Be careful, 
jim will accuse you of being a smear artist. 
it's  a roving we will go.
But, then again, jim wants bush impeached too.
how silly of me.

Check out the website where he linked the jon christian ryter 
article. on the left side of the column is an offer to buy signed 
artwork the subject of which is a picture of bush rolling up his 
sleeves and getting to work. Oy VEY! Jim, My god, have you no shame?


--- In cia-drugs@yahoogroups.com, JSvj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>   (September 05, 2005 -- 01:17 AM EDT // link // print)
> 
> As noted, the Washington Post got burned today by a "senior Bush  
> official" who told them that Gov. Blanco of Louisiana had never  
> declared a state of emergency in the site -- a claim the Post 
printed  
> as fact. Yet the claim was demonstrably false and by late 
afternoon  
> the Post had been compelled to print a correction.
> 
> This week's Newsweek contains the same false claim -- and though  
> their recital of the anecdote is unsourced, common sense suggests  
> that someone or some operation fed them both the same line, which  
> neither organization checked out before running.
> 
> Monday's Times, not surprisingly, confirms that the White House  
> damage control operation is being run by Karl Rove and Dan 
Bartlett.
> 
> Add it up.
> 
> And who will report this out?
> http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/
> 
> 
> 
> 
> On Sep 5, 2005, at 0:27, Jim Rarey wrote:
> 
> > A partial answer why it took so long. There was no ontingency 
plan  
> > for a hurricane higher than a category three, which is 
the "worst  
> > case scenario" under which the levees were built
> > JR
> >
> > http://www.jonchristianryter.com/News_Folder/Behind.html
> >
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> >
> > Sept. 4, 2005—Labor Day Weekend
> >
> > Gov. Blanco is responsible for Katrina aftermath catastrophe
> >
> > Put a public school teacher in the governor's mansion and 
you'll  
> > have a pedagogue as the chief executive every time. It really  
> > doesn't matter how long she's in office, she'll always be a  
> > schoolmarm who's out of her element and in over her head—the 
Peter  
> > Principle epitomized.Unfortunately for the people of New 
Orleans,  
> > it took a crisis of cataclysmic proportions in which thousands 
of  
> > people suffered physical deprivation and emotional
humiliation—
and  
> > hundreds died before anyone realized that when you elect a 
follower  
> > as your leader, no one makes realistic plans for the crisis 
until a  
> > catastrophe occurs, and while waiting for someone to say, "This  
> > way, follow me..."everyone becomes hopelessly stagnate. And, 
that's  
> > what happened in New Orleans.
> >
> > Louisiana governor Kathleen Babineaux Blanco is one of those  
> > pedagogues. She needs to be back teaching classes at Breaux 
Bridge  
> > High School—not as the chief executive of a State. If the
voters 
of  
> > Louisiana are smart in 2007 they will provide her with a job  
> > transfer—and send Lt. Governor Mitchell Landrieu packing as  
> > well.Both of them fiddled while Rome burned, believing they 
could  
> > best deal with the multitude of problems in New Orleans after 
the  
> > flood waters subsided and the damage caused by Hurricane 
Katrina  
> > could be more safely and accurately assessed.
> >
> > The tragedy that unfolded in New Orleans in the wake of the  
> > floodwaters ofHurricane Katrina should be a political career- 
> > buster. Between now and the federal elections in November, 2006 
and  
> > the gubernatorial elections in 2007, Louisiana's Democratic 
Party  
> > led by Sen. Mary Landrieu (Mitch Landrieu's sister) will have 
to  
> > convince the State's 67% black majority that the suffering they  
> > endured during Hurricane Katrina was the fault of President 
George  
> > W. Bush—who was too busy enjoying his summer vacation at his 
ranch  
> > in Crawford, Texas to deal with the tragedy that was unfolding 
in  
> > Louisiana. That's the argument she has pushed at all of the 
press  
> > conferences she held after Katrina devastated the Gulf coast.
> >
> > On Fox News, Landrieu emphasized the fact that the US Army Corp 
of  
> > Engineers asked Congress for $27 million dollars in last year's  
> > omnibus budget bill, but only got $5 million to reinforce the  
> > levees around New Orleans. (Let's review: between Bush and  
> > Landrieu, which one is in Congress? The last time I read the US  
> > Constitution, only Senators and Congressmen could add line items 
to  
> > the legislation voted on by them. Presidents can either sign or  
> > veto the entire bill, but they can't add to, or take away from, 
the  
> > legislation sent to him for his signature. Bush signed into law  
> > what Congress enacted.
> >
> > If anyone's to blame for the appropriations bill having an  
> > insufficient amount of money to repair the 17th St. levee, 
let's  
> > start by pointing our finger at Louisiana's two Senators and 
seven  
> > congressmen who failed to push the leadership of the House and  
> > Senate for something their State obviously needed.) But, the 
truth  
> > is, $27 million—had every penny been spent reinforcing the
levee—
 
> > would not have prevented the disaster from happening since what 
the  
> > money was to be used for was adding height to the levee. New  
> > Orleans flooded because the levee broke. To reinforce the 
entire  
> > levee and add additional height to it would require an  
> > appropriation in the hundreds of millions. And that is money 
that  
> > rightfully should be appropriated from the pockets of the 
taxpayers  
> > of Louisiana—not the taxpayers of New York, Minnesota,
Arizona 
and  
> > New Mexico.
> >
> > The argument advanced over the last couple of days by racism  
> > activists Jesse Jackson andAl Sharpton, the Democratic National  
> > Committee, and the radical left socialists likeMoveOn.org is 
that  
> > President George W. Bush did not react until the public outcry  
> > overwhelmed the media. Bush wasn't concerned, the liberal 
pundits  
> > said, because all of the rich white folks got out of New 
Orleans  
> > before Hurricane Katrina blew ashore, and the only people left 
in  
> > New Orleans were the welfare class poor—who are 90% black and
 
> > always vote Democratic.
> >
> > Let's forget the colorful racist rhetoric for a moment and look 
at  
> > the facts. From the moment Katrina blew ashore—hours before
the  
> > 17th Street levee broke—New Orleans mayorRaymond Nagin
declared  
> > martial law over his city and ordered it evacuated. He tried, 
in  
> > vain, to get Gov. Blanco to turn control of available National  
> > Guard troops over to him. She refused.
> >
> > Blanco's advisers told her that the remaining 7,000 National 
Guard  
> > troops left in Louisiana were not enough to secure the city of 
New  
> > Orleans, and that it was not in her best political interest to 
use  
> > them until they could be reinforced since they might get hurt, 
or  
> > worse, hurt or kill a civilian they were charged with 
protecting.  
> > Instead, she let Nagin's 1,500 New Orleans cops fend for 
themselves  
> > in a city that had been tacitly surrendered to looters and thugs.
> >
> > Blanco, who apparently was not in constant or at least direct  
> > contact with the mayor of New Orleans as a leader would be 
expected  
> > to be, appeared to be preoccupied with photo ops which made it  
> > appear to the voters that she was aware of the plight that was  
> > enveloping her State—and that she was implementing corrective
 
> > measures to ward off disaster. Like a school teacher passing 
out  
> > unimportant assignments, she outlined the measures that would 
take  
> > place to secure the city of New Orleans and rescue its people.  
> > Butnothing happened. Why? Because Blanco never took control of 
the  
> > emergency apparatus of Louisiana.
> >
> > Her TV rhetoric was never translated into specific instructions 
to  
> > her department heads. Nor does it appear there was an official  
> > request from the State of Louisiana to the Bush Administration 
for  
> > federal assistance until September 2 when federal troops 
assumed  
> > control of the Blanco quagmire. Because each State is 
sovereign,  
> > the federal government cannot send federal troops into a State, 
or  
> > declare martial law without authorization from the governor of 
that  
> > State.
> >
> > Blanco never became the leader the people elected her to be. 
Not  
> > when the levees broke. Not when the looting began. Not when a 
dozen  
> > rapes in the SuperDome happened. Not when mobs of thugs took to 
the  
> > streets and ransacked the homes of News Orleans "refugees" who 
left  
> > town before the storm hit, or were trapped in the SuperDome 
(under  
> > a lockdown situation where they were not allowed to leave by 
order  
> > of the Blanco Administration—which apparently viewed their 
local  
> > "refugees" as potential looters). Nor did Blanco become a 
leader  
> > when gangs armed with automatic weapons took to the streets and  
> > terrorized the people of New Orleans, keeping the Red Cross,  
> > medical personnel and other emergency responders from helping 
the  
> > frightened, the hungry, the injured and the dying. Blanco 
requested  
> > large scale federal intervention four days too late. What Gov.  
> > Kathleen Blanco should have done—on August 30 or at the
latest, 
on  
> > the 31st—was declare martial law; impose a curfew in the 
affected  
> > parrishes, issue a "shoot-to-kill" order on all looters to the  
> > National Guard under her control as well as all local, county 
and  
> > State police agencies—and she should have requested federal  
> > assistance then, not on Sept. 2 when the situation in New 
Orleans  
> > had become a hopeless quagmire.
> >
> > It took Fox News to expose the horror of the pseudo-prison camp 
at  
> > the SuperDome where American citizens were trapped without food 
and  
> > water; where police were under orders to keep them contained 
there  
> > to prevent further incidents of looting. Fox News also reported 
the  
> > gang war in the streets of New Orleans, and that thugs were 
firing  
> > on New Orleans fire fighters as looters tried to break into the  
> > Verizon offices in New Orleans. America's outrage finally 
forced  
> > State officials in Baton Rouge—whom it appears were waiting
for 
the  
> > flood waters to recede before acting—to wake up and
communicate  
> > with local officials who were fighting to save a city; and with 
the  
> > Bush Administration which was ready to assume control of the 
city,  
> > restore order and evacuate the remaining people to temporary  
> > shelters in other States.
> >
> > Even as the media was reporting on the atrocities that were  
> > happening on the ground, those theoretically in charge of 
emergency  
> > operations appeared to be oblivious of the problems since they  
> > communicated directly with the Governor's office and not with 
city  
> > officials (whom everyone assumed were communicating with 
Blanco).  
> > FEMA DirectorMichael Brown, an undersecretary of Homeland 
Security  
> > told reporters that he thought "...the security situation is 
pretty  
> > darn good." Terry Ebbert, head of the New Orleans Emergency  
> > Management operations said help was almost nonexistent. What he 
had  
> > seen, he said was "...too little, too late. FEMA has been here  
> > three days," he added, "yet there is no command and control. We 
can  
> > send massive amounts of aid to tusnami victims, but we can't 
bail  
> > out the city of New Orleans."
> >
> > It was not until George Bush went to Louisiana and saw first 
hand  
> > what was not happening that the looting was stopped. And the 
Red  
> > Cross which, the day before, was afraid to even enter New 
Orleans,  
> > was feeding the flood victims there in complete safety. Medical  
> > attention reached the aged and infirm—and the 25 thousand
lock-
ins  
> > who were living in their own body waste at the SuperDome were  
> > evacuated to temporary shelters outside of the State.
> >
> > Added to that, the Bush Administration then provided Louisiana 
with  
> > a $56 million grant to provide jobs to 10 thousand displaced 
people  
> > to help with the cleanup from Hurricane Katrina.Then Bush 
booked  
> > the Carnival Cruise Line through November to provide temporary  
> > living quarters for close to half of the displaced people from 
New  
> > Orleans.
> >
> > Nevertheless, the liberals, trying to help themselves to a 
double  
> > serving of the midterm Election of 2006, will continue to 
insist  
> > that the dehumanization of New Orleans' poor was the fault of  
> > George W. Bush, not Gov. Kathleen Blanco. And, by the time the  
> > gubernatorial election is held in Louisiana in 2007, Blanco will 
be  
> > claiming the same thing in an attempt to win re-election.
> >
> > Louisiana politicians have known for at least 30 years that if 
a  
> > Category 4 or 5 hurricane hit New Orleans the levees that 
protect  
> > the below-sea level city would not be able to hold back the 
tidal  
> > surge on the back end of the storm. New Orleans would become 
the  
> > Venice of America—or its Atlantis. For that reason, on August
25—
2  
> > days before Hurricane Katrina made landfall—Bush declared 
portions  
> > of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida a major disaster  
> > area.Ê Blanco should have declared a state of emergency and 
asked  
> > the federal government to take charge on that date.
> >
> > Bush's declaration allowed FEMA—which coordinates state and 
local  
> > disaster relief efforts—to make funds and supplies available
to 
the  
> > Gulf coast States that were about to feel Katrina's fury. 
Medical  
> > supplies, food and water—and National Guard units were
readied. 
The  
> > Red Cross set up a command center in Baton Rouge. But until 
Blanco  
> > declared a state of emergency and invited federal troops into 
her  
> > State, the Bush Administration had done virtually everything it  
> > could do.
> >
> > Several things should have happened as the Category 5 storm 
bore  
> > down on the coast of Louisiana since it was the nightmare storm  
> > everyone feared—and theoretically prepared for—for 30
years. 
But  
> > one thing that absolutely nobody could have foreseen or 
predicted  
> > happened in New Orleans that radically changed the rescue-
recovery  
> > equation once disaster struck.
> >
> > Correctly, New Orleans mayor Ray Nagin ordered the evacuation 
of  
> > the city. Roughly 65% of the population in the city heeded the  
> > warning, locked up their homes and left the city. There is no 
doubt  
> > Nagin's decision to evacuate the city saved many lives. But 
that  
> > appears to be the last correct decision made by a city or State  
> > official for four days. While Nagin declared martial law, the 
New  
> > Orleans police department and the Orleans Sheriff's Department 
did  
> > not take immediate tactical control of the city to enforce the  
> > curfew imposed by the mayor. Once the city lost electrical 
power  
> > and the streets of the concrete jungle remained dark at night, 
the  
> > armed gangs and vandals that terrorized the population by day  
> > terrorized the police by night. Cops, fearful of being ambushed 
and  
> > assassinated by street gangs, refused to patrol the darkened 
city  
> > at night. As a result, anarchy ruled the streets of New Orleans 
for  
> > four days.
> >
> > Realizing that most of the city is below sea level and that a  
> > hurricane of the magnitude of the one bearing down on New 
Orleans  
> > was going to result in major flooding as the levees were 
breached,  
> > someone should have made sure the mass transit vehicles (the 
city  
> > would need to transport those who remained behind) were safely  
> > moved to high ground and were out of harm's way. School buses.  
> > Public transit buses. Nagin controlled the public transit system 
of  
> > New Orleans. Blancocontrolled the city's school buses since 
they  
> > are owned by the State Board of Education.No one moved the mass  
> > transit vehicles.
> >
> > Like the rest of New Orleans, when Katrina passed through town 
on  
> > its way north, all of the buses were under water. The first post-
 
> > Katrina task had suddenly become an impossible hurdle before 
anyone  
> > in the city or State government realized that particular 
problem  
> > existed. Getting the displaced residents of New Orleans out of 
the  
> > flood-ravaged city would now became a Herculean task that would  
> > ultimately require the air national guard six days later.
> >
> > As America watched what could more easily have been a made-for-
TV  
> > movie than a real life drama incredulously unfold before their  
> > eyes, city and State officials were stymied because absolutely  
> > nothing was happening on the ground to bring relief to close to 
40  
> > thousand displaced New Orleans residents. Those in the locked-
down  
> > Superdome were, in a very real sense, captives of the city—
without  
> > water or food and without toilet or bath facilities. If the 
United  
> > States government locked up 15,000 al Qaeda terrorists and 
deprived  
> > them of food and water for five days, and did not provide them 
with  
> > humane restroom facilities,the UN and Amnesty International 
would  
> > have charged them with war crimes. Yet the city of New Orleans 
held  
> > its own citizens in what can only be described as a prison 
lockdown  
> > without the barest essentials of life—bread and water—for
five 
days  
> > and nights because they lost control of their city.
> >
> > Completely exhausted, Mayor Ray Nagin gave the media an 
interview  
> > on Sept. 2 that reveals much about the Blanco Administration 
that  
> > he might otherwise have never spoken. Nagintold the media he 
hadn't  
> > seen any State officials in New Orleans. "It's politics, man," 
he  
> > said,"they're playing games and they're out there spinning for 
the  
> > cameras. I don't know what they're doing." And, in Nagin's 
view,  
> > the State officials didn't know what the State officials were  
> > doing, either.
> >
> > "I'll tell you this," Nagin said, "I'll give the President some  
> > credit on this. He sent one John Wayne dude that can get stuff  
> > done. His name is [Lt.] Gen. [Russell] Honore. He came off the  
> > doggone chopper, and started cussing and people started moving.  
> > He'll get some stuff done. They ought to give that guy—if
they  
> > don't want to give it to me—full authority to get the job
done.  
> > We'll save some people."
> >
> > Asked if he thought the President was serious when he held his  
> > press conference, Nagin said the president "...can't do 
anything  
> > until Blanco requests him to do it." The reporter acknowledged  
> > knowing the law prohibited the federal government from stepping 
in  
> > without a State request for assistance, asking: "Do you know  
> > whether or not she's made that request?"
> >
> > Nagin shrugged. "I don't know," he admitted. "I don't think so. 
We  
> > called for martial law when we realized that the looting was  
> > getting out of control and we redirected all of our police 
officers  
> > back to patrolling the streets..I'm telling you right now, [the  
> > news media is] showing all these reports of looting—people 
doing  
> > all that weird stuff. And, they are doing that. But people are  
> > desperate. They're trying to find food and water...the majority 
of  
> > them. You have some knuckleheads out there, taking advantage of 
the  
> > lawlessness—this situation we can't really control, and
they're  
> > doing some awful, awful things. But that's a small amount of 
the  
> > people. Most people are looking to try and survive."
> >
> > Nagin apparently holds the same view as Fox News' Bill O'Reilly 
who  
> > refused to call breaking into stores to steal food, water and a  
> > change of underwear, "looting." I looked for the waiver in the 
7th  
> > Commandment but I couldn't find one. Converting something that 
does  
> > not belong to you for your own personal use—regardless of
your  
> > "need"—is stealing. Stealing is stealing—even if you need
the  
> > "loot" to feed your family. (Don't get me wrong. If I was in 
that  
> > place, at that time, under those circumstances—and there was
no  
> > place to buy water or food—there's no doubt in my mind that, 
even  
> > knowing it was wrong, I would still take care of my family. But 
I  
> > know that just because I could claim the moral high ground does 
not  
> > make the crime any less immoral.) Stealing is still stealing. 
Plain  
> > and simple, its wrong.
> >
> > But the media pundits who, almost universally, are able to 
excuse  
> > the theft of water, food and clothing, were clear in their 
minds  
> > that stealing plasma TVs, video games and players, jewelry, 
guns  
> > and other nonessential merchandise was looting.
> >
> > That raises the last, unanswered question about why otherwise  
> > reasonably honest citizens could become thugs and thieves, 
using  
> > Katrina as an excuse to loot, pillage, rape and destroy human 
life.  
> > While much of the gun violence reported throughout New Orleans 
was  
> > gang-related, there appears also to be many instances of people  
> > firing at medivac helicopters not to kill or harm those on 
board,  
> > but to say, "Come and get my family." The National Guard 
soldier  
> > who was wounded in the leg at the SuperDome was shot as he  
> > struggled with a flood refugee trying to steal his rifle—to 
protect  
> > his own family. Commenting on the incident, New Orleans police  
> > captain Ernie Demmo said, "These are good people—they're just
 
> > scared people."
> >
> > Military helicopters delivering food and water to the people  
> > outside the convention center across from the SuperDome were 
mobbed  
> > by crowds of displaced people demanding that they take them to 
safety.
> >
> > After the first rush on one of the relief helicopters, the 
troopers  
> > began hovering about ten feet or so above the crowds, dropping  
> > cases of water and food, then flying away. That meant the 
biggest  
> > and strongest people on the ground got all the food and water.  
> > Those who needed nurishment and fluids most but were unable to  
> > fight, got nothing.
> >
> > For all practical purposes, New Orleans had become a primeval  
> > concrete jungle—survival of the fittest. The old and the weak 
died.  
> > An old man in a chaise lounge lay dead for days. An elderly 
woman  
> > lay dead in her wheel chair. Another body lay, covered in a 
dirty  
> > sheet, beside her and glazed-eye, parched and hungry people,  
> > hardened to the death around them, filed past them in search of 
a  
> > mouthful of water or a morsel of food as flies, attracted to 
the  
> > rotting corpses, buzzed around them in the stifling heat.
> >
> > What happened to the people of New Orleans during the horrors 
of  
> > surviving the flood that elicpsed the nightmare of Katrina? Most 
of  
> > the people of New Orleans evacuated the city before Katrina's 
wrath  
> > was unleashed on The Big Easy. The 300 thousand people who 
remained  
> > behind were either the elderly or the sick who could not easily  
> > leave, or those who survived in the city's publc housing 
projects  
> > and couldn't afford to leave.
> >
> > What the TV cameras usually capture in stories of human tragedy  
> > around America are ordinary people who rise to the occasion,  
> > working together to rescue their neighbors and support each 
other  
> > until help arrives. Instead, what the media saw were flood 
victims  
> > being raped and beaten; corpses littering the streets; looting 
and  
> > rioting; fires that could not start on their own breaking out 
all  
> > over the city; and police and emergency responders being fired 
upon
> >
> > Those who remained behind could be classified in one of three  
> > groups: [1] law-abiding elderly citizens of modest means or 
poor  
> > but proud Americans who simply lacked the money and/or  
> > transportation to leave the city; [2] people who can accurately 
be  
> > described as wards of the former generational welfare state in 
whom  
> > dependence on the political system was ingrained; and [3] 
criminal  
> > opportunists who seek human tragedy that will allow them to prey 
on  
> > others.
> >
> > Louisiana, like Mississippi, Arkansas and Alabama, are 
considered  
> > the generational welfare States of the South. The good ol' boy  
> > caste political system of the South is corrupted by four  
> > generations of welfare and a steady stream of welfare handouts 
and  
> > patronage jobs that help erode the moral value structure of the  
> > welfare recipients over time. What human tragedy exposes when 
we  
> > see the worst in people, whether its riots in Watts after an  
> > injustice against African Americans—white LA cops use
excessive  
> > force against a black man like Rodney King—is witnessed by 
America,  
> > or destruction of a way of life in The Big Easy, is the  
> > psychological consequence of generational welfare.
> >
> > It's "normal" for neighbors to band together and fight to 
protect  
> > their property in a communal sense, and to overcome the 
adversity  
> > that face the community equally. Why? Because collectively, 
their  
> > sweat equity created the infrastructure they are fighting to 
save.  
> > Those who contribute nothing to the creation of the community 
have  
> > no sweat equity invested. Thus, they have no communal bond with 
the  
> > infrastructure, so destroying it leaves no sense of guilt.
> >
> > Likewise, if the livelihood of the citizen comes from the 
gratuity  
> > of the State and not from being employed by the businesses 
within  
> > the community in which they live, why would they worry if 
looters  
> > destroyed those businesses and carried off the means by which  
> > others earn their living? For that reason, looting was a 
natural  
> > reaction by many of those who are accustomed to having the 
State  
> > provide for their needs. Thus, the real tragedy of Hurricane  
> > Katrina is our expoure—as Americans—to a caste system we
created 
by  
> > allowing utopian, socialist politicians to ensnare four 
generations  
> > of Americans and chain them to the bondage of a welfare system 
that  
> > robs men of their dignity and their will to convert their own  
> > dreams into reality.
> >
> > And, while the American people believed they shattered the cycle 
of  
> > dependency on government by ending "...welfare as we know it" 
in  
> > 1996 when the GOP intruded in the sacrosanct world of 
entitlements  
> > and wiped out welfare as a "career choice."
> >
> > Tragically today Congress has several pieces of pending 
legislation  
> > that will secretly reassemble the Welfare State during the 
109th  
> > Congress. Among those bills are HR 240, thePersonal 
Responsibility,  
> > Work and Family Promotion Act of 2005 (approved by the House 
Ways &  
> > Means Committee's Subcommittee on Human Resources—March 15, 
2005);  
> > S.667, the Personal Responsibility and Individual Development 
for  
> > Everyone Act [PRIDE] (approved by the Senate Finance
Committee— 
> > March 17, 2005); S.456, the Pathway to Independence Act (still 
in  
> > committee—introduced by Lincoln Chafee [R-RI], Gordon Smith
[R-
OR],  
> > Jay Rockefeller [D-WV], James Jeffords [I-VT] and Susan Collins 
[R- 
> > ME].
> >
> > Unknown to most Americans, when Congress "ended" welfare in 
1996,  
> > they provided a stop gap measure to give temporary assistance 
to  
> > welfare recipients to help them transition off welfare. That  
> > temporary measure became a new permanent welfare system called 
TANF 
> > (temporary assistance for needy families). That was the only 
way  
> > they could entice Bill Clinton to sign the legislation that 
ended  
> > the block grants to the States. The TANF legislation was 
designed  
> > to provide a 5-year phase out of benefits to generational 
welfare  
> > recipients when it was enacted in 1996.
> >
> > Since the legislation was passed, State-level bureaucracies 
have  
> > argued that many welfare recipients are simply not employable 
due  
> > to their own personal "barriers to employment" such as: lack of  
> > education and training; substance abuse problems and physical 
and/ 
> > or mental health problems. And, while the States didn't admit 
it,  
> > two other chronic conditions: basic laziness and a math 
reality.  
> > Welfare is more profitable than the starting wage in a minimum 
wage  
> > environment. Oh yes, one other thing that benefits the State  
> > bureaucracies which are predominantly Democratic even in GOP  
> > States: the chain that ties the welfare recipient to the  
> > bureaucracy is tethered at the voting box.
> >
> > What does it all add up to? The chaos and anarchy we witnessed 
on  
> > Fox News and your local liberal network TV stations (if they 
played  
> > it) will be replayed again and again in communities with large  
> > welfare populations whenever a crisis of any type develops. It 
does  
> > not have to be a catastrophe caused by a hurricane or a tornado.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > Copyright © 2005 Jon Christian Ryter.
> > All rights reserved.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > Complete archives at http://www.sitbot.net/
> >
> > Please let us stay on topic and be civil.
> >
> > OM
> >
> >
> >
> > YAHOO! GROUPS LINKS
> >
> >  Visit your group "cia-drugs" on the web.
> >
> >  To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
> >  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >
> >  Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of 
Service.
> >
> >





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Please let us stay on topic and be civil. 

OM
 
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