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New Yorker: The White House Under Water

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Manix Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-06-05 06:34 PM
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New Yorker: The White House Under Water
<snip>


And yet, to a frightening degree, Bush’s faults of leadership and character were brought into high relief by the crisis. Suntanned and relaxed after a vacation so long that it would have shamed a French playboy, Bush reacted with fogged delinquency, as if he had been so lulled by his summer sojourn that he was not quite ready to acknowledge reality, let alone attempt to master it. His first view of the floods came, pitifully, theatrically, from the window of a low-flying Air Force One, and all the President could muster was, according to his press secretary, “It’s devastating. It’s got to be doubly devastating on the ground.” The moment demanded clarity of mind and rigorous governance, and yet he could not summon them. The performance skills Bush eventually mustered after September 11th—in his bullhorn speech at Ground Zero, in his first speech to Congress—eluded him. The whole conceit of his Presidency, that he was an instinctive chief executive backed by “grownups” like Dick Cheney and tactical wizards like Karl Rove, now seemed as water-logged as Biloxi and New Orleans. The mismanagement of the Katrina floods echoed the White House mismanagement—the cavalier posture, the wretched decisions, the self-delusions—in postwar Iraq.





New Yorker
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tedzbear Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-06-05 07:06 PM
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1. Kick!
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mcscajun Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-06-05 07:06 PM
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2. Bush...meet nail...wall.
WTG, New Yorker!
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Lindacooks Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Sep-07-05 01:38 AM
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3. This phrase stuns me:
"The moment demanded clarity of mind and rigorous governance, and yet could not summon them."

Whenever in hell has the chimp EVER had 'clarity of mind' or 'rigorous governance'?? Every word out of his mouth, even when totally scripted, sounds fuzzy and ill-conceived.

And I have to add this from that article:

"The President’s incuriosity, his prideful insistence on being an underbriefed “gut player,” is not looking so charming right now, either, if it ever did. In the ABC interview, he said, “I don’t think anyone anticipated the breach of the levees.” Even the most cursory review shows that there have been comprehensive and chilling warnings of a potential calamity on the Gulf Coast for years. The most telling, but hardly the only, example was a five-part series in 2002 by John McQuaid and Mark Schleifstein in the New Orleans Times-Picayune, a newspaper that heroically kept publishing on the Internet last week. After evaluating the city’s structural deficiencies, the Times-Picayune reporters concluded that a catastrophe was “a matter of when, not if.” The same paper said last year, “For the first time in 37 years, federal budget cuts have all but stopped major work on the New Orleans area’s east bank hurricane levees, a complex network of concrete walls, metal gates and giant earthen berms that won’t be finished for at least another decade.” A Category 4 or 5 hurricane would be a catastrophe: “Soon the geographical ‘bowl’ of the Crescent City would fill up with the waters of the lake, leaving those unable to evacuate with little option but to cluster on rooftops—terrain they would have to share with hungry rats, fire ants, nutria, snakes, and perhaps alligators. The water itself would become a festering stew of sewage, gasoline, refinery chemicals, and debris.” And that describes much of the Gulf Coast today."

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speedoo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Sep-07-05 02:16 AM
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4. Recommended
People need to read this.
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