Our Third World
By: Robert C. Koehler
And so the real enemy showed itself and we lost the Big Easy.
Before we sort out the small blames - the funding cuts to FEMA, the cronyism
and amateurism that silently ravaged our national disaster response preparedness
under the Bush administration, the bleeding of the economy and diversion of
resources caused by the war in Iraq - we owe it to the thousands of dead, the
million displaced, the entire devastated Gulf Coast that has become Atlantis,
to rethink, first, who we are as a country.
We tolerate poverty and flaunt environmentalism, and therefore the poorest
of the poor were left to flounder and drown in a "toxic gumbo" that
may have been created by a hell spawn of global warming.
While our president presides over the bloated windfall (for a few) known as
the war on terror - saving us from nothing - and purports to be spreading freedom
and democracy across the planet, America's own Third World raises up its hand
in desperation. With Katrina poised offshore, we evacuated the First World,
primarily in SUVs (something over half of all vehicles owned in America are
SUVs), and left the rest of the population to die like Third Worlders everywhere.
"The poverty in Louisiana is stunning," Janice McAlpine, a public-interest
lawyer in Baton Rouge, told me. "It's as close to a Third World country
as you can get. We don't have a system in place to assist poor people in times
of crisis" - which blow in far more often than Category 5 hurricanes. "Many
of the people who are suffering now," she noted, "have suffered through
a lot of things."
That's just the way it is. But Katrina laid this suffering bare, spread the
shocking reality of it across the front pages of the world's press.
"We have been abandoned by our own country," Aaron Broussard, the
president of Jefferson Parish, told Tim Russert. "Hurricane Katrina will
go down in history as one of the worst storms ever to hit an American coast,
but the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina will go down as one of the worst abandonments
of Americans on American soil ever in U.S. history... Bureaucracy has committed
murder here in the greater New Orleans area, and bureaucracy has to stand trial
before Congress now."
Nick Cater, writing in London's The Guardian about the offers of aid - food,
medicine, relief workers - pouring into the United States from all over the
world, including such impoverished countries as Afghanistan, cautioned: "If
we do give for Katrina, let's react as America would to any developing country
which fails to prepare for disaster and allows its people to die, such as Zimbabwe
or North Korea: Set conditions for aid use, channel it away from the government
to trusted charities, and insist on intensive scrutiny of the results."
So much for the arrogance of the world's only superpower, which gave way when
the levees of New Orleans broke. Suddenly effective leadership requires more
than swagger.
"At a fundamental level, I'd argue, our current leaders just aren't serious
about some of the essential functions of government," Paul Krugman wrote
recently in the New York Times. "They like waging war, but they don't like
providing security, rescuing those in need or spending on preventive measures.
And they never, ever ask for shared sacrifice."
This is a stunning indictment. In George Bush, the country has precisely the
wrong leader to deal with its real needs. His administration's record of shame
- from the war in Iraq to the flaunting of the Kyoto Accords to its mean-spirited
aid offer last winter to tsunami victims - is evidence of an obsolete set of
values inadequate to meet the enormous challenges of the 21st century. We need
a president who is not "soft on CO2 emissions." We need a president
who can lead us out of the fossil fuel era.
Jeremy Rifkin, writing in Chosun Ilbo (Seoul), says the storm will be seen
as a "tipping point of the fossil fuel era - the moment when the American
public began to discard the comfortable myth that the end of the oil era and
the cataclysmic effects of global warming lie far in the distant future."
Hurricane Katrina, not 9/11, may turn out to be the defining crisis of the
Bush administration: a crisis badly fumbled at every level, maybe because there's
no country to invade afterward.
We have met the enemy, as Walt Kelly's Pogo said in 1970, on the occasion of
the first Earth Day, and he is us. We have no precedent for dealing with this
enemy, but 35 years later, the urgency to do so is upon us.
Robert Koehler, an award-winning, Chicago-based journalist, is an editor
at Tribune Media Services and nationally syndicated writer. He can be reached
at bkoehler@tribune.com or visit his Web site at commonwonders.com.
Source: http://www.iviews.com
Date created: 09/20/05
Date/Time Last Modified: 9/20/2005 8:10:32 AM
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