances?
Are you arguing against my state having firemen? Isn't the question
why do the states have to go thru Soviet style politico's to use
their own resources now?
If the people organize themselves but have Soviet Style Politico's
than usurp that authority, isn't that a problem?
If I had a neighborhood watch, and then Bush came and deputized
them all and sent them to a foreign country, would it still be my
fault if robberies increased in my neighborhood. I mean, if I
organize new militia's and the guvmints gonna take them too,
doesn't that restrict my ability to freely organize against such
events?
It hasn't yet occurred to Jim that all these snafus from the Bush-era FEMA and so forth are happening by design rather than simply being a structural feature. It will be interesting to see what happens when it does.
Aren't the NG's the state militia's that are there,
empowered by the people to help in just such instances?
Of course. What I'm saying is that people, for their own sake, need
to realize that in the long run the only ones they can realy depend
on is themselves (and each other).
It hasn't yet occurred to Jim that all these snafus from the
Bush-era FEMA and so forth are happening by design...
Huh?
Put it this way, Jim: What better way for the Grover Norquist
crowd in Washington -- which includes pretty much the entire GOP
right now -- to demonstrate why we need to get rid of government
than by fucking up domestic disaster relief efforts? It's not as if
they need to ride this one to a war overseas, so might as well muff
it, then tell everyone, "See? See? This is what we've been saying
all along -- government is just no damned good!"
IOW, for them, it's a feature, not a bug, and one that was
deliberately programmed in. Don't you think if George Bush really
cared about an effective FEMA, he would have put someone with
disaster preparedness and relief experience in charge of it?
Phil,
Wow, you've managed to create a conspiracy theory based on the idea
that politicians will make themselves personal look bad in order to
advance some abstract agenda.
I don't think they are that principled.
Shannon & Phil,
Or that clever. It's the fatal flaw of virtually every conspiracy
theory.
And perhaps someone here can enlighten me, but my understanding was
that when it came to the National Guard or FEMA, doesn't the
Governor have to specifically mobilize them (or request,
in the case of FEMA)? As for other military, aren't there laws
regarding posse commintatus (sp?) that prohibit the use of military
forces on US soil? The last I'm quite fuzzy about. But I'm 85%
certain about the requirement that the governor or state government
in general take the action.
A little OT, but earlier when the reaction was coming in from Europe and they said this was an example of why we needed a stronger government. This latest talk about the NG makes me think it's more of a warning for them against Brussels.
Tom Crick wrote:
"...Apparently, all we need to know is that pointing out government
ineptitude is Bush bashing."
Continuously pointing out Bush and FEMA's ineptitude without
acknowledgine the ineptitude of the mayor and governor is bush
bashing.
Pointing out government ineptitude at all levels is
libertarianism.
Not to mention that the notion that Republicans favor smaller government is SOOOOOOO last millennium.
You want to know what the head of FEMA did before he joined the
Bush Administration in 2001? "Brown spent 11 years as the
commissioner of judges and stewards for the International Arabian
Horse Association, a breeders' and horse-show organization based in
Colorado." They fired him.
Full post
here at The Moderate Voice.
"Continuously pointing out Bush and FEMA's ineptitude
without acknowledgin[g] the ineptitude of the mayor and governor is
bush bashing."
This is bullshit.
...stinks like the ol' objectively pro-whatever argument. We had a
nice thread about that kind of logic earlier
this week.
Deaths from marijuana use : 0
Deaths from FEMA mismanagement and Bushbots dropping the ball :
1000's and 1000's.
Conclusion: Government by Bushbots is more dangerous than marijuana
use.
"...Do you think Bushbots would buy "Support our FEMA" yellow
ribbon magnets?"
If you're using terms like "Bushbots" as you do here, you're
bashing Bush and, for that matter, anyone who disagrees with your
personal politics enough to support him. And your "objective"
argument is that we're stupid for doing so.
You could at least try to have that much honesty.
Rest assured we all know what you mean; if you fool anyone, it's
only yourself. What's bullshit is you saying otherwise.
But of course, I can already hear what 80% of the anti-Bush crowd
will say in response: "Bush lied, and people died, so why should we
tell the truth, even about our own opinions?"
It's worth noting how FEMA's act was amazingly more competent in
Florida during the 2004 hurricanes. Not up to Clinton-era
standards, but then Clinton staffed it with competent people, but
in Florida it was obvious that White House people were watching
FEMA like a hawk and making sure things worked well.
I can't imagine why New Orleans, 2005, would see such an utterly
different response. It wasn't just scale -- FEMA couldn't even get
their own command and control up, or make the simplest decisions,
so it wasn't like they couldn't deal with ALL the mess. They'd have
screwed up just as spectatuclarly if the problem was merely a burst
water main.
FEMA's incompetence in Katrina was due to an utter lack of concern
by the White House. No one cared until late Wednesday, when Bush's
advisors finally realized Bush's poll numbers were falling.
I wouldn't call it a conspiracy theory -- that implies intent. I'd
call it the regular Bush administration MO. If it doesn't benefit
Bush, it's not worth the energy. In 2004, competent FEMA response
was worth tons of votes -- an incompetence would lose them. In
2005, Bush didn't give a shit.
Not to mention, of course, that Bush -- like you gentlemen --
doesn't believe government can solve problems, so government jobs
don't go to the competent, but to people he wants to reward.
(Checking the bios of the top FEMA officials makes that obvious).
Perhaps a free-market solution would work better, but it's been
proven (FEMA under Witt) that a competently-led FEMA can manage
quite well.
"If you're using terms like "Bushbots" as you do here,
you're bashing Bush and, for that matter, anyone who disagrees with
your personal politics enough to support him."
"Bushbots" simply refers to propaganda victims, not Bush himself.
...Not that I don't bash Bush, just about every chance I get.
...Of course, just because I like to bash Bush, doesn't mean I'm
wrong for doing so--does it?
"Rest assured we all know what you mean; if you fool anyone,
it's only yourself. What's bullshit is you saying
otherwise."
I have no idea what you're talking about here, or what this has to
do with the faulty logic to which my last comment referred.
Where the hell did all those billions of dollars spent on
creating DHS go? They couldn't have wasted all of it on creating
the useless terrorist watch list or hiring ineffective airport
screeners to catch nail-cutters.
I remember after 9/11 seeing news stories showing the feds building
large warehouses stockpiled with vaccines, first aid gear and
hazmat gear to handle a terrorist attack. Are you telling me that
there wasn't one single depot near NO? Did they think that New
Orleans was never going to be a terrorist target? And if this is
how they handle a hurricane, I shudder to think how we're going to
fair if the bird-flu pandemic breaks out. I'm picturing something
more like "28 Days Later" rather than "Outbreak".
Jim,
You said "Of course. What I'm saying is that people, for their own
sake, need to realize that in the long run the only ones they can
realy depend on is themselves (and each other)"
That's what I said, and you seem to have disagreed. If I don't have
the right to organize for my own defense becuase the soviets
(republicans) are going to steal my prepared resources, then I
can't even depend on myself. Unless, wait I have it right
here...something about this in the declaration of
independence...
No, the reason four hurricanes went much better in Florida (and the present one so much better in Mississippi) is that the respective governors called up the NG BEFORE the storm, positioned supplies and equipment, had emergency declarations in place and set up OPS centers that FEMA folks could be slotted into. Sheesh, haven't any of you commenters ever observed hurricanes and aftermaths up close?
""Bushbots" simply refers to propaganda victims, not Bush
himself."
Most people don't think of propaganda as a positive thing. So if
Bush is delivering propaganda and "fooling" people, that doesn't
say much good about him does it?
And as I said, "your "objective" argument is that " ...we're stupid
for [supporting Bush]."
A "propaganda victim" in the United States (especially one who
reads Reason!) is either stupid or willfully ignorant.
So thank you for conceding my points on that score.
"...Of course, just because I like to bash Bush, doesn't mean I'm
wrong for doing so--does it?"
Certainly not, but I rather suspect you'd be here bashing Bush in
any case, so even *if* you're right here, it's like being right
some of the time on a multiple choice test becuase you filled in
"A" for every answer.
"...I have no idea what you're talking about here"
It would be one thing if you purely criticized the government here,
though you'd then have to consider all of it as flyover says. But
that's not what you did .....
Pointing out government ineptitude at all levels is
libertarianism.
Amen, Brother Fly
Maybe Daley's boys should have done like the So Cal Swift Water
Rescue teams did. Just get on a C-5 and go do it, 'stead of axing
permission I mean.
Morat, FEMA has never had anything remotely close to a coherent
response to anything. Because I live here I remember clearly how
much criticism FEMA received in the wake of the So Cal firestorms.
The FEMA response was identical to NO.
In that same vein, I heard the Head Wench (dude, he said head and
wench) from FEMA -in our Sector of Californicate (includes LA)
state that FEMA had no contingency plan to provide water to
refugees of any catastrophe (read: earthquake) where thousands
might gather as they did at the Superdome. She also said that FEMA
didn't believe that there would ever be a need for providing water
to thousands of people. That tells me volumes about what to expect
from FEMA.
Were I the mayor of Nu Awlins I would have driven a bus load of
parole officers to the nearest construction equipment yard, NG
armory, or army post and commandeered a half dozen water buffalos
or water towers and taken them to the Superdome. But he couldn't do
that because he a.) voted for Bush, or b.) he's a racist and hates
blacks, or c.) he doesn't hate blacks but they just don't matter
that much because they didn't vote for Bush in the first place, or
d.) Bush should hitched the water buffalos up to AF I because it
ain't the mayors job to deal with shit like this.
mewsifer, the problem is, by any objective measure, "a" is the right answer a whole lot more than it should be.
Bush had 5 years to get it right. Bush and Cheney told us that
they were the only candidates who had a plan to keep the results of
a terrorist attack and the resulting chaos from getting out of
control.
I thought they considered what might happen from terrorist attacks
that could deny access to an area and cause refugees. These
scenarios should have included; dirty bombs, flooding, disease,
civil unrest and looting.
A lot of people have made comparisons to Bush's handling of the
9/11 attacks and they are very different because of the confined
area of the 9/11 attacks. These areas were easy to secure and the
areas hit were mostly business related (very few refugees to
relocate). The Katrina debacle occurred over a huge area and it
wiped out homes and denied an easy response to emergency
responders.
I would have thought that what is occuring now, with the flat boats
and helicopters, would have been part of a flood plan. Even getting
riverine forces with armored light boats should have been deployed.
Troops from Fort Polk could have been used very quickly. When I was
at Fort Bliss we were called out for fire duty all the time in the
summer to fight forest fires in the mountains north of El Paso. So
disaster response can happen very quickly when the right people are
called.
The Louisiana National Guard was also used too much to augment
forces in Iraq. Now we have troops from other states to fill in and
they may not be as culturally aware of things in Louisiana as a
native would be and I think that will lead to a more
confrontational attitude from both sides.
There are just so many things that Bush's Administration and other
levels of government failed at doing or planning for, the list is
endless. All the while, taxes go up and blame is deflected by the
Bushbots and the true believer types, who probably secretly think
that all those sinners in New Orleans and along the Gulf Coast got
what they deserved.
"So if Bush is delivering propaganda and "fooling" people,
that doesn't say much good about him does it?"
It's not just Bush. It's echo chamber radio, certain news stations,
certain newspapers, certain magazines with associated
web-sites--all with the same talking points.
People regurgitate it all. ...They think they're getting their news
from a variety of sources. ...It's funny really--except when
they're torture apologists, etc.
"Certainly not, but I rather suspect you'd be here bashing Bush
in any case, so even *if* you're right here, it's like being right
some of the time on a multiple choice test becuase you filled in
"A" for every answer."
I probably didn't tell you that I voted for Bush the first time
around. ...Wait, I think I did!
...But you probably don't know that I was and am a big Reaganite.
Bush couldn't hold a candle to Ronald Reagan. You seem to assume
that I'd bash Bush regardless of his policies and decisions.
Why?
Would the things I say be any less true if they came from a
dyed-in-the-wool Democrat?
"It would be one thing if you purely criticized the government
here, though you'd then have to consider all of it as flyover says.
But that's not what you did ....."
I do think government solutions are a bad idea, almost universally.
...but I also think many of the long term problems American faces
today are a direct result of bad leadership. I blame President Bush
and his administration; I think they're the problem. I think the
Bush Administration is largely incompetent, and I think they've
demonstrated that repeatedly since taking office.
I've explained my attitude toward future Iraq policy, for instance,
thusly. I prefer a competent withdrawal to an incompetent
occupation and a competent occupation to an incompetent withdrawal.
The problem we have right now is that our leadership is
incompetent.
...If I'm right, and, indeed, that's the problem--as a loyal
American--shouldn't I be criticizing the President and his
administration specifically? ...rather than government in
general?
P.S. What does any of this have to do with bad logic flyover
used?
Is this
article true???
It claims that citizen boat rescuers were turned away...
I don't really doubt that it is, and it fits into my belief that
Bush is really just a modified Soviet.
Joe,
I have great respect for folks who try to make the argument you
suggest by crticizing *policy*, without resorting to name-calling.
I personally (usually) do not have enough self-discipline to avoid
responding in kind when the latter takes place first.
I'm a Republican, but Republicans make mistakes (some even
willfull) like everyone else. I'm perfectly willing to listen to
someone make the argument that, in a particular case, that is what
has happened.
On everyone else's points regarding FEMA: Here's something to
consider. No civilian agency has the experience neeeded to evacuate
a major U.S. city; almost no city mayor (of any party) can possibly
master such a huge logistical challenge with myriad, overlapping
city agencies and a short time frame. At the end of it, they'll
burst into tears like the Mayor of N.O.
Only the military knows how to do an evacuation of this sort with
any level of confidence - it's the kind of thing they spend 30+
years grooming generals to do. And even they have trouble!
If we're gonna blame the feds, ok. Next time, let's have military
coningenecies to take over city gov't *before* we need to order an
evac.
Tom Crick,
Please tell me something the government of Louisiana and New
Orleans did well leading up to and after hurrican Katrina?
My point is, you keep pounding on the Bush administration, while
ignoring the failure across the board.
I understand you have a problem with Bush's leadership. I respect
that, but the issue here is hurricane Katrina. Just because you
feel he has f'd up Iraq does not mean he as f'd up the response to
hurricane Katrina.
I'm not trying to mindlessly defend the feds here, but I will not
let the local officials off the hook. The human catastrophe this
has become could have been lessened had the governor and mayor
acted appropriately before Katrina hit.
Hey, flyover, mewsifer, from FEMA's website:
"Preparing America
In the event of a terrorist attack, natural disaster or other
large-scale emergency, the Department of Homeland Security will
assume primary responsibility on March 1st for ensuring that
emergency response professionals are prepared for any situation.
This will entail providing a coordinated, comprehensive federal
response to any large-scale crisis and mounting a swift and
effective recovery effort. The new Department will also prioritize
the important issue of citizen preparedness. Educating America's
families on how best to prepare their homes for a disaster and tips
for citizens on how to respond in a crisis will be given special
attention at DHS."
mewsifer,
The army kills people and breaks things. They can also do hard
manual labor in large numbers when carefully watched over by
experts. A tiny fraction of the army actually is experts at
certains things, like the Corps of Engineers.
But Emergency Management (formerly known as "Civil (dig the root
word) Defense) is a civilian job.
I would no more want the military in charge of search and rescue,
clothing, feeding, housing, evacuating, health care, and other
emergency response efforts than I would want FEMA in charge of
retaking Falluja.
It is self-serving and objectively false to suggest, as your line
of argument does, that what we are seeing in New Orleans is pretty
much the best we can expect of the feds. They can, and have, done
much better in the past.
Hey joe:
http://www.ohsep.louisiana.gov/plans/EOPSupplement1a.pdf
They had a plan, they didn't implement, thousands died.
FEMA responds. The state and city were supposed to prevent the
tragedy of a hundred thousand stuck underwater. The mayor waited
too long to order a mandatory evacutation. By the time he did,
greyhound has shutdown, the airport was closed. There was ample
warning that New Orleans was in the path of hurricane.
It would have been a hell of a lot easier to get the people out
before the infrastructure was destroyed and the city was under
water.
"...But you probably don't know that I was and am a big
Reaganite. Bush couldn't hold a candle to Ronald Reagan. You seem
to assume that I'd bash Bush regardless of his policies and
decisions. Why?"
On Reagan, that makes two of us, no argument whatsoever. Bush never
has been, and never will be a Reagan, no matter how he tries. I
*dream* of the day we have a Reagan again - I really do.
Look, here's my main point: when you say something like "Bushbot,"
you (inadvertently?)catch everyone in the Ben Kenobi trap i.e.
"who's the more foolish, the fool or the fool who follows
him?"
It's not you so much, it's that SO MANY people do this.
Remember that Democrats have been saying for years how dumb
Republicans are; if you're a Reaganite, you're probably like me -
old enough to rememebr when that's all they ever said about
him!
My choices in 2004 were Bush or Kerry - and, for the love of God,
it's a pretty fair argument that Bush is closer to Reagan than
Kerry would have been. Lots of people figured the same thing;
they're not bots for doing so.
(Aside: The poor man needed a 36 hour staff conference with Mary
Beth Cahill to decide which shoe to tie first. I exaggerate, but
really, would he have reacted faster here, would he have fixed
Iraq? Would he have done better than Bush? Odds are no.)
The sad fact is both the hurricane and Iraq would have been so much
easier if we had all of Reagan's armed foreces, instead of what's
left of it after the 90's cutbacks and the high tech version of
cutbacks called "transformation."
"I'm not trying to mindlessly defend the feds here, but I
will not let the local officials off the hook. The human
catastrophe this has become could have been lessened had the
governor and mayor acted appropriately before Katrina
hit."
I think we can agree that everyone responsible for this tragedy
should take their appropriate share of the blame.
"My choices in 2004 were Bush or Kerry - and, for the love
of God, it's a pretty fair argument that Bush is closer to Reagan
than Kerry would have been. Lots of people figured the same thing;
they're not bots for doing so."
I changed my registration to Libertarian back when Bush Sr. broke
his tax pledge, but I voted party line Republican in every
election, right up to the last one. Supporting the Republicans
meant four things to me then:
1) Deep cuts in federal spending
2) Deep cuts in marginal tax rates
3) A pragmatic foreign policy
4) A devotion to free trade
To my eye, George W. Bush failed all four of those tests. ...and I
wouldn't have voted for Kerry, even if he'd paid me. I had other
options--and I don't want to start another controversy, but you did
too--and one of them came closer to passing all four tests than any
of the other candidates. Were you aware of Badnarik?
...So he had some kooky ideas about driver's licenses! Nobody's
perfect. ; )
Tom Crick,
I agree with you there.
Getting back to the original topic Julian posted on: I'm not sure
what to make of the refusal of help from Chicago, right after he
posted I heard that a bunch of emergency personnel from the suburb
of Milwaukee I live in are heading to Louisiana.
I don't know if anybody sitting at a computer 100's or 1000's of
miles away really knows what's going with the relief effort.
Has anybody seen a map show the area where the infrastructure is
destroyed? How many people and how much equipment can realistically
get into New Orleans. Everybody sits at their computer typing that
things should happen faster, but how fast can anything move into
that large of a devastated area?
There's lot of sniping, but not much real information. I've been
trying to keep up with the efforts to get the rigs and refineries
operating because that affects my business, but I haven't really
seen as much about progess getting power, etc. to the states
affected.
Joe,
"But Emergency Management (formerly known as "Civil (dig the root
word) Defense) is a civilian job.
I would no more want the military in charge of search and rescue,
clothing, feeding, housing, evacuating, health care, and other
emergency response efforts than I would want FEMA in charge of
retaking Falluja."
Fair enough, but then you'll need a fleet of helicopters, trucks,
etc. and great logistical ability to master the situation - you
want an Amry not painted green.
The military is expert at logistics, and when everthing is said and
done here, I'd bet that logistical failures are the big culprit
with Katrina.
This is why the national guard is subordinate to the state governor
- because the military is useful in these situations.
"It is self-serving and objectively false to suggest, as your line
of argument does, that what we are seeing in New Orleans is pretty
much the best we can expect of the feds. They can, and have, done
much better in the past."
It's not self-serving, I just want to solve the problem - and I
really don't see that a mayor is likely to be up to something this
big.
But to be fair: when did we last, in modern times, try to evacuate
a city the size of N.O.?
I think we can do better; I was trying to suggest ways to do better
without spending money duplicating agencies we already have - money
we might spend on prevention, which is the other criticism of both
Bush and Clinton here.
BTW American Civil Defense was always a joke during the Cold War;
we we're all gonna die.
The primary purpose of government is to euthanize the hoi
polloi. Government is a spider. After a formal invitation into the
parlour, the next step is a date rape drug/ euthanization.
Thrashing about is what government fears most. Voting is
government's venom.
Have a nice day.
mewsifer,
I know a good portion of coastal North Carolina was evacuated
successfully back in 1999 or 2000, but I don't know how big the
numbers were.
That was the first time a portion of the interstate system was made
one way, and it worked very well.
And to paraphrase Mrs TWC, if I were the president I would have
called the boss at FEMA on Monday night and told him he had 12
hours to get food & water to NOLA, and the National Guard
mobilized or he was fucking fired. I'da gone down the line from
Uncle Ben's Condoleeza Rice as well. Just keep firing people until
someone gets the job done.
I mean, come on, you're the president, you can do whatever you
want.
Disclaimer: I've never voted for anyone named Bush in my life.
TWC,
Mrs. Prole said similar things, including, "This is what I pay
fucking taxes for, so the government should get off it's ass and
conduct some fucking relief."
Two of Mrs. Prole's friends' husbands are soldiers and she was
wondering why they weren't alerted or deployed sooner, as in, "What
the fuck is the Army for when it's not fucking fighting?"
I also had to listen to her reaction to the bullshit "looting"
stories. "It's not fucking looting when the fucking food is
abandoned and you're fucking starving. That's called
survival."
Mrs. Prole has a damn sewer mouth.
Free minds, Free labor
TWC/Mrs. TWC:
Fair Comments, but:
"I mean, come on, you're the president, you can do whatever you
want."
Had I been President I would have fired the entire senior state
government of Louisiana and the N.O. mayor/city council on Monday
and federalized eveything, except the constitution would have been
in my way ..... damn thing.
From the purely political side, if I were Karl, I'd have as many of
these folks as possible hauled up before GOP controlled
Congressional committees and torn to pieces for refusing federal
control.
Check out the washingtonpost headline:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/09/03/AR2005090301680.html
Karl could also launch investigations of how federal funds have
been spent in LA./N.O. for the last 25 years - there's bound to be
something juicy.
From Washington Post cited above:
"Behind the scenes, a power struggle emerged, as federal officials
tried to wrest authority from Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Babineaux
Blanco (D). Shortly before midnight Friday, the Bush administration
sent her a proposed legal memorandum asking her to request a
federal takeover of the evacuation of New Orleans, a source within
the state's emergency operations center said Saturday.
The administration sought unified control over all local police and
state National Guard units reporting to the governor. Louisiana
officials rejected the request after talks throughout the night,
concerned that such a move would be comparable to a federal
declaration of martial law. Some officials in the state suspected a
political motive behind the request. "Quite frankly, if they'd been
able to pull off taking it away from the locals, they then could
have blamed everything on the locals," said the source, who does
not have the authority to speak publicly.
A senior administration official said that Bush has clear legal
authority to federalize National Guard units to quell civil
disturbances under the Insurrection Act and will continue to try to
unify the chains of command that are split among the president, the
Louisiana governor and the New Orleans mayor.
Louisiana did not reach out to a multi-state mutual aid compact for
assistance until Wednesday, three state and federal officials said.
As of Saturday, Blanco still had not declared a state of emergency,
the senior Bush official said.
"The federal government stands ready to work with state and local
officials to secure New Orleans and the state of Louisiana," White
House spokesman Dan Bartlett said. "The president will not let any
form of bureaucracy get in the way of protecting the citizens of
Louisiana."
Blanco made two moves Saturday that protected her independence from
the federal government: She created a philanthropic fund for the
state's victims and hired James Lee Witt, Federal Emergency
Management Agency director in the Clinton administration, to advise
her on the relief effort."
So I see:
It's all Bush's fault for not taking control, but they won't agree
to give him control because then he could blame them, instead of
them blaming him.
That would suck .....
Exactly what is the meaning of "State of Emergency" if this still
doesn't count?
I wonder whether the whole mess in NO could have been better
handled if the Pentagon rather than DHS took charge of the initial
relief efforts (ie: search and rescue). For all its faults in Iraq
the one thing the military is good for is mobilizing a
large group of specialized soldiers to accomplish a mission. DoD,
despite its Rumsfeld era cuts, still manages to get the job done,
provided that there is a clear objective.
DHS, on the other hand, is an unproven entity, burdened with a
stultifying bureaucracy seemingly unable to handle the most basic
tasks without a paper trail. Its creation was an attempt to show
voters that something was being done in the face of the failures of
9/11. The culture of DHS seems to be one of holding endless press
conferences to reassure people, rather than accomplish anything
concrete.
TWC,
In that same vein, I heard the Head Wench (dude, he said head
and wench) from FEMA -in our Sector of Californicate (includes LA)
state that FEMA had no contingency plan to provide water to
refugees of any catastrophe (read: earthquake) where thousands
might gather as they did at the Superdome. She also said that FEMA
didn't believe that there would ever be a need for providing water
to thousands of people. That tells me volumes about what to expect
from FEMA.
Do you remember where you saw that?
I seem to recall FEMA being involved in providing water and food to
the various parks where temporary tent cities popped up after the
Northridge quake.
Given the general guidelines asking people to have a week of water
and food it follows that within a week the people need to be
evacuated or the supplies need to arrive or ...
Evade, I was sitting at the bus stop waiting to pick up the kids
and I flipped on the radio to AM 640 in LA at 4:00 on Wednesday
thinking I'd catch the news. The bus was late and when the news was
over John & Ken were interviewing the FEMA Wench who made an
abject fool of herself with bureaucratic double speak. I heard it
with my own ears. I know those guys are Pitbulls, but sheesh, this
woman was lacerated and bleeding. I'm going to look at the KFI (640
LA) site and see if there is a transcript.
Okay, I looked at the site but I didn't see a transcript of the
interview. But, I heard it with my own ears.
BTW, she said we (FEMA) recommend three days of
water.....
This is off topic, but the kids just made me watch Goonies with
them. I gotta say, in the context of today fat kids, Chunk doesn't
look very, well, Chunky.
Mewsifer, you missed my entire multiple-post tirade about what
absolute schmucks the state and local governments are. I think it
is only one of a very few times I have used the EFFFFF word in this
forum. I was going for balance the other way.
Just for the record I don't see this as GWB's fault or as an act of
racism. The government just sucks and when push comes to shove, you
better have a .357 and some water stashed somewhere because ain't
nobody coming to save you.
This is what I posted on my blog yesterday:
When push comes to shove the cops aren't going to protect you or
your property, the government isn't going to save you, and there
are very few things you can really count on. Yourself, maybe your
immediate family, and possibly your small circle of friends, with
the benevolence of strangers running a distant fourth.
It is also instructive to note that while the authorities are
brainstorming in meetings (think power struggles and pissing
contests) the Salvation Army is serving food and water to desperate
people in Biloxi and elsewhere.
If anyone thinks this is just a case of the wrong people running
the show, well, you're simple misguided. FEMA will never do it
right. They didn't in Fla, they didn't in CA, they didn't in NOLA.
That is reality, not racism, not GWB, it is as much a fact of
reality as gravity.
Super Prole,
Mrs TWC cusses more than she used to.
I'spose that comes from having kids and being married to me.
Mewsifer, okay, I guess my rants against the locals are on a couple of different threads. Sorry. For the record, I think the locals screwed up big time.
"Just for the record I don't see this as GWB's fault or as an
act of racism. The government just sucks and when push comes to
shove, you better have a .357 and some water stashed somewhere
because ain't nobody coming to save you ....
(think power struggles and pissing contests)."
I have to admit this is one of the best comments I've seen around
all week.
"All you really own is whatever you can carry in two hands at a dead run"�Robert A Heinlein
One more comment spam here...
Good Night, my friends.
It's 11:00 on the west coast, my kids made me watch Goonies for the
11th time in the last 14 months. I'm going to have a glass of wine,
kiss MRS TWC goodnight, and crash, because.....
Dude, I'm really tired.
Thanks for looking TWC.
Do you recall if the woman was Karen E. Armes? She's listed here as the
Acting Regional Director.
So I lied....
Thanks Mew, and this is The Wine Commonsewer Communications Network
signing offfffffffff
Evade, yes I think it was Karen Ames. The name rings a vague
bell and Sector 9 sticks in my mind and she is the head of sector
9.
You know I was just screaming in the car. I was impressed that she
kept her cool but she just made an idiot out of herself.
J&K just kept asking her what was so tough about bringing in
water to the Superdome with a helo and she kept coming up with the
lamest excuses like the fact that the electricity was out and
therefore the air traffic control tower was not functioning so they
couldn't fly around there because it was too dangerous. It was a
truly pathetic performance. I'm sure she got her butt kicked by her
bosses afterward.
Tom,
"Were you aware of Badnarik?"
Yes, certainly; my wife is a serious Libertarian.
I didn't much agree with his foreign policy. But I think there's a
second point (old hat around here), which to me isn't a controversy
because I think everyone has to solve this their own way: Badnarik
wasn't going to win, and Kerry very nearly might have. To me, there
is a practical side to voting ...
I also don't agree with you about the "incompetence" of the
administration - one also has to measure what they've been faced
with for the past 5 years.
Seriously, on foreign policy for example, think of what he was
handed ... how many people think Clinton was competent? Their
approach to problems was to try to make them appear to go away.
Basically they wasted the entire 8 year "strategic pause" as they
called it - Iran, Iraq, North Korea, al-Quieda/Afgan., Lybia, etc.
were all well known serious problems in the 90's, and they were
allowed to sit and fester. All that got handed to GWB, who was
promptly blown up 7.5 months into office.
If you have a brain tumor and all that you do for it for 6 months
is take advil, the surgeon will have trouble when he goes to cut it
out.
As a coda to the voting bit: in 92, if Bush's father had won (which
would have happened without Perot), would we be fighting all of
these wars?
I think not. Bush Sr. was much too clever to let us get stuck in an
8 year long containment policy as we did.
"All you really own is whatever you can carry in two hands at a
dead run." Robert A. Heinlein.
So like, grab a cheek in each hand and HAUL ASS! right?
But seriously, I have to agree with several on this thread: If you
sit on your ass waiting for the government to help you in life, all
that you will get is a sore ass...literally and figuratively.
Good to see Mayor Daley has something to take his impending indictment off his mind.
I have voted Libertarian ever since I was old enough to vote,
and ever since they ran their first candidate ( Hospers.) Except in
the last election when I did not, would not, could not vote at all.
Not even for Badnarik. But that's another thread.
Mewsifer, you raise an interesting point: Would we have remained in
Iraq for eight years if Bush Sr. had won a second term? Well, would
we have even been there in the first place except for him and his
predecessor and their policies? And isn't it odd that the Old Man
did not seem to care what those monsters in Iraq were doing until
they started doing it to some of his personal friends in Kuwait?
Equally remarkable is the fact that one of the first things his son
did upon taking office was to reseal and reclassify a bunch of his
father's and Reagan's papers concerning Iraq.
Cigar Bill wassn't any better; we all know what he was competent
at. And Mrs. Co-president was too busy worrying about how to
someday become Madame President.
But clearly something needed to be done about Iraq, because it was
on its way to becoming a fifty odd year containment policy ala
Korea. I do not have any use much for Geprge W., but I can't really
fault him much for the war in Iraq. Except, perhaps for the way it
was run. (I can hear Joe, "Bush lied!") No, I don't think he did. I
think some of his administration and advisors did.
Three days supporting this trainwreck of an operation and no
sleep...anyways, I work public affairs, but can't disclose for
whom. i'm not assigning blame for any of this, or trying to sway
anyone's opinion...been doing enough of the latter for 72 hours
now, and I need to vent by being candid.
So, here's the truth. FEMA fucked up. It's taking 7 hours to load
50 patients onto airplanes b/c FEMA can't triage for shit -- let
alone coordinate transportation effectively. Aircrews are
frustrated as hell because they're being told to fly back across
the country after 1 medivac or supply mission, only to be put on
alert as soon as they get back. I've talked to many a pissed off
pilot in the last few days. I really don't think the blame can be
put on the exec level, as all the agencies have been in place, and
training regularly, for years. I know how hard FEMA trains, b/c
I've covered two of their training exercises. Bottom line?
Leadership of FEMA, a delay in Louisiana activating the guard, and
logistics that are damn near impossible to work out are where
people should be putting the blame.
What was needed in NO was a strategy. A strategy is composed of
a plan and the execution of the plan. It appears that there was
neither of these.
The problem with NO was actually rather well-defined: A city below
surrounding water, in a hurricane-prone region. One of the
contingencies, I can only assume, was the event that water seek the
lowest point, and fills NO until it equalizes with Lake
Ponchartrain. Sure there could be other contingencies, but that's
gotta be one of them! In that case, the wet and dry areas of the
city would be possible to see in advance, as would the probable
escape and supply routes. Also to plan for was the thousands
staying behind: beg, force, offer money, and have a plan for what
to do about the rest. This includes looters, which must have been
expected. Why weren't flyer's at least passed out Friday and
Saturday?
So there wasn't a plan (or if there was, someone lost in in a file
cabinet). No clear delineation of responsibility. If that's not bad
enough, then they messed up the execution! Nobody in charge. No
communication. No law and order. Total panic. Finger pointing. In
America.
This has been the most shameful week of my life. When this is over,
Nagin, Blanco, Brown, Chertoff, and Bush should all resign.
"But clearly something needed to be done about Iraq, because it
was on its way to becoming a fifty odd year containment policy ala
Korea. I do not have any use much for Geprge W., but I can't really
fault him much for the war in Iraq. Except, perhaps for the way it
was run."
I agree with you about our Iraq policy entirely; I was alluding to
this in talking about Clinton and the containment policy - part of
the reason al-Q exists as it does now is that you can't do North
Korea style containment in the middle east by a western
power.
My suggestion is Bush sr. would have realized that.
"(I can hear Joe, "Bush lied!") No, I don't think he did. I
think some of his administration and advisors did."
If only he knew what his people were saying.
Because politicians certainly never take the high ground and let
their subordinates take the low as a media strategy. Certainly not
when Karl Rove is running your political operation.
Gad, you're a sucker.
Joe,
You can sit there and say "Bush lied" over and over again for the
next twenty years, in the hope that if you say it enough times,
that that will somehow make it true. But saying it's so doesn't
make it so, so save your wind.
As for being a sucker, I believe it is you that is employed by a
government; not I.
I don't have any more use for the Bushes than I do for any of the
Damnocrats. I don't know you, but I'd bet you're one of those that
still can't get over the fact that George Bush beat Gore.
Did anyone else see Aaron Broussard, president of Jefferson
Parish, La., break down on Meet the Press today?
You can watch the video here.
It was hard to pick out exactly what he was saying, but am I to
understand that the guy whose mother drowned in the nursing
home--after calling her son for days asking for help--was in charge
of the Parish's emergency response program? ...or do I have that
all confused?
"You can sit there and say "Bush lied" over and over again
for the next twenty years, in the hope that if you say it enough
times, that that will somehow make it true. But saying it's so
doesn't make it so, so save your wind."
Did you read joe's comment from September 4, 2005 at 12:29
PM?
...Did you see Colin Powell's testimony before the UN? Did you see
the phony photographs of non-existent mobile WMD labs?
"As for being a sucker, I believe it is you that is employed by
a government; not I."
If joe worked for Microsoft, would his observations be any less
accurate?
"I don't know you, but I'd bet you're one of those that still
can't get over the fact that George Bush beat Gore."
If you don't know him, why would you make such a bet? It's almost
like you're arguing against a stawman joe, and strawman joe only
exists in your head.
...and even if joe is one of those people that can't get over the
fact that Bush beat Gore, how would that make his points any less
valid?
http://www.nationalreview.com/document/kerry200401261431.asp
The world is full of suckers.
If you don't trust NRO feel free to pull the Congressional Record;
you'll might also enjoy finding speechs by Sandy Berger (to C.F.R.
perhaps?), Tony Lake, and President Clinton himself from the same
era.
"and even if Joe is one of those people who can't get over the
fact that Bush beat Gore, how would that make his points any less
valid?"
It wouldn't, of course. How does his calling me a "sucker" make his
point any MORE valid?!
And yes, Tom Crick, I saw Joe's comment from 4 Sept. etc. Jesus! I
refered to it, didn't I?
As for taking a bet without knowing the man, most bets are made on
intuition or a hunch. I think that's why it's called gambling. I've
been reading Joe's tired and tiresome diatribe about Bush almost
daily for months on this site, so I think I can formulate a pretty
good hunch. Any other questions?
Before I forget, on the subject of Colin Powel: A Barbara Walters interview with him is supposed to be on broadcast television either tonight or sometime this week. It should prove interesting, if it is not a rerun.
Yes, I admit it, I've been saying terrible, anti-Bush things for
years.
I said he was lying when he told us we were threatened by nukes and
germ bombs from Iraq.
I said he was going to fuck up the invasion and occupation of
Iraq.
I said he, and top people in his administration, established
pro-torture policies that allowed Abu Ghraib to happen.
I said John Kerry was a legitimate war hero, and didn't deserve to
be slandered.
I said the administration was giving sweetheart contracts to
Haliburton and covering it up.
I said that they weren't taking the essential responsibilities of
government seriously, and putting party hacks in charge of
operations that needed to be handled by career experts.
So you can pretty much dismiss whatever I have to say about George
Bush, since my partisan blinders are obviously interfering with my
perception of reality.
On Grover Norquist: "We want to make government just small
enough that we can drown in a bathtub."
Blub blub blub.
Can somebody remind me of what I said on September 4?
"And yes, Tom Crick, I saw Joe's comment from 4 Sept. etc.
Jesus! I refered to it, didn't I?
Here's joe's comment:
"(I can hear Joe, "Bush lied!") No, I don't think he did. I
think some of his administration and advisors did."
...
----Comment by: joe at September 4, 2005 12:29 PM
Here's jw's response:
"You can sit there and say "Bush lied" over and over again for
the next twenty years, in the hope that if you say it enough times,
that that will somehow make it true. But saying it's so doesn't
make it so, so save your wind."
...
----Posted by jw at September 4, 2005 01:39 PM
So in response to:
"I refered to it, didn't I?"
...I would have to say, no--you didn't refer to joe's comment. You
referred to the comments of strawman joe. ...But you have to
understand that none of the rest of us can see, hear or quote
strawman joe, 'cause he only exists in your head.
(My apologies to all for not returning to this thread sooner; I
have to sleep now and then)
Tom Crick,
Are you blind? You asked me if I had seen Joe's post at 4
Sep.,12:29 pm. Well here it is,the relevant part anyway; if you
prefer, scroll back up and look for yourself:
[If only he knew what his people were saying. Because politicians
certainly never take the high ground and let their subordinates
take the low as a media strategy. Certainly not when Carl Rove is
running your political operation. Gad! You're a sucker! Comment by:
Joe at September 4, 2005 12:29 pm]
Here is MY reply, MY post which appeared just after Joe's; again,
the relevant part of it(at 4 Sep., 1:39 pm):
[As for being a sucker, I believe it is you that is employed by a
government; not I.]
Now, doesn't that pretty much look like I was replying to Joe's
post? Wouldn't that lead most people to believe that I had,
therefore, READ his post?! Furthermore, Crick, the statement you
quote as being Joe's, namely: [(I can hear Joe,"Bush lied")No, I
don't think he did. I think some of his administration and advisors
did.]....well I believe that was MY statement; was it not? Scroll
back up and look! Good God, man, learn to read and stop
embarrassing yourself.
And one last thing (then I am done with this particular
thread):
Joe's sarcastic statement about politicians' media stategy is just
an insinuation that BUSH LIED and let his subordinates take the
heat for it. Hell, that just demonstrates my point, namely, that
Joe just says the same old tired thought over and over, this time
using different words. Restatement of a thought is not a validation
of its truth or accuracy. You anti-Bush Democrats and Liberals see
a "vast right wing conspiracy" behind every bush. Why not brush-up
on Occam's Razor sometime?
Last time I checked FEMA is under the control of Congress not the President.
my partisan blinders are obviously interfering with my
perception of reality.
Your perception of reality is shaped by your partisan blinders.
You, me, everyone, see what we want to see. None of us has a
stranglehold on truth. Ignoring this limit and insisting your
truth, your answer is the only valid interpretation seems arrogant.
We all suffer more when your guesses are enforced by coercion on
those who guess differently.
mewsifer,
Oh, please. I'm no fan of Clinton, but it's not like Bush hit the
ground running on those problems after his inauguration. His #1
military priority until 9/11 was shoring up our missile defense
systems; he did nothing more than Clinton had as far as al-Qaeda
was concerned.
Crimethink,
Yes, you are correct. However, Bush had been in power 7.5 months
whereas Clinton had been in power for 8 years. I believe it's a
correct statement (if you want links I'll go find them) to say he
wasn't even done installing lower level appointees.
Bottom line: no administration is up-and-running in less than about
a year.
Moreover, we we're first attacked by al-Q stateside in 1993 - that
gave Clinton something like 7 years.
Not comparable.
On BMD, a small country like, for example, North Korea can
effectively do 50 New Orleans in 20 minutes with a tiny missile
force - which they virtually can build now. Wouldn't you like to
have some deterrent available (esp. after watching this disaster of
a hurricane + response) other than, "well KJI, if you blow us up,
we'll blow you up too" ?
Clinton, to his credit, never cut our BMD research. Perhaps you
recall that he visited Putin in 2000 to discuss ways to modify the
ABM treaty (which didn't go well), but decided to leave it to his
successor (once again).
Site comments/questions:
Media Inquiries and Reprint Permissions:
(310) 367-6109
Editorial & Production Offices:
3415 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
Suite 400
Los Angeles, CA 90034
(310) 391-2245