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emad Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-03-05 08:39 AM
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Blaming Bush: Guardian Lead Article
Blaming Bush

Leader
Saturday September 3, 2005
The Guardian


Hurricane Katrina has cruelly demonstrated the awesome power of nature and the havoc it can wreak on the proudest efforts of humankind. It has also exposed the United States government, and George Bush at the head of it, to charges of badly mishandling what looks like being one of the country's worst ever natural disasters. Unlike what happened after the September 11 terrorist attacks, partisan warfare has already broken out over the waterlogged catastrophe that is New Orleans and the battered coast of Mississippi, Louisiana and Alabama. This is a crisis in full spate - as shown by shocking images of bodies floating in putrid water and desperate refugees scrabbling to catch supplies dropped by helicopter. America is the richest and most powerful country on earth. But its citizens, begging for food, water and help, are suffering agonies more familiar from Sudan and Niger. The worst of the third world has come to the Big Easy.

Such is the scale of this disaster that Mr Bush would probably have been criticised however he had responded. He was already under fire for taking the longest summer vacation in presidential history and he stayed put at his ranch in Texas as Katrina made her deadly landfall. On Wednesday, two days after the hurricane struck, he flew over the area in Air Force One, only arriving yesterday (but not in New Orleans itself) to see the scene for himself, though he did declare that relief efforts so far had been inadequate. He sounded grave, but spoke of hope ahead, even in these "darkest days". In previous public appearances, his tone and demeanour seemed inappropriate, further evidence of the tin ear he displayed when referring to Osama bin Laden and the 9/11 hijackers as "folks". It is hard to disagree with the New York Times, famously restrained in its use of language, whose editorial found that Mr Bush's response had been "casual to the point of carelessness". The Times' former editor, Howell Raines, wrote in our pages that his behaviour was "outrageous".
More substantive points include charges that the president cut funding for the levees that were supposed to protect New Orleans from floods. Others have singled out the damaging and greedy redevelopment of coastal wetlands. Not all the criticism stands up to close scrutiny. Even with full funding in recent years, none of the flood-control projects would have been completed in time to prevent the swamping of the city. Staving off cuts to the budget of army engineers would not have helped since the destruction was vaster than any contingency. Still, there is a widespread perception that the sheer scale of the problems reflects a shuffling of resources - to pay for tax cuts and the Iraq adventure - that has left the US far too vulnerable. It is all a brutal reminder that government policies, sometimes followed only in the small print of rows over obscure budget allocations, can have real - and deadly - consequences for real people.

The words "homeland security" now have a terribly hollow ring in the anarchic south: 35% of Louisiana's National Guard is serving in Iraq, where four out of every 10 soldiers are guardsmen. And recruiting is down because people fear being sent to Iraq. The priority given to law and order seems a troubling inverse reflection of what happened after the fall of Baghdad. Is it really more important to use deadly force against looters than to deliver humanitarian aid effectively?

http://www.guardian.co.uk/katrina/story/0,16441,1561993,00.html



Special report
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rodeodance Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-03-05 08:41 AM
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1. msnbc is carrying this story now--
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rodeodance Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-03-05 08:42 AM
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2. a brit saying "the site of the world's superpower humbling is humbling"
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Birthmark Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-03-05 08:44 AM
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3. Partisan my ass!
I would criticize ANY President, regardless of party, race, religion, IQ, or chromosome count, whose Administration took 4+ days to get food and water to people! Partisan my ass!
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Prodemsouth Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-03-05 09:02 AM
Response to Reply #3
5. Thank You- whenever the Monkey defenders come off with these
charges of partisanship. Partisanship my ass- that is what we need to say. Mike Parker, who worked under Bush and was thwarted under Mitch Daniels who is now Gov of Indiana said it would not have totally stopped the flood but if the project would have continued this disaster would not be near the scale it is today.
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emad Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-03-05 08:52 AM
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4. "Political culture...on sale to highest bidder": Times today:
It is hard to believe that some of the responsibility for the catastrophe that has befallen the residents of New Orleans does not lie with a political culture that has often looked as though it were on sale to the highest bidder.

SNIP from:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/newspaper/0,,175-1762879,00.html
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