Pitt: Washing Away the Conservative Movement
By William Rivers Pitt
t r u t h o u t |
PerspectiveTuesday 06 September
2005http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/090605A.shtml
The responsibility of ministers for
the public safety is absolute, and requires no mandate. It is in fact the prime
object for which governments come into
existence.-- Winston
ChurchillSomewhere, at this moment, a
neoconservative is seething.
It isn't fair, he rages within. We had it wired.
The House is ours, the Senate is ours, the Supreme Court is ours, the Justice
Department is ours, the television news media is bought and paid for. We could
act with impunity, say whatever we needed to say to get what we want, do
whatever wanted, and no one could touch us. We could refashion the nation as we
saw fit, whether people wanted to come along with us or not, because we know
better.
We followed Leo Strauss's
edicts to the letter, growls the seething neoconservative. Strauss, our
neoconservative godfather, told us that this nation is best run by an elite that
does not have to bother with the will or desires of the populace. Strauss told
us we didn't even have to bother with the truth while pursuing our agenda. We
are the elite, and we know
best.
Somewhere, at this moment, a
neoconservative is seething because his entire belief structure regarding
government has been laid waste by a storm of singular ferocity. Hurricane
Katrina has destroyed lives, ravaged a city, damaged our all-important petroleum
infrastructure, and left every American with scenes of chaos and horror seared
forever into their minds. Simultaneously, Hurricane Katrina has annihilated the
fundamental underpinnings of conservative governmental
philosophy.
What we are seeing in New
Orleans is the end result of what can be best described as extended Reaganomics.
Small government, budget cuts across the board, tax cuts meant to financially
strangle the ability of federal agencies to function, the diversion of billions
of what is left in the budget into military spending: This has been the aim and
desire of the conservative movement for decades now, and they have been largely
successful in their efforts.
Combine
this with a wildly expensive and unnecessary war, rampant cronyism that replaces
professionals with unqualified hacks at nearly every level of government, and
the basic neoconservative/Straussian premise that the truth is not important and
that the so-called elite know best, and you have this catastrophe laid out on a
platter. The conservative and neoconservative plan for the way this country
should be run has been blasted to matchsticks, their choice of priorities
exposed as lacking, to say the very
least.
The Katrina disaster in a
nutshell: A storm that had been listed for years as #3 on America's list of
"Worst Possible Things That Could Happen" arrives in New Orleans to find levees
unprepared because massive budget cuts stripped away any ability to repair and
augment them. The storm finds FEMA, the national agency tasked to deal with the
aftermath of natural disasters, run by Bush friend Michael Brown, a guy who got
fired from his last job representing the rights of Arabian horse owners. The
storm finds a goodly chunk of the Louisiana National Guard sitting in a desert
7,000 miles away with their high-water Humvees parked beside them. The storm
finds that our institutional decades-old unwillingness to address poverty issues
left tens of thousands of people unable to get out of the way of the
ram.
Grover Norquist, one of the
ideological leaders of our current administration, once said he wanted to shrink
the federal government until it was small enough to be drowned in a bathtub.
Well, those who believe in his view of things have worked very hard to
accomplish this, and we see now what happens when you do that. In this case, the
government did not drown. An American city
did.
Early estimates of the costs to
repair the damage to New Orleans are rolling above $100 billion. The invasion
and occupation of Iraq has cost many times more than that. The gigantic tax cuts
of a few years ago further denuded the federal budget. Conservative and
neoconservative dogma required this, and has left us singularly vulnerable. They
have always wanted a weakened federal government, and now we have one, and a lot
of people are dead because of it. The cost of this storm, plus the cost of the
tax cuts, plus the cost of the Iraq war, plus the long-term damage to our
economy caused by high gasoline prices, is going to kick the guts out of our
government for a very long time to
come.
In so many ultimately dangerous
ways, their exposure is complete. For the last four years, we have been
inundated with the claim that only Bush and the neocons can protect us from
terrorism. The justification and shield for every action taken, no matter how
absurd, has been that it is for our own good and defense. That's all dust now.
"This is the Law and Order and Terror government," writes MSNBC newsman Keith
Olbermann in his blog. "It promised protection - or at least amelioration -
against all threats: conventional, radiological, or biological. It has just
proved that it cannot save its citizens from a biological weapon called standing
water."
Above and beyond the fact that
the levees have broken all around the governmental philosophies of the
conservative/neoconservative crew is the question of whether this could have
been avoided with a little bit of personal responsibility. There is a lot of
finger-pointing going on at the highest levels right now; at one point over the
weekend, Bush defenders absurdly attempted to blame the Mayor of New Orleans for
what happened. One boggles when trying to determine how the mayor of one city
bears the responsibility for the damage and lack of rescue response that took
place in Mississippi, Alabama and outside the realm of his parishes. This was a
nicely Straussian twist on the truth, straight out of the
playbook.
Could it have been avoided?
Let's ask the National Weather Service, which sent out this alert on Sunday,
August 28th: "A hurricane warning is in effect for the north central gulf coast
from Morgan City, Louisiana, eastward to the Alabama/Florida border, including
the city of New Orleans and Lake Pontchartrain. Maximum sustained winds are near
160 mph with higher gusts. Katrina is a large hurricane. Coastal storm surge
flooding of 18 to 22 feet above normal tide levels, locally as high as 28 feet,
along with large and dangerous battering waves, can be expected near and to the
east of where the center makes landfall. Some levees in the greater New Orleans
area could be
overtopped."
"Some
levees in the greater New Orleans area could be overtopped." That was Sunday.
Monday passed, and then Tuesday, and then Wednesday, and then Thursday, and then
Friday, and then the weekend came, before any action of any significance
whatsoever was taken to protect the lives of the citizens of that
city.
Also on
Sunday the 28th, Governor Blanco of Louisiana dispatched a letter to Bush
formally requesting help for the horror she saw rolling towards her state over
the southern horizon. "Under the provisions of Section 401 of the Robert T.
Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act, 42 USC. 5121-5206
(Stafford Act), and implemented by 44 CFR 206.36, I request that you declare an
expedited major disaster for the state of Louisiana as Hurricane Katrina, a
Category V hurricane approaches our coast south of New Orleans; beginning on
August 28, 2005 and continuing," read the letter. She went on in great detail
over four full pages to list a series of requests that, had they been granted,
would have spared thousands of people from
death.
She was
flatly ignored. Forget the fact that a hurricane hitting New Orleans has been on
the danger list for decades. The Bush folks got the word on Sunday, not once but
twice, and instead of swinging into action, they literally ate
cake.
Have they
learned anything from this? Hardly. The most important bit on this week's
conservative agenda, beyond stuffing Mr. Roberts into the Chief Justice chair,
is to repeal the estate tax. Yes, that's correct, before we do anything else, we
have to make sure the rich of this nation get an even larger slice of the pie.
This caused DNC Chairman Howard Dean to launch a singularly pointed salvo over
the
weekend.
"Countless
thousands of our fellow Americans throughout the Gulf Coast region continue to
suffer in the aftermath of hurricane Katrina," said Dean. "While some have begun
the painful task of rebuilding their lives and coping with the unfathomable
loss, so many still await help. And the cost of this disaster in human and
material terms remains unknown. It's simply irresponsible for Senator Frist and
Ken Mehlman to even think about spending our tax dollars on breaks for
millionaires at a time when our top priority must be to ensure we have the
resources needed to address the long and short term costs associated with
rescue, recovery, and rebuilding in the wake of hurricane Katrina. Not to
mention the vital lesson we learned this week about the deadly cost of diverting
funds at the expense of the safety of the American people. These costs,
continued Dean, "also come at a time when our nation faces a massive deficit,
and mounting costs in the ongoing war in
Iraq."
It isn't
irresponsible, Chairman. It's standard operating procedure. They've been doing
it like this for so long that they've forgotten how to do it any other way. They
are such true believers that they cannot fathom doing it any other way. Likely,
they will get away with it, and the loss of estate tax revenues will further
damage our nation's ability to care for its
own.
The house
of cards has fallen in. A generation of conservative thinking, combined with
five years of neoconservative thrashing, has finally come to an unavoidable
head. The agencies tasked to protect us - FEMA and the Department of Homeland
Security to name two - have been proven to be utterly useless. The heads of
these agencies - Chertoff and Brown - are the perfect avatars of Bush's way of
doing business, insofar as they have no business being in the positions they are
in. The conservative movement has failed spherically, from all sides and in all
directions.
So
here's a thought: Let's repudiate these fools. When the basic software for the
operating system of a computer is proven to be riddled with bugs and bad code,
it is time to rewrite the whole thing. We have to do that here, with our
government and institutions, and we have to do it now. Throw conservative dogma
into the dustbin of history where it
belongs.
Remember
that a massive, highly industrialized and infrastructured, diverse nation
requires an effective central government, funded properly and staffed by
professionals and patriots, in order to keep the wheels on the road. Remember
the words of that great Republican, Oliver Wendell Holmes, who said, "Taxes are
the price we pay to live in a civilized society." What we are seeing in New
Orleans is not civilized society, but anarchy. The reasons for this are as clear
as the nose on your
face.
They have
failed us. Many people are dead because of it. It's time to change the software.
Enough of this Boo Radley leadership.
Posted: Tue - September 6, 2005 at 07:26 PM