|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
The politics of the blame game
Bush rejects responsibility in Hurricane Katrina disaster
By Patrick Martin
9 September 2005
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The Bush administrations response to the social disaster
unfolding in Louisiana and Mississippi is to deny any responsibility
for the horrifying conditions facing more than one million people.
White House officials, from Bush on down, have rejected all criticism
of the federal governments failure to prepare before Hurricane
Katrina hit the Gulf coast or respond adequately afterwards.
Im not going to engage in the blame game,
Bush press spokesman Scott McClellan said repeatedly at a press
briefing Wednesday, when reporters sought a response on whether
Bush had confidence in Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)
Director Michael Brown. Bush and his congressional Republican
defenders used the same phrase to rebuff any effort to think critically
about the destruction of New Orleans and much of the Louisiana
and Mississippi Gulf coast, the biggest natural disaster in US
history.
What is the meaning of this banal but mind-boggling phrase?
Is there nothing to be learned from the cataclysm which has killed
thousands, if not tens of thousands, in New Orleans and surrounding
areas? Is it the case that no individual or institution can be
held accountable for failures in myriad areas, from the planning
and maintenance of adequate infrastructure to the preparation
and execution of rescue and reconstruction?
This is a government and a ruling eliteDemocratic as
well as Republicanthat endlessly preach the gospel of personal
responsibility for the great mass of Americans who work
for a living. When it comes to cutting federal social programs
for the poor or restructuring the Medicaid, Medicare and Social
Security systems, Bush is all for personal responsibility.
Finding a job, securing adequate health care coverage, paying
for college education, saving for retirementthese are all
obligations which should, in the view of the Republican Right,
be placed squarely on individuals. That was the logic of the recent
congressional passage of a bankruptcy reform bill,
signed into law by Bush, making it much harder for workers to
escape the burden of debts caused, in the majority of cases, by
sudden or severe illness, inadequate health insurance, or layoff.
The bill takes effect October 17just about the time many
Katrina victims may be compelled to file for bankruptcy.
But when it comes to the performance of the ruling elite itself,
including high government officials like Brown, Secretary of Homeland
Security Michael Chertoff, and Bush himself, that is another matter.
Any attempt to fix responsibility, hold officials accountable,
or remove themeven though the consequence would be departure
to a well-paid retirement, not the colossal losses facing the
victims of Katrinais rejected out of hand.
One measure of the indifference at the White House came in
an incident recounted by House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi,
who described a conversation with Bush on Tuesday when she urged
him to fire Brown. He said Why would I do that?
Pelosi told the New York Times. I said because
of all that went wrong, of all that didnt go right last
week. And he said, What didnt go right?
Bush & Co. denounce the blame game even as
reports continue to emerge of gross indifference and incompetence,
if not outright sabotage, in the operations of FEMA and other
federal agencies responsible for disaster planning, relief and
reconstruction. On Thursday, NBC found thousands of trailer homes
still parked at a Georgia facility, although the state of Mississippi
ordered them from FEMA more than a week ago to provide emergency
housing. There were reports of hospital ships held offshore, doctors,
nurses and other medical workers diverted from the disaster zone,
and hundreds of buses blocked from entering the New Orleans area
for post-storm evacuations.
Hurricane Katrina has laid bare the essential irrationality
of the profit system and the human cost of the colossal social
inequality it engenders, and discredited the claims, incessantly
repeated by the media and political establishment, that the capitalist
market is the solution to all social problems.
The expenditure of a few billion dollars, to strengthen the
New Orleans levees and revitalize the downstream delta marshland
and barrier islands that long provided natural protection to the
city, would have sufficed to prevent hundreds of billions in damages
and save thousands of lives. But an economic system driven by
the profit motive and a political system controlled by the biggest
financial interests prevented such an elementary exercise in prudence
and forethought.
Last year a planning exercise dubbed Hurricane Pam
simulated a direct hit on New Orleans by a storm weaker than Katrina.
The scientists and disaster management professionals who engaged
in this simulation predicted inundation of the city and the death
of tens of thousands. The response of the Bush administration
was to propose hundreds of billions of additional tax cuts for
the wealthy, while cutting spending on the New Orleans levees
by more than 50 percent.
After virtual silence for a week, spokesmen for the Democratic
Party on Wednesday began to criticize the Bush administrations
conduct, some more stridently than others, calling for an independent
bipartisan commission to investigate the preparation for and response
to Hurricane Katrina. But these criticisms focused on a handful
of officials, particularly Brown and Chertoff, while obscuring
the deeper social issues.
Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid sought to reduce the disaster
to Bushs personal laziness, sending a letter to the Homeland
Security Committee demanding answers to questions about Bushs
vacation and whether it had any effect on the federal governments
response.
Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, the Democratic presidential
candidate in 2004, said in an interview, What you see here
is a harvest of four years of complete avoidance of real problem-solving
and real governance in favor of spin and ideology. Democratic
National Committee Chairman Howard Dean said, The idea that
somehow government didnt care until it had to for political
reasons, its appalling.
Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton appeared on several television
news programs opposing the plans by the Republican leadership
for an investigation of the Katrina disaster by a special House-Senate
committee which would have a majority of Republicans. I
dont think the government can investigate itself and I dont
think the government should be distracted from the main job, which
is the recovery process that needs to go on, she said on
ABCs Good Morning America.
Clinton, Reid and Pelosi are all pushing for the establishment
of an independent bipartisan commission modeled on the panel which
delivered its report last year on the September 11, 2001 terrorist
attacks. This only shows that what the Democrats are seeking is
a cover-up more sophisticated than the crude one proposed by the
Republicans.
All of the official investigations into 9/11, the lies used
to justify the war in Iraq, and the Abu Ghraib torture scandal
have served to protect the key institutions of the American statethe
military and intelligence agencies, the White House, Congresswhile
at most a handful of underlings are punished or removed from their
positions. The routine of whitewash and cover-up has become stereotyped
and almost farcical.
In the case of Katrina, Bush first proposed an investigation
on Tuesdayone which he claimed he would head himself. Then
congressional Republicans proposed an investigation they would
control. They were followed by the Democrats demanding a procedure
in which they would have equal influence. (There are, of course,
Democratic officials to protect as well, in the New Orleans and
Louisiana governments and the Clinton administration).
Working people should reject all such investigations as futile
and fundamentally dishonest. The government and its top officials,
beginning with Bush and Cheney, must be held accountable, not
just their political stooges like Brown. More than that, every
major institution of the American ruling elite is implicated in
the disaster: Congress, the Democratic and Republican parties,
the military, the media.
The root cause of the disaster is the profit system itself,
which all of these institutions uphold. Working people and young
people must draw definite political conclusions from the destruction
of New Orleans: it is time to build an independent political movement
of the working class to replace the capitalist system with a socialist
economy that is democratically and rationally planned to serve
human need, not profit.
See Also:
New Orleans becomes a war zone
A dress rehearsal for martial law?
[8 September 2005]
US ruling elite rejects policy shift
to confront disaster
[7 September 2005]
After New Orleans disaster: human misery
and the profit principle
[7 September 2005]
Hurricane Katrina disaster shows the
failure of the profit system
[6 September 2005]
As hurricane disaster mounts, Bush scapegoats
state, local officials
[5 September 2005]
New Orleans and Baghdad-two sides of
the same policy
[3 September 2005]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |