September 09, 2005

The Politics of a Hurricane

One thing is sure, Mayor Nagin is no Rudy Giuliani. While Rudy did something during 9/11, Nagin went on radio and bashed Bush and other conservatives saying they aren't helping and practically blamed them for the flood in New Orleans. He should've just kept quiet and helped people instead of turning a tragedy into a political blame game. Helping people would've made him heroic. But his idiotic rant made him look like a fool. Yes, of course people will help, we all see the need. But there was absolutely no need to take this into the political arena. If he needed to say anything, he should've focused on coming together as Americans to overcome the crisis and not let politics divide us.

The leftists will use any means to blame the Bush administration in order to gain the upperhand in US politics. But it was inexcusable for them to use Hurricane Katrina to try to advance their incongruous ideology. They made it seem like Bush himself caused the hurricane. Some have complained that Bush didn't provide the funds to help in building up the levees. The same complainers said there were computer simulated predictions that this very incident would occur and that Bush ignored it. These people do their best to tear others down in imagined and unprovable ways. First of all, if there’s anyone to blame, it’s the laziness of state and local politicians. There is no excuse why it takes so long to build things that can help people. Then again, the reason why the levees weren’t built was because no matter how big the levees, it won’t do any good; New Orleans sits on some really soft ground. Simply put, the bigger the levees, the quicker the sinking of those levees. And there were enough people who knew of the computer simulations to round up the amount of resources to counter this natural disaster. Waiting for the federal government to do anything only shows they don’t know how to help themselves and don’t know the workings of government. Depending on the government for assistance is unwise and inefficient.

So, why did the National Guard come so late? Is Bush guilty of negligence? No, of course not. There seems to be this overwhelming misunderstanding that only the President has all the responsibility of calling in the National Guard to the rescue. Not so. It was Governor Blanco who had just as much responsibility to call them in. She thought the Red Cross and all the other volunteers were already doing a swell job, but she was ignorant to how large a force was necessary to help. Contrary to popular opinion, the LA National Guard, the Coast Guard, the Red Cross, FEMA, and DHS were poised and ready to help before Katrina made landfall. Within a day, several other state’s National Guard were already helping with rescue efforts. The Coast Guard alone rescued a few thousand within two days of the flooding. What we all saw in the news was the National Guard coming in after Nagin told them to help the local and state police. They weren’t late at all, they were already there. There were a few thousand National Guardsmen doing a whole host of things from rescuing to policing. It was Nagin and Blanco who didn’t know how to use the resources efficiently. Besides, with devastation this large, it usually takes time to gather the troops needed and I don’t blame the National Guard for trickling in over the course of the week, all 7,000 and then some. Within four days there were over 10,000 troops helping, not including all other branches of the military. The media made it seem like the National Guard came five days late and that Bush sat on his hands while the Gulf Coast suffered. And they also made it seem like all of our military were in Afghanistan and Iraq while only a few of them were manning the stateside barracks. Some people come up with the strangest conclusions. A few liberal pundits went so far as to call Bush a racist. I shake my head at that because it is so unnecessary. Goes to show the lack of respect these people have for themselves and their country. They also like to make opinions based on a paltry amount of information. I must admit, the entire rescue effort had a lot of errors. Too much happened with inefficient handling of resources. Nagin and Blanco weren’t prepared for the devastation and worse, didn’t prepare the citizens with information acquired from the previous year. They set the stage to play the blame game, but they ended up as the losers.

I'm not a Bush sycophant, but I know when a leader has a good head on his shoulders and a big heart in his chest. He was man enough to take responsibility for the mistakes of others. Unfortunately, I can’t say the same for Mayor Nagin and Governor Blanco.

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