Geoff Metcalf
Monday, Sept. 5,
2005
Discontent is the want of self-reliance: it is infirmity of
will. – Ralph Waldo EmersonThe tragedies of Hurricane
Katrina continue, and help, aid and assistance are belatedly
trickling into the devastated area.
In addition to the ubiquitous visual images of flood-ravaged
victims, two equally disturbing images supplement the graphic
catastrophic images:
- We hear local authorities spin their complicity in
problems with blame casting.
- We see assorted special-interest elements exploiting the
natural disaster to further personal, professional and
political agendas.
Former Oklahoma Governor Frank Keating recently uttered a
very significant and largely overlooked empirical axiom:
"Leadership at the local level is EVERYthing." HOOAH!
While filling in for Chris Core on WMAL Friday night and
discussing the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, one caller said,
"It's all Bush's fault!" HUH?!
This brand of brain flatulence myopia falls under category
No. 2 above as one of those exploiting the natural disaster to
further an agenda, regardless of facts and evidence that
contradict the preconceived opinion or prejudice.
- Was the president responsible for the weather?
- Was he responsible for local officials ignoring his
pleas to evacuate?
- Prior to the storm's landfall, Bush said he "cannot
stress enough the dangers this hurricane poses to Gulf
Coast communities."
- "I urge all citizens to put their own safety and the
safety of their families first by moving to safe
ground," he said.
- Was he responsible for the incompetence of the New
Orleans mayor?
- Did he order school and municipal buses not be used in
the evacuation?
- "Scores of New Orleans school buses are sitting in
flood waters after Hurricane Katrina instead of being
used to evacuate thousands of poor people before Katrina
hit."
- "Almost 400 New Orleans Regional Transportation
Authority buses are also now under water, never used for
the evacuation of the neediest of the City's citizens."
- Did he fail to protect the local infrastructure … and
was that even his job?
The answer to all the above (and more) is "No."
This is a complex and devastating situation that could have
been mitigated and wasn't.
Mother Nature had already plotted New Orleans for a fire
mission … it wasn't a question of IF but WHEN a major Category 3
or larger hurricane would hammer the artificial bowl of the Big
Easy.
An old Army buddy wrote: "This wasn't a sneak hurricane
attack. They have been tracking this Lady for weeks and knew she
was a Class 5 storm. They knew exactly her landfall and surely
New Orleans was a bucket ready to be filled." This former
Special Forces/retired DEA agent said, "If this country can't
handle a natural disaster, with an abundance of warning, I
shudder to think what would transpire if a major terrorist
attack occurred."
He isn't the Lone Ranger. What IF we had been (or ARE) hit
with a biological or nuclear terrorist attack? If Katrina is any
indication of how we will respond, we are S.O.L.
As with 9/11 and previous natural disasters, from hurricanes
to earthquakes … from blizzards to tornados, it is (and will
always be) the LOCAL first responders who do the heavy lifting.
At best, the feds are a bridging mechanism and supplemental
resource provider.
Beyond the miserable, incompetent job performance of local
authorities, there was/is another contributing factor to the
chaos, and it was manufactured by the government.
Several observers have commented on the disproportionate
number of black faces in the growing file footage of
post-Katrina New Orleans.
That is largely a function of demographics and the fact that
the media have focused on New Orleans and not ventured into the
surrounding devastation. Orleans county is 67.3 percent black.
Were a camera crew to venture into Hancock, Mississippi, with
only 6.8 percent black population, the file footage would look
different.
The Orleans county black population is largely poor.
Presumably, many have been ‘conditioned' to expect government to
‘help.'
The focus has been on the victims stuck in New Orleans. But
how many packed up and left (as the president urged the mayor to
order)? How many who couldn't get transportation just walked
out?
When did individual self-reliance morph into waiting for the
government to solve your problem?
The story of the Wild and Free Pigs of the Okefenokee Swamp
is illustrative of a for-real problem. http://www.geoffmetcalf.com/790.html
The allegory of the pigs includes a serious moral lesson. It
is a story about federal money being used to bait, trap and
enslave a once free and independent people.
Federal welfare, in its myriad forms, has reduced not only
individuals but also state and local governments to a state of
dependency.