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EDITORIAL
Category 4 Mind-Blower
My little son put down his Lego construction and came over to
me full of tears. “Dad I’m really scared,” he
said. “What if none of this is real and everything is a
dream? How do I know I’m not dreaming right now?”
Like any parent I did the best I could. We talked about the reality
of nature and the nature of reality and for this morning my answers
were good enough, though I suspect they really weren’t.
The reality of nature is that in our mountains it’s been
bone dry this past month while parts of the south saw 15 inches
of rain in a day plus 15 feet of ocean. No, we never know if reality’s
going to shift into something unimaginable except in dream or
some sort of waking nightmare. All we can do is stay conscious
enough to plan and respond as effectively as we can. Personally,
we each try and figure out our own ways to do those things. But
collectively we have to rely on elected officials and the people
they appoint to make sure we’re as safe as we can be. That,
it turns out, is the scariest thing hurricane Katrina has washed
over the national consciousness. And for many of us, it’s
swept away any illusion that in the event of real crisis, our
basic security is in any way assured.
So where was our nation’s leadership as the perfect storm
of death slowly spun toward a major American city? The President,
as usual, was vacationing at his Texas ranch, the Vice President
at his Wyoming one. The Secretary of State was in New York shopping
for $600 Ferragamo shoes. The guy in charge of FEMA who’d
trained for his job by running the International Arabian Horse
Association was at least in his office, even if he had no idea
what was happening outside it. They obviously don’t get
CNN or the Weather Channel there, probably just Fox News and the
700 Club, both of whom were busy opining about how we should assassinate
foreign heads of state, or noting how there are those who believe
that homosexuality causes hurricanes and meteors. Perhaps, in
view of such an odd media climate, FEMA figured they should send
a thousand people down south with clipboards and a stated mission
to enhance the agency’s PR profile. The end result was an
unknown number of dead Americans who didn’t need to die,
and the sight of our Homeland Security structure disintegrating
in the face of something everyone could see coming plain as day
and far in advance.
The storm itself was followed by a freak counterspin out of Washington.
Heck, nobody guessed the levees would break said the guy whose
department’s studies said they would. Prominent Republicans
immediately laid blame on state and local officials, Democrats
pointed out how the Bush administration slashed $105 million urgently
sought for New Orleans flood control to a fraction of what was
needed, while simultaneously managing to find $231 million for
a bridge on an uninhabited Alaskan island. Then came the blaming
of victims; early reports of savage violence turned out to be
wildly exaggerated, while truths about surrounding towns turning
away black evacuees walking out on bridges are just emerging.
And quickly, the bigger problems started to come out… command
& control, communications, National Guard resources…
and people had little trouble understanding that domestic casualties
were in some part, at least, a direct if unforeseen cost of the
war in Iraq.
After a few days the President finally flew in for a first quick
photo op at an emergency food distribution center. German television,
and Louisiana’s own senator, reported that the moment he
left, the entire operation was disassembled and trucked away with
people still waiting for food and water watching in disbelief.
No doubt many of them feel better now, knowing the Department
of Homeland Security has hired the Blackwater mercenaries, the
same private security force we use for the really tough jobs in
Iraq, to help patrol New Orleans. And in case the Blackwater guys
eventually need some backup, Chuck E. Cheese is busy helping recruit
3 to 6 year-olds for the Permanent War by continuously running
MTV-like videos from the Defense Department featuring soldiers
handing out candy to happy Iraqi kids, big-eyed puppets, and plenty
of way-cool shots of US warplanes and tanks. Looks like some people
are planning a long, long war for us ahead.
So what’s coming up short term? More insane profiteering
by the energy industry, no doubt, probably accompanied by talk
of new threats of supply instability, real or made up… the
goal being to make us grateful gas is only $3.50 and not $4.50
this week for a commodity refined, shipped, and paid for back
when it sold for $2.25. In retrospect, we all should have bought
Halliburton stock; it’s flying, and we could be too if the
Vice President would just sell off some of his shares.
The reality is we’re probably at the beginning of an inflationary
spiral just like in the late 1970’s when gas was rationed
and double-digit inflation and interest rates ground the economy
to a standstill. It’s all about the cost of energy, the
pain’s just starting and going to get worse, and the biggest
impact will be on those who can least afford it, like the poor
left to fend for themselves in New Orleans.
We’re hopeful for a forthright, independent review from
Congress of the manmade dimensions of Katrina’s impact.
And among our prayers for those whose lives have been shattered,
we’re including one that nobody in our government does anything
to annoy the Canadians, the Venezuelans, or some of our other
key energy suppliers.
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