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View Full Version : When the Catastrophe Is Government


synch
09-09-2005, 05:49 AM
Our elected officials responded to the bureaucratic failings of our various intelligence agencies by creating the Department of Homeland Security, the largest bureaucracy we've ever seen. Federal spending skyrocketed. We created new cabinet-level positions. We handed over a number of our civil liberties, because our government told us doing so was necessary to protect our freedom.

Sept. 11 is no longer the most catastrophic failure of government in my lifetime. Its response to Hurricane Katrina is. Government at all levels, run by both parties, regardless of race, inexcusably failed to secure the safety of the people of New Orleans. The lesson here is not the failure of one party or the other. The lesson here is the failure of government.

The federal government's shortcomings have been widely reported. They include the symbolic: After the storm hit, President Bush strummed a guitar at a fundraiser, invoking comparisons to Nero. He couldn't cut the last few days of his five-week vacation. Vice President Cheney returned from his vacation six days after the storm hit.

They include cronyism: FEMA Director Michael Brown was brought into the organization after having been fired from his previous job directing horse shows. He had no emergency management experience, and seems to have been hired because he was the college buddy of President Bush's pal Joe Allbaugh (who now runs a firm that consults companies on how to win contracts from FEMA and other federal agencies).

The Army Corps of Engineers began the task of shoring up Lake Ponchartrain decades ago. Administrations and Congresses controlled by both parties had ample opportunity to ensure the task was completed. They had other priorities. When the federal government took over the responsibility to protect New Orleans, it effectively shut out any private or local efforts that may have emerged to upgrade the levee system.

The New Orleans Times-Picayune noted that by Thursday, WalMart had delivered thirteen trucks of supplies while government bureaucrats were still ringing their hands. By the time the federal government finally marched into New Orleans, the Red Cross had sheltered over 130,000 people, and delivered more than 2.5 million meals. By the time military brigades began rescuing people from rooftops, ordinary citizens had saved thousands with private boats.

Guess what commie USA hating left wing media outlet wrote this.

synch
09-09-2005, 11:20 AM
Nobody guessed :(

This article is from the fox news website.

no really... (http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,168732,00.html)

infidel
09-09-2005, 11:35 AM
About time.
The lies and spin coming from the administration have become so blatant that even Fox can't bear to repeat them without changing their name from news to fiction.

synch
09-09-2005, 11:40 AM
What I don't get is that it's not more blatant than many other things that have happened.

Do you reckon that seeing as this struck us citizens the people at fox are willing to be impartial about the whole thing where when it was mostly iraqi citizens getting blown up it was all commie talk to be against the government?

infidel
09-09-2005, 11:54 AM
I think what has changed with this event is that many reporters were on location in NO and saw firsthand what was happening.
It disturbed them so much that they had to tell the truth.

enree erzweglle
09-09-2005, 12:05 PM
Katrina marked the first time that I watched Fox in eons. I only watched for several minutes but what I saw wasn't half bad. It was emotional heartstringsy reporting, but I expected that given what happened.

I watched a 2-hour retrospective of Peter Jennings' career and man was that a good piece. What he did throughout his career made me appreciate journalism at a new level. (And it also makes me want to watch each of his news reports from the major events throughout the last 20 or so years.) I know, wrong thread. Sorry, I am too tangential.

synch
09-09-2005, 12:14 PM
Who is Peter Jennings? Fox anchor?

We don't get fox here.

King PSYZ
09-09-2005, 12:15 PM
He was a long time network news anchor here

valvano
09-09-2005, 12:48 PM
he also was a high school drop out..

synch
09-09-2005, 12:53 PM
Immagine that, becoming a highly regarded news anchor without having finished high school. That's commendable isn't it valvano?

valvano
09-09-2005, 01:04 PM
no, it just proves any idiot can sit in front of a camera, look important, and read from a teleprompter...

synch
09-09-2005, 01:06 PM
The only way you can prove that to me is by sitting in front of a camera, look important and read from a teleprompter.

valvano
09-09-2005, 01:21 PM
your an idiot sitting at a computer pounding away on a message board...not much difference huh?

:D

synch
09-09-2005, 01:36 PM
Which you are telling me... sitting at a computer... pounding away on a message board...

Not much difference huh?

valvano
09-09-2005, 02:01 PM
i'm not an idiot
:p

synch
09-09-2005, 02:06 PM
You wouldn't know it if you were now would you ;)