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Warham
09-06-2005, 07:12 AM
The Mayor Who Failed His City
By Ben Johnson
FrontPageMagazine.com | September 6, 2005

IT’S OFFICIAL: THE AMERICAN LEFT NOW BELIEVES GEORGE W. BUSH IS GOD. Bellowing leftists such as Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Cindy Sheehan have blamed Hurricane Katrina – something insurance companies classify as an act of God – on President Bush’s “killing policies” (and, in RFK Jr.’s case, those of Mississippi’s Republican governor, Haley Barbour). Former Clinton aide Sidney Blumenthal also penned an article in The Guardian chalking up the flood to the Bush administration’s having cut one item in the Army Corps of Engineers’ annual budget. (Desperate to build a presidential legacy, even ex post facto, ex-President Bill Clinton has intimated his administration did more to keep New Orleans safe than Bush's.) Meanwhile, DNC Chair Howard Dean weighed in by demeaning Bush’s trip to the disaster area, calling it “just another callous political move crafted by Karl Rove.”

In addition to claiming Bush somehow fed the phantom of “global warming” to rain death upon his own citizens, the Left has alleged “racism” in his handling of this disaster. Jesse Jackson quipped post-Hurricane New Orleans looks like “the hull of a slave ship.” Director Michael Moore played the race card in an open letter to Bush on his website. They found an echo in the “Reverend” Al Sharpton, who told MSNBC’s abysmal Keith Olbermann, “I feel that, if it was in another area, with another economic strata and racial makeup, that President Bush would have run out of Crawford a lot quicker and FEMA would have found its way in a lot sooner.” Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-MD, a member in good standing of the Congressional Black Caucus, played both the race and the God card, thundering:

We cannot allow it to be said that the difference between those who lived and those who died in this great storm and flood of 2005 was nothing more than poverty, age or skin color…To the president of the United States, I simply say that God cannot be pleased with our response.

And they say all the religious nutjobs are on the Right.

The Democrats’ avenging angel has come in the form of Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-NV, who has proposed a 9/11-style commission to probe the feds’ response to Hurricane Katrina. (After all, the original 9/11 Commission proved so exemplary.) Despite these transparent attempts to claw political advantage from the suffering of the downtrodden – after the National Guard forgeries, Plamegate, and conspiratorial ravings about the Federalist Society won them no traction – a Washington Post poll revealed 55 percent of Americans do not blame President Bush for the debacle in the Big Easy.



Perhaps that is because the American people intuit it is not the federal response that should be monitored but that of New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin, a Democrat and, coincidentally, a black man.



In accordance with the “City of New Orleans Comprehensive Emergency Management Plan” – a blueprint drawn up to deal with emergencies like this one – all “Authority to issue evacuations of elements of the population is vested in the Mayor.” The document specifically states, “The person responsible for recognition of hurricane related preparation needs and for the issuance of an evacuation order is the Mayor of the City of New Orleans.” This outline does not mention any specific federal government’s role in disaster relief, instead carving out roles for state and municipal governments. In fact, as Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld noted this holiday weekend, posse commitatus statutes bar federal officers from working as law enforcement officials.



Charged with so heavy a responsibility, Mayor Nagin punted, then passed the buck. The National Hurricane Center called Nagin Saturday night asking him to evacuate New Orleans, and President Bush also begged him to get his people to safety. As mayor, the final decision was Nagin's. He was expected to issue such an order 48 hours before the storm made landfall; however, the storm touched down and the levees gave way less than 48 hours after his proclamation.



Moreover, he is to see that “Special arrangements will be made to evacuate persons unable to transport themselves or who require specific life saving assistance.” Yet some 205 buses, and perhaps a greater number of large transit vehicles, were left stranded in a flooded parking lot. University of New Orleans professor Shirley Laksa had calculated some 125,000 residents do not have private transportation. As a result of Nagin’s inaction, Katrina’s victims are twice as likely to be poor than the average American. These are the people who had no recourse but to wait for the local government to rescue them; these are the people municipal malfeasance and nonfeasance abandoned to an ill-equipped Superdome.

Despite these critical lapses in judgment, Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-LA, pressured her commander-in-chief to withhold all criticism of the local response (President Bush had not made any, justified though it might be), threatening that, if he didn’t, “I might likely have to punch him. Literally.” Although Washington was abuzz when Rep. Dan Burton called Bill Clinton a “scumbag,” no censure has been forthcoming for Landrieu.

The Left has not idled down its criticisms of Bush, blaming him for global warming and poor planning. The facts tell another tale. The infrastructure the Left criticizes Bush of withholding, planned by the Army Corps of Engineers, would have only defended the city from a level three storm; Katrina’s level five winds would have overwhelmed the project, even if it had been completed. Former Louisiana Democratic Senator John Breaux said the funds leftists blame Bush for cutting have been diverted by presidents since the 1970s. With the Left sniping at him over high deficits incurred by fighting a war in two nations, President Bush has had to trim non-essential spending, and no one considered it a vital priority to fund a system designed to guard against what Sen. Breaux called a “once every hundred years” storm. The experts several steps removed from the president – and on both sides of the aisle – simply bet a storm of this magnitude would not occur. The Army Corps of Engineers commander Lt. Gen. Carl Strock spelled out these sentiments: “We had an assurance that 99.5 percent this would be OK. We, unfortunately, have had that .5 percent activity here.” Strock also denied needed monies were diverted to Iraq.

However, this storm didn’t catch everyone by surprise. Scientists have known since the 1980s that the city’s levees would fail in a storm of Katrina’s magnitude.

The federal government’s response has been laudable. FEMA Director Mike Brown began moving federal resources into New Orleans two days before the storm hit. Currently, some 8,500 active duty troops are serving in New Orleans. The chaotic situation created by Mayor Nagin’s herding people into the Superdome, without adequate provisions for the long haul, with the resultant murder, rape, and looting a byproduct of poor, or non-existent, planning. Governor Blanco also deserves blame for not calling in the National Guard to get the situation in hand earlier. Now, 38,000 National Guardsmen are aiding the wider disaster area, including undertaking the police functions within New Orleans that Mayor Nagin could not or would not furnish.



With all these efforts going on, Jesse Jackson threw himself before the cameras yet again last week, claiming, “The president has not put together a federal program or a coordinated effort to address this massive crisis.”



Just prior to Jackson’s statement, Mayor Ray Nagin coped with the high pressure of the situation he created by launching into a profanity-laden radio interview with WWL-AM. He ranted that federal relief workers needed to “get off your asses.” (This at a time when helicopters bearing federal relief were being shot at by New Orleanians Nagin could not control.)



These are the same murderous looters the Democratic Party’s blog referred to as “the victims.” The only New Orleans residents not intimidated by the rampaging gangs of hoodlums have relied upon the only freedom that keeps law-abiding men safe: the right to privately own firearms.

The New Orleans debacle has demonstrated a few discomforting truths: there is apparently no national suffering so moving that the Left will not exploit it for crass political advantage. The nation should have learned this when Bill Clinton blamed the Oklahoma City Bombing on Rush Limbaugh and Republican “anti-government rhetoric.” More importantly, significant holes remain in our national infrastructure, which an enterprising terrorist cell could exploit. We can no longer turn a blind eye to the national security implications of mayoral elections in this nation’s vital cities. Their governance, so long dominated by corrupt and ineffectual leftists, has led to disaster on a massive scale. In the case of New Orleans, a plan had even been drawn up to fend off the worst…the mayor simply demurred from filling in its blanks. The tragedy filling our television screens for the last week is its result. Next time, the mourning could be caused by an act of war. At least one Bush critic, Rep. Bobby Jindahl, R-LA, is right: “After 9/11, this never should have happened.”

Big Train
09-06-2005, 10:16 AM
Thank you Warham., that is the first logical thing I've read in the media about all of this. It actually acknowledges the core issues.

BigBadBrian
09-06-2005, 10:24 AM
Originally posted by Warham
Meanwhile, DNC Chair Howard Dean weighed in by demeaning Bush’s trip to the disaster area, calling it “just another callous political move crafted by Karl Rove.”



You tell 'em Howie.

http://www.strangepolitics.com/images/content/110035.jpg

Nickdfresh
09-06-2005, 11:52 AM
Originally posted by Big Train
Thank you Warham., that is the first logical thing I've read in the media about all of this. It actually acknowledges the core issues.


The federal government’s response has been laudable. FEMA Director Mike Brown began moving federal resources into New Orleans two days before the storm hit. Currently, some 8,500 active duty troops are serving in New Orleans. The chaotic situation created by Mayor Nagin’s herding people into the Superdome, without adequate provisions for the long haul, with the resultant murder, rape, and looting a byproduct of poor, or non-existent, planning. Governor Blanco also deserves blame for not calling in the National Guard to get the situation in hand earlier. Now, 38,000 National Guardsmen are aiding the wider disaster area, including undertaking the police functions within New Orleans that Mayor Nagin could not or would not furnish.

If you believe this shit, your fucking delusional...

Cover the FEARLESS LEADER's ass...Funny, the author accuses the left of what many on the right already seemed to know.:rolleyes:

Guitar Shark
09-06-2005, 11:53 AM
There is plenty of blame to spread around.

Hardrock69
09-06-2005, 12:56 PM
Blame it on Hurricane Katrina....
:rolleyes:

diamondD
09-06-2005, 01:00 PM
And none of it's helping anybody at this time.

ELVIS
09-06-2005, 01:02 PM
Originally posted by Hardrock69
Blame it on Hurricane Katrina....
:rolleyes:

No, no!

The hurricane had nothing to do with it...

BigBadBrian
09-06-2005, 03:29 PM
Originally posted by Guitar Shark
There is plenty of blame to spread around.

Yep.

:gulp:

BigBadBrian
09-06-2005, 03:30 PM
Originally posted by diamondD
And none of it's helping anybody at this time.

Agreed. They can hold all the hearings they want six months from now. Just help the people NOW, dammit.

Nickdfresh
09-06-2005, 06:14 PM
Originally posted by BigBadBrian
Agreed. They can hold all the hearings they want six months from now. Just help the people NOW, dammit.

True dat...

Angel
09-06-2005, 06:39 PM
Hell has officially frozen over folks. BBB, Nick & Angel all agree!

(It's the end of the world as you know it....) ;)

Warham
09-06-2005, 09:04 PM
Originally posted by Angel
Hell has officially frozen over folks. BBB, Nick & Angel all agree!

(It's the end of the world as you know it....) ;)

And I feel fine.

BigBadBrian
09-06-2005, 10:25 PM
http://www.rc4systems.net/albums/album04/excuses_excuses.jpg

Big Train
09-07-2005, 12:57 AM
Originally posted by Nickdfresh
If you believe this shit, your fucking delusional...

Cover the FEARLESS LEADER's ass...Funny, the author accuses the left of what many on the right already seemed to know.:rolleyes:

Not covering for anyone...I'm just saying let's start at the beginning. But no, we can't possibly do that right? Let's not follow it from the local government, who was in charge to begin with and just immediately run it up to the top. If you really want the truth you have to start in New Orleans itself...you seem to not want the truth though.

Nitro Express
09-07-2005, 02:30 AM
Everyone fucked up. The Mayor of New Orleans fucked up, the Gov. of Louisianna fucked up. The Dept. of Homeland Security (FEMA) fucked up. Bush fucked up.

Bush did give a presidential warning to vacate the hurrican target zone. I saw him on television doing it. The city of New Orleans because of it's obviouse flooding danger should have had a well detailed evacuation plan. This plan should have taken the city's large poor population into consideration. This was not done. The mayor failed. The Govenor should have assessed the situation and sent help in. This was a pooch screw. The president should have assessed the situation and sent federal help in when it became obviouse New Orleans was a city in caos and it's leadership was non-existant.

Everyone is to blame on this baby. I hate seeing the partisan politics come out. I think the Democrats and Republicans should just say fuck it and start shooting each other. The last ones standing win.

Phil theStalker
09-07-2005, 03:57 AM
Originally posted by Big Train
Thank you Warham., that is the first logical thing I've read in the media about all of this. It actually acknowledges the core issues.
This is just entertainment like Rush Limbaugh is.


:spank:

NAZI CLOWN

zeronumber
09-07-2005, 05:35 PM
Originally posted by Hardrock69
Blame it on Hurricane Katrina....
:rolleyes:

You see...that's too easy.
Then the idiots can't nag on Bush.
Who would want that?

I mean, we could blame the enginers who built the city because they assumed that the city would never be hit with something stronger than catagory 3.

We could blame the mayor and the govenor, the president, sammy hagar, the olsen twins, aunt jermima, the limburgh baby and the entire nation of jolly town...

Just not the hurricane itself...
Because as we all know....it's never natures fault for a natural disater.:rolleyes:

Nickdfresh
09-07-2005, 05:48 PM
Post 1:
Originally posted by BigBadBrian
Agreed. They can hold all the hearings they want six months from now. Just help the people NOW, dammit.

Post: 2

Originally posted by BigBadBrian
http://www.rc4systems.net/albums/album04/excuses_excuses.jpg

Jesus BBB, why do you make yourself look like a joke like this?:rolleyes:

DrMaddVibe
09-07-2005, 06:08 PM
http://www.cityofno.com/portal.aspx?portal=46&tabid=26

"Certain hazards, such as a hurricane, provide some lead time for coordinating an evacuation. However, this can not be considered a certainty. Plus, the sheer size of an evacuation in response to an approaching hurricane creates the need for the use of community-wide warning resources, which cannot be limited to our City's geographical boundaries. Evacuation of major portions of our population, either in response to localized or citywide disasters, can only be accomplished if the citizens and visitors are kept informed of approaching threats on a timely schedule, and if they are notified of the need to evacuate in a timely and organized manner. If an evacuation order is issued without the mechanisms needed to disseminate the information to the affected persons, then we face the possibility of having large numbers of people either stranded and left to the mercy of a storm, or left in an area impacted by toxic materials.

In this day of high-speed communication and wide-spread availability of information, mechanisms do exist to transmit emergency related information to the vast majority of the community. For our most serious threat, hurricanes, information from the National Hurricane Center in Miami and our local office of the National Weather Service, can reach the general population through local governments and mass media outlets. It is the responsibility of the Office of Emergency Preparedness to guarantee that not only is the public alerted, but that other emergency response organizations and personnel are alert and in position to meet the real or potential threat.

Warning for an emergency requires notification at two levels: notification of public officials and response organizations and the warning of the general public. The mechanisms chosen to accomplish these critical events must be rapid in execution and comprehensive in application. This annex outlines the procedures which will be implemented for notifying the emergency response network of its activation, and of informing the general public of the potential or actual occurrence of life threatening events and hazards.

The extent and methods of warnings issued will be determined by the Director of the Office of Emergency Preparedness, and are based upon the geographic area impacted. When events necessitate the immediate evacuation of threatened individuals, these decisions may be made by the on scene Incident Commander. Decisions affecting larger geographic areas will be made by the Director of the Office of Emergency Preparedness in conjunction with the Superintendent of Fire and Superintendent of Police.

General evacuations that may result from an approaching hurricane will be ordered by the Mayor of the City, upon the recommendation of the Director of the Office of Emergency Preparedness. The area affected by the warning may range from blocks and portions of neighborhoods, to the entire city."





"'I'm fixing a hole where the rain gets in, And stops my mind from wandering, Where it will gooooooooo."

Warham
09-07-2005, 06:13 PM
http://www.rc4systems.net/albums/album04/excuses_excuses.jpg