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Bush rules out significant federal aid to hurricane victims
Statement of the WSWS Editorial Board
1 September 2005
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Only hours after reports that the death toll from Hurricane
Katrina may number in the thousands, President Bush delivered
perfunctory remarks that offered little except condescending sympathy
to the victims of the worst natural disaster in American history.
Nothing in his words, facial expression, or body language indicated
that Bush either comprehended or was even concerned about the
monumental catastrophe that has struck hundreds of thousands of
people in one of the United States greatest and most historic
cities.
Rather, with a smirk on his face, he allowed that the
days seem awfully dark for those affecteda phrase
that could only have been uttered in these terrible circumstances
by someone who did not count himself among those unfortunates.
This from the President of the United States!
And yet, this was not merely a poor choice of words. For the
Bush administration, the tragedy of New Orleans is not particularly
important and requires no major effort on the part of the United
States.
In a brief nine-minute speech, Bush made no statement committing
the federal government to a significant or sustained effort to
aid the citizens of New Orleans and other areas that have been
shattered by the hurricane.
The president said he had instructed his cabinet to work
closely with state and local officials, as well as with the private
sector, to ensure that were helping, not hindering, recovery
efforts.
In the course of his brief remarks, he repeated multiple times
that the federal government would be working with local
officials. The government would be assisting local
officials in New Orleans to evacuate remaining citizens;
the Coast Guard was working alongside local officials, local
assets to conduct search and rescue missions; the National
Guard would assist governors and local officials with
disaster response efforts; the cabinet would work with local
folks, local officials, to develop a comprehensive strategy to
rebuild the communities affected.
The process of recovery, Bush said, would take years.
This is not a timetable that indicates any exceptional level of
urgency.
This language was chosen by Bushs handlers to convey
a definite message: the administration will not allow the disaster
to entangle the federal government in significant financial commitments.
Beyond the most immediate and basic rescue efforts, the immense
human problems arising from the hurricane will be left largely
in the hands of local authorities, who have no access to the tens
of billions of dollars required to meet the needs of those affected,
particularly in New Orleans.
Bush avoided any concrete commitment of financial resources.
In the course of his speech, money was mentioned only once, at
the end, when he declared, At this stage in the recovery
efforts, its important for those who want to contribute,
to contribute cash. He expressed thanks to the American
Red Cross and the Salvation Army and the Catholic Charities, and
all other members of the armies of compassion.
The meaning of these words is clear: relief efforts will be
organized through private charities and religious institutions,
just as the administration has sought to promote faith-based
initiatives to replace government guaranteed social welfare programs.
The American Red Cross hopes to raise $135 million to provide
hurricane relief, a figure that is dwarfed by estimated damagemuch
of it uninsuredin the tens of billions of dollars.
Bush waited more than two days before reacting to the hurricane.
He has so far refused to visit the region. Instead, he used Air
Force One for a stunt, evidently meant to convey compassion and
concern, to fly over the area so he could see how devastating
the sights were.
For days, the entire country has focused with growing horror
on the utter destruction caused by the hurricane, but Bush, in
his demeanor, tone and actions, cannot help but convey a sense
of indifference. Nothing in the way he spoke on Wednesday gave
any indication that he was speaking about one of the worst catastrophes
ever to hit the American people.
Bush made clear that he would do nothing to halt brazen price-gouging
by the energy industry, which has seized on the disaster to hike
up gasoline prices all across the country, boosting already swollen
corporate profits. Gas prices were raised literally overnight
anywhere from 30 to 75 cents a gallon, and are now above $3 in
most of the country. There is talk of gasoline soaring toward
$5 a gallon in the coming weeks or months.
This is placing new strains on the American population, which
has already been hard hit by a combination of stagnating wages
and accelerating inflation. But Bush merely declared piously that
our citizens must understand this storm has disrupted the
capacity to make gasoline and distribute gasoline.
In other words, no serious measures will be taken to stop wild
profiteering by Bushs former business associates and cronies
in the oil industry.
Against the background of the catastrophe that has struck the
southern states, the immense loss of life and terrible suffering,
Bushs response reflects the callous indifference to human
life that is a hallmark of his administration. Even as the White
House, with the support of the Democratic Party, squanders nearly
$6 billion a month on a war to subjugate the people of Iraq and
grab control of the countrys oilwith the toll in Iraqi
and American deaths rising every dayit has no interest in
providing the resources necessary to address the crisis in Louisiana.
New Orleans is drowning: the water level rising to 15 or 20
feet in some areas. Almost the entire metropolitan area, once
home to over one million people, is underwater. Storm surges caused
by the hurricane simply overpowered the inadequate system of levees
and pumps.
On Wednesday, the citys mayor warned that the number
of people killed in New Orleans could number in the thousands.
Hundreds more have been killed in Mississippi and Alabama.
Tens of thousands remain trapped in New Orleans, hemmed in
by the flood waters surrounding houses, apartment buildings and
hospitals.
Homes numbering in the tens of thousands have been destroyed
or damaged beyond repair. A million people have been turned into
refugees, unable to return home for weeks or months, if ever.
These individuals have no source of income.
New Orleans is a flooded plain resembling the topography prior
to its settlement in 1718. As the New Orleans Times-Picayune
wrote on Wednesday, the only dry land was a narrow band
from the French Quarter and parts of Uptown, the same small strip
that was settled by [Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne de] Bienville amid
the swamps... With solid water from the lake to the French Quarter,
the inundation and depopulation of an entire American city was
at hand.
This disaster requires the immediate commitment of tens of
billions of dollars to meet the needs for rescue operations and
the care, housing and feeding of the displaced and dispossessed,
and the mammoth challenges of rebuilding and recovery. The people
who, through no fault of their own, have lost loved ones, homes,
employment and a lifetimes worth of belongings, must be
made whole.
The utter lack of preparation for the hurricane and the gross
inadequacy of the New Orleans levee system constitute an
indictment of a social and economic systemcapitalismwhich
subordinates all human needs to the requirements of corporate
profit and the accumulation of personal wealth.
The archaic and reactionary economic principles which left
New Orleans defenselessand which are being upheld by Bush,
regardless of the human consequencesmust not be allowed
to dictate how the catastrophe will be dealt with.
Working people should demand the organization of a massive
national relief effort, utilizing all necessary resources, to
rebuild the devastated areas and restore the lives of the survivors.
Those who are now refugees require an influx of funds to secure
shelter, food and other necessities until they are able to relocate
and stabilize their living conditions.
People who have lost their homes and their possessions must
be provided with the resources they need to relocate, rebuild,
and, so far as possible, recover fully from the disaster that
has befallen them.
The rebuilding New Orleans will be an enormous task, but it
is one that can and must be carried out. Not only must homes and
buildings be rebuilt, restored or replaced, but a new and much
improved levee system must be put in place, and serious efforts
undertaken to implement a longer-term response to the hurricane
threat.
See Also:
Crackdown on looting
New Orleans police ordered to stop saving lives and start saving
property
[1 September 2005]
Hurricane Katrina: a calamity
compounded by poverty and neglect
[31 August 2005]
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