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Thanks, DeAnander, and I agree with everything you say but one.  I do not have limitless faith in imperial incompetance.  I do not think it is tinfoilerie to hold them responsible.  They were warned of this beforehand.  They know or have access to the specialists who can deal with it.  They knew on Monday the levee was breached and did nothing.  They know there's a 72 hour window and they waited 72 hours.  I do not think this was planned, but it certainly was deliberate -- they do not care.

Maybe we can eventually make language a complete impediment to understanding. -Hobbes
by Izzy (izzy at eurotrib dot com) on Thu Sep 1st, 2005 at 06:08:58 PM EST
[ Parent ]
They knew on Monday the levee was breached and did nothing.  They know there's a 72 hour window and they waited 72 hours.  I do not think this was planned, but it certainly was deliberate -- they do not care.

It was all very careless and confused. They were careless people, Tom and Daisy--they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessnes or whatever it was that kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they had made...

F. Scott pretty much summed up Bush-type people more than 80 years ago.
You've got to be a carefully-taught rentier to achieve this level of indifference.


My mind is aglow with whirling transient nodes of thought careening through a cosmic vapor of invention. -- Hedley Lamarr.

by Angry Blue Planet (jrclio@aol.com) on Thu Sep 1st, 2005 at 06:51:35 PM EST
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I would agree with these comments if you replaced "they" with "we." It's not some remote "they" that screwed this up, it's the voting public: Us.

WE built the city on a floodplain, WE pumped out the groundwater, WE put up the flood walls, WE didn't have a plan for getting people out of the city...

by asdf on Thu Sep 1st, 2005 at 08:15:54 PM EST
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     Or, to put it another way, 51% of "we" elected someone who cut funding for flood control projects in Southern Louisiana and who put a political hack in charge of the agency responsible for emergency management.  

     It all depends on how we define "we".
     No human agency could have kept Katrina from doing some damage to NOLA. But there's damage and there's damage, and there are big differences in human costs as well. Different policies under different leadership can make a difference.
     Is anyone prepared to argue at this point that elections don't matter and it doesn't make any difference who wins?

[crickets chirp]

[paint dries]

[grass grows]

I thought not.

My mind is aglow with whirling transient nodes of thought careening through a cosmic vapor of invention. -- Hedley Lamarr.

by Angry Blue Planet (jrclio@aol.com) on Thu Sep 1st, 2005 at 08:40:50 PM EST
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I lived along the Mississippi when it flooded about 12 years ago.  

President Clinton and Al Gore came to assess the damage immediately.  

My father spent a whole day sandbagging with Gore.  

There was a National Guard truck on every street corner.  Probably more National Guard were in my area than are in the whole country at this point.

There was water, food and shelter for everyone.  

Prison inmates were brought in to help with the clean up and the levees...

No, it was nothing on the scale of this, but there was no blaming, no "we couldn't have forseen..." no unnecessary tragedy ... Just everyone banding together and getting to work.  Everyone thought FEMA was joke then too, but when they sat twiddling their thumbs and shuffling paper work, the people simply took it upon themselves to do the work.  None of this finger pointing and running around in a panic.  It's like a bunch of stoned teenagers are running this show saying, "Dude, that city's screwed.  Shit.  Let's get outta here before we get caught."

F-ing disgrace.

Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. -Voltaire

by p------- on Thu Sep 1st, 2005 at 10:21:06 PM EST
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