(no subject)
Sep. 5th, 2005 09:41 pmNo one is suggesting that mayors or governors in the afflicted areas, nor the federal government, should be able to stop hurricanes. Lord knows, no one is suggesting that we should ever prioritize levee improvement for a below-sea-level city, ahead of $454 million worth of trophy bridges for the politicians of Alaska.
But, nationally, these are leaders who won re-election last year largely by portraying their opponents as incapable of keeping the country safe. These are leaders who regularly pressure the news media in this country to report the reopening of a school or a power station in Iraq, and defies its citizens not to stand up and cheer. Yet they couldn't even keep one school or power station from being devastated by infrastructure collapse in New Orleans — even though the government had heard all the "chatter" from the scientists and city planners and hurricane centers and some group whose purposes the government couldn't quite discern... a group called The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
- Keith Olberman, September 5, 2005
Now, contrast that with this:
What I’m hearing is they all want to stay in Texas. Everyone is so overwhelmed with the hospitality.
And so many of the people in the arena here, you know, were underprivileged anyway so this (she chuckled)--this is working very well for them.
- Barbara Bush, September 5, 2005
And then remember where the buck stops:
[President Bush] directed the development of a new National Response Plan (NRP) to align Federal coordination structures, capabilities, and resources into a unified, all discipline, and all-hazards approach to domestic incident management. . . .The end result is vastly improved coordination among Federal, State, local, and tribal organizations to help save lives and protect America's communities by increasing the speed, effectiveness, and efficiency of incident management.
National Response Plan for Dept. Homeland Security, created in December of 2004, effective as of April, 2005 (it's a PDF and if you don't have a PDF reader, or don't want to download the whole thing, an excerpt can be found here
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