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Bush visits New Orleans on Katrina anniversary: returning
to the scene of the crime
By David Walsh
30 August 2007
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Working class residents of New Orleans responded with anger
and protests to the visit paid by George W. Bush Wednesday on
the second anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, a tragedy which led
to the loss of more than 1,800 lives and massive devastation in
the region.
Bush administration neglect and indifference contributed to
the deaths and mass suffering and continues to be responsible
for the plight of countless thousands of present or former New
Orleans and Gulf Coast residents.
As nearly every media account admits, substantial sections
of New Orleans remain in ruins; 40 percent of the population has
not returned; only a fraction of those who have applied for federal
house-rebuilding grants have received it; the murder rate has
doubled; suicides, domestic violence and rape have increased sharply;
the homeless population has also doubled, and many of those are
living in the citys estimated 80,000 abandoned dwellings.
The Atlanta-based Southern Education Foundation released a
report August 29 that decried the federal response. It noted,
Not since the Great Depression of the 1930s has the United
States witnessed so many of its own students thrown out of school.
A major US city was damaged catastrophically, an entire layer
of the population has been plunged into misery and the federal
government has made no centralized effort to restore the city
or ameliorate the conditions of its working-class residents. In
the face of this, on the second anniversary of the hurricane,
Bush hobnobbed with the local elite, lied and uttered platitudes.
On Tuesday night, the president began his visit to the area
by having dinner with various celebrities at Dooky Chase, a well-known
New Orleans restaurant that has been closed since the hurricane
two years ago and plans to re-open in a few weeks. The following
morning Bush spoke at the citys Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Charter School for Science and Technology. Subsequently, Bush
traveled to Mississippi, where he posed in front of the US 90
Bridge between Bay Saint Louis and Pass Christian; the bridge,
destroyed in the storm, was partially reopened to traffic in May
2007.
In response to Bushs visit, one thousand people marched
Wednesday in a protest through New Orleans impoverished
Lower 9th Ward, a neighborhood that still lies in ruins. Signs
accused Bush of murder and angry demonstrators denounced the government
for failing to act. Gina Martin, one of those on the march, told
the Associated Press (AP), Bush was down here again making
more promises he isnt going to keep. The government has
failed all of us. Its got to stop.
A bystander, Clarence Russ, 64, commented to the AP, There
was supposed to be all this money, but whered it go? None
of us got any, said Russ, whose house, the wire service
noted, was the only restored home on an otherwise desolate
block.
A local Baptist minister, Rev. Marshall Truehill, told the
media, People are angry and they want to send a message
to politicians that they want them to do more and do it faster.
Nobodys going to be partying.
Media accounts reported widespread anger, frustration and skepticism.
The AP noted that some residents had no use for the protesters.
Not because they had any use for Bush but because protest, in
the words of one resident, James Chaney, doesnt get
us anything. It doesnt get anyone to help us.
Bushs comments had an air of unreality about them. He
spoke optimistically about the regions recovery at the various
stops along his route. At the famed soul food restaurant Tuesday
night, the president greeted Democratic Governor Kathleen Blanco,
New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin and distinguished leaders in
this community, and quiet heroes who have helped bring optimism
and hope to New Orleans.
At the charter school, where he made his most extensive remarks,
Bush explained, My attitude is this: New Orleans, better
days are ahead. Its sometimes hard for people to see progress
when you live in a community all the time. Laura and I get to
comewe dont live here, we come on occasion. And its
easy to think about what it was like when we first came here after
the hurricane, and what its like today. And this town is
coming back. This town is better today than it was yesterday,
and its going to be better tomorrow than it was today.
Its difficult for many residents to see progress, because
for them there is no progress. According to a recent study by
the Institute For Southern Studies, The Katrina recovery
is failing. As of mid-August [2007], 60,000 people are still living
in temporary FEMA trailers because of hold-ups on
aid programs and insurance. Schools and hospitals are shuttered,
good jobs are scarce and daily threats to health and wellbeing
arent addressed.
The Los Angeles Times observed, Off his [Bushs]
route in the Lower Ninth Ward, there was even more evidence [of
devastation]: entire blocks deserted, with no sign of rebuilding
attempts, and store after store boarded up.
Remarkably, Bush felt the need to tell New Orleans citizens,
still reeling from one of the worst natural and social disasters
in US history, that they hadnt been abandoned. [W]ere
still paying attention. We understand, he said, adding later,
And so I come telling the folks in this part of the world
that we still understand theres problems and were
still engaged.
He returned to this theme in Mississippi, asserting that people
in the area were worried that the President and other folks
in Washington other than the Mississippi officials are going to
forget what took place down here. So one of the reasons that Laura
and I have come back is to remind people that we havent
forgotten, and wont.
In part, this is an attempt to argue that the disaster recovery
is not the federal governments problem and that state and
local governments and private organizations and individuals have
to carry the burden. Beyond that, however, that the president
of the United States should even raise the possibility of Washingtons
forgetting about the Hurricane Katrina disaster and
its ongoing consequences is enormously revealing. In fact, the
worries of Mississippi residents are well placed.
The American ruling elite regards the fate of its ordinary citizens
with precisely this kind of arrogant indifference.
The Bush administration remembers Katrina victims, perfunctorily,
when it comes time for such anniversaries. It was widely noted
that the president failed to mention the disaster at all in his
2007 State of the Union address. Neither hurricane,
Katrina, New Orleans nor Gulf Coast
merited a single reference.
Of course, for a certain social layer, there has been a silver
lining. Bush is not purely delusional when he speaks of recovery
and renewed prosperity. For giant contractors, casino and hotel
operators, real estate developers and speculators and swindlers
of various stripes, Katrina has proven a boon. Billions have gone
into their pockets.
The Institute For Southern Studies report notes that $3.5 billion
in tax breaks have gone to jumpstart business in Gulf Opportunity
or GO Zones across 91 parishes and counties in Alabama,
Louisiana and Mississippi. But many of the breaks have been of
questionable benefit to Katrina survivors. Take for instance the
$1 million deal to build 10 luxury condos next to the University
of Alabama football stadiumfour hours from the Gulf Coast.
Federal contracts for rebuilding and recovery have also
been marked by scandal, fraud and abuse. One of the leading watchdogs
on this issue has been Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.), whose office
released a study in August 2006 that identified 19 Katrina-related
contracts worth $8.75 billion that experienced significant
overcharges, wasteful spending or mismanagement.
The Katrina disaster remains an open wound. None of the issues
bound up with the terrible events of August and September 2005
have been resolved. It is noteworthy that Bush, Gov. Blanco and
Mayor Nagin, all complicit in the massive disaster, remain in
office two years later.
This is a commentary on the decayed state of American institutions.
Polls, according to CBS News on August 29, reveal that only 20
percent of those surveyed thought the federal governments
response was adequate; 77 percent said the government could have
done much better. Less than half saw any progress in the recovery
of the region. Providing some idea of the scope of the tragedy,
29 percent of those surveyed indicated they knew someone directly
affected by Katrina.
Yet no high official has been held accountable, and there are
no moves in that direction. Obliged to report Bushs idiocies
in New Orleans and Mississippi, no one in the American media bats
an eye and the Democratic presidential hopefuls merely issued
pro forma statements.
See Also:
Hurricane Katrina two years on
[29 August 2007]
One year since Hurricane
Katrina: New Orleans left to rot
[29 August 2006]
Bushs vision
for New Orleans: a profiteers paradise
[16 September 2005]
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