The Head Lines say it all.
DID NEW ORLEANS CATASTROPHE HAVE TO HAPPEN?
Times-Picayune Had Repeatedly Raised Federal Spending Issues
New Orleans: Loss of wetlands opens floodgates to disaster
"Katrina's Real Name is Global Warming"
Federal Government Wasn't Ready for Katrina, Disaster Experts Say
The slow response to Katrina and poor federal leadership is a replay of 1992's mishandling of Hurricane Andrew
by Seth Borenstein
Why Thousands May Die
Biloxi Newspaper Rips Relief Effort, Begs for Help
And the music plays on:
New Orleans Is Sinking Lyrics
The Tragically Hip
Alright!
Bourbon blues on the street, loose and complete
Under skies all smoky blue green
I can't forsake a dixie dead shake
So we danced the sidewalk clean
My memory is muddy
What's this river that I'm in?
New Orleans is sinking man
And I don't wanna swim
Colonel Tom, what's wrong? what's going on?
You can't tie yourself up for a deal
He said, Hey north you're south shut your big mouth,
You gotta do what you feel is real
Ain't got no picture postcards, ain't got no souvenirs
My baby, she don't know me when I'm thinking bout those years
Pale as a light bulb hanging on a wire
Sucking up to someone just to stoke the fire
Picking out the highlights of the scenery
Saw a little cloud that looked a little like me
I had my hands in the river
My feet back up on the banks
Looked up to the lord above
And said, hey man thanks
Sometimes I fell so good, I gotta scream
She said Gordie baby I know exactly what you mean
She said, she said, I swear to god she said
My memory is muddy
What's this river that I'm in?
New Orleans is sinking man and I don't wanna swim
Swim!
It's The End Of The World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)
REM
That's great, it starts with an earthquake, birds and snakes, an aeroplane and Lenny Bruce is not afraid.
Eye of a hurricane, listen to yourself churn - world serves its own needs, dummy serve your own needs.
Feed it off an aux speak, grunt, no, strength, no, Ladder start to clatter with fear fight down height.
Wire in a fire, representing seven games, a government for hire and a combat site.
Left of west and coming in a hurry with the furies breathing down your neck.
Team by team reporters baffled, trumped, tethered cropped.
Look at that low playing! Fine, then. Uh oh, overflow, population, common food, but it'll do.
Save yourself, serve yourself. World serves its own needs, listen to your heart bleed
dummy with the rapture andthe revered and the right, right.
You vitriolic, patriotic, slam, fight, bright light, feeling pretty psyched.
It's the end of the world as we know it.
It's the end of the world as we know it.
It's the end of the world as we know it and I feel fine.
Six o'clock - TV hour. Don't get caught in foreign towers.
Slash and burn, return, listen to yourself churn.
Locking in, uniforming, book burning, blood letting.
Every motive escalate. Automotive incinerate.
Light a candle, light a votive. Step down, step down.
Watch your heel crush, crushed, uh-oh, this means no fear cavalier.
Renegade steer clear! A tournament, tournament, a tournament of lies.
Offer me solutions, offer me alternatives and I decline.
It's the end of the world as we know it.
It's the end of the world as we know it. (It's time I had some time alone)
It's the end of the world as we know it and I feel fine.
It's the end of the world as we know it. (It's time I had some time alone)
It's the end of the world as we know it. (It's time I had some time alone)
It's the end of the world as we know it and I feel fine.
The other night I dreamt of knives, continental drift divide.
Mountains sit in a line, Leonard Bernstein.
Leonid Brezhnev, Lenny Bruce and Lester Bangs.
Birthday party, cheesecake, jelly bean, boom!
You symbiotic, patriotic, slam book neck, right? Right.
It's the end of the world as we know it. (It's time I had some time alone)
It's the end of the world as we know it. (It's time I had some time alone)
It's the end of the world as we know it and I feel fine (It's time I had some time alone)
It's the end of the world as we know it
It's the end of the world as we know it
As thousands left New Orleans in advance of Hurricane Katrina we have to ask; Who was left behind, and why? While those with vehicles left New Orleans thousands who could not, the poor and disabled, the sick and elderly were left behind. There was no evacuation plan for them. Martial law was declared in Mississippi, too late to save those unfortunate enough to have been left behind. Unlike New Orleans there was no mandatory evacuation. Instead in the aftermath of the destruction of Biloxi by Katrina the state declared martial law to protect the casinos from the survivors. Greyhound buses quit running on Friday in New Orleans, the last plane left Sunday. The state officials did not commandeer or place under martial law any and all forms of transportation for the folks left behind. Of course not, the majority of them were black.
CNN: Heartbreak and destruction in small towns and large
I truly believe that apart from 9/11 this is one of the most significant events that has ever hit this country. Anybody who tells you this disaster is going to be rectified in a matter of months hasn't seen the situation. People are carrying their children, trying to get them to safety. A woman coming down to the police, close to hysterics, saying, "My elderly mother is in a building over there, she needs dialysis. She can't get it. She is dying. Can you help me?" And the police had to say, "There is absolutely nothing we can do. We don't have a precinct house. We don't have communication. There is absolutely nothing we can do for you."
New Orleans has fast become a refugee city. Thousands and thousands of people are seeking shelter on the highway overpasses looking for some sort of help, some sort of information. They are screaming out to us and anybody around for water and for help. They are looking for information and for a way to get out. On the highway overpasses and underneath the highways as well, people are trying to find a spot for themselves. Prison buses are streaming by to evacuate prisoners and a lot of people are very, very upset that they aren't getting help, but the prisoners are.
The frightening thing is watching the news, as the objective news reporters at the heart of the disaster dispassionately interview survivors, or show aerial shots from helicopters of people waving to them from roof tops. Why don't they get down there and help you ask yourself. Why are the reporters whining about lack of access to passable roads, no communications, etc. Why aren't they helping? Because they are the simulacrum of capitalism, the reportage of the dispassionate survival of the fittest ideology on our TV screens. The State had emergency plans, sure, but not plans that included those that needed them the most the poor and vulnerable. They had no plan to mobilize all transportation means to evacuate all the people, hence the sardine like cramming of people into the New Orleans Super dome Stadium. Now when that collapses they are shipping these same folks all the way to Houston to stick them in another Super dome Stadium.
Survivors evacuate New Orleans as looting rages
Meanwhile, thousands are feared dead in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Nagin, when asked how many people died in the hurricane, said: "Minimum, hundreds. Most likely, thousands." While Lt. Kevin Cowan of the state Office of Emergency Preparedness said it is too soon to confirm how many died, he noted there were likely many who had not been rescued from their roofs and attics. "You have a limited number of resources, for an unknown number of evacuees. It's already been several days. You've had reports there are casualties. You all can do the math," he said. The death toll has already reached at least 110 in Mississippi. Nagin, whose pre-hurricane evacuation order cleared the city of half a million out of the storm's path, estimates that 50,000 to 100,000 people remained.
The first reports in the aftermath of Katrina were about looting. Looting my ass, people left behind were gathering bottled water, dry clothes, food that was already going bad. People helped people, even CNN reported that so called looting was for essentials. Survivours don't loot they survive. As the Band song The Night Yhey Drove Old Dixie Down
says: "take what you need and leave the rest."
Folks who got out of New Orleans said they were glad to be alive, they said that this gave them a new perspective on life, that there was more to life than property, as they watched their homes and belongings sink beneath the floodwater. Well that was soon replaced by concern of the 'authorities' about looting.
Survivors evacuate New Orleans as looting rages
The evacuation began as New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin ordered the entire police force to abandon search-and rescue efforts and concentrate on putting a stop to widespread looting and violence. "They are starting to get closer to heavily populated areas - hotels, hospitals, and we're going to stop it right now," Nagin said. Dozens of carjackings were reported, including a nursing home bus and a truck carrying medical supplies for a hospital.
Those left behind, abandoned to fend for themselves by these same authorities, are now taking matters into their own hands and are trying to get out of New Oreleans as it sinks beneath the flood waters of broken levees.
Looting became the redistribution of wealth for those left behind, from each according to their abilities to each according to their needs..
Those left behind to die, have nothing to lose they are in effect walking dead men. Whose property are they looting, no-ones the property owners long left the city to the poor, elderly, sick, and disabled. The city is now the vast vault of the dead and undead, truly the New Orleans of Anne Rice.
A boy ran out from a petrol station on Lee Circle clutching boxes of chocolate bars, followed by an elderly man carrying all the cigarettes his arms could hold. He flashed a half-toothed smile and declared "Everything's cool", offering a pack as a gift. On the corner of Loyola Avenue and Julia Street, just a few blocks from the French Quarter, people emerged from abandoned buildings as the sun began to heat up the floodwater and turn the air to hot soup. Nine out of 10 of these remnants were black. All were destitute, dressed in rags, and carrying what was left of their possessions in plastic bags. They had survived the hurricane and the floods and a terrifying night, and now they were wandering the streets, looking for a way out.
'It's like a war zone here. There was shooting and looting'
As toxic waters rise, the desperation and fear grow
Julian Borger in New Orleans
Thursday September 1, 2005
The Guardian
Mississippi relies heavily on taxes from casino gambling, and the concern is that all the riverboat casinos are gone, money the state needs for it's budget is gone. There's another paradox of Katrina, she exposed the frailty of the so called low tax regimes that rely on gambling to fund state services. Katrina lifted the casinos off their barges and landed them on main street in Biloxi, ripped open; their river of coins flowing out. The Republican Governor of Mississippi waxed eloquently in pure Southern Red Neck, 'we are gonna get them looters' he said. Not to be any less a red neck the Democrat Governor of Louisiana also called for an end to rescuing the victims and the need to restore 'law and order'. How about rescuing the poor, sick, elderly that capitalism left behind. Nope forget them, we are going to protect our profits.
AP reported:
Looting broke out in some New Orleans neighborhoods, prompting authorities to send more than 70 additional officers and an armed personnel carrier into the city. One police officer was shot in the head by a looter but was expected to recover, authorities said. A giant new Wal-Mart in New Orleans was looted, and the entire gun collection was taken, The Times-Picayune newspaper reported. "There are gangs of armed men in the city moving around the city," said Ebbert, the city's homeland security chief. Also, looters tried to break into Children's Hospital, the governor's office said. On New Orleans' Canal Street, dozens of looters ripped open the steel gates on clothing and jewelry stores and grabbed merchandise. In Biloxi, Miss., people picked through casino slot machines for coins and ransacked other businesses. In some cases, the looting took place in full view of police and National Guardsmen
The National Guard Belongs in New Orleans and Biloxi. Not Baghdad.
Where was the Bush Administration? Where were the Army and National Guard, southerners and reporters repeatedly asked? Why they were all in Iraq of course, making sure that America was safe from terrorists. And just as ineffectual there as at home.
Nearly 650 Iraqis Die in Stampede, Official Says
BAGHDAD - Nearly 650 Iraqi Shi'ites died in a stampede on a Tigris River bridge in Baghdad on Wednesday, panicked by rumors a suicide bomber was about to blow himself up, an Interior Ministry official told Reuters Most victims were women and children who "died by drowning or being trampled" after panic swept a throng of thousands of people heading to a religious ceremony, the official said By 2:15 p.m. the death toll had risen to 647, with 301 injured, the official said.Television images showed people clambering down from the bridge to escape the surging crowd and piles of slippers left behind by the crush of people,
Two days after Katrina landed and the Federal Government in the US had yet to mobilize national disaster relief. What it did do was release troops to stop looters, which was as effective as their defence of Iraq from insurgents.
CNN and other News stations were in the heart of the storm and its aftermath and there was no pending rescue from the military. Reporters viewed the disaster with the shared frustration of the survivors, where was the rescue operations? There was no plan to rescue those left behind, only a plan to evacuate those who could afford to leave. The national guard was not sent in to rescue those so callously left behind, they were sent in to defend the remnants of private property. Cuba got hit with just as bad a storm this summer, and had less deaths because they evacuated everyone. In America it's dog eat dog, survival of the fittest down and dirty capitalism.
Katrina revealed the unspoken class war in America.
Nasty, Brutish -- Society's Net Snaps
Every-man-for-himself ethos serves Americans poorly in times of crisis when people must pull together by Doug Saunders, Globe and Mail
Katrina was a predictable storm, one of many that hit this summer. They are getting bigger and nastier. We are watching climate change happen before our eyes courtesy of cable television news.
UK's Chief Scientific Advisor: Global Warming May Be to Blame for Katrina
While the Bush Administration has finally admitted that there maybe something to this climate warming thing, it's not as crucial an issue as making a profit is. Producing green backs means producing green house gases.
Meanwhile in Europe half the continent is being flooded and half is burning with wildfires.
Fire and floods sweep Europe in summer of intense weather
VIENNA -- Fire and floods have engulfed Europe this summer, as a drought in Spain and Portugal transformed swaths of woodland into a massive tinderbox and torrential downpours carved a trail of destruction through Alpine valleys and impoverished Balkan villages Entire sections of the Swiss capital, Bern, have been submerged. Blazes flare up as others are snuffed in Portugal and Spain. And dozens have been killed in a third straight summer of extreme European weather that has people asking: Why? ''People wonder, 'Hey, what's going on with our climate?' “said Dale Mohler, the director of international forecasting at AccuWeather.com.
Apologists for capitalism like Bjorn Lomborg, the Danish author of the Sceptical Environmentalist says there is no proof that human beings are to blame for global warming. He is right, it's not human beings its the economic/political/technological system we created called capitalism.
And as capitalism demands we ignore global climate change and its impact, in order to continue with business as usual, Mother Nature has a way of reminding us she does not give a hoot about capitalism or us if we ignore her.
UPDATES: I am adding updates of information that is relevant to the crisis and the thesis of this article to the 'Comments' section of this article.
The Filling and Bursting of Bourgeois Civilisation
Amadeo Bordiga
The floods in the Po valley and the confused debate over their causes and over the responsibility of organisations and public bodies that did not know how to carry out protection work, with all the disgusting mutual accusations of “speculating” on misfortune, puts into question one of the most widespread false opinions shared by all the contenders. This is that contemporary capitalist society, with the corresponding development of science, technology and production, places the human species in the best possible position to struggle against the difficulties of the natural environment. Hence the contingent fault of the government or of Party A and B, which lies in not knowing how to exploit this magnificent potential at hand, and in the erroneous and culpable administrative and political measures. Hence the no less classic: “Move over, I want to take over now!” If it is true that the industrial and economic potential of the capitalist world is increasing and not diminishing, it is equally true that the more virulent it is, the worse the living conditions of the human mass are in regards to natural and historical cataclysms. Unlike the periodic spates of rivers, the spate of frenetic capital accumulation knows no perspective of a “decrease”, of a falling curve from the hydrometer readings, but only the catastrophe of the river banks bursting.
Yesterday
The relationship between the thousands of years long development of man’s production technique and relations with the natural environment is very close. Primitive man, like an animal, gathered and ate wild fruit using a simple grasping action and, like an animal, fled headlong from the disruption of natural phenomena that threatened his life. As the artificial production of products for consumption and the accumulation of reserves of these products and of tools forced him to settle, so too they forced him to defend himself from such threats as the weather[1] and natural devastation. Such a defence, not unlike that against other groups competing for the best site, or predators on the accumulated reserve, could only be collective. From these collective needs arose, as we have seen many times, class division and exploitation by rulers. In Marx “the capitalist mode of production ... is based on the dominion of man over nature.”[2] It also presupposes the war of nature on man. A too generous and lavish nature would not be the favourable environment which capitalism could spring from. “It is not the mere fertility of the soil, but the differentiation of the soil, the variety of its natural products, the changes of the seasons, which form the physical basis for the social division of labour... It is the necessity of bringing a natural force under the control of society, of economising, of appropriating or subduing it on a large scale by the work of man’s hand, that first plays the decisive part in the history of industry. Examples are, the irrigation works in Egypt, Lombardy, Holland, or in India and Persia where irrigation by means of artificial canals, not only supplies the soil with the water indispensable to it, but also carries down to it, in the shape of sediment from the hills, mineral fertilisers. The secret of the flourishing state of industry in Spain and Sicily under the dominion of the Arabs lay in their irrigation works… One of the material bases of the power of the state over the small disconnected producing organisms in India, was the regulation of the water supply. The Mahometan rulers of India understood this better than their English successors. It is enough to recall to mind the famine of 1866, which cost the lives of more than a million Hindus in the district of Orissa, in the Bengal presidency.” It is well known that similar famines have raged recently, despite the tremendous potential of world capitalism... The struggle against nature generates industry; man lives on two sacred Dantesque elements, nature and art (the third is God). Capitalism generates the exploitation of man from industry. The bourgeoisie will not be revolted by violence against God, nature and art. Very modern high capitalism shows serious cases of retreat in the struggle to defend against attacks by the forces of nature on the human species, and the reasons are strictly social and class ones, so much so as to invert the advantage derived from the progress of theoretical and applied science. Let us wait then to blame it for having increased the rainfall intensity with atomic explosions or, tomorrow, with having “messed about” with nature so much as to risk making the earth and its atmosphere uninhabitable and even to make the skeleton explode by priming “chain reactions” of all the elements in nuclear complexes. For now let us establish a social and economic law for the parallel between its greater efficiency in exploiting labour and the life of men and the ever decreasing efficiency in the rational defence against the natural environment, in the widest sense. The earth’s crust is modified by geological processes which man increasingly learns to distinguish and decreasingly attributes to mysterious wishes of angry forces and which, within certain limits, he learns to correct and control. When, in pre-history, the Po valley was a huge lagoon through which the Adriatic Sea lapped the foothills of the Alps, the first inhabitants, who evidently were not lucky enough to beg “amphibious craft” from self-interested American charity, occupied pile-dwellings rising above the water. It was a “terramara” civilisation of which Venice is a distant development; it was too simple for a “reconstruction business” to be based on it with contracts to supply timber! The pile-dwellings did not collapse during floods: modern brick houses do. However, what means exist today to build raised houses, roads and railways! They would suffice to protect the population. Utopia! The sums do not tally, while the account of 200 billion lire for repair works and reconstruction is quite in order. In the past, the building of the first embankments dates back to the Etruscans. The natural process of mountainside degradation and the transport of material suspended in river waters from the mountains at flood time has formed a huge, fertile lowland region over the centuries. This convenience assured the settlement of agricultural peoples. The subsequent populations and regimes continued to raise high embankments along the banks of the large rivers, which were insufficient to stop huge cataclysms when the river shifted its course. The shift of the Po near Guastalla onto a new course, which was until then the lowest reach of the Oglio, dates from the fifth century. In the thirteenth century, the great river abandoned the southern distributory of the huge delta, the present-day secondary “Po di Volano”, in the reach near its mouth and adopted the present course from Pontelagoscuro to the sea. The frightening “shifts” have always been from south to north. A general law assumes a tendency for all the world’s rivers to migrate northwards for geophysical reasons. However, in the case of the Po, this law is evident due to the great difference between its north and south bank tributaries. The former rise in the Alps and have clear water either because they pass through large lakes, or because they do not have a maximum regime during periods of heavy rainfall, but instead during the springtime melting of glaciers. Therefore these rivers do not carry mud and sand deposits into the course of the main river when in flood. However, from the south, from the Apennines, the short and torrential right bank tributaries with their huge variations between maximum and minimum flow pour down the debris of mountain erosion, filling in the right bank section of the Po’s channel, which every so often escapes this damming by turning North. Chauvinism is not required to know that the science of river hydraulics arose from this problem: for centuries the problem has been posed of the utility and functioning of embankments, or the connection with the problem of the distribution of irrigation water via canals, and finally of river navigation. After the Roman works, information is available about the first canals in the Po valley in 1037. After the victory of Legnano,[3] the Milanese built the Naviglio Grande to Abbiategrasso, which was made navigable in 1271. With this arose capitalist agriculture, the first in Europe, and the great hydraulic works were undertaken by state bodies: from the canals and basins of Leonardo, who also provided norms for the river regimes, to the Cavour Canal, begun in 1860. The construction of embankments to contain rivers raised a major problem: that of raised rivers. While the Alpine rivers, such as the Ticino and Adda, run largely between natural banks, the right bank tributaries and the Po below Cremona are raised: this means that not only the water level, but also the bed of the water course is higher than the surrounding countryside. The embankments save it from being flooded and a collector canal runs parallel to the river to collect local water which it carries to the river downstream: these are the great reclamation works, and as they approach the sea, the transfer of water to the river is performed mechanically so that the districts which are below not only the river, but also the sea, are kept dry. The entire Polesine is a huge low-lying area. Adria is 4 meters above sea level. Rovigo is 5 meters: there the Po’s bed is higher and the Adige’s even more so. Clearly a breach in the embankments would turn the whole of Rovigo province into a huge lake. There is a major debate among hydrologists as to whether the rise in the beds of such rivers is progressive. French hydrologists said yes a century ago while the leaders of Italian hydrology opposed them, and the matter is still discussed in congresses today. Nevertheless, one cannot deny that the river load and its deposition extends the mouth out to sea, even if this does not collect in the final reaches of the river’s bed. Because of this incessant process, the gradient of the bed and the water surface can only decrease and, according to hydrological law, the speed of the current equally falls: hence the need to raise embankments seemed historically endless and unavoidable. The disastrous nature of the breaches occurring is also progressive. The availability of modern mechanical means has contributed in this field to extending the method of exploiting large areas of the most fertile land, keeping them dry by continuous pumping. The risk to the tenants and workers worries a profit economy, but the damage caused when the works fall can be balanced against the fertilisation by the invading mud on the one hand and the economic factor on the other: carrying out works is always good capitalist business. The classic reclamations by alluviation were widespread in the modern period along the entire Italian lowland coast: river water was alternately allowed to flood into and deposit in the great basins, the level of which rose slowly with the double advantage of not letting useful and fertile soil wash out to sea and of providing ever greater security from flooding and future danger. This rational system was found to be too slow for the requirements of capital investment. Another tendentious argument was and is drawn from the continuously rising population density which cannot permit a loss of fertile land. So almost all the old polders, carefully surveyed with precision by the hydrologists of the Austrian, Tuscan and Bourbon regimes, have been destroyed. Clearly, if today one had to choose from the various radical solutions to these problems, not only would one clash with the incapacity of capitalism to look to the distant future as regards the handing down of installations from generation to generation, but one would also clash with the strong local interests of farmers and industrialists who have an interest in not having various zones eroded and who play on the attachment of poor people to their inhospitable homes. Since a while back, new solutions have been proposed to create “lateral channels” for the Po. This type of study is always unpopular because the results forecast are uncertain, something which creates great annoyance in business circles. One solution, on the right, consists in a cut from Pontelagoscuro to the valleys or lagoons of Comacchio: the artificial canal would cut about one third off the length of the present river course to the sea. Such a solution clashes with the big investments in Ferrarese reclamation works and with fish farming, so it would be resisted. But the solutions with more foresight and which perhaps are more in conformity with natural processes call for the reuniting of the Po and Adige courses between which lies the lower Polesana, creating in its Thalweg,[4] presently criss-crossed by small water courses, a huge collector and, perhaps, in the final count, a side canal for one if not both rivers would encounter no less resistance. In the bourgeois period, such a study does not lead to positive research, but to two “policies”, right and left, as regards the Po, with the related conflict between speculating groups.
Today
There is discussion as to whether the present catastrophe, in which some have already seen the natural formation of a large stable swamp and a shifting of the Po’s course with the total destruction of the north bank, is due to exceptional rainfall and the complicity of natural causes, or to the inexperience and the error of men and directors. Indisputably the succession of wars and crises have caused decades of neglect in the difficult service of technical inspection and embankment maintenance, dredging of river beds where necessary and the systematisation of high mountain basins, the deforestation of which caused greater and more rapid rain water run-off during high water and greater flows of suspended material to the river courses on the plain. With the bad trend that now prevails in science and official technical organisation, it is even difficult to collect and to compare udometric data (amount of rainfall on various dates in the basin which feeds the river) and hydrometric data (water levels at the hydrometers, maximum flow) with those of the past. Offices and scientists with self-respect now offer replies in line with political requirements and reasons of state, that is, according to the effect that they will have, the figures having been massaged in every possible way. One can also well believe the current of criticism which states that not even the observation stations destroyed during the war have been replaced, and it is also credible that our present technical bureaucracy works with old maps, passed along copy by copy, dragging along slowly over the drawing tables of the lazy technical personnel, and that it does not update the surveys with new altitude surveys, which are difficult, and with operations of geodetic precision, which allow one to collate the various data of the phenomenon. It lives in masses of maps which are in line with approvals given in circulars in terms of format and colour, but do not give a tinker’s cuss for physical reality. The figures handed out here and there for the popular press don’t add up, but it is too easy to blame the journalists who know all about nothing. It therefore remains to be seen – and those movements with wide support and plentiful means could well try to do this – if the intensity of rainfall really was the highest in a century of observation: it is correct to doubt it. The same goes for the hydrometer readings for the maximum levels and flows: it is easy to say that the historical maximum was recorded at Pontelagoscuro at 11,000 cubic meters per second but now has presently risen to 13,000. In 1917 and 1926 there were very large maxima of much lesser consequence, always in spring, up to 13,800 cubic meters per second passing through Piacenza. Let us say without dwelling further on the matter that the rainfall was certainly not of unheard of proportions and the chief responsibility for the disaster lies in the long lack of necessary services and in the omission of maintenance and improvement works, which is related to the smaller public budget for such works and the way money was spent compared to the past. It is a matter of providing a cause for these facts, which must be a social and historical cause, and it is puerile to bring up again the “bad management” of those who were or are at the helm of the Italian ship of state. Besides, this is not a uniquely Italian phenomenon, but occurs in all countries. Administrative chaos, thieving, the penetration of speculation into public decision making are now denounced by the conservatives themselves, and in America they have been related to public disasters: even there ultra-modern cities in Kansas and Missouri have fallen victim to badly regulated rivers.[5] Two mistaken ideas underlie a critique like the one we have just mentioned. One is that the struggle to return from the fascist dictatorship within the bourgeoisie (the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie has existed since it won freedom) to the external multiparty democracy had as its aim a better administration, whereas it is clear that it had to lead, and has led, to a worse administration. This is the fault common to ALL shades in the great block of the CLN.[6] The other incorrect idea is the belief that the totalitarian form of the capitalist regime (of which Italian fascism was the first great example) gave overwhelming power to the state bureaucracy against the autonomous initiatives of enterprises and private speculation. On the contrary, this form is vital for capitalism’s survival and that of the bourgeois class at a certain stage. It concentrates counter-revolutionary powers in the state machine, but renders the administrative machine weaker and more open to manipulation by speculative interests. Here we need a historical sketch of the Italian administrative machine from the epoch of the achievement of national unity. Initially it worked well and had strong powers. All the favourable conditions contributed to this. The young bourgeoisie had to pass through the heroic phase and to make sacrifices in order to seize power and to affirm its interests. Therefore the individual elements were still prepared to offer their all and were less attracted by immediate hidden gain. Further resolute enthusiasm was needed to liquidate the resistance of the old powers and of the rusted state machines of the various parts into which the country was originally divided politically. There was no notable division into parties as the sole party of the liberal revolution governed (virgin in 1860, old slag in 1943) with the clear acquiescence of the few republicans and with the workers’ movement yet to appear. The swindles began with the bi- party transformismo of 1876.[7] The skeleton of the bureaucracy coming from Piedmont following close on the heels of the military forces of occupation enjoyed a real dictatorship over the local elements and the aristocratic, and clerical, opponents were repressed by emergency powers... as they were guilty of anti- liberalism. Under such conditions, a young, conscientious and honest administrative machine was constructed. The bureaucracy suffered a twin attack on its uncorrupt dominance with the capitalist system’s development in depth and extension. The great entrepreneurs of public works and of productive sectors aided by the state emerged in the economic field, while in the political field, the spread of corruption to parliamentary business became such that every day “the people’s representatives” intervened to impinge on the decisions of the executive system and general administration, which previously had functioned with scrupulous impersonality and impartiality. Public works, which previously had been put in place by the most competent, who were naively pleased to have a regular salary as government functionaries, and who were wholly independent in their judgements and advice, began to be imposed by the executioners: we mean the classical Carrozoni[8] began to do the rounds. The machine of state expenditure became decreasingly useful for the community, but all the more financially burdensome. This process accelerated during the Giolittian period[9], but nevertheless increasing economic prosperity made the damage less obvious. This system, as its political masterpiece, slowly entangled the emerging workers’ party. Precisely because Italy has an abundance of labour power and a lack of capital, all sides call on the state to provide work, and the MP who seeks votes in an industrial or agricultural constituency does the rounds of the ministries hunting for the panacea: public works. After the First World War, the Italian bourgeoisie, even though they came out “winners”, saw the favourable wind of the heroic period change too drastically and so there was fascism. The concentration of the policing strength of the state along with the concentration of the control of almost all the economic sectors simultaneously allowed it to avoid the explosion of radical revolts among the masses and to assure free speculative manoeuvring for the well-off class, on condition that the latter formed itself into a single class centre within the framework of government policy. Every medium or small employer was compelled to make reformist concessions, called for during the long struggle of the workers’ organisations which (as usual) they destroyed, stealing their programme, so that while a high degree of capitalist concentration was favoured, the internal situation was pacified. The totalitarian form allows capital to set in motion the reformist trick of the previous decades, latching on to the class collaboration proposed by the traitors of the revolutionary party. The leadership of the state machine and abundant special laws were clearly placed in the service of business initiatives. The technical legislation – to return to our starting point, dealing with rivers – which around 1865 had produced several masterpieces, was now reduced to a total hotchpotch open to all possible manoeuvres, the functionary being reduced to a puppet of the large firms. The hydrological services were precisely those clashing with the famous idea of private initiative. They require a single institution and full powers – they had a very long tradition. Jacini wrote in 1854. The civil problem of the waters found in Giandomenico Romagnosi an immortal writer of treatises.[10] All in all, bourgeois administration and technology had even then class goals, but they were serious, while today they are mere bagatelle. This led to the bad trend which has caused the degradation and not the improvement of the hydraulic defences in the Paduan plain, starting from a process not concerning just one party or nation, but the centuries long ups and downs of a class regime. In short, if once the bureaucracy, independent but not omnipotent, laid out its project on the drawing board and then called in bids from public works “enterprises”, compelling them, refusing even the offer of a cup of coffee, to complete them rigorously, thus at most the selection of the funded works was made according to general principles, today the relationship is inverted. The weak and servile technical bureaucracy lets the enterprises themselves draw up the plans and approves them almost unseen, and the enterprises obviously select the profitable works and drop the delicate operations which require more diligence and offer less chance of repetition in the future. This does not happen because of morality, nor even because in general the functionary gives way to competition and large bribes. It is that if a functionary resists, not only does his workload increase ten-fold, but also the interests against whom he clashes mobilise against him with decisive party influence in the higher echelons of the ministry that employs him. Once the most capable technician gained promotion, now it is the one most able to move in such a system. When single party fascism gave way to the multi-party system unknown even in Giolittian Italy, even in the constitutional model of perfect England, and so on (where we have never had ten parties declaredly ready to govern according to the constitution, but at most two or three), things went from bad to worse. They were supposed to restore the experts and the honest men with the Allied armies. What a silly hope so many had: the new changing of the guard has produced the worst of all guards, as on the Po embankments. It is symptomatic enough in diagnosing the present phase of the capitalist regime that a senior official in the Ministry of Works let slip that the flood surveillance services worked well right up to the fatal moment: the only moment for which they are paid a regular salary. This is the style of modern bureaucracy (for some the new ruling class! Ruling classes arrive with gaping mouths, but not with a failing heart). No less interesting is what Alberto de Stefani wrote, entitled “The Management of the Po”.[11] After outlining the history of measures taken, he cited the judgement of authors in technical journals: “One can never insist too much on the need to react against the system of concentrating the activity of the offices exclusively, or nearly so, on the projection and execution of major works.” De Stefani did not see the radical implication of such a critique. He deplored the neglect of conservation and maintenance of existing works, while new works were being planned. He cited other passages: “One spends tens of billions (and tomorrow hundreds) for extensions after systematically grudging and withholding those small amounts required for maintenance and even to close breaches.” That seems to have happened on the Reno. An economist of De Stefani’s calibre scrapes by with saying: “We have too little conservative spirit due to too much uncontrolled fantasy.” Is it thus perhaps a factor of national psychology? Never: of capitalist production. Capital has become incapable of the social function of transmitting the labour of the present generation to the future ones, utilising the labour of past generations in this. It does not want maintenance contracts, but huge building deals. To enable this, huge natural cataclysms are insufficient – capital creates human ones with ineluctable necessity, and makes post-war reconstruction “the business deal of the century”. These concepts have to be applied to the critique of the base, demagogic position of the Italian so-called workers’ parties. When speculation and capitalist enterprise are given the capital to invest in hydraulic works which is now committed to armaments, capitalist enterprise (except to cause a crisis among the pseudo- reds of the metallurgical centres, if the business were really to be undertaken) will use that capital in the same way: cheating and speculating at one thousand percent, raising their glasses high to the coming if not of the next war, then of the next flood. The huge river of human history also has its irresistible and threatening swellings. When the wave rises, it washes against the two retaining embankments: on the right the conformist one, of Conservation of existing and traditional forces; along it priests chant in procession, policemen and gendarmes patrol, the teachers and cantors of official lies and state-schooling prate. The left bank is that of the reformists, hedged with “people’s” representatives, the dealers in opportunism, the parliamentarians and progressive organisers. Exchanging insults across the stream, both processions claim to have the recipe to maintain the fast- flowing river in its restrained and enforced channel. But at great turning points, the current breaks free and leaves its course, “shifting” like the Po at Guastalla and Volano onto an unexpected course, sweeping the two sordid bands into the irresistible flood of the revolution which subverts all old forms of restraint, moulding a new face on society like on the land. Battaglia Comunista No.23, 1951
[1] Publisher’s note – it actually says “meteore” (meteorites) in the original Italian. We cannot believe that Bordiga and his comrades could have been stupid enough to write this – even humans today cannot defend themselves against meteorites, and it is not just because of the irrationalities of the capitalist system! We therefore have assumed that a mistake was made and the original intent was to make some reference to “meteorologico” (meteorological) phenomena. [2] Capital, Vol I, Chapter 16 (The English edition of 1887). The following quotation is from the same section [3] In 1176 the Lombard Communes defeated the Emperor Barbarossa at Legnano. [4] Line where opposite slopes meet at the bottom of a valley. [5] Floods in June and July in Kansas and Missouri caused dozens of deaths and left many homeless. [6] Comitato di Liberazione Nazionalea the antifascist front towards the end of the second world war, going from the Communist Party to the monarchists. [7] On 18 March 1876, the last “destra” government fell and the “sinistra”, based on regional interests, took over. There was, however, little political difference as the two parties transformed into two almost identical schools of thought. [8] Platonic and wasteful body or enterprise, especially public. [9] Roughly 1901 to 1914. [10] La proprieta fondaria e la poulazione agricola in Lombardia (Milan, 1854 - not 1857 as in the original). Stefano Jacini (1872-91) agronomist, head of the Inchiesta Agraria e sulle condizioni della classe agricola (1884). Minister of public works under Cavour (1860) and again in 1864 and 1867. Gian Domenico Rornagnosi (1761-1835) jurist and philosopher. Considered to be the main inspiration behind the juridical and administrative system adopted by the Kingdom of Italy (1861-1946). [11] Alberto De Stefani was the Minister of Finance and the Treasury from 1922 to 1925 when he was removed after pressure from financial and industrial groups. He remained a fascist and was tried after the war for this, being acquitted. The article quoted was published in Il Tempo (Rome) on 21 November 1951. It reiterates what he had previously written when still a minister: “As one reads on, one will see the path taken since the Kingdom’s foundation to the present of the various legislative attempts, of citizens’ sacrifices and their real value, of the excellence of provision and execution, of the defectiveness and deviations which the interest of the state and nation sometimes had to suffer because of the upper hand gained by political or particular or special interests.” (L’azione dello Stato per le Opere Pubbliche 1862-1924, Rome 1925 p. vii)
Murdering the Dead
Bordiga Archive
Antagonism
42 comments:
UPDATE:
As more news breaks on Katrina I am adding some links that have appeared after I wrote the article above.
For more on the issue of the Racism involved in the evacuation see Z Magazine
THE HURRICANE DISASTER: US CAPITALISM STANDS DISGRACED
Statement of the World Socialist
Web Site
Editorial Board
2 September 2005
Dear Kitty Blog is running articles and updatges from an international perspective on the crisis of Capitalism, the Environment and Katrina.
A member of Internationalist Perspectives writes in respose to my posting to an email discussion list:
Isn't it amazing how quickly a modern city with its gleaming towers and
smoothly running commerce can turn into a hellhole? How quickly the veneer of self-confident capitalist normality is scratched off? How naked the capitalist priorities appear at such a moment? They can conquer a country in days. It's all shock and awe and perfect order. But to help the poor whom they left stranded in the inundated city, that takes weeks, and occurs in utter chaos. The shock and awe is now nature's, in response to capitalism's rape of the planet.
From what is now really going on in New Orleans, among the people left to
fend for themselves to survive, we get only glimpses now and then in the
media. A lot of the focus is on the looting and the violence. In part this is an attempt to blame the victims. There is a lot of anger about what happened and there will be even more when the economic effects, as yet another tsunami, ripple through the country. There will be a need for scapegoats and for justifying the abandonment of people by associating them with criminals. Implicitly, racism will be used as well. There are of course criminals who use the opportunity to terrorize and rape, how could it be otherwise in this age of capitalist decadence. It's part of the horror that people are desperate to flee. And it is inevitable when there is a breakdown
of capitalist normality, you could say it is business doing business in a new environment. The lust for profit continues. What is critical when such a situation arises (and it will arise more and more) is the degree of self-organization. A workers neighborhood that organizes itself would use
force to defend itself against such entrepreneurs, as well as for other
needs. As I said, we hear very little about that from the media-business. I
heard an NPR-reporter say that people stranded in the convention center in
New Orleans were looting stores and distributing the booty among the others.
Apparently, there was some self-organization going on at the center. I'd be very interested if others have heard similar things and to hear your thoughts about the implications of this incredible event.
Sander
Statfor Intelligence Reports writes:
New Orleans: A Geopolitical Prize
By George Friedman
The American political system was founded in Philadelphia, but the American nation was built on the vast farmlands that stretch from the Alleghenies to the Rockies. That farmland produced the wealth that funded American industrialization: It permitted the formation of a class of small landholders who, amazingly, could produce more than they could consume. They could sell their excess crops in the east and in Europe and save that money, which eventually became the founding capital of American industry.
But it was not the extraordinary land nor the farmers and ranchers who alone set the process in motion. Rather, it was geography -- the extraordinary system of rivers that flowed through the Midwest and allowed them to ship their surplus to the rest of the world. All of the rivers flowed into one -- the Mississippi -- and the Mississippi flowed to the ports in and around one city: New Orleans. It was in New Orleans that the barges from upstream were unloaded and their cargos stored, sold and reloaded on ocean-going vessels. Until last Sunday, New Orleans was, in many ways, the pivot of the American economy.
For that reason, the Battle of New Orleans in January 1815 was a key moment in American history. Even though the battle occurred after the War of 1812 was over, had the British taken New Orleans, we suspect they wouldn't have given it back. Without New Orleans, the entire Louisiana Purchase would have been valueless to the United States. Or, to state it more precisely, the British would control the region because, at the end of the day, the value of the Purchase was the land and the rivers - which all converged on the Mississippi and the ultimate port of New Orleans. The hero of the battle was Andrew Jackson, and when he became president, his obsession with Texas had much to do with keeping the Mexicans away from New Orleans.
During the Cold War, a macabre topic of discussion among bored graduate students who studied such things was this: If the Soviets could destroy one city with a large nuclear device, which would it be? The usual answers were Washington or New York. For me, the answer was simple: New Orleans. If the Mississippi River was shut to traffic, then the foundations of the economy would be shattered. The industrial minerals needed in the factories wouldn't come in, and the agricultural wealth wouldn't flow out. Alternative routes really weren't available. The Germans knew it too: A U-boat campaign occurred near the mouth of the Mississippi during World War II. Both the Germans and Stratfor have stood with Andy Jackson: New Orleans was the prize.
Last Sunday, nature took out New Orleans almost as surely as a nuclear strike. Hurricane Katrina's geopolitical effect was not, in many ways, distinguishable from a mushroom cloud. The key exit from North America was closed. The petrochemical industry, which has become an added value to the region since Jackson's days, was at risk. The navigability of the Mississippi south of New Orleans was a question mark. New Orleans as a city and as a port complex had ceased to exist, and it was not clear that it could recover.
The Ports of South Louisiana and New Orleans, which run north and south of the city, are as important today as at any point during the history of the republic. On its own merit, POSL is the largest port in the United States by tonnage and the fifth-largest in the world. It exports more than 52 million tons a year, of which more than half are agricultural products -- corn, soybeans and so on. A large proportion of U.S. agriculture flows out of the port. Almost as much cargo, nearly 17 million tons, comes in through the port -- including not only crude oil, but chemicals and fertilizers, coal, concrete and so on.
A simple way to think about the New Orleans port complex is that it is where the bulk commodities of agriculture go out to the world and the bulk commodities of industrialism come in. The commodity chain of the global food industry starts here, as does that of American industrialism. If these facilities are gone, more than the price of goods shifts: The very physical structure of the global economy would have to be reshaped. Consider the impact to the U.S. auto industry if steel doesn't come up the river, or the effect on global food supplies if U.S. corn and soybeans don't get to the markets.
The problem is that there are no good shipping alternatives. River transport is cheap, and most of the commodities we are discussing have low value-to-weight ratios. The U.S. transport system was built on the assumption that these commodities would travel to and from New Orleans by barge, where they would be loaded on ships or offloaded. Apart from port capacity elsewhere in the United States, there aren't enough trucks or rail cars to handle the long-distance hauling of these enormous quantities -- assuming for the moment that the economics could be managed, which they can't be.
The focus in the media has been on the oil industry in Louisiana and Mississippi. This is not a trivial question, but in a certain sense, it is dwarfed by the shipping issue. First, Louisiana is the source of about 15 percent of U.S.-produced petroleum, much of it from the Gulf. The local refineries are critical to American infrastructure. Were all of these facilities to be lost, the effect on the price of oil worldwide would be extraordinarily painful. If the river itself became unnavigable or if the ports are no longer functioning, however, the impact to the wider economy would be significantly more severe. In a sense, there is more flexibility in oil than in the physical transport of these other commodities.
There is clearly good news as information comes in. By all accounts, the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port, which services supertankers in the Gulf, is intact. Port Fourchon, which is the center of extraction operations in the Gulf, has sustained damage but is recoverable. The status of the oil platforms is unclear and it is not known what the underwater systems look like, but on the surface, the damage - though not trivial -- is manageable.
The news on the river is also far better than would have been expected on Sunday. The river has not changed its course. No major levees containing the river have burst. The Mississippi apparently has not silted up to such an extent that massive dredging would be required to render it navigable. Even the port facilities, although apparently damaged in many places and destroyed in few, are still there. The river, as transport corridor, has not been lost.
What has been lost is the city of New Orleans and many of the residential suburban areas around it. The population has fled, leaving behind a relatively small number of people in desperate straits. Some are dead, others are dying, and the magnitude of the situation dwarfs the resources required to ameliorate their condition. But it is not the population that is trapped in New Orleans that is of geopolitical significance: It is the population that has left and has nowhere to return to.
The oil fields, pipelines and ports required a skilled workforce in order to operate. That workforce requires homes. They require stores to buy food and other supplies. Hospitals and doctors. Schools for their children. In other words, in order to operate the facilities critical to the United States, you need a workforce to do it -- and that workforce is gone. Unlike in other disasters, that workforce cannot return to the region because they have no place to live. New Orleans is gone, and the metropolitan area surrounding New Orleans is either gone or so badly damaged that it will not be inhabitable for a long time.
It is possible to jury-rig around this problem for a short time. But the fact is that those who have left the area have gone to live with relatives and friends. Those who had the ability to leave also had networks of relationships and resources to manage their exile. But those resources are not infinite -- and as it becomes apparent that these people will not be returning to New Orleans any time soon, they will be enrolling their children in new schools, finding new jobs, finding new accommodations. If they have any insurance money coming, they will collect it. If they have none, then -- whatever emotional connections they may have to their home -- their economic connection to it has been severed. In a very short time, these people will be making decisions that will start to reshape population and workforce patterns in the region.
A city is a complex and ongoing process - one that requires physical infrastructure to support the people who live in it and people to operate that physical infrastructure. We don't simply mean power plants or sewage treatment facilities, although they are critical. Someone has to be able to sell a bottle of milk or a new shirt. Someone has to be able to repair a car or do surgery. And the people who do those things, along with the infrastructure that supports them, are gone -- and they are not coming back anytime soon.
It is in this sense, then, that it seems almost as if a nuclear weapon went off in New Orleans. The people mostly have fled rather than died, but they are gone. Not all of the facilities are destroyed, but most are. It appears to us that New Orleans and its environs have passed the point of recoverability. The area can recover, to be sure, but only with the commitment of massive resources from outside -- and those resources would always be at risk to another Katrina.
The displacement of population is the crisis that New Orleans faces. It is also a national crisis, because the largest port in the United States cannot function without a city around it. The physical and business processes of a port cannot occur in a ghost town, and right now, that is what New Orleans is. It is not about the facilities, and it is not about the oil. It is about the loss of a city's population and the paralysis of the largest port in the United States.
Let's go back to the beginning. The United States historically has depended on the Mississippi and its tributaries for transport. Barges navigate the river. Ships go on the ocean. The barges must offload to the ships and vice versa. There must be a facility to empower this exchange. It is also the facility where goods are stored in transit. Without this port, the river can't be used. Protecting that port has been, from the time of the Louisiana Purchase, a fundamental national security issue for the United States.
Katrina has taken out the port -- not by destroying the facilities, but by rendering the area uninhabited and potentially uninhabitable. That means that even if the Mississippi remains navigable, the absence of a port near the mouth of the river makes the Mississippi enormously less useful than it was. For these reasons, the United States has lost not only its biggest port complex, but also the utility of its river transport system -- the foundation of the entire American transport system. There are some substitutes, but none with sufficient capacity to solve the problem.
It follows from this that the port will have to be revived and, one would assume, the city as well. The ports around New Orleans are located as far north as they can be and still be accessed by ocean-going vessels. The need for ships to be able to pass each other in the waterways, which narrow to the north, adds to the problem. Besides, the Highway 190 bridge in Baton Rouge blocks the river going north. New Orleans is where it is for a reason: The United States needs a city right there.
New Orleans is not optional for the United States' commercial infrastructure. It is a terrible place for a city to be located, but exactly the place where a city must exist. With that as a given, a city will return there because the alternatives are too devastating. The harvest is coming, and that means that the port will have to be opened soon. As in Iraq, premiums will be paid to people prepared to endure the hardships of working in New Orleans. But in the end, the city will return because it has to.
Geopolitics is the stuff of permanent geographical realities and the way they interact with political life. Geopolitics created New Orleans. Geopolitics caused American presidents to obsess over its safety. And geopolitics will force the city's resurrection, even if it is in the worst imaginable place.
Der Spiegel (Germany)
September 1, 2005
No One Can Say they Didn't See it Coming
by Sidney Blumenthal
In 2001, FEMA warned that a hurricane striking New Orleans was one of the three most likely disasters in the U.S. But the Bush administration cut New Orleans flood control funding by 44 percent to pay for the Iraq war.
Biblical in its uncontrolled rage and scope, Hurricane Katrina has left millions of Americans to scavenge for food and shelter and hundreds to thousands reportedly dead. With its main levee broken, the evacuated city of New Orleans has become part of the Gulf of Mexico. But the damage wrought by the hurricane may not entirely be the result of an act of nature.
A year ago the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers proposed to study howNew Orleans could be protected from a catastrophic hurricane, but the Bush administration ordered that the research not be undertaken. After a flood killed six people in 1995, Congress created the Southeast Louisiana Urban Flood Control Project, in which the Corps of Engineers strengthened and renovated levees and pumping stations.
In early 2001, the Federal Emergency Management Agency issued a report stating that a hurricane striking New Orleans was one of the three most likely disasters in the U.S., including a terrorist attack on New York City. But by 2003 the federal funding for the flood control project essentially dried up as it was drained into the Iraq war. In 2004, the Bush administration cut funding requested by the New Orleans district of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for holding back the waters of Lake Pontchartrain by more than 80 percent. Additional cuts at the beginning of this year (for a total reduction in funding of 44.2 percent since 2001) forced the New Orleans district of the Corps to impose a hiring freeze. The Senate had debated adding funds for fixing New Orleans' levees, but it was too late.
The New Orleans Times-Picayune, which before the hurricane published a series on the federal funding problem, and whose presses are now underwater, reported online: "No one can say they didn't see it coming ... Now in the wake of one of the worst storms ever, serious questions are being asked about the lack of preparation."
The Bush administration's policy of turning over wetlands to developers almost certainly also contributed to the heightened level of the storm surge. In 1990, a federal task force began restoring lost wetlands surrounding New Orleans. Every two miles of wetland between the Crescent City and the Gulf reduces a surge by half a foot. Bush had promised "no net loss" of wetlands, a policy launched by his father's administration and bolstered by President Clinton.
But he reversed his approach in 2003, unleashing the developers. The Army Corps of Engineers and the Environmental Protection Agency then announced they could no longer protect wetlands unless they were somehow related to interstate commerce.
In response to this potential crisis, four leading environmental groups conducted a joint expert study, concluding in 2004 that without wetlands protection New Orleans could be devastated by an ordinary, much less a Category 4 or 5, hurricane. "There's no way to describe how mindless a policy that is when it comes to wetlands protection," said one of the report's authors. The chairman of the White House's Council on Environmental Quality dismissed the study as "highly questionable," and boasted, "Everybody loves what we'redoing."
"My administration's climate change policy will be science based," President Bush declared in June 2001. But in 2002, when the Environmental Protection Agency submitted a study on global warming to the United Nations reflecting its expert research, Bush derided it as "a report put out by a bureaucracy," and excised the climate change assessment from the agency's annual report. The next year, when the EPA issued its first comprehensive "Report on the Environment," stating, "Climate change has global consequences for human health and the environment," the White House simply demanded removal of the line and all similar conclusions. At the G-8 meeting in Scotland this year, Bush successfully stymied any common action on global warming. Scientists, meanwhile, have continued toaccumulate impressive data on the rising temperature of the oceans, which has produced more severe hurricanes.
In February 2004, 60 of the nation's leading scientists, including 20 Nobel laureates, warned in a statement, "Restoring Scientific Integrity in Policymaking": "Successful application of science has played a large part in the policies that have made the United States of America the world's most powerful nation and its citizens increasingly prosperous and healthy ... Indeed, this principle has long been adhered to by presidents and administrations of both parties in forming and implementing policies. The administration of George W. Bush has, however, disregarded this principle ... The distortion of scientific knowledge for partisan political ends must cease." Bush completely ignored this statement.
In the two weeks preceding the storm in the Gulf, the trumping of science by ideology and expertise by special interests accelerated. The Federal Drug Administration announced that it was postponing sale of the morning-after contraceptive pill, despite overwhelming scientific evidence of its safety and its approval by the FDA's scientific advisory board. The United Nations special envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa accused the Bush administration of responsibility for a condom shortage in Uganda -- the result of the administration's evangelical Christian agenda of "abstinence."
When the chief of the Bureau of Justice Statistics in the Justice Department was ordered by the White House to delete its study that African-Americans and other minorities are subject to racial profiling in police traffic stops and he refused to buckle under, he was forced out of his job.
When the Army Corps of Engineers' chief contracting oversightanalyst objected to a $7 billion no-bid contract awarded for work in Iraq to Halliburton (the firm at which Vice President Cheney was formerly CEO), she was demoted despite her superior professional ratings. At the National Park Service, a former Cheney aide, a political appointee lacking professional background, drew up a plan to overturn past environmental practices and prohibit any mention of evolution while allowing sale of religious materials through the
Park Service.
On the day the levees burst in New Orleans, Bush delivered a speech in Colorado comparing the Iraq war to World War II and himself to Franklin D. Roosevelt: "And he knew that the best way to bring peace and stability to the region was by bringing freedom to Japan." Bush had boarded his very own "Streetcar Named Desire."
Sidney Blumenthal is former assistant and senior advisor to President Clinton and the author of "The Clinton Wars".
MORE UPDATES-
Law and Order=Defend Private Property
IRAQ-TESTED SOLDIERS IN NEW ORLEANS WITH SHOOT TO KILL ORDERS
Agence France-Presse
September 2, 2005
BATON ROUGE - A squad of 300 National Guard troops landed in anarchic New Orleans fresh from Iraq on Thursday, with authorization to shoot and kill
"hoodlums", Louisiana Governor Kathleen Blanco said.
"Three hundred of the Arkansas National Guard have landed in the city of New Orleans," said Blanco.
"These troops are fresh back from Iraq, well trained, experienced, battle tested and under my orders to
restore order in the streets," Blanco said.
"They have M-16s and they are locked and loaded.
"These troops know how to shoot and kill and they are more than willing to do so if necessary and I expect
they will," said Blanco.
Colonel Henry Whitehorn of the Louisiana State Police said that the law and order situation in the city was "bad."
He said however anarchic conditions around the Superdome stadium and central business district where
up to 20,000 refugees have been sheltering had been "stabilising."
But he admitted that a number of police officers, who had lost everything in flooding after Hurricane Katrina which roared ashore last Monday, had handed in
their badges, unwilling to take the fight to looters.
Several thousand people are feared dead in the disaster.
USA: LABOR DAY IN THE SHADOW OF KATRINA
Trade unionists in the United States are this weekend celebrating Labor Day in the wake of the greatest natural disaster ever to befall the country. According to reports in the mass media, thousands of lives have been lost in New Orleans and other areas.
Unions have already begun to do their bit -- see for example this page on the website of the AFL-CIO, advising trade union members on how to help
NICE BUT THE US REFUSES AID FROM VENESUALA, CANADA, AND JAMICA.
U.S. Says unsolicited offers can be "counterproductive"
Venezuela Offers $1M, Oil, Food and Equipment for U.S. Victims of Hurricane Katrina
Thursday, Sep 01, 2005
By: Cleto Sojo - Venezuelanalysis.com
CITGO President and CEO, FelÃx Rodriguez, said that CITGO stands prepared to offer additional assistance for victims of hurricane Katrina
Credit: Aporrea.org
Sept 1, 2005 (Venezuelanalysis.com).- CITGO Petroleum Corporation has pledged a $1 million donation towards Hurricane Katrina relief efforts, the company’s President and CEO Félix RodrÃguez announced yesterday through a press release.
RodrÃguez said this donation had the full support of the company’s parent organization, the Venezuelan state oil compa ny Petróleos de Venezuela, S.A. (PDVSA), as well as Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez.
“Our hearts go out to the victims of this terrible tragedy and CITGO stands prepared to offer its assistance,” RodrÃguez said.
According to the CEO, the funds will be directed to appropriate relief organizations in the affected areas.
CEO RodrÃguez traveled yesterday to Lake Charles, Louisiana where he met with local officials and visited the city’s Civic Center, which has been turned into a full-service shelter for storm refugees.
RodrÃguez presented the local chapter of the American Red Cross, in charge of operations at the shelter, with a separate $25,000 donation to assist the organization in its efforts at the center.
2,200 victims are currently housed at the Civic Center, and more victims are expected to arrive.
A group of volunteers from the nearby CITGO Lake Charles Manufacturing Complex, known as Team CITGO, are helping in the relief efforts.
RodrÃguez met with local and state officials, including Lake Charles Mayor Randy Roach, Louisiana Senators Willie Mount and Jerry Theunissen, and State Reps. Ronnie Johns, Chuck Kleckley, Elcie Guillory and Dan Morrish.
RodrÃguez stressed that CITGO stands prepared to offer additional assistance.
He also presented officials with a letter from Venezuelan Energy Minister Rafael RamÃrez indicating that Venezuela is prepared to offer additional assistance in the form of fuel supplies to help offset shortages.
Ramirez, who also serves as president of the Venezuelan national oil company, PDVSA, stressed that the offer of support for storm victims comes from Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.
President Chávez announced yesterday that Venezuela will send oil and humanitarian aid to the U.S. to help alleviate the effects of the hurricane, which he described as "a catastrophe."
Sources at the Venezuelan Embassy in Washington DC, told Venezuelanalysis.com that apart from the million dollars in monetary assistance, Venezuela is offering two mobile hospital units, each capable of assisting 150 people, 120 specialists in rescue operations, 10 water purifying plants, 18 electricity generators of 850 KW each, 20 tons of bottled water, and 50 tons of canned food.
According to the Embassy, Venezuela's Consulate in New Orleans will remain closed until further notice.
More Venezuelan aid for victims
Yesterday, the Venezuelan Foreign Ministry issued a statement expressing solidarity with the people and government of the United States. "The Venezuelan government and nation express to the United States and its leaders their dismay regarding the magnitude and consequences of Hurricane Katrina," read the statement.
"As a way of expressing its solidarity and sentiments of compassion towards the families of the victims that are facing the loss of their material goods, the Bolivaria n Republic of Venezuela reiterates the offer made by President Hugo Chavez, of sending fuel and humanitarian aid to the United States..." the statement continued.
U.S. Says unsolicited offers can be "counterproductive"
The U.S. State Department welcomed the willingness of foreign nations to help, but said they do not have information on Venezuela´s offer.
However, according to The Washington Times, a senior State Department official said he was not aware of the Venezuelan offer, but noted that unsolicited offers can be "counterproductive."
Venezuela´s offer comes amid renewed tensions between the United States and the left-wing government of President Hugo Chavez. Washington continuously accuses democratically-elected Chavez of being a threat to stability in Latin America, while Chavez accuses the Bush Administration of wanting to destabilize or overthrow his government.
Chronology of a Man Made Disaster
September 1, 2005
CHRONOLOGY....Here's a timeline that outlines the fate of both FEMA and
flood control projects in New Orleans under the Bush administration. Read
it and weep:
* January 2001: Bush appoints Joe Allbaugh, a crony from Texas,
as head of FEMA. Allbaugh has no previous experience in disaster management.
* April 2001: Budget Director Mitch Daniels announces the Bush
administration's goal of privatizing much of FEMA's work. In May, Allbaugh
confirms that FEMA will be downsized: "Many are concerned that federal
disaster assistance may have evolved into both an oversized entitlement
program...." he said. "Expectations of when the federal government should
be involved and the degree of involvement may have ballooned beyond what is
an appropriate level."
* 2001: FEMA designates a major hurricane hitting New Orleans as
one of the three "likeliest, most catastrophic disasters facing this country."
* December 2002: After less than two years at FEMA, Allbaugh
announces he is leaving to start up a consulting firm that advises
companies seeking to do business in Iraq. He is succeeded by his deputy,
Michael Brown, who, like Allbaugh, has no previous experience in disaster
management.
* March 2003: FEMA is downgraded from a cabinet level position
and folded into the Department of Homeland Security. Its mission is
refocused on fighting acts of terrorism.
* 2003: Under its new organization chart within DHS, FEMA's
preparation and planning functions are reassigned to a new Office of
Preparedness and Response. FEMA will henceforth focus only on response and
recovery.
* Summer 2004: FEMA denies Louisiana's pre-disaster mitigation
funding requests. Says Jefferson Parish flood zone manager Tom Rodrigue:
"You would think we would get maximum consideration....This is what the
grant program called for. We were more than qualified for it."
* June 2004: The Army Corps of Engineers budget for levee
construction in New Orleans is slashed. Jefferson Parish emergency
management chiefs Walter Maestri comments: "It appears that the money has
been moved in the president's budget to handle homeland security and the
war in Iraq, and I suppose that's the price we pay."
* June 2005: Funding for the New Orleans district of the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers is cut by a record $71.2 million. One of the
hardest-hit areas is the Southeast Louisiana Urban Flood Control Project,
which was created after the May 1995 flood to improve drainage in
Jefferson, Orleans and St. Tammany parishes.
* August 2005: While New Orleans is undergoing a slow motion
catastrophe, Bush mugs for the cameras, cuts a cake for John McCain, plays
the guitar for Mark Wills, delivers an address about V-J day, and continues
with his vacation. When he finally gets around to acknowledging the scope
of the unfolding disaster, he delivers only a photo op on Air Force One and
a flat, defensive, laundry list speech in the Rose Garden.
A crony with no relevant experience was installed as head of FEMA.
Mitigation budgets for New Orleans were slashed even though it was known to
be one of the top three risks in the country. FEMA was deliberately
downsized as part of the Bush administration's conservative agenda to
reduce the role of government. After DHS was created, FEMA's preparation
and planning functions were taken away.
Actions have consequences. No one could predict that a hurricane the size
of Katrina would hit this year, but the slow federal response when it did
happen was no accident. It was the result of four years of deliberate
Republican policy and budget choices that favor ideology and partisan
loyalty at the expense of operational competence. It's the Bush
administration in a nutshell.
UPDATE 3
Four days after Katrina hit and finally George II announces that his government will now "double" their efforts to help New Orleans. Two times Zero is still Zero, George. The total disregard for human life, belies the pro-life man of god Presidency of George Bush, he cannot even accept the distruction of New Orleans as a classic "Act of God".
His God, the God in God Bless Amrerica.
His conservative compasionate christianity was put to the test this week and it failed. As it did during 9/11. He flew overhead then as he does now, circling in Air Force One waiting till the dust and debris clears to land and hug Firemen, days after the disaster. There are no Firemen to hug in New Orleans, and certainly no White Firemen to hug.
Joy Reid in a great photo essay on her blog shows New Orleans now looks alot like Haiti,
where many of the original settlers came from, ironic that.
Joy is columnist and writer who also has an essay on this tragedy at CommonDreams. It goes along with her photo montage. Like the montage its entitled In America
About the lawlessness and looters, The Globe and Mail on Friday Sept 2 reports on its front page the quintessential Americanism of this man made disaster.
'All you can do is fend for yourself'
As they report the looters are also the cops. As I said this is people getting what they need to survive and that includes the cops. Cause like those left behind they too are black.
TIMOTHY APPLEBY and ALAN FREEMAN report from New Orleans, a city of anarchy, where corpses lie in the open and bewildered residents scavenge for anything to help them survive as they wait for help.
"At a corner of the French Quarter's fabled Basin Street, now transformed into a vision of darkly ominous floodwaters, a phalanx of armed men stood guard over the First District police station.
Looking more like members of a Third World militia than officers of a U.S. municipal police force, some were dressed in flak jackets, others in T-shirts, brandishing their semi-automatic weapons and shotguns as if they meant to use them.
"Hope you got a pistol," suggested one of the policemen, the sleeves of his T-shirt rolled up to expose a massive dragon tattoo and the name Armand. "It's going to be mayhem here."
A six-hour visit to New Orleans yesterday, four days after Katrina hit, resembled an urban bad dream, where gun shots pierced the humid afternoon air, large fires burned uncontrolled and thousands of dispossessed and increasingly angry people wandered aimlessly through a city where peace and order had dissipated.
Sporting a backward black baseball cap, a rope-thick gold chain around his neck and a Romanian made Kalashnikov -- "it's rusty, but it will stop anything" -- the cop explained how the New Orleans police were taking care of things in the near-anarchy that reigned after the catastrophe sparked by hurricane Katrina.
"We have no support right now," the 27-year-old former U.S. soldier complained, citing the force's lack of commitment.
"All you can do is fend for yourself," added a colleague. "It's wild."
So when Armand and his buddies needed some electricity, they commandeered a boat and used it to appropriate a generator. "We got an 18-wheeler and a Cadillac, too," said his friend.
And when the policemen need supplies, they help themselves to whatever hasn't been looted by civilians at the nearby Winn-Dixie supermarket. So when another policemen asked some visiting reporters for a lift home to pick up the keys to his car, they decided it was wise to comply."
In suburban Jefferson County, three sheriff's cars were parked outside a Wal-Mart, its front door pried open. In the parking lot, a middle-aged black couple loaded their car with bags of food and items like mouthwash from their bargain-hunting trip.
Asked whether the store was open, the woman replied that it was operating under the authority of the Jefferson County sheriff's office.
The man was wearing a pair of shorts and a large, dirty, orange T-shirt. Pinned on the chest was a big sheriff's badge. Another group of "shoppers" loaded a Coleman cooking stove into their car.
And as they report the guys coming to save the day, the National Guard and the Army are well good ol white boys. Yee Ha. And we know the outcome of this story already don't we. There is going to be alot more deaths in New Orleans, from not so 'friendly fire'.
The residents remaining in the city are overwhelmingly black and extremely poor. At times, the racial divide evoked images of the Old South. At one point in midafternoon, a group of heavily armed state policemen, all of them white, ran into the cavernous Amtrak railway station, apparently to check out reports of looting. The black families congregated outside waiting for transportation looked on in fear.
Why did I call this a man made disaster after all it was a Hurricane that hit the Gulf coast of the US. Well all indications are that the destruction of the wetlands, like the destruction of the coral reefs in the pacific caused nature to reek havoc with a vengance. The coral reefs protected islanders from the Tusanami last December. However where the coral was destroyed for profit in Sri Lanka it lead to the destruction of the islands coastal habitats.
MANGROVES & CORAL REEFS STOP TSUNAMIS
Illegal destruction of coral reefs worsened impact of tsunami
The other aspect of this as a man made disaster is simply that they had no evacuation or relief plan. While the mayor of New Orleans shout, Flee, there was no plan as to where to flee to.
As in a case of nuclear war, the plan is that the government and pentagon officials will survive while the rest of us are expendable.
That New Orleans looks like it was hit by an A Blast, proves that.
Comrades from the Internationalist Workers Group issued the following Press Release on Katrina. They are influenced by the work of A. Bordiga.
Statement on the flooding caused by Hurricane Katrina
The flooding caused by Hurricane Katrina has resulted in a social disaster of epic proportions and has shown once again the sick reality of capitalist society that values property over human life. The plans for evacuation consisted of people all driving out of the city at once in their cars. This sort of brilliant bourgeois planning did not care to take into account the approximately 100,000 people in the city that, according to the Times/Picayune of Louisiana, do not own their own automobile. So in another grim milestone, we are shown how the capitalist system is progressively unable to meet or prepare for the most elementary human needs.
Year after year of fiscal starvation budgets for the most basic infrastructure improvement projects left the region unprepared to meet the disaster. Hurricane Katrina, a category four hurricane, easily wiped out the levees that were meant originally to withstand category three hurricanes at best. Government money for projects to widen drainage canals, build pumping stations and improve the levee system, have gone unfunded for years. Even this disaster is hardly likely to spur any new capital investment in their own social infrastructure; the 2006 government budget will most likely reduce spending on such socially necessary infrastructure even further from the current level of about $82 million dollars, which back in 2001 had stood at $147 million. To put this social spending in perspective the Institute for Policy Studies and another think-tank called Foreign Policy in Focus, have jointly issued a report recently that estimates the war in Iraq to cost about $5.6 billion every month.
The mayor of New Orleans has said that about 80% of the city is now underwater. Heavily armed police units are establishing martial law throughout the worst affected areas in order to defend property from looters, many of whom are searching for basic necessities. Virtually the entire police force of the city of New Orleans was called off search and rescue missions and called onto anti-looting duty. An additional 10,000 National Guard units are going to be deployed. Disease and starvation are certain to follow in the wake of this flood, which has been made immeasurably worse, especially for the regions poorest workers, as the bourgeoisie has increasingly viewed basic social infrastructure, in the form of things such as public transportation and flood control measures as an unbearable burden in their pursuit of the accumulation of capital. The lives of the workers of the Lower Ninth Ward in New Orleans and elsewhere in the areas hit by the hurricane are worth nothing to the capitalist class.
For years engineers and scientists have been warning about the potential for a catastrophic disaster in the event of a hurricane or a major flood in southern Louisiana. Nothing was done to either move the city or even come up with a concrete evacuation plan. The official evacuation plan was for everyone to own their own car, and drive off down the same roads all at once. The government then told the victims stranded around the city and in the Superdome that the government authorities would try to save as many of them as possible. This has had the effect of panicking anyone who didn’t want to be one of those people left behind and has caused much hypocritical moralizing from the bourgeois press on the subject of looting and lawlessness, as if they expected people who have been stranded and left behind to face starvation, disease and death, to behave rationally. The message of the bourgeoisie is that if you are too poor to own a car then you deserve to die.This tragedy shows us in stark relief a system that is capable of creating the largest imperialist war machine ever built but still cannot be bothered to plan for the eventuality of a natural disaster.
The Internationalist Workers Group, section of the International Bureau for the Revolutionary Party in the United States and Canada, September 2nd 2005.
UPDATE 4
On Fox this morning the Friends refered to Michael Moores latest salvo against Bush over New Orleans as 'rantings', (what is Bill O Reilly then reasoned arguement?) just as they tched, tched, in feigned outrage about Rapper Kayne West going off message on the Live NBC Hurricane Relief Telethon last night. He had the termidity to say what everyone knows,
Appearing two-thirds through the program, he claimed "George Bush doesn't care about black people" and said America is set up "to help the poor, the black people, the less well-off as slow as possible."
NBC quickly distanced itself from his speaking truth to power.
While Fox remains the cheerleader for all that is White with America. We're #1 We're #1 their chant for Fox and the USA has gotten muddied over the last week.
The gloating self agrandizment of American Patriots has become muted by the segregationist racist truth that there are Two Americas.
Didn't some Democrat Predisential hopeful run on that slogan? Speaking of Democrats, while everyone points out George II failure in leadership, the vacuum also exists because of the deafening silence from the other party. They seem to have slipped into the night, with nary a whimper over this national disgrace. Not a peep out of Dean, Kerry, Edwards,Gore, etc etc etc. Nope not a peep, and here was their chance to win back the south in one fell swoop.
UPDATE 5
Further comments:
The Dominion, a Canadian Online Journal, has published this comment piece by it's editor, again pointing out the obvious,to those with eyes to see, well worth the read:
The Battle of New Orleans (September 03, 2005)
Race, Class Disparity Set Stage for New Orleans Disaster
by Dru Oja Jay
From the New York Times we have two Op Ed pieces:
UNITED STATES OF SHAME By Maureen Dowd, Published: September 3, 2005
A CAN'T-DO GOVERNMENT
By Paul Krugman
Published: September 2, 2005
And their own Editorial of Sept 2 repeats what I have said New Orleans was a Man Made Disaster
New Orleans catastrophe: the product of a bankrupt system
Hurricane Katrina, that pounded the U.S. Gulf Coast this week caused unprecedented catastrophe. It is undoubtedly the most powerful storm in U.S. history, a category four hurricane. The human tragedy will be impossible to determine for weeks or months to come. Initial death counts have gone from a few hundred to thousands as floating bodies have simply been "brushed aside" as rescue efforts take precedence.
The corporate press has made much fuss about looting, the racist bias in the reporting epitomized by the description of a black man wading through water up to his waist with a box of diapers for his children as a looter, while a young white couple wading through water of equal depth, we were told, were, "finding food".
Visit: http://www.beowt.com/images/looting.gif
People too poor to leave the city, folks that were stranded in it in other words, were described in the corporate press as "people who chose not to leave". Those who could afford to leave did so. Those with means left and those without were stuck. New Orleans is a working class city. Sixty seven percent of the population is black and 50% of that 67% lives below the poverty line. One of the major reasons for this is that the main industry has been tourism so most of the jobs are service sector jobs that are often non-union and very low paid. It is this poverty that caused so many residents to stay in the city during this crisis, they did not "choose to stay" as the racist capitalist media says. The U.S. minimum wage is a poverty level wage and unfortunately, the heads of organized labor, in order to pacify business, have refused to mobilize their membership to increase it any significant amount. The U.S. minimum wage should be at least $15 per hour. The heads of organized labor bear some responsibility for the poverty conditions in cities like New Orleans.
The rich live on higher land and have better access to transport, and a way out. It is the same in every natural disaster whether here in the U.S. Indonesia or Iran, the poor are the majority of the victims. As the losses mount, those with money, and better insurance, will re-coup the most.
This morning, September 1st, three of the worst looters appeared on CNN. President Bush himself along with two former presidents, Bush the father and Bill Clinton. The current Bush brought the two former one's in as fundraisers. What hypocrites these characters are.
After hurricane Andrew hit Florida in 1992. The cost of the clean up was $22 billion. The insurance corporations screamed about their profits and threatened to pull out of the state. So Bush senior, who was President at the time and, following him, Bill Clinton, collaborated with their buddies in the insurance companies to rewrite the insurance laws and restructure the industry throughout the 1990's. They both did their jobs and rewrote the laws to increase the profits of the insurance companies through a combination of increasing the involvement of the state government in hurricane costs, reducing the exposure of the private insurance underwriters, and increasing the liability of homeowners. The insurance companies themselves also introduced a 2% deductible.
In addition, insurance companies that are based nationwide were allowed to set up "Florida only" based companies which they could put into bankruptcy if they were losing money in that state leaving the rest of their company untouched. All kinds of state supported back up funds that is underwritten by taxpayers were set up to bail out the insurance corporations. These hypocrites believe in the market only as long as they are making money. But when the effects of their rotten system hit their pocket book they turn to the working class like they did in the savings and loan scandal, the shifting of companies pension obligations or the cost of the murderous assault on Iraq.
President Bush himself opposed funding that would have strengthened the network of levies that protected New Orleans and whose failure added to the catastrophe. The Times Picayune newspaper is just one of the many sources that warned repeatedly of such a catastrophe that occurred this week. On June 8, 2004, Walter Maestri, emergency management chief for Jefferson Parish, Louisiana; told the Times-Picayune: "It appears that the money has been moved in the president's budget to handle homeland security and the war in Iraq, and I suppose that's the price we pay. Nobody locally is happy that the levees can't be finished, and we are doing everything we can to make the case that this is a security issue for us."
Daddy Bush tells the media today that his son has "deep concern over this disaster". The corporate media naturally covers for them. Partisanship is not productive now. Politics is out. They must stick together. Bush, this buffoon and representative of the oil corporations that loot the American people and the people of the world is, "deeply concerned." The workers and poor of New Orleans are not convinced. The hatred of the gang in Washington is rising to the surface with a vengeance as the crisis deepens.
"You can do everything for other countries, but you can't do nothing for your own people," one resident of the convention center exclaims, "You can go overseas with the military, but you can't get them down here." Thirty thousand people in the Superdome were without food and water for days. One resident of the convention center told the AP that when they tried to break in to the convention center kitchen to get food, the National Guard drove them away. The vast majority of people entering Rite Aid or Wal-Mart are taking what they need to survive, but for Bush and his cronies, corporate property is what is sacrosanct and must be protected at all costs, even if is about to fall victim to Katrina's flood.
Adults and babies have died in the New Orleans Convention Center unable to get help and waiting days for buses that might get them out of there. People have complained that they've seen nothing of the National Guard or the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the government agency created to deal with such disasters. But Bush placed FEMA under the umbrella of homeland security and many critics have complained that the agency is being isolated and marginalized in order for Bush to pursue his war on terror. The Wall Street Journal reports that even congress is concerned that FEMA's effectiveness has been "diluted" by the Bush administration's efforts to make it primarily a relief agency, but "traditionally", writes the WSJ, "FEMA has also been actively involved in planning for catastrophes."
The economic effects of the hurricane will be devastating. The storm shut down 8 major refineries in the Gulf Coast amounting to about 10% of U.S. capacity; half of the jet fuel in the U.S. is refined there. As of this writing 80% of New Orleans is under water and 75% of the state of Mississippi is without electricity. By some accounts, 40,000 workers in Mississippi have lost their jobs. Massive oil platforms were ripped from their moorings and went adrift. The sheer physical power of Katrina can be summed up in one sentence: the storm surge that it created temporarily reversed the direction of the mighty Mississippi river, a waterway that drains 41% of the U.S. land mass from the Appalachians to the Continental Divide.
Immediate estimates of the cost of the damage hover around $75 billion. One thing is for certain, not only the physical burden but also the financial burden of this catastrophe will be borne by the working class and poor, the insurance companies and their stooges in Washington have made sure of that.
As costs mount, the corporate politicians will respond to their master's demands for shifting the costs of the catastrophe on to the backs of U.S. workers and the middle class. But this crisis was avoidable. The imbecile in the White House refuses to accept that global warming exists. The policy of "full spectrum dominance" has meant a global assault on the environment, on workers' rights, on the public sector and social spending that would have mitigated much of the effects of katrina's wrath. Iraq is nothing more than privatization by the bomb. These profit addicted thugs who worship the market, Democrat and Republican alike, have no right to rule, are a threat to humanity.
The insurance companies, and the oil companies must be taken out of private hands. The billions of dollars in stolen wealth that they have accumulated can be used to rebuild the Gulf Coast. Exxon alone made $25 billion in profit last year. This can also be done with the banks. A huge finance sector controlled by democratically elected working class and middle class people can be created. This can be used for developing society in all ways, including the rebuilding necessary following natural disasters. This finance sector would not be determined by the profit motive but by the needs of the people. The Democrats and Republicans will not do this; these parties represent the corporations and their corrupt capitalist system.
The immediate aftermath of hurricane Katrina offers an opportunity to begin this process at the local level. The oil workers are unionized; the chemical workers are organized. These Union locals have the ability to make an appeal to all organized workers in the area as well as nationally and internationally to organize the relief effort and get resources in to the area, independent of the cronies in Washington? Given the outpouring of sympathy for the victims in New Orleans, an appeal of this nature would receive enthusiastic support from workers all over the world.
Is it possible that in areas still occupied that local elected committees could be formed to oversee the day-to-day operations of distribution of supplies in each area rather than having individuals risk being shot for taking a bottle of water from a drug store? That supplies in the stores in each area can be requisitioned and distributed through these committees rather than go to waste. These committees can then link up with the union locals so that the working class as a whole becomes the dominant force in the relief effort. The resources and millions of dollars the union movement spends electing Democrats to office, politicians who are responsible for the present catastrophe, should be used now to assist the working class to act on our own behalf.
The horrific situation that exists in New Orleans confirms the need for the transformation of society. It confirms the bankruptcy of the capitalist class and their system; in the wealthiest and most powerful country that has ever existed, a major city has been destroyed and rotting corpses, bodies of workers and the poor, are floating around the once busy streets.
Richard Mellor
LABORS MILITANT VOICE
A CITY UNDER SIEGE A MESSAGE FROM NEW ORLEANS
In a message dated 9/2/05 2:14:27 PM, anticapitalistAThotmailDOTcom writes:
Thanks to all the loved ones and long-lost friends for your sweet notes of concern, offers of housing and support, etc. Yes, I stayed through the storm and aftermath. I'm fine - much better off than most of my brother and sister hurricane survivors.
Below is my attempt to relay some of what I've seen these last few days.
Please Forward
Notes From Inside New Orleans
by Jordan Flaherty
Friday, September 2, 2005
I just left New Orleans a couple hours ago. I traveled from the apartment I
was staying in by boat to a helicopter to a refugee camp. If anyone wants
to examine the attitude of federal and state officials towards the victims of
hurricane Katrina, I advise you to visit one of the refugee camps.
In the refugee camp I just left, on the I-10 freeway near Causeway, thousands
of people (at least 90% black and poor) stood and squatted in mud and trash
behind metal barricades, under an unforgiving sun, with heavily armed soldiers
standing guard over them. When a bus would come through, it would stop at a
random spot, state police would open a gap in one of the barricades, and
people would rush for the bus, with no information given about where the bus was
going.
Once inside (we were told) evacuees would be told where the bus was taking
them - Baton Rouge, Houston, Arkansas, Dallas, or other locations. I was told
that if you boarded a bus bound for Arkansas (for example), even people with
family and a place to stay in Baton Rouge would not be allowed to get out of
the bus as it passed through Baton Rouge. You had no choice but to go to the
shelter in Arkansas. If you had people willing to come to New Orleans to pick
you up, they could not come within 17 miles of the camp.
I traveled throughout the camp and spoke to Red Cross workers, Salvation Army
workers, National Guard, and state police, and although they were friendly,
no one could give me any details on when buses would arrive, how many, where
they would go to, or any other information. I spoke to the several teams of
journalists nearby, and asked if any of them had been able to get any
information from any federal or state officials on any of these questions, and all of
them, from Australian tv to local
Fox affiliates complained of an unorganized, non-communicative, mess. One
cameraman told me "as someone who's been here in this camp for two days, the
only information I can give you is this: get out by nightfall. You don't
want to be here at night."
There was also no visible attempt by any of those running the camp to set up
any sort of transparent and consistent system, for instance a line to get on
buses, a way to register contact information or find family members, special
needs services for children and infirm, phone services, treatment for possible
disease exposure, nor even a single trash can.
To understand the dimensions of this tragedy, its important to look at New
Orleans itself.
For those who have not lived in New Orleans, you have missed a incredible,
glorious, vital, city. A place with a culture and energy unlike anywhere
else in the world. A 70% African-American city where resistance to white
supremacy has supported a generous, subversive and unique culture of vivid beauty.
From jazz, blues and hiphop, to secondlines, Mardi Gras Indians, Parades,
Beads, Jazz Funerals, and red beans and rice on Monday nights, New Orleans is a
place of art and music and dance and sexuality and liberation unlike anywhere
else in the world.
It is a city of kindness and hospitality, where walking down the block can
take two hours because you stop and talk to someone on every porch, and where a
community pulls together when someone is in need. It is a city of extended
families and social networks filling the gaps left by city, state and federal
governments that have abdicated their responsibility for the public welfare.
It is a city where someone you walk past on the street not only asks how you
are, they wait for an answer.
It is also a city of exploitation and segregation and fear. The city of New
Orleans has a population of just over 500,000 and was expecting 300 murders
this year, most of them centered on just a few, overwhelmingly black,
neighborhoods. Police have been quoted as saying that they don't need to search out
the perpetrators, because usually a few days after a shooting, the attacker is
shot in revenge.
There is an atmosphere of intense hostility and distrust between much of
Black New Orleans and the N.O. Police Department. In recent months,
officers have been accused of everything from drug running to corruption to theft.
In separate incidents, two New Orleans police officers were recently charged
with rape (while in uniform), and there have been several high profile police
killings of unarmed youth, including the murder of Jenard Thomas, which has
inspired ongoing weekly protests for several months.
The city has a 40% illiteracy rate, and over 50% of black ninth graders will
not graduate in four years. Louisiana spends on average $4,724 per child's
education and ranks 48th in the country for lowest teacher salaries. The
equivalent of more than two classrooms of young people drop out of Louisiana schools
every day and about 50,000 students are absent from school on any given day.
Far too many young black men from New Orleans end up enslaved in Angola
Prison, a former slave plantation where inmates still do manual farm labor, and
over 90% of inmates eventually die in the prison. It is a city where industry
has left, and most remaining jobs are are low-paying, transient, insecure jobs
in the service economy.
Race has always been the undercurrent of Louisiana politics. This disaster
is one that was constructed out of racism, neglect and incompetence.
Hurricane Katrina was
the inevitable spark igniting the gasoline of cruelty and corruption. From
the neighborhoods left most at risk, to the treatment of the refugees to the
the media portrayal of the victims, this disaster is shaped by race.
Louisiana politics is famously corrupt, but with the tragedies of this week
our political leaders have defined a new level of incompetence. As hurricane
Katrina approached, our Governor urged us to "Pray the hurricane down" to a
level two. Trapped in a building two days after the hurricane, we tuned our
battery-operated radio into local radio and tv stations, hoping for vital news,
and were told that our governor had called for a day of prayer. As rumors
and panic began to rule, they was no source of solid dependable information.
Tuesday night, politicians and reporters said the water level would rise
another 12 feet - instead it stabilized. Rumors spread like wildfire, and the
politicians and media only made it worse.
While the rich escaped New Orleans, those with nowhere to go and no way to
get there were left behind. Adding salt to the wound, the local and
national media have spent the last week demonizing those left behind. As someone
that loves New Orleans and the people in it, this is the part of this tragedy
that hurts me the most, and it hurts me deeply.
No sane person should classify someone who takes food from indefinitely
closed stores in a desperate, starving city as a "looter," but that's just
what the media did over and over again. Sheriffs and politicians talked of
having troops protect stores instead of perform rescue operations.
Images of New Orleans' hurricane-ravaged population were transformed into
black, out-of-control, criminals. As if taking a stereo from a store that will
clearly be insured against loss is a greater crime than the governmental
neglect and incompetence that did billions of dollars of damage and destroyed a
city. This media focus is a tactic, just as the eighties focus on "welfare
queens" and "super-predators" obscured the simultaneous and much larger crimes of
the Savings and Loan scams and mass layoffs, the hyper-exploited people of New
Orleans are being used as a scapegoatto cover up much larger crimes.
City, state and national politicians are the real criminals here. Since at
least the mid-1800s, its been
widely known the danger faced by flooding to New Orleans. The flood of
1927, which, like this week's events, was more about politics and racism than any
kind of natural disaster, illustrated exactly the danger faced. Yet
government officials have consistently refused to spend the money to protect this
poor, overwhelmingly black, city. While FEMA and others warned of the urgent
impending danger to New Orleans and put forward proposals for funding to
reinforce and protect the city, the Bush administration, in every year since 2001, has
cut or refused to fund New Orleans flood control, and ignored scientists
warnings of increased hurricanes as a result of
global warming. And, as the dangers rose with the floodlines, the lack of
coordinated response dramatized vividly the callous disregard of our elected
leaders.
The aftermath from the 1927 flood helped shape the elections of both a US
President and a Governor, and ushered in the southern populist politics of Huey
Long.
In the coming months, billions of dollars will likely flood into New Orleans.
This money can either be spent to usher in a "New Deal" for the city, with
public investment, creation of stable union jobs, new schools, cultural
programs and housing restoration, or the city can be "rebuilt and revitalized" to a
shell of its former self, with newer hotels, more casinos, and with chain
stores and theme parks replacing the former neighborhoods, cultural centers and
corner jazz clubs.
Long before Katrina, New Orleans was hit by a hurricane of poverty, racism,
disinvestment, deindustrialization and corruption. Simply the damage from
this pre-Katrina hurricane will take billions to repair.
Now that the money is flowing in, and the world's eyes are focused on
Katrina, its vital that progressive-minded people take this opportunity to fight for
a rebuilding with justice. New Orleans is a special place, and we need to
fight for its rebirth.
-----------------------------------------------
Jordan Flaherty is a union organizer and an editor of Left Turn Magazine
(www.leftturn.org). He is not
planning on moving out of New Orleans.
-----------------------------------------------
Below are some small, grassroots and New Orleans-based resources,
organizations and institutions that will need your support in the coming months.
Social Justice:
www.jjpl.org
www.iftheycanlearn.org
www.nolaps.org
www.thepeoplesinstitute.org/
www.criticalresistance.org/index.php?name=crno_home
Cultural Resources:
www.backstreetculturalmuseum.com
www.ashecac.org/
http://198.66.50.128/gallery/
www.nolahumanrights.org
http://www.freewebs.com/ironrail/
http://www.girlgangproductions.com/
Current Info and Resources:
http://neworleans.craigslist.org/
about/help/katrina_cl.html
'This is criminal': Malik Rahim, recent Green Party candidate, reports
from New Orleans
Malik Rahim, a veteran of the Black Panther Party in New Orleans, for
decades an organizer of public housing tenants both there and in San
Francisco and a recent Green Party candidate for New Orleans City
Council, lives in the Algiers neighborhood, the only part of New Orleans
that is not flooded. They have no power, but the water is still good and
the phones work. Their neighborhood could be sheltering and feeding at
least 40,000 refugees, he says, but they are allowed to help no one.
What he describes is nothing less than deliberate genocide against Black
and poor people. - Ed.
New Orleans, Sept. 1, 2005 - It's criminal. From what you're hearing,
the people trapped in New Orleans are nothing but looters. We're told we
should be more "neighborly." But nobody talked about being neighborly
until after the people who could afford to leave ? left.
If you ain't got no money in America, you're on your own. People were
told to go to the Superdome, but they have no food, no water there. And
before they could get in, people had to stand in line for 4-5 hours in
the rain because everybody was being searched one by one at the entrance.
I can understand the chaos that happened after the tsunami, because they
had no warning, but here there was plenty of warning. In the three days
before the hurricane hit, we knew it was coming and everyone could have
been evacuated.
We have Amtrak here that could have carried everybody out of town. There
were enough school buses that could have evacuated 20,000 people easily,
but they just let them be flooded. My son watched 40 buses go underwater
- - they just wouldn't move them, afraid they'd be stolen.
People who could afford to leave were so afraid someone would steal what
they own that they just let it all be flooded. They could have let a
family without a vehicle borrow their extra car, but instead they left
it behind to be destroyed.
There are gangs of white vigilantes near here riding around in pickup
trucks, all of them armed, and any young Black they see who they figure
doesn't belong in their community, they shoot him. I tell them, "Stop!
You're going to start a riot."
When you see all the poor people with no place to go, feeling alone and
helpless and angry, I say this is a consequence of HOPE VI. New Orleans
took all the HUD money it could get to tear down public housing, and
families and neighbors who'd relied on each other for generations were
uprooted and torn apart.
Most of the people who are going through this now had already lost touch
with the only community they'd ever known. Their community was torn down
and they were scattered. They'd already lost their real homes, the only
place where they knew everybody, and now the places they've been staying
are destroyed.
But nobody cares. They're just lawless looters ... dangerous.
The hurricane hit at the end of the month, the time when poor people are
most vulnerable. Food stamps don't buy enough but for about three weeks
of the month, and by the end of the month everyone runs out. Now they
have no way to get their food stamps or any money, so they just have to
take what they can to survive.
Many people are getting sick and very weak. From the toxic water that
people are walking through, little scratches and sores are turning into
major wounds.
People whose homes and families were not destroyed went into the city
right away with boats to bring the survivors out, but law enforcement
told them they weren't needed. They are willing and able to rescue
thousands, but they're not allowed to.
Every day countless volunteers are trying to help, but they're turned
back. Almost all the rescue that's been done has been done by volunteers
anyway.
My son and his family - his wife and kids, ages 1, 5 and 8 - were
flooded out of their home when the levee broke. They had to swim out
until they found an abandoned building with two rooms above water level.
There were 21 people in those two rooms for a day and a half. A guy in a
boat who just said "I'm going to help regardless" rescued them and took
them to Highway I-10 and dropped them there.
They sat on the freeway for about three hours, because someone said
they'd be rescued and taken to the Superdome. Finally they just started
walking, had to walk six and a half miles.
When they got to the Superdome, my son wasn't allowed in - I don't know
why - so his wife and kids wouldn't go in. They kept walking, and they
happened to run across a guy with a tow truck that they knew, and he
gave them his own personal truck.
When they got here, they had no gas, so I had to punch a hole in my gas
tank to give them some gas, and now I'm trapped. I'm getting around by
bicycle.
People from Placquemine Parish were rescued on a ferry and dropped off
on a dock near here. All day they were sitting on the dock in the hot
sun with no food, no water. Many were in a daze; they've lost everything.
They were all sitting there surrounded by armed guards. We asked the
guards could we bring them water and food. My mother and all the other
church ladies were cooking for them, and we have plenty of good water.
But the guards said, "No. If you don't have enough water and food for
everybody, you can't give anything." Finally the people were hauled off
on school buses from other parishes.
You know Robert King Wilkerson (the only one of the Angola 3 political
prisoners who's been released). He's been back in New Orleans working
hard, organizing, helping people. Now nobody knows where he is. His
house was destroyed. Knowing him, I think he's out trying to save lives,
but I'm worried.
The people who could help are being shipped out. People who want to
stay, who have the skills to save lives and rebuild are being forced to
go to Houston.
It's not like New Orleans was caught off guard. This could have been
prevented.
There's military right here in New Orleans, but for three days they
weren't even mobilized. You'd think this was a Third World country.
I'm in the Algiers neighborhood of New Orleans, the only part that isn't
flooded. The water is good. Our parks and schools could easily hold
40,000 people, and they're not using any of it.
This is criminal. These people are dying for no other reason than the
lack of organization.
Everything is needed, but we're still too disorganized. I'm asking
people to go ahead and gather donations and relief supplies but to hold
on to them for a few days until we have a way to put them to good use.
I'm challenging my party, the Green Party, to come down here and help us
just as soon as things are a little more organized. The Republicans and
Democrats didn't do anything to prevent this or plan for it and don't
seem to care if everyone dies.
/Malik's phone is working. He welcomes calls from old friends and anyone
with questions or ideas for saving lives. To reach him, call the Bay
View at (415) 671-0789./
NOTES FROM CUBA
In my article I pointed out that Hurricane Dennis this summer hit Cuba with the force of Katrina, yet the result was far different as the following article shows. Following that article is the official press release from Cuba expressing solidarity with the people of the Gulf Coast.
JUVENTUD REBELDE
July 15, 2005
The hurricane and socialism
A CubaNews translation by Ana Portela. Edited by Walter Lippmann
By: Zarathustra*
* Comments by a Spaniard visiting Havana when hurricane Dennis hit.
The terrible hurricane that crossed the island of Cuba from
Friday, July 8, to Saturday 9 left a balance of16 deaths
and important destruction in all parts of the economic life
of the country. When hurricane Dennis touched land in the
province of Cienfuegos, wind force was more than 200
kilometers an hour - force 4 in a scale of 5 - and found a
socialist country in a state of emergency. The hurricane
began to lose force as it moved towards the northwest and
when it exited near Havana. The winds were no more than one
hundred kilometers an hour. However, it caused torrential
rains that caused serious flooding in the provinces of
Villa Clara and Matanzas.
In a review of the damages after the passage of this
impressive and unusual freak of nature - no other has been
registered of such intensity in Cuba during the month of
July - it is surprising to learn publicly of the evaluation
made by the authorities of the country.
Thousands of persons were evacuated with impeccable order
and moved to higher ground. All involved in this mass
movement noted the almost total collaboration of the Cuban
people in preventive measures that has been the key reason
that attenuated the crisis. Material damages have been
great according to estimates of the assembly presidents of
the Provincial Peoples Power in the central areas that were
most affected. They could have been greater were it not for
the measures of the people and authorities.
By mid afternoon on Saturday 9, one third of electricity in
the country was restored as well as the greater part of
highway transportation systems, and serious work is
advancing in the work to supply water and gas to the homes
as well as the repair of telecommunications and rail
transportation.
On Friday, July 8, the Commander in Chief, Fidel Castro Ruz
participated for two hours in the Round Table broadcast
every afternoon on Cuban television. For the second
consecutive day he converted the television studio into a
general headquarters for coordination in the preparation of
national defense against the catastrophe. Viewed by all of
Cuba, the extraordinary volume of information was managed
in every detail, small and large, of resistance to the
hurricane in each province. At approximately six in the
afternoon, Fidel informed that the hurricane had past 300
kilometers from the western coast of Haiti causing at least
18 deaths. Shortly after he reviewed, case by case, the
circumstances of the deaths registered in Cuba due to the
first affectations of the hurricane.
Present in all Round Tables between Thursday and Saturday,
was Dr. José Rubiera, director of the Forecast Center of
the Cuban Institute of Meteorology. He gave explicit and
detailed explanations with satellite images in real time,
about everything related to the atmospheric phenomenon.
During the last hour of the Round Table on Friday, Dr. José
Rubiera looked terribly tired the same as all the other
officials present. Everyone had to give reports to the
President and television viewers about the measures taken.
They received suggestions from Fidel and returned to their
posts. Meantime the journalists of Cuban television made
link ups with different institutions involved in the civil
defense and prevention of catastrophes as, also, with the
different regions affected by the hurricane.
The barriers between reality and television were broken.
This was not a performance; they were real co ordinations,
on a national scale, measures against the imminent
catastrophe. The amount of information at the disposal of
the Cubans was always abundant and dealt with every detail
of technical problems, of generation of electricity, of
each line of transportation or the evacuation of any
locality. And this coordination reached every corner of
Cuban reality, every municipal institution of Popular
Power.
The writer of this report was able to attend the visit of a
delegate in one of those block institutions in a home in
Havana. The delegate in question - the equivalent of an
elected councilor - was concerned about the damages and
needs of each family. A large part of the information on
TV, Saturday, was precisely reports by different
representatives of Popular Power in the most affected
areas.
The deep civic-mindedness of the Cuban people should be
noted. A few short hours before the hurricane reached
Havana, the population was busy preparing to live two or
three days without light, water or gas. The people queued
up for provisions. In spite of the situation, the
environment was of absolute calm and the people waited on
line with a praiseworthy discipline and patience.
The general impression of this huge mobilization of a
socialist country is to observe a society of responsible
adult citizens, well organized, with solidarity, accustomed
to confront, collectively, all kinds of situations. Cuban
society has again demonstrated the enormous level of
conscience, cohesion and organization and its leaders, some
in simple olive green uniforms, the majority in T-shirts,
with kaki trousers or jeans, perspiring like any worker,
were barely different from the common people they
represent.
Above all, Cuban authorities watched over human lives. They
even reached the point of centrally organizing production
of bread for the critical moments after the hurricane and
foresaw the possibility of preparing collective cooking if
the situation of provisions became worse.
Two days after the hurricane passed completely, June 11,
normality returned to Havana. The most affected provinces
advanced in the phase of recovery. The key word was:
rapidly. In the capital provisions have been
re-established, damages evaluated, streets cleaned up of
fallen trees and branches. All done by the grass roots
organizations of Popular Power and neighborhood solidarity.
When we walked around the tremendously resuscitated city,
we remembered a walk in the city of Mexico on the summer of
1999. The numerous wounds of the earthquake that hit the
city in the early 80s surprised us. In socialist Cuba it
would just become water under the bridge in a few days
because the meteorological giant ran into a human giant.
Extract taken from Rebelión
Solidarity message to the U.S. people
National Assembly of People's Power of the Republic of Cuba. Havana, September 1st 2005
The Cuban people have followed with concern the news related to the effects of Hurricane Katrina in the territories of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama. The information, still incomplete, allows us to understand that it is a true tragedy of extraordinary dimensions.
In terms of physical destruction and material damage, it is considered the most costly natural disaster in the history of the U.S. The Red Cross of that country estimates that their work will be much harder than what they had to face as a result of the atrocious attacks on the 11th of September 2001.
Tens of thousands of people are trapped in flooded areas, have lost their homes, are displaced or in refuge. The Governor of Louisiana said the situation was desperate in New Orleans, where the water levels continue to raise. The Mayor of that city stated that hundreds, perhaps thousands of people could have died there.
This disaster, with its enormous burden of death and suffering, affects the entire population of those states, but it hits more strongly African Americans, Latin workers and poor Americans, who are the overwhelming majority of those still waiting to be rescued and taken to safe places, and it is among them where the highest number of fatal victims and people who lost homes concentrates.
These news cause pain and sadness to Cubans. On their behalf, we want to express our deep solidarity to the American people, to the State and local authorities and to the victims of this catastrophe. The whole world must feel this tragedy as its own.
The New Orleans Disaster: The Real Face of “Capitalism of the 21st Century”
By John Peterson
Friday, 02 September 2005
“And here it becomes evident, that the bourgeoisie is unfit any longer to be the ruling class in society, and to impose its conditions of existence upon society as an over-riding law. It is unfit to rule because it is incompetent to assure an existence to its slave within his slavery, because it cannot help letting him sink into such a state, that it has to feed him, instead of being fed by him. Society can no longer live under this bourgeoisie, in other words, its existence is no longer compatible with society.”
Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, The Communist Manifesto
Nearly 100 years ago, V.I. Lenin explained that under capitalism, life for the vast majority of humanity is “horror without end”. Misery, degradation, squalor, hunger, lack of clean water, electricity, and housing – let alone access to jobs, health care, and education - is the wretched fate of literally billions of people on this planet. Until recently for most Americans, this grim reality existed only in places “far, far away, about which we know very little” - and in the American inner cities where the media’s cameras never shine.
Literally overnight, this has all changed. Now, images of unimaginable devastation and anguish are splashed across our TV screens, beamed in not from Bangladesh or Sri Lanka, but from the historic home of Mardi Gras and Bourbon Street: New Orleans.
Hurricane Katrina in Louisiana: the United States is now the "Third World"
By Michael Hureaux
Friday, 02 September 2005
Here is the true face of George W. Bush's "Homeland Security": In New Orleans, Louisiana, a major southern port city in the United States of America ‑ the wealthiest nation on the planet ‑ legions of poor people are barricaded off into sports stadiums as an "emergency measure", the city knows consistent breakdowns in rescue efforts, adequate supplies and support unavailable to those government workers commissioned to perform salvaging works. Entire communities are to go without basic utilities for the coming weeks, shortages of people power ordinarily employed to keep order in time of crisis. Hospitals are having to evacuate their patients under looter's gunfire in order to effectively serve the sick and injured, hundreds of corpses are floating in stagnant water, posing a direct threat of cholera outbreak, morgues in many places in the region are overtaxed in the work of processing the dead.
In short, the so-called "third world" economy is now a steady fixture in the "new" speculator's economy. The President, the Congress, the Media talking heads who run interference for this national disgrace, speak glibly of appointing panels of former presidents to go out and cheerlead for fundraising efforts. Instead of applying all the mighty force of a government and a culture that can build telescopes that look across galaxies and farm the ocean floors, the government of this country is proposing, in effect: a bake sale. And even as the numbers of dead continue to rise, even as it is made more and more plain that the largest crime of this moment is the inadequate preparation made for natural disasters by these so-called defenders of the public interest, the capitalist media would have the public believe that the largest threat posed to this devastated section of our people is a handful of looting bands.
While Bush prevaricates, Venezuela offers help to US poor
By Jorge Martin -
Friday, 02 September 2005
Venezuela was the first country to offer help to the United States in dealing with the effects of Hurricane Katrina. On Wednesday, August 31st, Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez announced that Venezuelan state-owned CITGO Petroleum Corporation had already pledged US$1 million for hurricane aid. "It's a terrible tragedy that our North American brothers are living through," Chavez said. "We have a battalion from our Simon Bolivar humanitarian team ready in case they authorize it for us to go there, if they give us the green light." He offered humanitarian workers and fuel to help. "We are willing to donate fuel for hospitals, for public transport, everything we can do," Chavez said.
But at the same time Hugo Chavez sharply criticised US president G W Bush for his handling of the Hurricane crisis. "As more information comes out now, a terrible truth is becoming evident: That government doesn't have evacuation plans," Chavez said. Putting words to what many in the US must be thinking, he added that Bush, "there at his ranch, said nothing more than 'you need to flee'; he didn't even say how - in cowboy style." He also pointed out that the lack of a clear strategy on the part of the government hit the poorest sections of the population hardest. "We all saw the long lines of desperate people leaving that city in vehicles, those who had vehicles," he said, noting that the areas worst affected are amongst "some of the poorest in the United States, most of them black."
In contrast with the lack of action on the part of the US government, the Venezuelan government was able to help hundreds of Lousiana residents. CITGO, a company in the US owned by the Venezuelan oil company PDVSA, has a network of refineries and gas stations in the United States. One of these is based in Lake Charles, Louisiana, and was opened to give shelter and aid to some 2,000 residents of the area.
Felix Rodriguez, the president of both PDVSA and CITGO who was visiting the Lake Charles refinery, said that the funds from their donation would be directed to aid organizations in affected areas.
According to Venezuelanalaysis.com, sources at the Venezuelan Embassy in Washington DC said that "apart from the million dollars in monetary assistance, Venezuela is offering two mobile hospital units, each capable of assisting 150 people, 120 specialists in rescue operations, 10 water purifying plants, 18 electricity generators of 850 KW each, 20 tons of bottled water, and 50 tons of canned food."
In his statement Chavez also noted the contrast between the way Cuba and the US deal with these kinds of natural catastrophes. Here we can see again the advantages of a system where the private profit motive was abolished after the 1959 revolution. While there are very few victims of hurricanes in Cuba, and the contingency plans are properly organised, in the most powerful capitalist nation on earth, thousands die, most of whom could be alive today if the necessary measures had been taken.
Chavez further made the link between the fierceness and frequency of recent hurricanes and global warming, for which he blamed capitalism and criticised the US for refusing to sign the Kyoto Protocol on the reduction of greenhouse gases.
Not surprisingly, coverage of this offer for help from Venezuela was very scarce or non existent in the US media. The only reaction from the US administration was from an unnamed "senior State official" quoted in the Washington Times as saying that “he was not aware of Caracas' proposal” but noted that “unsolicited offers can be counterproductive." The Bush administration cannot really accept this offer for help which would destroy the image they are trying to create of Chavez as an evil dictator.
Venezuela's offer comes a week after the statements by right wing fundamentalist preacher Pat Robertson, who said on his TV station that Chavez should be assassinated. The Bush administration has so far not condemned this statement and not taken any legal measures against Pat Robertson. The furthest they went was when Rumsfeld said that he did not agree with the declarations of Robertson, but that any private individual is free to say whatever he wants.
In the last week, Venezuela has also offered cheap gas and fuel to poor communities in the US, the hardest hit by the recent increases in the price of oil. "We want to sell gasoline and heating fuel directly to poor communities in the United States". Chavez explained that the exorbitant price of oil is mainly caused by speculation on the part of the multinationals and intermediaries, and that if these were cut out, prices would be much cheaper. He explained how in Venezuela gas is even cheaper than bottled water and that Venezuelans can fill their tank for about $2. According to the Venezuelan Embassy in the US, more than 1400 organisations (churches, charities, counties, hospitals) have already contacted them to enquire about the details of the offer.
This is not the only offer that revolutionary Venezuela has made to the United States people. When Chavez attended the graduation of the first promotion of the Latin American School of Medicine in Cuba (ELAM), he also offered to bring tens of thousands of US citizens to Cuba to be operated on their cataracts, extending the "Mision Milagro", which has been dealing with Venezuelan patients, to a 150,000 poor US-Americans a year. The offer was also to train thousands of doctors at this ELAM school. "We are deeply concerned about the poverty which is increasing in the United States," Chavez said.
The attitude of Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez towards the US is thus very clear and has been so from the very beginning of the Bolivarian revolution: opposition to imperialism and the attempts of the US administration to overthrow the democratically elected government in Venezuela, while at the same time solidarity and links with ordinary working people in the United States.
These offers of help also expose the inability of capitalism in the US to provide the basics for their own population: health care for all, relief in case of emergency, cheap fuel for heating in the winter, etc. This is a further argument against those who say that the Bolivarian revolution in Venezuela must proceed cautiously, not to provoke imperialism, etc. In fact the best defence against imperialism is taking measures like these which will show ordinary working people in the United States what can be done and will make them think what kind of government they would rather have: one that puts war and private profit before peoples' basic needs, or one that invests the country's natural resources to improve peoples' lives.
This example would be even more powerful if the Venezuelan revolution were completed and the whole of the economy put under the democratic control of the workers, the only way in which the Bolivarian revolution can succeed.
SEPT 3 News Updates
A walk through hell: Reporter finds evil and grace in New Orleans
Allen G. Breed
The Associated Press
Along the debris-choked Mississippi River, pharmacist Jason Dove watches as people scramble in the parking lot of the downtown convention centre for cases of airlifted water and shakes his head. "We created this Frankenstein," he says. "It's showing how fragile this society is."
In the world-renowned French Quarter, armed residents hide behind ornate iron gates like prisoners in a frilly jail. Historic markers on Napoleonic-era houses share billing with signs that warn: "You loot, we shoot!"
When water began rising in predominantly black neighbourhoods, many jumped to the conclusion the levee had been purposely breached to preserve the old city and its hotels.
"F--- the Quarter!" a black man shouts as he walks beneath a balcony where a resident lounges with a cold beer. "They always protect the Quarter."
After several days in the street with little water and less food, people around the convention centre began imagining that the storm was somehow a vehicle for ethnic cleansing. One black man insists that authorities want everyone corralled into the convention centre -- not to facilitate an orderly evacuation, but so police can ignite the gas and blow them up.
"They want us all crazy so they can shoot us down like dogs!" a woman shouts.
Police point their guns at the crowds and tell them to back off. The people take it as aggression. But when you look into these officers' eyes, there is real fear.
Officer Kirk LeBranche cowered on the roof of his flooded hotel in New Orleans East for three days as the nighttime hours became a shooting gallery.
"Anarchy and chaos," he says. "People are desperate."
Officers deserted their posts. Many of them lost everything but their lives to the storm, and they refuse to gamble those on a seemingly lost city.
Carl Davis wonders why someone can't just truck the food in and hand it out in an orderly fashion. Rather than taking comfort in the food drops, he finds the process insulting, demeaning.
"They're giving it to us like we're in the Third World," he spits. "This should never have happened. It didn't happen in Iraq, and it didn't happen in the tsunami."
Down the street, anxious tourists idle on a bandstand across from Harrah's casino, which has become a National Guard and police staging area. Jill Johnson of Saskatoon says police don't want them there, but she and others worry they would be easy prey at the convention centre.
"We're appalled," says Johnson. "This city is built on tourists, and we're their last priority."
Canadians stuck amid armed looters-Ottawa must wait for OK to go in: Foreign Affairs National Post
Nearby, Cassandra Robinson huddles in the loading area of a local store where a small community has formed. Her niece, Heavenly, who turned one year old the day before the storm, dozes in Robinson's arms, weakened by a diet of water and mashed-up potato chips.
Robinson says people are behaving like animals because they are being treated as animals.
"We're not born thieves," she says, as neighbours heat food over a trash-can fire. "We were born Christians."
(Working Class Self Organization EP)
Across the city, people have banded together, creating pockets of civility amid the chaos.
The management of the French Quarter's Hotel Le Richelieu fled two days after the storm. Those left behind -- cooks, maids and security officers -- organized to ration supplies, establish foraging teams and set up a schedule for guard duty.
Days after the storm, the kitchen somehow manages to keep serving hot food. Guests have taken to calling the place the Hotel Rwanda.
"It's a jungle and it's dog-eat-dog," hotel security guard Glenn King says as he rests his hand on the butt of a revolver at his side.
"When you see the police doing the same thing the looters are doing, it tells me you're going to have to fend for yourself."
Cavalry finally arrives
Hurricane Katrina death toll could reach 10,000
CanWest News Service; Daily Telegraph; with files from The Associated Press
And with tens of thousands of bedraggled survivors desperate for food and water, fires burning out of control and armed looters still roaming the streets, at least until the afternoon, New Orleans continued to resemble a war zone more than an American city.
In what looked like a scene from a Third World country, some people threw their arms heavenward and others nearly fainted with joy as the trucks and hundreds of soldiers arrived in the punishing midday heat.
But there were also profane jeers from many in the crowd of nearly 20,000 outside the convention centre, which a day earlier seemed on the verge of a riot, with people seething with anger over the lack of anything to eat or drink.
"They should have been here days ago," said 46-year-old Michael Levy, whose words were echoed by those around him yelling, "Hell, yeah!"
Deployed across the street were hundreds of armed soldiers and police officers, some with rifles raised in a scene that looked more like an armed standoff than a humanitarian rescue effort.
"Why are they treating us like we are some kind of enemy? They are putting a perimeter around us," said Gary Kinard, 41, who was at the convention centre for three days with his wife and five children.
"There ain't no way in the world this is supposed to happen in America. Not in America," said Kinard. "They go way overseas and take care of somebody overseas, but not down here. That is messed up."
Extreme Weather A Special Feature at Canada.com
And in China:
Death toll from Typhoon Talim climbing
Opps and here comes another Atalantic Storm to threaten the US coast:
Maria nearing hurricane strength
Maria is the 13th named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season, one of the busiest on record. Historically, only about four or five named storms form by this time of year, according to the hurricane centre.
If the storm's sustained wind speed reaches 119 km/h as expected, Maria would be the season's fifth hurricane.
The Atlantic hurricane season begins June 1 and ends Nov. 30. Peak storm activity typically occurs from the end of August through mid-September.
See CathyfromCanada blog for updates and interesting links and further outrages around the evacuation of New Orleans
Please feel free to forward or post.
Dear friends, radicals, progressives and anarchists,
There is this great myth that natural disaster is the "great
equalizer" holding no prejudice towards any one race or class. While
nature may hold no preference, we live in a society that makes its choice
of victim clear. Whether its trailer parks in tornado alley or the low
level 9th ward in New Orleans, it is almost always the
poor and minorities that carve out their existence in places most
vulnerable to nature's wrath or the wrath of humans with toxic
factories and refineries fueled by greed and consumption.
As peace activists, we have consistently pointed out that the Bush
administration is siphoning desperately needed funds and resources to
fight an illegitimate war in Iraq. We have warned against being stretched
too thin and asked the question, what will happen when
disaster strikes at home? We now know the answer: the poor, the
infirm and the downtrodden will die horrific deaths as federal
agencies struggle with their incompetence. By practically disabling FEMA,
cutting the budget for the New Orleans levee system and
calling the National Guard to arms in Iraq, the Bush
administration's myopic focus on Iraq and the War on Terror has left us
more exposed than ever before. In what should be Homeland
Security's shining moment, it is now clear that the Bush
administration is ill-prepared to respond to large scale disaster be it at
the hands of humans or nature. The lesson comes at the cost of innocent
lives that for too long already have been ignored and
forgotten on the fringes of society.
As anti-capitalists and anti-racists, we have decried the
corporations and brutal system that breeds inequality and heartbreak along
the fault-lines of class and race. We have pledged our
solidarity to the working class, to the poor and oppressed. We have raised
fists and banners in their names but I am stuck in this
netherworld between blinding optimism and abject cynicism and lament that
for too long that is all we have done (certain exceptions are not
ignored). The devastation wrought on New Orleans and the
Mississippi shoreline all too clearly exposes the quietly raging
river current of class disparity and racism winding throughout this country.
As environmentalists, we have been the right wing's "chicken little"
foretelling of the days to come when furious storms unleashed by
global warming would rip through our lives. NASA recently revealed their
"smoking gun" for global warming found in studying the ocean and its
increasing temperatures. And now in the wake of Katrina even
mainstream press is daring to pose the question, could global warming have
contributed to Katrina's strength? According to the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, hurricane wind speeds have increased by 50% in 50
years, that warm water is a crucial ingredient to hurricanes, makes such
findings even more sobering. As environmentalists, we have warned against
disrupting nature's defense mechanisms against storms whether its
clear-cuts begetting landslides in the Pacific Northwest or the
eradication of the wetlands surrounding New Orleans for the sake of
"development". We have removed natural defenses and for too long, we
people of consciousness have voiced our fear over what the cost will be
and our cries have largely fallen on deaf ears.
So, is this intended as an "I told you so" or as a stratagem for how we
can capitalize on this and use it for the "movement"? Indeed no, I write
this with a heavy heart, a fear of the world becoming more unhinged than
it already is and a regret that for too long we have "intellectualized" a
movement and bounced from issue to issue never linking them together in
any meaningful way. Some of us (not all) have missed the forest for the
trees and lack deep committed connections to one another and those that
suffer daily under this system. We have focused on goals and movements and
unconsciously/consciously objectified and tokenized along the way. As
radicals, anarchists and progressives it should be our compassion, love
and desire to live our lives a better way in balance with nature and one
another that sets us apart. Some of our bitter predictions have come true
and it's time to put our money where are mouth is and support the victims
of Katrina and a system we defiantly oppose. What were once talking points
have becomes screams echoing along the coastline of Louisiana, Mississippi
and Alabama. Hopefully people are converging throughout the country with
similar orientations, planning how to send aid in any form possible and
not waiting for United Way or the Government to tell you how. People are
dying folks, the very people we have
purported to stand in solidarity with for so long, even more are
displaced with whatever possessions they had destroyed. I don't have
perfect answers for what we can do or how we can help but I know there are
answers out there. We talk so much of community and whether you're in
Portland, Houston or New York, how we respond will reflect how deep our
commitment to community truly is.
As humans, all other "activist" labels aside, we need to come together
with a meaningful message of compassion, love and solidarity that is not
measured by our words but by our actions.
With love, rage and a little bit of hope,
maureen haver
houston, texas
maureen@riseup.net
AttyTood Blog from Philly has some good articles on how you can help folks in New Orleans, and of course critical articles on the disaster response.
ZMag online has an article by Michael Parenti, "How the Free Market Killed New Orleans"
Meanwhile Scientific American Predicted this Disaster way back in their October 2001 issue Which makes you wonder once again why Louisiana, New Orleans and of course the Bush boys were so unprepared.
CIVIL ENGINEERING
Drowning New Orleans
A major hurricane could swamp New Orleans under 20 feet of water, killing thousands. Human activities along the Mississippi River have dramatically increased the risk, and now only massive reengineering of southeastern Louisiana can save the city
By Mark Fischetti
In a message dated 9/3/05 9:27:39 AM, acpollack2atjunodotcom writes:
On the lists today are news of Halliburton contracts just awarded to rebuild Navy equipment in the Gulf, contracts gained through new Halliburton employee Joe Allbaugh. Allbaugh is the man who according to the story below purposely destroyed FEMA, saying it was an "oversized entitlement program" and his goal was to "restore the predominant role of state and local response to most disasters." With private contractors of course to clean up the damage.
Allbaugh was Bush's campaign director appointed for that reason and not for emergency experience. What's more he's the one who put the current head of FEMA - formerly lawyer for a horsing association! -- in his job. And that current head didn't even know there were people at the N.O. convention center!
http://nytimes.com/2005/09/03/national/nationalspecial/03fema.html?pagewanted=print
The New York Times
September 3, 2005
Leader of Federal Effort Feels the Heat
By ERIC LIPTON and SCOTT SHANE
WASHINGTON, Sept. 2 - On Thursday night, Michael D. Brown, the federal government's point man for managing the response to Hurricane Katrina, made a remarkable confession on live television.
Speaking of the thousands stranded at the convention center in New Orleans without food or water, Mr. Brown said that his agency, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, had just learned of their plight.
CNN's Paula Zahn was incredulous. "Sir," she said, "you aren't just telling me you just learned that the folks at the convention center didn't have food and water until today, are you? You had no idea they were completely cut off?"
"Paula," Mr. Brown replied unequivocally, "the federal government did not even know about the convention center people until today."
The comment symbolized what some have described as a deeply flawed federal response. President Bush praised Mr. Brown's performance on Friday, but Mr. Brown's remarks prompted Representative Bennie Thompson of Mississippi, the ranking Democrat on the House Committee on Homeland Security, to call on President Bush to fire Mr. Brown or Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff.
"That was just a boneheaded statement from someone who should be in charge of this situation," Mr. Thompson said. "The president will have to change the leadership so that a response this bad will never, never happen again for the American people."
Mr. Brown, 50, is a Republican lawyer who worked for the International Arabian Horse Association before joining FEMA in 2001 as general counsel. This week he has become the public face of an agency that critics say has lost focus and clout since it was absorbed in 2003 by the new Department of Homeland Security.
Now that FEMA is part of a much larger bureaucracy created to counter the threat of terrorism, its role in dealing with natural disasters has been diminished, state emergency management directors, disaster experts and former FEMA officials say. Senator Mary L. Landrieu, a Louisiana Democrat, asked the president to name a new cabinet-level official to direct the effort.
Representative Mark Foley, Republican of Florida, said FEMA should be separated from the Department of Homeland Security. "FEMA should not be hindered by a top-heavy bureaucracy when they are needed to act swiftly to save lives," Mr. Foley said.
Since FEMA's absorption into Homeland Security, its ties to state emergency programs have been weakened, and it has reduced spending on disaster preparation, critics say.
Russ Knocke, press secretary at Homeland Security, denied that FEMA's move to the department had hurt it. "Not only does FEMA have the resources but it has the backing of the department to do the job," he said.
Mr. Brown was brought to FEMA in 2001 by the then-director, Joe M. Allbaugh, an old friend who had run Mr. Bush's first presidential campaign. He was promoted to deputy director in 2002 and to director in 2003.
The public first saw Mr. Brown's folksy manner when he led the response to the 2004 Florida hurricanes. FEMA was later criticized for giving millions to undeserving residents.
This week he has displayed striking candor, saying he awakened Monday thinking the agency had underestimated the storm and later admitting that the lawlessness surprised him.
Andy Lester, a friend who practiced law with Mr. Brown, called him "an incredibly compassionate, very dedicated fellow in a thankless job."
Mr. Allbaugh said Mr. Brown is "doing a great job."
"I know a lot of people right now want to point fingers and criticize, but people should keep their powder dry," he said. "Disasters, particularly one of this magnitude, are always ugly to begin with."
FEMA was created by President Jimmy Carter in 1979 after criticism of the government's fragmented response to a series of disasters, including Hurricane Camille in 1969 and California earthquakes in 1971.
Hurricane Andrew, which struck South Florida in 1992, demonstrated that the federal government still had not sufficiently figured out how to respond smoothly, as thousands were initially left without shelter or water. The agency had a reputation for political patronage and pork barrel spending.
It was with the appointment in 1993 of James Lee Witt, from Arkansas, that the agency began to earn respect.
Mr. Clinton made FEMA a cabinet-level agency.
"Witt shaped it into an organization that was not only to respond to disaster but attempt to mitigate disaster by taking actions before they occurred," said Michael Greenberger, a domestic security expert at the University of Maryland and a former Justice Department official.
After severe flooding in the Midwest in 1993, FEMA under Mr. Witt, for example, bought more than 10,000 properties adjacent to rivers and relocated residents and businesses. In Grafton, Ill., where 403 residents and businesses applied for disaster aid after the 1993 flood, only 11 applied when the river overflowed again in 1995, FEMA said at the time.
The approach to disaster management changed with the arrival of President Bush, experts in emergency management say. Mr. Bush appointed Mr. Allbaugh, who was Mr. Bush's chief of staff when he was governor of Texas.
Testifying before Congress in 2001, Mr. Allbaugh said he was concerned that federal disaster assistance had become "an oversized entitlement program" and made it clear that the new administration wanted to curtail FEMA's mission.
His goal, he said, was to "restore the predominant role of state and local response to most disasters."
While Mr. Allbaugh was FEMA director, the Bush administration, with the backing of Congress, reversed the emphasis on preventing flooding, cutting the formula for such federal grants by half.
"It just does not make good sense," said Larry A. Larson, director of the Association of State Floodplain Managers.
FEMA's budget in recent years under the Bush administration has grown, from $4.6 billion in 2002 to $5.038 billion as originally enacted this fiscal year.
But after the 2001 terrorist attacks, the agency was merged along with 21 other agencies into the newly formed Department of Homeland Security. Grants previously distributed directly to local and state governments were assigned to a separate Homeland Security office. As a result, three out of every four so-called federal preparedness grants now are spent on counterterrorism.
Representative Thompson, whose Mississippi district was damaged by Katrina, said that during the Bush administration, FEMA had lost its focus.
"FEMA went back to being treated like a political resting place for favors that were owed," he said. "The entire emphasis of it was demoted."
James Risen contributed reporting for this article.
© Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company
Independent UK
The dispossessed of New Orleans tell of their medieval nightmare
By David Usborne inside the Houston Astrodome
Published: 04 September 2005
A brand new city has arisen inside the Astrodome in Houston, Texas, population 15,000. Not the best address in America - they gave it its own postal code, 77230 - but it offers some benefits to its residents. It is almost clean, more or less safe and entirely dry. No longer are these people clinging to the roofs of houses above swirling waters or squatting on elevated roadways in the sun unsure if they will live or die.
And, happily, they are no longer cowering in the New Orleans Superdome, a place that turned mad with murders, rapes, suicide, abortions and the ammonia fumes of human waste. Or imprisoned in the convention centre without food or water, in the company of corpses. Those two places of sanctuary became hell-holes of a kind unthinkable in the United States of America. Until last week.
No doubt, the new arrivals in the Astrodome are among the blessed of New Orleans. But most are nowhere near the end of their ordeal. Their faces have that blank, glazed look of people mentally overwhelmed. Thousands have another anguish: loved ones are missing. Some vanished during the chaotic bus transfer from New Orleans to here. They will probably be found - eventually. Others have not been seen or heard from since the first hours of the storm.
Gabrielle Benson, 40, has to think for a second. It is five, she says, the number of her family who are unaccounted for. "I don't know where my mum and dad are and I have three kids of mine who are missing." Two other children are with her. Ms Benson is calm about the missing kids. They survived the storm and were with her in the New Orleans Superdome all last week. They got lost in the pandemonium of boarding the buses. Quite likely, they are in a different city by now.
It is the mess with the buses that makes Ms Benson most angry. She and her family had abandoned their home in the projects last Sunday and fled immediately to the Superdome. The stampede for the buses began on Thursday. She described soldiers of the National Guard barking orders - "Make a hole, make a hole, that was their favourite order," she says - and making no effort to keep parents and children together. "They treated us like dirt, like dirt. They wouldn't even help my kids when they got lost. 'Ma'am, you've got to stay behind the barricade' is all they said." The soldiers did at least give them water while they waited - throwing bottles into the crowd. "Just popping people on the head with them."
But if getting on the buses was hard, what came before was far worse for many among these evacuees. Thousands never made it to the Superdome or to the convention centre. Some now are saying they are glad of it, like Ruby Taylor.
Ms Taylor was not a looter exactly, but the looting helped save her life. She is tall and proud, and 62 years old. Eating a Red Cross dinner here on Saturday of rice, beans and diced beef steak, she describes fleeing her first-floor apartment on Monday, when the water had risen almost to her shoulders, and wading to the local school. "We were fortunate because we had the school kitchens, so we got all the food they was looting and cooked it," she recalls with a brief smile. Surrounded by water on all sides and eventually forced to the third floor of the school, she and everyone else watched in frustration as their SOS signs went unheeded by circling helicopters for two days. "I know they saw our signs," she says. "I know they did." Finally, on Wednesday, boats arrived and they were taken to an interstate causeway just west of the city. There they remained - without food or shelter - for 30 hours, until the first buses arrived.
Many people here described similar hours of desperation in the open air - on elevated roadways, beneath bridges, even in mosquito-infested fields - before the buses arrived. Many had hopped from one location to the next over several days, fleeing the water - from their own home, to homes of friends that were still above the water level, to roofs, and to the elevated roads that are all around the city. Some, like Linda Bertoniere, clung to lampposts to stay alive. Others had to leap from rooftop to rooftop.
Yet, it is the testimony of those who did as they were told and responded to government appeals to take refuge in the New Orleans Superdome and the convention centre who are now coming forth, here and in other evacuee shelters, with stories of deprivation and danger almost too awful to fathom.
Devan Allen is 11 years old. Here with his dad, he gingerly approaches to tell what he saw in the Superdome. They were things no child should witness. Like the moment on Tuesday - or was it Wednesday? The days have blurred together for everyone here - when a man stood on one of the balconies and screamed so everyone could hear that he had lost everyone in the storm and now he would die also. He dived headfirst on to the playing field below, his head bursting open. Devan shouldn't have seen that. Nor should he have heard the gunshots. Nor the whispers of the girls who were raped and stabbed to death, right there with him in the Superdome. Or of the boy who was raped.
"I was scared," says Devan. "I knew that there was rapes going on and they said they were men snatching the boys." He recalls the suicide: "He just jumped right off." Like so many of the adults, he also remembers the ordeal of boarding the buses. "It was a big old crowd all right. It was terrible."
James Allen, his father, is among those boiling with anger with what they found when they fled to the Superdome. "We went there because we thought we would be safe, but instead we were more inmates than anything." James, 31, was born in New Orleans. After what happened in the Superdome, he says, he will never, ever, go back to the city. "I can't go back there after what we've been through." By the last night, he says, the soldiers of the National Guard had given up even patrolling the inside of the arena, leaving it to succumb to its own ugliness and anarchy.
The details of the stories from inside the Superdome vary slightly depending on who is telling them. The accuracy of some of the details cannot yet be proven. It will be one of the elements of the bungling of the rescue effort that will be a subject of official investigations. But Gaynell Farrell, 56, who has worked for the Whitney National Bank in New Orleans for 27 years - her husband rode the storm out in a suburb of New Orleans and has survived - says she is certain of what she saw and heard. If there is an official investigation of events in the arena, Ms Farrell might want to testify.
"You don't want to know what it was like. We had killings, abortions, babies born, toilets stacked up and it was hot, hot, hot." Pressed for details, she doesn't hesitate. She speaks of two girls being raped and murdered inside the dome, one aged seven. The other was 16 and was "slit open" by a knife after she was raped in the woman's bathroom, she says. Much of what she tells is similarly described by several other dome evacuees. A boy aged seven was also raped by two men. (Mr Allen says the rapist was chased down by other men and beaten before being handed over to the soldiers. He claims they also beat him and then threw him from a terrace outside the Superdome to the asphalt, killing him.)
"There was babies born and put in the garbage," Ms Farrell continues. Apparently, someone else found one infant alive and took it to the small clinic they had inside. Almost everyone talks of gunshots in the night, including one shooting of a National Guard soldier. Ms Farrell says the soldier died, others spoke of him being wounded in the leg and surviving. Meanwhile, she adds, a black-market trade flourished in marijuana cigarettes, crack cocaine, guns and alcohol, in plain view of the authorities. Men were flashing their penises at the women, who dared only go to the bathroom in groups of five. When the bathrooms became so foul that going into them was impossible, people began squatting down just anywhere to relieve themselves. "Human beings don't live like that, people in the street don't live like that," she says.
All this weekend, federal officials will interview the heads of each family group in the Astrodome to give them money and some guidance on what to do next. The same process was getting under way at other evacuee centres here in Houston and in several other cities across Texas, including Dallas and San Antonio, and in other southern states. It's everyone's hope that as many people as possible here will somehow find the means to get alternative shelter, maybe in cheap apartments or with relatives in Texas. Some will end up staying in Texas, others will eventually return to Louisiana. Yesterday, announcements would occasionally come over the loudspeakers or on the electronic message boards that used to carry sporting results with the good news for some that friends or family had arrived to pick them up.
But it won't be so easy for most of the souls in here. Many of them are exhausted and quite obviously traumatised by their experiences over the days since Hurricane Katrina hit. "I'm not moving," Ms Benson says flatly. "This is going to be my home. My home for me and my kids." She just prays first that the three children who are missing can be found and brought to her here.
VOICES FROM THE STORM
"None of us have any place to go."
Julie Paul, 57, in a poor area last Sunday, watching New Orleans empty.
"The water's rising pretty fast. I got a hammer and an axe and a crowbar, but I'm holding off on breaking through the roof until the last minute. Tell someone to come get me please. I want to live."
Chris Robinson, Monday, calling from New Orleans.
"There are lots of homes through here worth a million dollars. At least they were yesterday."
Fred Wright, surveying Mobile's Eastern Shore
"I don't treat my dog like that. I buried my dog. You can do everything for other countries but you can't do nothing for your own people. You can go overseas with the military but you can't get them down here."
Daniel Edwards, pointing at a dead woman parked in a wheelchair outside the convention centre.
"I do think the nation would be responding differently if they were white elderly and white babies actually dying on the street and being covered with newspapers and shrouds and being left there."
David Billings of anti-racist organisation, The People's Institute.
"I don't want to see no more water unless I'm taking a bath."
Anona Freeman,before being air-lifted out.
Even ythe New York Times admits that this is class war:
September 2, 2005
From Margins of Society to Center of the Tragedy
By DAVID GONZALEZ
The scenes of floating corpses, scavengers fighting for food and desperate throngs seeking any way out of New Orleans have been tragic enough. But for many African-American leaders, there is a growing outrage that many of those still stuck at the center of this tragedy were people who for generations had been pushed to the margins of society.
The victims, they note, were largely black and poor, those who toiled in the background of the tourist havens, living in tumbledown neighborhoods that were long known to be vulnerable to disaster if the levees failed. Without so much as a car or bus fare to escape ahead of time, they found themselves left behind by a failure to plan for their rescue should the dreaded day ever arrive.
"If you know that terror is approaching in terms of hurricanes, and you've already seen the damage they've done in Florida and elsewhere, what in God's name were you thinking?" said the Rev. Calvin O. Butts III, pastor of Abyssinian
Baptist Church in Harlem. "I think a lot of it has to do with race and class. The people affected were largely poor people. Poor, black people."
In the days since neighborhoods and towns along the Gulf Coast were wiped
out by the winds and water, there has been a growing sense that race and class are the unspoken markers of who got out and who got stuck. Just as in
developing countries where the failures of rural development policies become glaringly
clear at times of natural disasters like floods or drought, many national
leaders said, some of the United States' poorest cities have been left vulnerable by federal policies.
"No one would have checked on a lot of the black people in these parishes
while the sun shined," said Mayor Milton D. Tutwiler of Winstonville, Miss. "So am I surprised that no one has come to help us now? No."
The subject is roiling black-oriented Web sites and message boards, and many black officials say it is a prime subject of conversation around the country.
Some African-Americans have described the devastation wrought by Hurricane
Katrina as "our tsunami," while noting that there has yet to be a response equal to that which followed the Asian tragedy.
Roosevelt F. Dorn, the mayor of Inglewood, Calif., and the president of the National Association of Black Mayors, said relief and rescue officials needed to act faster.
"I have a list of black mayors in Mississippi and Alabama who are crying out for help," Mr. Dorn said. "Their cities are gone and they are in despair. And no one has answered their cries."
The Rev. Jesse Jackson said cities had been dismissed by the Bush
administration because Mr. Bush received few urban votes.
"Many black people feel that their race, their property conditions and their voting patterns have been a factor in the response," Mr. Jackson said, after meeting with Louisiana officials yesterday. "I'm not saying that myself, but what's self-evident is that you have many poor people without a way out."
In New Orleans, the disaster's impact underscores the intersection of race and class in a city where fully two-thirds of its residents are black and more than a quarter of the city lives in poverty. In the Lower Ninth Ward neighborhood, which was inundated by the floodwaters, more than 98 percent of the residents are black and more than a third live in poverty.
Spencer R. Crew, president and chief executive officer of the national
Underground Railroad Freedom Center in Cincinnati, said the aftermath of the hurricane would force people to confront inequality.
"Most cities have a hidden or not always talked about poor population, black and white, and most of the time we look past them," Dr. Crew said. "This is a moment in time when we can't look past them. Their plight is coming to the forefront now. They were the ones less able to hop in a car and less able to
drive off."
That disparity has been criticized as a "disgrace" by Charles B. Rangel, the senior Democratic congressman from New York City, who said it was made all the worse by the failure of government officials to have planned.
"I assume the president's going to say he got bad intelligence, Mr. Rangel said, adding that the danger to the levees was clear.
"I think that wherever you see poverty, whether it's in the white rural community or the black urban community, you see that the resources have been sucked up into the war and tax cuts for the rich," he said.
Outside Brooklyn Law School yesterday, a man selling recordings of famous African-Americans was upset at the failure to have prepared for the worst. The
man, who said his name was Muhammad Ali, drew a damning conclusion about the
failure to protect New Orleans.
"Blacks ain't worth it," he said. "New Orleans is a hopeless case."
Among the messages and essays circulating in cyberspace that lament the lost
lives and missed opportunities is one by Mark Naison, a white professor of
African-American Studies at Fordham University in the Bronx.
"Is this what the pioneers of the civil rights movement fought to achieve, a society where many black people are as trapped and isolated by their poverty as they were by segregation laws?" Mr. Naison wrote. "If Sept. 11 showed the power of a nation united in response to a devastating attack, Hurricane Katrina
reveals the fault lines of a region and a nation, rent by profound social
divisions."
That sentiment was shared by members of other minority groups who understand the bizarre equality of poverty.
"We tend to think of natural disasters as somehow even-handed, as somehow random," said MartÃn Espada, an English professor at the University of Massachusetts and poet of a decidedly leftist political bent who is Puerto Rican. "Yet it has always been thus: poor people are in danger. That is what it means to
be poor. It's dangerous to be poor. It's dangerous to be black. It's dangerous to be Latino."
This Sunday there will be prayers. In pews from the Gulf Coast to the
Northeast, the faithful will come together and pray for those who lived and those who died. They will seek to understand something that has yet to be fully
comprehended.
Some may talk of a divine hand behind all of this. But others have already noted the absence of a human one.
"Everything is God's will," said Charles Steele Jr., the president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in Atlanta. "But there's a certain amount of common sense that God gives to individuals to prepare for certain things."
That means, Mr. Steele said, not waiting until the eve of crisis.
"Most of the people that live in the neighborhoods that were most vulnerable are black and poor," he said. "So it comes down to a lack of sensitivity on the part of people in Washington that you need to help poor folks. It's as
simple as that."
Contributing reporting from New York for this article were Andy Newman,
William Yardley, Jonathan P. Hicks, Patrick D. Healy, Diane Cardwell, Anemona Hartocollis, Ronald Smothers, Jeff Leeds, Manny Fernandez and Colin Moynihan. Also contributing were Michael Cooper in Albany, Gretchen Ruethling in Chicago,
Brenda Goodman in Atlanta and Carolyn Marshall in San Francisco.
From: "Ahimsa Sumchai" asumchaiatsfbayviewdotcom
Sent: Saturday, September 03, 2005 12:13 PM
"Their Eyes Were Watching God"
"It is to be feared that extreme events which can be traced to climate
change will have increasingly grave consequences in the future."
Topics Geo-Annual Review:Natural Catastrophes 2003
African American anthropologist and literary genius Zora Neal Hurston
captured the anguishing impact of a gulf coast hurricane on the simple lives
of black migrant workers in her novel There Eyes Were Watching God.
Prior to Hurricane Katrina, the worst natural disaster in U.S. history
occurred on September 8, 1900 when a hurricane slammed into the island city
of Galveston, Texas claiming 1200 lives and demolishing every man-made
structure on the island.
Tropical storms are high energy violent movements of moist air and
wind. Hurricanes, cyclones and typhoons are all regional names for the same low
pressure systems. According to the World Meteorological Organization the 2003
Atlantic hurricane season weathered the impact of 16 named storms - well
above the 1944-1996 average of 9.8 - and consistent with a spiraling increase in
the annual number of tropical storms this century.
In 2004 devastating hurricanes swept into the Caribbean and the Gulf of
Mexico claiming the lives of 2000 people. Hurricane Katrina's catastrophic
impact on the lives of hundreds of thousands of people in the Gulf Coast
states of Mississippi, Alabama, Florida and Louisiana is symptomatic of a growing
disease like "epidemic" that is afflicting the earths oceans and atmosphere.
For decades scientists and intelligent world leaders have warned that human
induced changes in the earths climate have resulted in disturbances in how our
planet converts and distributes the solar energy of the sun resulting
in temperature imbalances around the world.
These human changes include global warming, rising sea levels,
deforestation, the damming of rivers and "slash and burn" farming practices in the
developing world. It is essential that we understand and mitigate the impact of
the human activities that are affecting the frequency and severity of
natural disasters.
In no better place can we germinate an understanding of these
factors than in San Francisco's Bayview Hunters Point community where the impact of
abusive and neglectful industrial activities and environmental degradation is
as evident on its low income community of color as the disproportionate impact
of climate change is felt on communities of color in the developing world.
Ninety five percent of all disaster related deaths occur in developing
nations.
The tropical countries of the earth and the regions located at the
earths equator receive most of the sun's heat. As the earth rotates masses of
warm moist air move away from the equator toward cooler regions. When the
temperature of the ocean exceeds 80 degrees, tropical storms acquire enough energy
to become hurricanes.
Scientists believe that carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases cause
the global warming that is affecting coastal areas, icebergs, wildlife and
causing horrific tropical storms. the melting of polar ice and glaciers has
caused an 8 inch rise in sea levels over the last century and expansion of the
volume of the world's oceans.
Forty percent of U.S. carbon dioxide emissions come from fossil fuel
power plants. The U.S. and China are the world's worst producers of greenhouse
gas emissions.
The Kyoto protocol is a greenhouse gas reduction plan adopted by over
150 countries. The United States has refused to sign it. In July of this year
the leaders of the world's richest countries met at the G-8 summit in bomb
ravaged London, England. Global warming was a major issue on the agenda
recognized as a "serious and long term challenge." While the G-8 summit failed to
bring U.S. President George Bush to the table in an agreement to set targets to
reduce greenhouse gas emissions it led to a decision to hold a special
meeting with the emerging nations of China, India, Brazil and South Africa,
countries where the worst environmental damage on earth is taking place.
Former U.S. President Bill Clinton announced plans to hold a global
summit called the Clinton Global Initiative September 15-17, 2005 in New York.
It is timed to coincide with the UN General Assembly and will include the
topic of climate change.
In late August the New York Times reported on a confidential draft
proposal by officials in nine Northeastern U.S. states who hav come to a
preliminary agreement to cap and reduce greenhouse gas emissions from power plants.
If the agreement is made final it would be the first of its kind in the United
States.
Locally, in 2004 San Francisco passed an Energy Independence Ordinance,
an initiative calling for the provision of 360 megawatts of green energy -
one third of the cities peak energy demand - through conservation and
efficiency improvements and the use of wind, solar, tidal and other renewable energy
sources.
Fossil Fuel Dependence in Bayview Hunters Point
Numerous air monitoring studies conducted in BVHP confirm the presence
of toxic air contaminants and pollutants that contribute to the high
incidence of petrochemical toxicity documented in a series of observational studies
performed by the Department of Public Health.Diseases associated with exposure
to products of combustion and fossil fuels include asthma, allergies, immune
disorders, cardiopulmonary disorders, restrictive lung diseases and cancers
including childhood leukemia and lymphoma.
The major sources of these pollutants are power plants, private
industry and the sewerage treatment plant. The Hunters Point Shipyard is a source
of low dose ionizing radiation and particulates. The risk of fire related
distribution of airborne toxins has not been adequately studied at the shipyard.
Greenhouse gases like methane, CO2 and volatile organic compounds have been
documented to emanate from the shipyards Parcel E Landfill and may contribute
to the poor indoor air quality in homes and 20 schools and daycare centers
within a 1 mile radius of the shipyard.
While the Hunters Point Power Plant appears to be on schedule for shut
down in 2006 environmental activists remain both cautius and vigilant. The San
Francisco Public Utilities Commission plan to close Mirant Corporations
Potrero Hill Plant proposes to do so by siting three of four GE natural gas fired
combustion turbine power plants the state received in legal settlement for
the energy crisis at the base of Potrero hill near Islais Creek.
Islais Creek was once a precious wetland habitat and sanctuary of the
Muwekme Ohlone Indians - the first people of the Southeast community. It has
survived devastation by utility and development mishaps. Additionally, the
region for the proposed siting of the plants rests in an earthquake hazard zone
called a liquefaction zone.
The Independent System Operator is a commission that regulates
electricity reliability in the state of Calfornia. According to the PUC, the ISO has
agreed to stop paying Mirant to run the Potrero Plant running if the four
combustion turbines can be sited in San Francisco. Proponents of siting the 3
plants in the southeast sector argue they will burn cleaner and operate less
often.
Environmentalists and community leaders like Green Action, Community
First Coalition and the Sierra Club counter they plants may ultimately operate
more often to meet the increased generational needs expected of the myriad of
new housing and development projects being implemented in Bayview, Mission
Bay and Visitacion Valley.
Moreover, Mirant has offered no guarantee it will hsut down the plant
and, indeed, recently completed a $30 million upgrade project that will allow
the it to operate indefinitely.
The impact of Hurricane Katrina's blow to the Gulf Coast states and the
petrochemical industry of the region, coupled with the escalating conflict
in the oil producing countries of the Middle East add to mounting fears by
community leaders that the clandestine strategic plan of the development driven
administration of Mayor Gavin Newsom requires the permanent siting of the
three CT power plants and the continued operation of the Mirant Power Plant in
Potrero Hill.
Fidel Castro Reiterates Cuban Friendship to the United States
Havana, Sep 3 (Prensa Latina) President Fidel Castro signified Friday the Cuban people´s goodwill and friendly feelings, offering medical aid to help the victims of hurricane Katrina, which hit Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana states.
And here is the scary truth from the horses mouth, the Army Times, while many folks asked for help this is what the US Army is offering those left in New Orleans, combat operations. Combat against Americans!
A tip o the blog to ANONYMOSES for this link.
September 02, 2005
Troops begin combat operations in New Orleans
By Joseph R. Chenelly
Army Times staff writer
NEW ORLEANS — Combat operations are underway on the streets “to take this city back” in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
“This place is going to look like Little Somalia,” Brig. Gen. Gary Jones, commander of the Louisiana National Guard’s Joint Task Force told Army Times Friday as hundreds of armed troops under his charge prepared to launch a massive citywide security mission from a staging area outside the Louisiana Superdome. “We’re going to go out and take this city back. This will be a combat operation to get this city under control.”
Jones said the military first needs to establish security throughout the city. Military and police officials have said there are several large areas of the city are in a full state of anarchy.
Somalia?! Look Like Somalia?! We are talking about New Orleans USA right. And come to think of it Somalia was another real success for the US military right. Blackhawk Down!
New Orleans Indymedia has participating bloggers and news reports, links to activist groups still in NO still active, helping the poor, linking missing families, its live from NO listen to the people speak from the centre of this disaster
Hurricane Katrina as Class Warfare
Kurt Nimmo,
Another Day in the Empire
September 3, 2005
Counterpunch is running a series of articles and opinion pieces on Katrina
this one will lead you to links to their stories online.
Weekend Edition
September 3 / 4, 2005
Who Will Rescue America?
Waiting for the Outside World
By MIKE FERNER
Anne Rice author of Interview with a Vampire, and other wildly successful horror and erotic novels whom I mentioned in this article has published an opinion piece in the New York Times
Do You Know What it Means to Lose New Orleans?
by Anne Rice
Karmalized blog reports that:
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Police shot eight people carrying guns on a New Orleans bridge Sunday, killing five or six, a deputy chief said. A spokesman for the Army Corps of Engineers said the victims were contractors on their way to repair a canal.
Opps. Well as I posted here earlier all those folks wanting the US Army and National Guard to come into New Orleans, well dumb idea. These guys declared this a "Combat Operation", and sure enough already killed contractors through friendly fire.
This is the land of the NRA you know where the right to bare arms, err bear arms is sacred to all Americans,
notice we have heard nothing from the NRA defending Americans in New Orleans right to arm themselves, like the state they probably think all armed folks in New Orleans are looters (cause they are black of course).
And the Army/Ntional Guard/Police have shoot to kill orders folks.
So they kill armed contractors, who are armed cause other people have guns too. Yep gun culture is great eh.
Can't tell the good guys from the bad guys without a program.
Except there are no bad guys, there are armed survivors, armed contractors, its America damn it and everyone has a gun. It's the American way, well of course the subtext of this is White America can have guns, anyone else is a looter, thug, criminal, etc.
Citizens are now refugees in their own country. This is the largest crisis of homelessness ever in the US. Yet it underscores the real crisis of homelessness that goes on daily in cities across America, proving again that there are two Americas.
Last year this article was published, and its prognistication erriely fits the current situation in Huston.
The Invisible People: The Precariously Housed and Doubled Up Families
By Jay Shaft- Coalition For Free Thought In Media
8/21/04
Voices of the Lost and Forgotten-Part Two
The plight of millions of people who lost their homes and now share housing with others. The ongoing struggle to pay the bills that threatens to make millions more homeless. Part two in a five part series on the alarming increases of homelessness, poverty, and hunger in America.
Commie Curmudgeon reminds us that the predicatbility of this crisis is that capitalism cannot and will not see the environment as where we live, our lifesupport system, rather it views it as resources to be exploited (which is why we as workers are all called 'human resources' in modern parlance).
He quotes from Andre Gorz book
Ecology as Politics,
well worth the read.
Warnings went ignored as Bush slashed flood defence budget to pay for wars writes Geoffrey Lean, Environment Editor, The Independent, UK
Published: 04 September 2005
The Perfect Storm by Chris Floyd, at Empire BurlesqueThe destruction of New Orleans represents a confluence of many of the most pernicious trends in American politics and culture: poverty, racism, militarism, elitist greed, environmental abuse, public corruption and the decay of democracy at every level.
Much of this is embodied in the odd phrasing that even the most circumspect mainstream media sources have been using to describe the hardest-hit victims of the storm and its devastating aftermath: "those who chose to stay behind." Instantly, the situation has been framed with language to flatter the prejudices of the comfortable and deny the reality of the most vulnerable.
The questions a shocked America is asking its President
By Rupert Cornwell in Washington
Published: 03 September 2005
The Independent UK
Why has it taken George Bush five days to get to New Orleans?
President Bush was on holiday in Texas when Katrina struck. He then spent Monday on a pre-arranged political fundraising tour of California and Arizona, which he did not cancel or curtail. On Tuesday he surveyed the hurricane damage - but only from the flight deck of Air Force One, prompting criticism that he was too detached from the suffering on the ground. He didn't give a speech until Tuesday afternoon - 36 hours after the storm first hit - and didn't embark on a proper tour of the region until yesterday. Key advisers have come under fire for similar levels of detachment. As the full magnitude of the disaster unfolded, the Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice, was seen buying shoes in New York, and Dick Cheney remained on holiday.
How could the world's only superpower be so slow in rescuing its own people?
It will probably take months, even years, to answer that question. But here are a few factors to consider: 1) the federal government's disaster relief agency, Fema, has lost considerable clout because the priority at the Department of Homeland Security has been counter-terrorism; 2) the homeland security director, Michael Chertoff, has no experience in disaster relief; 3) because of Fema's low profile, almost no contingency measures were taken before Katrina struck; 4) the under-resourced local Army Corps of Engineers appeared completely unprepared to conduct emergency operations after the levees were breached; 5) nobody appears to have considered the communications problems inherent in loss of phone and cell-phone service.
Why did he cut funding for flood control and emergency management?
Another question likely to be the subject of official investigations. Local and former federal officials are in little doubt that the budgetary priorities of Iraq, tax cuts and the "war on terror" are to blame. Disaster prevention experts have been studying New Orleans for years and urging upgrades to its levees and other preventive measures. The Army Corps of Engineers was supposed to carry out some of this work last year, but its funding was cut. It seems the Bush administration considered the risk of malicious human attack and the risk of the ravages of nature, and found itself incapable of holding both ideas in its head.
Why did it take so long to send adequate National Guard forces to keep law and order?
The National Guard is under pressure in every US state because of the strains of deployment in Iraq. More than one-third of Louisiana's 10,000 guardsmen are either in Iraq or Afghanistan. No mass deployment of guardsmen from other states is being contemplated because they are all needed in Iraq too. At first, only 3,000 guardsmen were sent to New Orleans, but that was increased to about 10,000 as looting and gun violence became widespread.
How can the US take Iraq, a country of £25m people, in three weeks but fail to rescue 25,000 of its own citizens from a sports arena in a big American city?
America's obsession with maintaining its pre-eminent position as the world's largest superpower means it is incapable of responding swiftly and effectively to a humanitarian crisis. While it has the firepower for fighting wars, it does not have the leadership and skills to combat natural disaster.
What the US can't do Cuba Can do.
Note this Red Cross report was written three years ago:
Preparedness saves lives as hurricane hits Cuba
23 September 2002
Xavier Castellanos in Havana, Cuba
As Hurricane Isidore passed over southwestern Cuba this past weekend, Cuban authorities implemented emergency procedures to evacuate 280,000 people to safety. No loss of life was reported, but many homes and farms have been damaged.
And this was written four years ago.
Socialism and storms
Cuba's success in minimising loss of life during Hurricane Michelle highlights the social dimension of coping with natural disasters
Dr Ben Wisner
Wednesday November 14, 2001
The Guardian
Hurricane Michelle was a category 3 storm. It hit land at the Bay of Pigs on Cuba's southern coast, where the ill-fated CIA-backed invasion failed decades ago, with winds of 216km/hr. The storm travelled north across the island, damaging 22,400 homes and destroying 2,800. It damaged agriculture, industry and infrastructure in five provinces in the western half of the island, as well as Havana. It was the worst hurricane to hit Cuba since 1944.
This is a hot article being linked to by a variety of sites well worth checking out for deconstructing George II PR trip down south.
The Potemkin Photo Op
Saturday, September 03 2005 @ 09:40 PM Eastern Daylight Time
Contributed by: Stranger
Bush ScandalsI was tuning in and out of Bush's massive photo op on the Gulf Coast yesterday, and everything at the time seemed just a little too pat for me. From the 'briefing' that went on in a hangar full of helicopters to his walking down a street in Biloxi and having three regular citizens walk up to him for comforting to the last press availiability of the day when he announced that the Convention Center was secure and the levees were being repaired, it was clear that the game plan from the White House was for Bush to go to the region, look decisive, comfort a few citizens, and announce at the end of the day that all was well.
It was a full-on effort to change the subject of discussion from the utter failure of the Bush administration to handle the crisis with even a hint of competency, and in true Bush fashion, he wrapped it up at 5:00 PM and announced that he was 'Flyin' out of (t)here.'
But from beginning to end, the entire exercise was a series of lies - a Potemkin photo op designed to fool those Americans who were not bothering to look closely at what was going on. Let's look at key aspects of Bush's trip that were covered by television.
From an emial I received:
All They Will Call You Will Be 'Refugees'
by Roland Sheppard
The mass media has been calling the poor and the Black New Orleans residents
who could not afford to evacuate New Orleans as "refugees." As if these are
sub-human or , as the constitution first stated, 4/5 of a human being. It
reminds me of Woody Guthrie's song "Deportees" about the plight of Mexican
laborers during the depression:
DEPORTEES
by Woody Guthrie
The crops are all in and the peaches are rotting
The oranges are filed in their creosote dumps
They're flying 'em back to the Mexico border
To take all their money to wade back again
Goodbye to my Juan, farewell Roselita
Adios mes amigos, Jesus e Maria
You won't have a name when you ride the big airplane
All they will call you will be deportees
My father's own father, he waded that river
They took all the money he made in his life
It's six hundred miles to the Mexico border
And they chased them like rustlers, like outlaws, like thieves
The skyplane caught fire over Los Gatos Canyon
The great ball of fire it shook all our hills
Who are these dear friends who are falling like dry leaves?
Radio said, "They are just deportees"
Is this the best way we can grow our big orchards?
Is this the best way we can raise our good crops?
To fall like dry leaves and rot on out topsoil
And be known by no names except "deportees"
The floods of Katrina are just the catalyst for the events that have
victimized these people.
Instead of evacuating these people, with the transportation that we now know
was available, the power to be left them to die. It is the logic of the
bi-partisan polices already in place.
The tragedy of Katrina has exposed the fact that Racism and class hatred are
rampant in this society. The levees may have been broken down, but the racial
and class divides are still standing.
To the capitalist class, these victims are expendable (ie: "refugees"). What
they see as a solution to the "welfare problem" and "urban blight."
The rebuilding of this port is an economic necessity, due to the strategic
location of New Orleans at the mouth of the Mississippi River. When they set
plans to rebuild the port of New Orleans, the largest port in this country, these
people are not included in their concept of the new port city.
This process can be found throughout this land, the inner cities are being
gentrified, by both the Republican and Democratic Parties, and the poor are
being scattered to the winds -- just like the "refuges." It is how the rich are
handling unemployment and poverty in this country.
Black Commentator's radio station's audio commentary on September 2 2005
"Will the 'New' New Orleans be Black?" expressed the problems and the process
quite well:
"One of the premiere Black cities in the nation faces catastrophe. There is
no doubt in my mind that New Orleans will one day rise again from its below sea
level foundations. The question is, will the new New Orleans remain the
two-thirds Black city it was before the levees crumbled?
"Some would say it is unseemly to speak of politics and race in the presence
of a massive calamity that has destroyed the lives and prospects of so many
people from all backgrounds. But I beg to differ. As we have witnessed, over and
over again, the rich and powerful are very quick to reward themselves as soon
as disaster presents the opportunity. Remember that within days of 9/11, the
Bush regime executed a multi-billion dollar bailout for the airline industry.
By the time you hear this commentary, they may have already used the New
Orleans disaster to bail out the insurance industry one of the ricchest businesses
on the planet. But what of the people of New Orleans, 67 percent of whom are
Black?
"New Orleans is a poor city. Twenty-eight percent of the population lives
below the poverty line. Well over half are renters, and the median value of homes
occupied by owners is only $87,000. From the early days of the flood, it was
clear that much of the city's housing stock would be irredeemably damaged. The
insurance industry may get a windfall of federal relief, but the minority of
New Orleans home owners will get very little even if they are insuured. The
renting majority may get nothing.
"If the catastrophe in New Orleans reaches the apocalyptic dimensions towards
which it appears to be headed, there will be massive displacement of the
Black and poor. Poor people cannot afford to hang around on the fringes of a city
until the powers-that-be come up with a plan to accommodate them back to the
jurisdiction. And we all know that the prevailing model for urban development
is to get rid of poor people. The disaster provides an opportunity to deploy
this model in New Orleans on a citywide scale, under the guise of rebuilding the
city and its infrastructure.
"In place of the jobs that have been washed away, there could be alternative
employment through a huge, federally funded rebuilding effort. But this is
George Bush's federal government. Does anyone believe that the Bush men would
mandate that priority employment go to the pre-flood, mostly Black population of
the city. And the Black mayor of New Orleans is a Democrat in name only, a
rich businessman, no friend of the poor. What we may see in the coming months is
a massive displacement of Black New Orleans, to the four corners of the
nation. The question that we must pose, repeatedly and in the strongest terms, is:
Through whose vision, and in whose interest, will New Orleans rise again. For
Radio BC, I'm Glen Ford."
What is needed is a massive public works project, to rebuild this city -- the
birthplace of Jazz. To employ the people who have been disposed by Katrina
and to rebuild this city from the ashes of the old!
Full Text of Fidel Castro Address
Cuba Offers Medical Help and Solidarity to Victims of Katrina
Havana, Sep 3 (Prensa Latina) Cuban President Fidel Castro offered the United States f 1,100 doctors with extensive experience, plus medicines and diagnostic teams, to help the victims of Hurricane Katrina.
Meanwhile the man Rumsfeld and Robertson want to kill still offers the US his support and aid:
Chavez Reaffirms Solidarity with US People
Caracas, Sep 4 (Prensa Latina) President Hugo Chavez reaffirmed Sunday Venezuela´s solidarity with the people of the United States and sent his condolences to those in pain due to the tragedy caused by Hurricane Katrina.
Now Is the Time? Now Is the Time!"
The Potential of the Gulf Coast Crisis:
Points for Discussion and Intervention
We wrote this text because we felt the level of discussion regarding the aftermath of hurricane Katrina needs to move beyond the rhetoric of cheering or condemning looters, cheering or condemning the authorities, or simply crying for the victims. "Oh my god, I can't believe this is happening," or "I told you so," or "People are dying!" just send us talking in circles. We want the U.S. (and possibly the world) to launch into the unknown — the total breakdown of the social order — and then continue pushing for a self-organized society.
In wanting this, we encourage drawing out and publicly defending the liberatory activities of the last 6 days and deepening this social rupture by refusing to confine it to the Gulf Coast. Our idea of how: implement concrete forms of solidarity that do not just focus on defense, but on attack.
RIGHT NOW, THE SYSTEM IS EXTREMELY VULNERABLE.
* We are experiencing one one of the largest disruptions of the capitalist economy and the social order since perhaps the L.A.-fueled urban rebellions that rippled across the country in 1992.
* Morale among the authorities is low: One-third of the N.O. police force has deserted and the rest are operating with limited vehicles, fuel, weapons, and communications, National Guardsmen are openly questioning their intervention both in N.O. and Iraq, the N.O. Mayor has broken down publicly...
* Faith and trust in the federal and state authorities is evaporating as aid and rescue resources are strangely absent or diverted. Meanwhile, world watches the starving locals on the nightly news. The National Guard is physically blocking ordinary citizens trying drive aid into N.O.. Bush has his lowest approval rating ever. His rhetoric of 'death to the looters' confuses most people who have, in the last few days, began to sympathize with the looting (see next point). Disgust with the government, and perhaps with government itself, grows.
* Growing defense of unlawful acts. Many everyday Americans are breaking from their lawful routine to justify the looting. As the definition of crime (and survival) shifts, agents of social control begin to weaken.
* A second crisis is threatening the stability of the system: rising gasoline prices. People are asking, when will it stop, who is responsible, and why even pay? Gas theft has skyrocketed and street protests against the hikes are rumbling across the country. This is creating a double crisis and people are mobilizing with the regime up against the wall. Not to mention the military stalemate in Iraq. Can the system be overloaded to the point of collapse? How can we best participate in these crises?
FOLKS IN LOUISIANA AND MISSISSIPPI HAVE RECOGNIZED THIS VULNERABILITY AND ARE ACTIVELY ASSAULTING IT.
* They are physically attacking the social order. The stories of gunfights, arson, and looting keep surfacing: in New Orleans, organized and sporadic attacks on police stations, officers, and National Guard units since the time the hurricane hit (before the flooding) and now fires set to buildings, many of them previously untouchable in the eyes of the poor; and then there is the looting (most notably, guns to carry out further attacks on the system) on a scale far greater than what South Central L.A. experienced in 1992.
* They are undermining capital's dominant social relations. Mass looting throughout the Gulf Coast, some of it quite pre-meditated and some of it outside of the hurricane path. Every account reads as a festive (or nervous) atmosphere with every sector of the population partaking: black, white, Latino, men, women, children, old, young, and even cops and wealthy tourists. The normal forms of exchange have been abandoned and large free markets have been reported on the neutral ground (the median) down some New Orleans streets. And it's not just a big 'fuck you' to those who profit from their needs, but also a defiant stance that everyone is entitled to enjoy themselves- what some would call 'excesses:' beer, televisions, etc.
* The breakdown is spreading: reports of widespread looting in New Orleans, Baton Rouge, Lafayette, Biloxi, Gulfport, and Hattiesburg and now signs that Memphis and Houston may soon face unrest with all the refugees from N.O.
IF NOW IS THE TIME, THEN WHAT TO DO? (SOME POINTS TO DISCUSS, MODIFY, AND, OF COURSE, ACT UPON)
* Refugees coming to your town? The most significant difference between the L.A. revolt and that of New Orleans, is that L.A. still exists. So far we have seen looting spread to areas where the refugees are sent, so this seems the most obvious way to expand the attack. People used to one week of not paying for anything (and gunfights with the police) of course find it psychologically difficult to walk into a store and revert back to paying (or obey the police)- any petty thief can tell you this. Here in St. Louis, authorities have decided to house hundreds of refugees in an (not-so-) old county jail. Enough said.
* Target the agencies responsible for the brutal neglect and murder of the people of New Orleans. Salvation Army, Red Cross, FEMA, all U.S. Military branches, etc. (More perpetrators keep being uncovered- e.g. Outback Steakhouse was reported to be serving food to rescue workers but denying food to the refugees in central Louisiana.)
* Provide solidarity with 'insurgents' in N.O. It is a very real possibility that the next week will see the federal government engaged in a guerilla conflict with citizens intent on defending their city. Solidarity could means vocal support, material support, and/or attack on our own terrain to spread the insurgency and weaken the forces of order. Any revolt, no matter how wonderful, will suffocate if it's not spread. Their fight is our fight- refuse to be divided from and condemned by potential comrades.
* Be careful what you take from the media reports. Don't believe the government statements. First-hand accounts and even on-the-ground corporate media reports provide a vastly different story than the official line. And it is those stories that must surface so we can't be divided into bad looters and good looters, armed gangs and rescuers, unemployed and workers, etc.
* Harness the sudden spirit of mutual aid. Outsiders are offering help for the displaced. Feelings of mutual aid not only pervade in the looted street markets of battered N.O., but also in those who were not there. But, as usual, it is mostly misdirected to paternalistic aid organizations (Red Cross and Salvation Army- both of which have abandoned the survivors), though housing offers seem to be bypassing these large organizations.
A Handful of St. Louis' Unwanted Children of Capital
September 3, 2005
* This is the result of discussions between comrades here in St. Louis over the last 6 days concerning the situation just down-river from us — discussions which will no doubt continue. We want to encourage a breaking out of discussions across the country on the implications and potentialities of the post-catastrophe situation in America. This is a hastily written text that we acknowledge has many gaps. Please help us fill them and share any discussions you have had with comrades in your city, whether it be inside or outside the Gulf region. If you want to respond to us directly, please do so as a 'comment' here
'AMERICANS DON'T WANT TO SEE AMERICANS SUFFER'
Political fury grows at slow federal effort
By SHAWN MCCARTHY
Monday, September 5, 2005 Page A1
Globe and Mail With reports from AP, AFP, Reuters
Some political leaders in Louisiana lashed out at U.S. President George W. Bush and the Federal Emergency Management Agency after officials in Washington had blamed state and local officials -- specifically Governor Kathleen Blanco -- for the lack of co-ordination on the ground in the days after New Orleans became flooded.
Louisiana Senator Mary Landrieu, a Democrat, criticized Mr. Bush's visit to the devastated city as a "photo op" and defended local and state officials who struggled to cope without communications or a significant federal presence in the early days of the flood.
"If one person criticizes them or says one more thing, including the President of the United States, he will hear from me," she said on ABC's This Week. "One more word about it after this show airs and I might likely have to punch him. Literally."
KATRINA: THE AFTERMATH
Storm's victims still seek blame as Katrina's toll grows higher
Some survivors thank God, others curse the government, TIMOTHY APPLEBY reports
Globe and Mail
And that rage and despair boils down to two questions: In the richest country in the world, how is it possible that a long-predicted disaster could bring a world-famous city like New Orleans to its knees? Second, why was the response so torturously slow?
The quick and easy answer is that a range of negatives blended into a toxic brew whose dimensions were unprecedented.
"You know what the problem was?" said refugee Gladys Long as she struggled up to the makeshift heliport on Interstate 10, all her worldly belongings carried in two plastic bags.
"The problem was that we're a bunch of poor black people that nobody in Washington gives a damn about. Ain't no Republican votes for Bush down here and he knows that."
Unfair, said New York water engineer Steven Smith, part of the legion of public and private-sector experts who have poured into New Orleans as the rescue and repair effort moves forward.
"Everybody's throwing shit at Bush, but I don't think anyone really saw this coming," he said.
"But hey, I'm a Republican."
Monday, September 5, 2005
New Orleans counts its dead
The strain was apparent in other ways. Aaron Broussard, president of Jefferson Parish, dropped his head and cried on NBC's Meet the Press.
"The guy who runs this building I'm in, emergency management, he's responsible for everything. His mother was trapped in St. Bernard nursing home, and every day she called him and said, 'Are you coming, son? Is somebody coming?' And he said, 'And yeah, Momma, somebody's coming to get you. Somebody's coming to get you on Tuesday. Somebody's coming to get you on Wednesday. Somebody's coming to get you Thursday. Somebody's coming to get you on Friday' — and she drowned Friday night. She drowned on Friday night," Mr. Broussard said.
"Nobody's coming to get her, nobody's coming to get her. The secretary's promise, everybody's promise. They've had press conferences — I'm sick of the press conferences. For God's sake, shut up and send us somebody."
And now the Good News:
Hurricane Survivors practice Mutual Aid, Self Management and Workers Control of the means of survival.That's real Anarchy.
In the French Quarter: Holdouts create survivor 'tribes,' divide up labour
Allen G. Breed
Canadian Press
In the absence of information and outside assistance, groups of rich and poor banded together in the French Quarter, forming "tribes" and dividing up the labour.
As some went down to the river to do the wash, others remained behind to protect property. In a bar, a bartender put near-perfect stitches into the torn ear of a robbery victim.
While mould and disease grew in the muck that engulfed most of the city, something else sprouted in this most decadent of American neighbourhoods - humanity.
"Some people became animals," Vasilioas Tryphonas said Sunday morning as he sipped a hot beer in Johnny White's Sports Bar on Bourbon Street. "We became more civilized."
Yes, wealthy people feasted on steak and quaffed warm champagne in the days after the storm. But many who stayed behind were the working poor - residents of the cramped spaces above the restaurants and shops.
Tired of waiting for trucks to come with food and water, residents turned to each other.
Johnny White's is famous for never closing, even during a hurricane. The doors don't even have locks.
Since the storm, it has become more than a bar. Along with the warm beer and shots, the bartenders passed out scrounged military Meals Ready to Eat and bottled water to the people who drive the mule carts, bus the tables and hawk the T-shirts that keep the Quarter's economy humming.
"It's our community centre," said Marcie Ramsey, 33, whom Katrina promoted from graveyard shift bartender to acting manager.
For some, the bar has also become a hospital.
A few blocks away, a dozen people in three houses got together and divided the labour. One group went to the Mississippi River to haul water, one cooked, one washed the dishes.
"We're the tribe of 12," 76-year-old Carolyn Krack said as she sat on the sidewalk with a cup of coffee, a packet of cigarettes and a box of pralines.
The tribe, whose members included a doctor, a merchant and a store clerk, improvised survival tactics. Krack, for example, brushed her dentures with antibacterial dish soap.
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