A Colossal Failure of Leadership

Joeychgo

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Sept. 2, 2005 - I didn’t see the movie “The Day After,” which depicts the desolation and desperation in the aftermath of a nuclear attack. Staring at the images from New Orleans and the Gulf Coast is like watching that disaster movie in real time. People trying to survive, scavenging like wild animals, dead bodies stuffed in corners of the Superdome, the governor of Louisiana fighting to hold back tears.

Where is Rudy Giuliani when we need him? We’ve had four years since 9/11 to prepare for a crisis with mass casualties, yet we seem totally unprepared. To be sure, there are countless unsung heroes performing tasks of kindness and going out of their way to help their fellow man. But this was a moment for national leadership, and nobody rose to take charge the way Giuliani did in New York.

This has been a colossal failure of government. President Bush spent Tuesday, the day after Katrina struck, at a Medicare event in Arizona and then he made his way to a San Diego naval base for yet another anniversary tribute to the Greatest Generation. His concession to reality was adding a few words of compassion to his prepared remarks. Meanwhile, the greatest natural disaster in a century was unfolding at sickening speed with television cameras capturing footage of looting reminiscent of the days after the invasion of Iraq. Things were so bad “you almost wonder if Donald Rumsfeld is in charge,” said Marshall Wittmann, an analyst with the Democratic Leadership Council.

Saving people and maintaining order are the first order of government in any disaster, and neither was achieved. The much-touted Department of Homeland Security appeared too caught up in its internal bureaucracy to perform, and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) called off its rescue missions Thursday because residents trying to board boats were getting violent. The disorder and lawlessness was breathtaking to watch. At one point, the evacuation of patients from a hospital was halted because of gunfire. Bush talks about “zero tolerance” for looters, but there aren’t enough police to stop them and the jails are under water. One third of the National Guard from the affected states of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama are in Afghanistan and Iraq, and they’re the ones trained to perform the police functions that restore civil order.

Instead of declaring a national emergency and deploying the military from all those nearby Texas bases, Bush deployed his father and President Clinton for a photo op at the White House as a prelude to a fund-raising tour. Callers to cable shows called the unfolding disaster “our tsunami” and wondered whether other countries would come to our aid the way the American government did when the tsunami hit Asia. We are the richest nation on earth with the resources, as Bush rightly said, “to take care of our business.” Even so, gestures of support are welcome; NEWSWEEK has learned that the former ambassador from Sri Lanka is rallying medical doctors from his country’s expatriate community to go to New Orleans to help. “I figured this is the least we could do to reciprocate for all the help we got,” Ambassador Devinda Subasinghe says.

We’re getting a taste of what poorer parts of the world have experienced along with a glimpse into a frightening future. Scientists say we have entered a cycle of frequent and dangerous storms. September is the peak season for hurricanes, and we’re already through the letter K with Katrina.

Bush’s comment that nobody thought the levees in New Orleans would break is false, and he will regret those words just as Condoleezza Rice did her comment that nobody could imagine a plane flying into a building like a missile. Local authorities and the Corps of Engineers had war-gamed hurricane scenarios and issued repeated warnings about the vulnerability of the levees. Their pleas were turned down and funding cut instead. Now the money will flow. Congressional leaders rushed back to Washington early to pass legislation to free up $10 billion for hurricane relief, a mere down payment on what it will cost to rebuild the stricken areas.

Congress had been planning to eliminate the estate tax, draining billions from a federal budget already reeling under the costs of a war. Marshall Wittmann, who used to advise John McCain, predicts that Bush’s tax-cutting days are over. “We’ve been living in la-la land,” he says. “This is a moment of sobriety when business as usual can’t continue.”


SOURCE
 
***** LEFTY SATIRE ALERT *****


Hurricane Shuts Down U.S. Efforts in Iraq, Afghanistan
by Scott Ott
(2005-09-03) -- The United States has temporarily suspended military action in Iraq and Afghanistan because those operations might distract from rescue and security efforts in New Orleans in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.

"We're just waiting for the Pentagon to say 'game on'," said one unnamed officer in the 3rd Armored Cavalry, just outside of Tall Afar, Iraq. "The whole chain of command has disintegrated since Katrina hit the gulf coast. My CO [commanding officer] said Rumsfeld hasn't heard from the president in days. For now, we're standing down."

As their tanks sit silently in the desert sun, National Guardsmen near Baghdad chat about the high price of fuel and their fears that they might be sent back to the United States to provide security in New Orleans.

"We're just hoping that the president is so distracted that he forgets we're over here," said one unnamed Guardsman from an Arkansas unit. "I love my country, but I don't want to go to New Orleans. I've got a wife and kids to think about."

Meanwhile, a Pentagon spokesman today announced that the security operation, designed to return New Orleans to its pre-hurricane condition, has been code named 'Operation Restore Debauchery'.
 
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***** LEFTY SATIRE ALERT *****

Bush: Rescue Refugees, Then Fill It to the Brim
by Scott Ott


(2005-09-02) -- President George Bush issued new orders today designed to deal with hurricane victims trapped in New Orleans and the gangs of looters roaming the city's streets.

"I've directed FEMA and the Army Corps of Engineers to take two immediate actions," said Mr. Bush as he stepped off Marine One after his helicopter tour of the ravaged region. "Our plan is simple, and can be expressed in just nine words: Rescue the refugees, then fill it to the brim."

The president explained that he had great compassion for those stranded at the increasingly unsanitary New Orleans convention center without food and water.

However, he has "no sympathy or tolerance for the gangs of brutal thugs who rob, rape and terrify."

"The moment we get the last legitimate refugee out of the city," the president said, "I've instructed the Corps of Engineers to dynamite the levees and let Lake Pontchatrain completely cover the snakes and fire-ants and their kin, if you know what I mean. Hurricane Katrina has provided us with a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to rid New Orleans of a chronic plague."

:bowrofl: :Beer :bowrofl:
 
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Getting a bit serious are we Rich?? Wasn't it you who made the comment that us "repugs" are the ones who get all bent out of shape? tisk tisk my friend, you should calm down.
 
and some people will believe anything the anti-Bush segment of America blows up there a$$.....
 
MAllen82 said:
and some people will believe anything the anti-Bush segment of America blows up there a$$.....

Mespock said:
Some people will believe anything bush blows up their ass...

...Some people still bother to think for themselves.
 
Joey, the most OBVIOUS FLAW in your article is that it matches up Rudy Giuliani, the mayor of New York, with George Bush, the President of the United States. The title is okay, but the characters criticized should be the MAYOR OF NEW ORLEANS AND THE GOVERNOR OF LOUISIANA. Where are they? Oh, that's right, whining and crying about how long it took for the Fed Gov. to come to their aid. Ridiculous. You never saw Giuliani simper like that after 9/11. But your article instead goes on to criticize everything it can about Bush.

Other flaws in the article include:

1. Ignoring the logistical effort necessary to round up vehicles, food, and drivers to get the supplies to New Orleans
2. Ignoring the fact that there are NO COMMUNICATIONS WHATSOEVER IN THE CITY.
3. Ignoring the fact that the police who the article says should be putting down the gangs are victims themselves and CAN'T COMMUNICATE.
4. Ignoring the fact that FEMA officials aren't soldiers and shouldn't be expected to just jump off a helicopter and rush forward into an oncoming hail of bullets from gangs trying to STEAL THEIR RIDE. Oh, come on Joey, would you get off the chopper, HERO???
5. Ignoring the fact that Bush, although the leader of the country, isn't the mayor of New Orleans, and couldn't be there until he flew there, while the MAYOR OF NEW ORLEANS DIDN'T DO SQUAT.
6. Ignoring the fact that Bush isn't the type to panic and run to and fro just so he will please you Fiberals. What good would it have done anyway? I am so glad my President is a man of careful consideration before he acts or speaks, unlike you Fibs.
 
fossten said:
6. Ignoring the fact that Bush isn't the type to panic and run to and fro just so he will please you Fiberals. What good would it have done anyway? I am so glad my President is a man of careful consideration before he acts or speaks, unlike you Fibs.
One of the biggest reasons I think this President is a great President.
 
are you talking about the move
TheDayAfterTomarow
Joey
i saw that one wow
but hey that was kinda in rever of what hpend that hapend to the norther states and we all when to the south man
but this hapend to the south and they came up her if they left
im still trying to understand why ther could be so many ppl in neworlean when didn the mayor
order them to leave
anyways
man im still trying to get over the shock every day i see a car from down there up her with licens plate from souther area like that man
 

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