(c/o IP list)

New Orleans crisis shames Americans
By Matt Wells
BBC News, Los Angeles


At the end of an unforgettable week, one broadcaster on Friday
bitterly encapsulated the sense of burning shame and anger that many
American citizens are feeling.

The only difference between the chaos of New Orleans and a Third
World disaster operation, he said, was that a foreign dictator would
have responded better.

It has been a profoundly shocking experience for many across this
vast country who, for the large part, believe the home-spun myth
about the invulnerability of the American Dream.

The party in power in Washington is always happy to convey the
impression of 50 states moving forward together in social and
economic harmony towards a bigger and better America.

That is what presidential campaigning is all about.

But what the devastating consequences of Katrina have shown - along
with the response to it - is that for too long now, the fabric of
this complex and overstretched country, especially in states like
Louisiana and Mississippi, has been neglected and ignored.

Borrowed time

The fitting metaphors relating to the New Orleans debacle are almost
too numerous to mention.

First there was an extraordinary complacency, mixed together with
what seemed like over-reaction, before the storm.

A genuinely heroic mayor orders a total evacuation of the city the
day before Katrina arrives, knowing that for decades now, New Orleans
has been living on borrowed time.

The National Guard and federal emergency personnel stay tucked up at
home.

The havoc of Katrina had been predicted countless times on a local
and federal level - even to the point where it was acknowledged that
tens of thousands of the poorest residents would not be able to leave
the city in advance.

No official plan was ever put in place for them.

Abandoned to the elements

The famous levees that were breached could have been strengthened and
raised at what now seems like a trifling cost of a few billion dollars.

The Bush administration, together with Congress, cut the budgets for
flood protection and army engineers, while local politicians failed
to generate any enthusiasm for local tax increases.

New Orleans partied-on just hoping for the best, abandoned by anyone
in national authority who could have put the money into really
protecting the city.

Meanwhile, the poorest were similarly abandoned, as the horrifying
images and stories from the Superdome and Convention Center prove.

The truth was simple and apparent to all. If journalists were there
with cameras beaming the suffering live across America, where were
the officers and troops?

The neglect that meant it took five days to get water, food, and
medical care to thousands of mainly orderly African-American citizens
desperately sheltering in huge downtown buildings of their native
city, has been going on historically, for as long as the inadequate
levees have been there.

Divided city

I should make a confession at this point: I have been to New Orleans
on assignment three times in as many years, and I was smitten by the
Big Easy, with its unique charms and temperament.

But behind the elegant intoxicants of the French Quarter, it was
clearly a city grotesquely divided on several levels. It has twice
the national average poverty rate.

The government approach to such deprivation looked more like
thoughtless containment than anything else.


The nightly shootings and drugs-related homicides of recent years
pointed to a small but vicious culture of largely black-on-black
crime that everyone knew existed, but no-one seemed to have any real
answers for.

Again, no-one wanted to pick up the bill or deal with the realities
of race relations in the 21st Century.

Too often in the so-called "New South", they still look positively
19th Century.

"Shoot the looters" is good rhetoric, but no lasting solution.

Uneasy paradox

It is astonishing to me that so many Americans seem shocked by the
existence of such concentrated poverty and social neglect in their
own country.

In the workout room of the condo where I am currently staying in the
affluent LA neighbourhood of Santa Monica, an executive and his
personal trainer ignored the anguished television reports blaring
above their heads on Friday evening.

Either they did not care, or it was somehow too painful to discuss.

When President Bush told "Good Morning America" on Thursday morning
that nobody could have "anticipated" the breach of the New Orleans
levees, it pointed to not only a remote leader in denial, but a whole
political class.

The uneasy paradox which so many live with in this country - of being
first-and-foremost rugged individuals, out to plunder what they can
and paying as little tax as they can get away with, while at the same
time believing that America is a robust, model society - has reached
a crisis point this week.

Will there be real investment, or just more buck-passing between
federal agencies and states?

The country has to choose whether it wants to rebuild the levees and
destroyed communities, with no expense spared for the future - or
once again brush off that responsibility, and blame the other guy.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/americas/4210674.stm

Published: 2005/09/03 08:43:13 GMT

© BBC MMV



You are a subscribed member of the infowarrior list. Visit
www.infowarrior.org for list information or to unsubscribe. This message
may be redistributed freely in its entirety. Any and all copyrights
appearing in list messages are maintained by their respective owners.

Reply via email to