It Starts at the
Bottom: Responsibility for Disaster Response
Saturday, September 24, 2005
By Sean Robins |
Personal
Responsibility | The City and the
State | The Feds and President Bush
I am going to buck the
trend, and say a few things about the response to Hurricane Katrina that I would
venture few if anyone else has said: The responsibility for response in a time
of natural disaster, does not start at the top, it
starts, it must start, at the bottom.
So let's start there.
Personal
Responsibility. . .
The person with primary
responsibility for your safety is you.
Period.
Every person must take
primary responsibility for their own circumstances, for their
own safety and well-being. You are always the person in
the best possible position to protect yourself--and your family
and loved ones. You know where you are. You know
what your own resources are. You know what you can do and
what you cannot do. There is no one else on this planet
who is more invested in, who has a greater interest in your own
well-being, that you. If you fail to take
responsibility for your own well-being, you can name no one else
with a greater interest in that well-being.
As a practical matter,
your ability to provide for yourself, to look out for yourself,
and to take steps to insure that well-being, is one-to-one.
One person's resources, knowledge, intelligence, abilities,
devoted to preserving the safety and interests of one person.
In all other circumstances, the odds get slimmer that your
interests will be as well looked after.
The responsibility that
you bear for yourself is a legal, a societal and a moral one.
It cannot be shirked. Those who shirk this responsibility,
history and common sense has shown, will only suffer.
In New Orleans, those with
primary personal responsibility for the safety of the city's
residents were the residents themselves. No one knew
better than the city's residents the peril in which they
existed, living day to day in the "bowl." Decade after
decade, though there have been a number of very serious
hurricane's to hit at or near the city, New Orleans had time and
again dodged the so-called bullet that--until the levees
broke--everybody thought it had again dodged.
Katrina was no doubt very
destructive in its own right. Be it category three or four
or five, it was clear before it hit that Katrina was the real
deal, extremely dangerous. The residents of the city were
warned long before it hit to get out. The President's
federal disaster declaration the day before it hit should
have been something of an additional hint to N'orleaners that
they had better evacuate. The mayor called early on for a
voluntary evacuation of the city, which by and large was heeded
by the majority of residents both in the city and in the
outerlying communities. In fact, the evacuation, when
compared to projections of what could be accomplished within a
given time period, it was a huge success. Well over a
million people took to the roads, and got out of the city and
its environs before Katrina came ashore.
Nevertheless, as of
landfall, estimates circulated that perhaps as many as 100,000
persons chose not to leave. (*We can only speculate
as to the real number of persons who stayed behind, as official
estimates, for example of the number who are believed to have
died in and after the storm, have been proving to be wildly
unreliable. A recent body count of about 250 pales in
comparison to the 10,000 or more that Mayor Nagin ranted lost
their lives to federal inactivity. More on that later.)
Well, what of these
perhaps 100,000 "hardy" souls who chose to stay and ride out the
storm. A number of things can be said. First, we can
play the game that a shocking number of leftist politicos,
Democratic activists, and mainstream journalists are playing:
The Race Game. There really is no factual basis
cited for any of their claims that New Orleans residents were
"left to die" in the storm by President Bush because they
were (a) black and (b) poor. Claims such as these have
come to be standard political plays executed under almost every
circumstance by those in the extreme left wing of the Democratic
Party. (A party, mind you, that is almost all left "wing"
and no real meat.) It is impossible to take these almost
psychotic rantings seriously.
Nevertheless, the claim
centers about a specious scenario that likewise has little or no
factual support. That those who stayed behind to weather
Katrina in their homes, did so because they were simply too poor
to have escaped. On so many levels, this is sheer fantasy.
Let's look closer.
- First, when asked
about why they chose not to evacuate New Orleans as
Katrina approached, many, if not the majority, have
responded that they believed they could successfully
weather the storm. Long-time N'orleaners had been
through it all, they believed, many times before--they
made it then, they would make it now. In other
words, they stayed because they did not believe that it
was necessary for them to leave. In terms of the
exercise of personal responsibility, these residents
(many of those who chose to remain) evaluated their own
needs, and found that staying was an acceptable
response.
- Second, quite a
few residents, long timers and old timers, and maybe
some who were just too in love with New Orleans
for their own good, could not bear to part with their
beloved town. They took the view that for better
or worse, they would stay, and if it turned out that
this was the Big One, then this was the Big One.
Whatever will be. . .will be, they believed.
Again, personal responsibility was exercised, and the
choice made. They took a gamble. Many one
that gamble. Some lost.
- Next, were a
significant number of persons who chose not to leave,
again--come what may, because they wished to protect
what they owned; not necessarily from the storm, for
that was not really possible, but in the aftermath, from
looters. For those not intimately familiar with
New Orleans, know that it is a heavily crime-stricken
city; not as bad as Number One Detroit, but pretty bad.
Bad enough to make quite a few risk their lives
(assuming that they didn't also fall into the first
category of those who believed it was not necessary to
leave) to protect their homes and property from looting.
(Message to Jesse Jackson: Contrary to you and
your cohorts' venomous spewings, many who stayed behind,
such as most of those in this category, were not
poor.)
- Finally, we turn
to a category whose membership may number in the
hundreds or several thousand, we have no idea.
This is the category of native criminals who chose to
remain behind for the purpose of availing themselves to
goods and materials that they expected would become
amazingly available in the storms aftermath, in the
absence of the rightful owners. In order words,
the looters. (Looting caveat: Everyone else
make's this caveat, so I will as well: I am not
referring to those many people who, having mistakenly
believed that they could ride it out, and that
everything would be alright when the storm passed--and
who afterward "took" food and water and the necessities
of life to survive. I mean the villains who saw
Katrina as an opportunity to profit by stealing things
such as major appliances, plasma tv's, jewelry. . .you
name it, whatever wasn't nailed down. I can only
hope that as many of these vermin as possible made it
into the "didn't make it" category. But based upon
the video of the worst of the looting, not enough of
these criminals croaked.)
You may have noticed that
the one category omitted from the above is the one crafted by
the Left to connote those allegedly abandoned by the evil Bush
Administration to die in the squalor of this Democratic bastion:
Those who were poor and black and who just could not escape.
The notion of personal responsibility, which appoints the
individual as the person most primarily responsibly for
their own safety, rejects the existence of this person.
Why? In addition to what was stated at the start of this
discussion, the objective facts reject their existence. No
one who remained in New Orleans to "weather" the storm were
without options, nor should they have been:
- First, living in
the "bowl," every resident had the personal obligation
to have some kind of plan for getting out of the
city. It is not acceptable to simply sit back on
one's derrière, do nothing, and expect someone else to
come along (city or state or feds) and pluck you from
the abyss. For those who live in more inland
circumstances, where the likelihood of a catastrophe
such as hurricane or massive flooding is not
substantial, it is perhaps understandable that one may
have never considered the need to flee under exigent
circumstances. But in New Orleans, no one can
claim that the potential for a "flooding out" of the
entire town was unconsidered. Everyone knew to a
certainty that such a potential was substantial.
Those who had no plan, chose to have no plan.
- Second, despite
the hundreds of city-owned and school buses that we have
now seen adrift in the flood, untouched and untouchable
because city officials failed to act to use them, there
were actually many other buses in service
prior to the storm and its aftermath, to take people
out of harms way to an evac center or shelter--and these
buses went largely unused by the hangers-on.
Again, they had made a choice to stay. They were
not unable to leave, at least not until after the levees
broke.
- Third, New
Orleans, according to mainstream media reports, may have
been 80% African-American, and was allegedly mostly
"poor"--though there is little insight provided as to
what this means in terms of dollars and cents, in terms
of standard of living, and in social terms in this
Democratic city in this Democratic state, run part and
parcel for decades by Big-L, Big-D, Liberal
Democrats--however, that does not mean, as we are
supposed to believe, that the people are careless.
In fact, watch the coverage as the water is pumped from
the city and it recedes to reveal the masses of
abandoned and now lifeless automobiles strewn all over
the city. Again (again!), people chose
not to evacuate, they chose not to get into theirs or a
family member's or a friend's or a neighbor's
automobile, and evacuate the city.
- Finally, if push
came to shove, few of the residents supposedly stranded
before the storm were incapable of simply putting
on a pair of shoes, tossing a few things into a backpack
or duffel bag, and hoofing it over to either the
Superdome or convention center, or one of the other
available shelters on higher ground. If your life
depends upon it, you can do it. Again, if anyone
was at this level of last resort, they chose not to
leave.
The concept of personal
responsibility lays bare the Big Lie being told by the anti-Bush
crowd, who sees every instance of the pain and misery of their
fellow citizens as simply an opportunity to make political
inroads against their enemies. Most of the 100,000 or so
(if this number is any more authentic than any other Katrina
statistic) who chose not to evacuate actually do
understand the concept of personal responsibility, and that
they sit at the top (not the bottom) of the heap in terms of
making their own disaster response.
Once the levees broke and
most of the city found itself quickly under water, many of those
who chose to stay before the storm hit, may then have
decided it better to get the heck out of Dodge, but it was then
too late. Not because they were poor and black, and not
because they didn't own their own means of transportation, and
not because they couldn't afford to buy a bus ticket--but
because the city was flooded so completely that nothing
could move in or out. It was not a matter of race.
It was not a matter of poverty. It was not a matter of
being unable to evacuate before the storm hit. It was a
matter of choice. Had Katrina ended like most of the
city's past hurricanes, passably, no one would be questioning
any of these choice. But it didn't. People made
their choices--some fared well, other did not. The
consequences of those choices must lie with those who made them.
(Jesse Jackson and his gaggle of despicably ceaseless
race-baiters notwithstanding.)
Liberals talk a good game
about freedom and personal determination, but they don't mean
it.
To Liberals, people must
always be looked after and taken care of. . .and not by other
people, but by the government. This is why the notion of
personal responsibility is not only totally alien, but utterly
repugnant to them. This accounts for their belief that the
utter lies and distortions about those left in New Orleans at
the time of Katrina's landfall as being "trapped" and unable to
"escape" on their own, would get traction, and somehow resonate
with the public. If the government didn't get them out,
the D's reason, then they must be trapped, because they could
not have gotten out on their own, and because they certainly
could not have decided for themselves to stay. As usual,
they got it wrong.
Those who did not evacuate
when it was recommended that they do so made a conscious choice
about their future. They chose to stay in the face of
warnings, urgings, recommendations and, finally, orders to
leave. They chose to stay in the face of mounting evidence
that New Orleans and its levees just might not be able to
withstand the Big One--whatever that was, whenever that was.
Some 100,000 or so (very approximately) chose to chance their
all and ride out the storm. Another million or more chose
to evacuate, and they did so successfully. Those who did
evacuate, survived. As it turns out, most of those
who chose to stay, likewise survived, although many had a really
tough time until rescue was effectuated. Some, of those
who chose to stay, died. Some died in the storm itself,
and some more died in the flooding after the levees gave 'way.
Is that regrettable? Certainly. Was it
unanticipated. Certainly not.
But does any of this mean
that the individuals who made certain choices should be
permitted to abdicate those choices. Positively not.
The City
and the State. . .

Gov. Kathleen Blanco (D-La.) |

New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin (D-La.) |
Books--perhaps not
widely-distributed bestsellers, but books nonetheless--will be
written about the actions taken by the two most incompetent
public servants, by an extraordinarily wide margin,
involved in the saga of Hurricane Katrina: New Orleans Mayor Ray
Nagin, and Louisiana Governor Kathleen Blanco. It is
difficult to decide which of the two was the most criminally
incompetent, history will be left to decide. It is hard to
know, likewise, how many deaths each was personally responsible
for. Mayor Nagin, for one, should be extremely gratified
that his dire prediction of 10,000 or more dead in the city
appears at this time to have been just so much nonsense.
Nonetheless, Nagin bears personal responsibility for the deaths
of many of his residents.
While, as discussed above,
the individual must bear the ultimate responsibility for his or
her own safety and security, government, particularly state and
local governments, do owe certain responsibilities to their
citizens. The primacy of the individual in the scheme of
disaster recovery does not quite remove the role of governments
entirely.
Certainly the city and the
state governments are responsible for those aspects of disaster
response and recovery which could not possibly be managed by
individuals. While the individuals must take primary
responsibility for getting and keeping themselves safe and
secure in the face of impending and predicable disaster, their
local officials must be at the ready to deal with the large
scale details: Such as where people are to shelter in the days
and weeks post-evacuation and post-disaster, and to help the
masses of evacuees with day-to-day subsistence once they are out
of harm's way.
Both the state of
Louisiana and the city of New Orleans had written and
detailed disaster response plans. Pretty hard to
believe, huh?
The
Hurricane Emergency Plan
of the City of New Orleans is a particularly detailed document,
which sets forth a plan describing what the city and its
agencies will do before, during and following a hurricane
including, of greatest interest here, plans for Warning,
Evacuation and Sheltering up to and including the entire
population of the city. Part of the hurricane plan is
given below:
The safe evacuation of threatened populations when endangered by a major
catastrophic event is one of the principle reasons for developing a
Comprehensive Emergency Management Plan. The thorough identification of at-risk
populations, transportation and sheltering resources, evacuation routes and
potential bottlenecks and choke points, and the establishment of the management
team that will coordinate not only the evacuation but which will monitor and
direct the sheltering and return of affected populations, are the primary tasks
of evacuation planning. Due to the geography of New Orleans and the varying
scales of potential disasters and their resulting emergency evacuations,
different plans are in place for small-scale evacuations and for citywide
relocations of whole populations.
Authority to issue evacuations of elements of the population is vested in the
Mayor. By Executive Order, the chief elected official, the Mayor of the City of
New Orleans, has the authority to order the evacuation of residents threatened
by an approaching hurricane.
Evacuation procedures for special needs persons with either physical or mental
handicaps, including registration of disabled persons, is covered in the SOP for
Evacuation of Special Needs Persons.
Major population relocations resulting from an approaching hurricane or similar
anticipated disaster, caused the City of New Orleans Office of Emergency
Preparedness to develop a specific Hurricane Emergency Evacuation Standard
Operating Procedures, which are appended to the Comprehensive Emergency
Management Plan.
The SOP is developed to provide for an orderly and coordinated evacuation
intended to minimize the hazardous effects of flooding, wind, and rain on the
residents and visitors in New Orleans. The SOP provides for the evacuation of
the public from danger areas and the designations of shelters for evacuees.
|
One might conclude, from
even this small fragment of the overall emergency response plan
of New Orleans, giving its generalities, that the city had
concluded that it bore at least some modicum of
responsibility to prepare for and provide the initial responses
and support to its own citizenry. . .instead of, as played by
the Mayor, demanding to know what other governments and other
agencies were going to do for New Orleans. Nagin's
own Hurricane Emergency Plan appears to put a quick end to any
of his squawking about the initial governmental responses to
Katrina in the New Orleans area. The responsibility was
Nagin's and his government's, and among the city, state and
feds, the first response was Nagin's alone.
It is almost eerie to read
how accurately the Plan describes precisely everything
that Nagin failed to do.
The Feds
and President Bush.
. .
One of the many lies being bandied
about by the Left and the media, about the response of the Federal
government and President Bush to Hurricane Katrina, is that too much time
passed between the "event" (and this gets a bit blurry) and the fed's
"response" (this too is a bit blurry in definition). The "event"
might be when Katrina's landfall was predicted by the weather services,
when Katrina actually hit the Gulf coast areas, when the hurricane had
passed, or when the New Orleans levees gave 'way. Which of the
"events" really doesn't matter for this analysis. The next
ambiguity in the charges by Lefties is when the federal response began
to take place. For our purposes here, this too doesn't matter, as
we'll discuss.
The clarity with which the potential for disaster all along the U.S.
Gulf coast from the growing threat of Hurricane Katrina was understood by almost
everyone is beyond dispute. What may be debated is the degree to which
many felt, deeply believed they were immune to such a disaster. To be
sure, many recent hurricanes have been hugely destructive, with some significant localized losses of life, but none
have been the much prophesied Big One that Katrina has, arguably,
become. But the final analysis remains the same: People made
choices about what to do, and whether to heed warnings and orders to
evacuate.
Had the levees not failed,
and the city then and only then suddenly
submerged, our discussion of Katrina would have ended within a
week.
The authority for the
federal government to become involved in relief efforts in the
states is provided by statute. Without the legislative
authority provided by Congress, the President would have no
legal authority to involve the feds in such local efforts.
Two statutes provide the President with this authority.
The first related to "Major Disaster Assistance Programs," 42
U.S.C. §5170,
and provides:
All requests for a declaration by the President that a major disaster
exists
shall be made by the Governor of the affected State. Such a request
shall be
based on a finding that the disaster is of such severity and magnitude
that
effective response is beyond the capabilities of the State and the
affected
local governments and that Federal assistance is necessary. As part of
such
request, and as a prerequisite to major disaster assistance under this
Act, the
Governor shall take appropriate response action under State law and
direct
execution of the State's emergency plan. The Governor shall furnish
information
on the nature and amount of State and local resources which have been or
will be
committed to alleviating the results of the disaster, and shall certify
that,
for the current disaster, State and local government obligations and
expenditures (of which State commitments must be a significant
proportion) will
comply with all applicable cost-sharing requirements of this Act. Based
on the
request of a Governor under this section, the President may declare
under this
Act that a major disaster or emergency exists.
|
The second statute, 42
U.S.C. §5191, deals with "Emergency Assistance Programs," and
provides:
(a) Request and declaration. All requests for a declaration by the
President
that an emergency exists shall be made by the Governor of the affected
State.
Such a request shall be based on a finding that the situation is of such
severity and magnitude that effective response is beyond the
capabilities of the
State and the affected local governments and that Federal assistance is
necessary. As a part of such request, and as a prerequisite to emergency
assistance under this Act, the Governor shall take appropriate action
under
State law and direct execution of the State's emergency plan. The
Governor shall furnish information describing the State and local efforts and resources
which
have been or will be used to alleviate the emergency, and will define
the type
and extent of Federal aid required. Based upon such Governor's request,
the
President may declare that an emergency exists.
(b) Certain emergencies involving Federal primary responsibility. The
President
may exercise any authority vested in him by section 502 or section 503
[42 USCS
§ 5192 or § 5193] with respect to an emergency when he determines that
an
emergency exists for which the primary responsibility for response rests
with
the United States because the emergency involves a subject area for
which, under
the Constitution or laws of the United States, the United States
exercises
exclusive or preeminent responsibility and authority. In determining
whether or
not such an emergency exists, the President shall consult the Governor
of any
affected State, if practicable. The President's determination may be
made
without regard to subsection (a).
|
Under both sections, the
law (that is, the Congress) requires that the
governor of the state (here, Ms. Blanco) do certain, specific
things, in order to provide the federal government with the
legal authority to provide a federal response to the state's
disaster needs.
First, the Governor
of the state must request of the President, that he
declare that either a major disaster or an emergency exists in
that state -- and that request must be based upon a finding
by that Governor that the disaster or emergency is of
such severity and magnitude that effective response is beyond
the capabilities of the State and the affected Local governments
-- and that because of this, federal assistance is needed.
That is, the Governor (here again, Kathleen Blanco) is obligated
to specifically request assistance, and verify that the
needed response is beyond the abilities of the state and local
authorities.
Second, as part of the
request for federal help, the Governor must take appropriate
action under State law and direct execution of the State's
emergency plan. Along with this, the Governor must
outline what state and local efforts have been and will be
taken under their emergency plans to respond to the
disaster, and must also define the type and extent of Federal
aid required. This means, Ms. Blanco, along with her
state and local assets, was obligated to perform their part
in remediating the disaster, as specified under their state and
local disaster plans.
Further, Ms. Blanco was
obligated, in view of the knowledge and understanding of her own
state and local plans, resources and capabilities, to specify
what Louisiana and New Orleans required from the federal
officials to help with the disaster.
The President, and federal
authorities and resources, are then and only then to be
allocated and dispatched to assist in dealing with the
disaster.
As to the first of Ms.
Blanco's duties under the law, it was her obligation to
have requested of President Bush a disaster or emergency
declaration, and to have provided him with her findings
that the response needed to Katrina was such that it was beyond
the capabilities of the state and local officials. While
it appears that at some point Ms. Blanco made such a
request, it is not clear that it was timely. A review of
her statements and interviews reveals someone more akin to a
deer-in-the-headlights than the chief executive of a state.
Blanco was almost completely paralyzed when her people needed
her to be making decisions and taking action.
Next, and both the state
and New Orleans itself failed this task: Blanco was required to
take all emergency measures which were provided for in her own
disaster plans, and which were within the ability of Louisiana
and New Orleans to have taken. Again, they failed
miserably to do this. Even Louisiana's own National Guard
forces, under the command of the Governor as in any
state, were not called out by her until much later on. In
conjunction with assessing what her own state was to be doing to
remediate the disaster, Governor Blanco was supposed to defined
for federal officials, based again on what her state was
supposed to be doing as the primary first responders to the
disaster, what else needed to be done--what needed to be
done that the state wasn't doing and could not do. It
appears that other than panicking, assuming the fetal position
and blubbering (oh, and perhaps cursing other people),
Blanco failed to do much. She left her own citizens to
founder, both before and after Katrina struck, and she did
little to define--as the law requires for her to do--the
assistance that she wanted of the federal government.
The federal statutes which
permit the federal government to become involved in
assisting state and local authorities in responding to
emergencies and disasters are abundantly clear as to what a
state's Governor must do: The Governor or a state must, in
effect, cede certain of their state sovereignty to the federal
government in such a crisis to permit the feds to operate in
that state. Unless a
states wish to grant carte blanche to the Federal
Government to determine on its own when it should act to
supersede the sovereignty of a state in a time of emergency,
then this process--of state responds first, state requests of
the feds, state defines its needs, feds respond--must be
followed. But be very clear about this: No state is going
to want to relinquish its sovereignty in such a manner. In
other words, it would be up to the Federal chief executive--the
President, George W. Bush--to decide when a need arose, what
that need consisted of, and when to barge in with Federal
forces, and not the state's chief executive--here, Louisiana's,
Kathleen Blanco. The President decides, and the President
acts. State sovereignty is suspended for the duration of
the emergency, and state and local officials sit on their
thumbs.
I'd like to see a show of
hands of all Governor's who wish to cede their state's
sovereignty in this manner--rather than made such decisions for
themselves.
. . .
I thought so. |
DSCC: Chuck
Schumer's Criminal Gang
Thursday, September 22, 2005
By Sean Robins |
| Apparently continuing his
ends-justify-means test for politically-appropriate activities,
operatives of Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) at his Democratic
Senatorial Campaign Committee (DSCC),
have been identified by the FBI as having illegally obtained the
credit information of a Republican senatorial candidate from
Maryland.
Following his June
announcement that he was establishing an exploratory committee
to consider a run for the U.S. Senate, Maryland's Lt. Gov.
Michael Steele was made the target of an intensive "research"
investigation by operatives at the
DSCC.
Senate Democrats are eager to retain the seat being vacated by
the retirement of Democrat Paul Sarbanes, and have noted the
possible candidacy of Kweisi Mfume. Michael Steele, who
delivered an address at last years Republican National
Convention, is Maryland's first African-American elected to a
statewide office. Democrats--who traditionally attempt to
lay claim to the civil rights movement--are loathe to have
African-Americans in positions of power and responsibility. . .if
they dare to be registered Republican.
According to the FBI and
sources cited by the
Associated Press,
Katie Barge--Research Director for the DSCC, and Lauren Weiner,
obtained Steele's social security number from court documents,
and used it to obtain his credit report. Barge and Weiner
have since resigned from the DSCC, although, according to Phil
Singer, a spokesman for the DSCC, they had originally been
placed on paid leave. DSCC officials have attempted to
distance themselves from their actions, alleging that they were
acting without authority.
The United States
Attorney's Office's fraud and public corruption division, in
conjunction with the FBI, is investigating the incident.
Lt. Gov. Steele's office is calling for a vigorous prosecution.
Pursuant to federal law,
it is a crime to fraudulently access consumer credit
information, and the access of Steele's credit report by
operatives of his Democratic opposition, certainly falls within
the rubric of fraudulent access. According to the federal
"Fraudulent Access to Financial Information" act, 15 U.S.C.
§6821:
It shall be a
violation of this subtitle for any person to obtain
or attempt to obtain, or cause to be disclosed of
attempt to cause to be disclosed to any person,
customer information of a financial institution
relating to another person--
(1) by making a false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or
representation to an officer, employee, or agent of
a financial institution; . . . |
Barge and Weiner, if
prosecuted and convicted solely of obtaining Steele's credit
report fraudulently, may face up to five years in prison,
according to 15 U.S.C. §6823(a):
| Whoever
knowingly and intentionally violates, or knowingly
and intentionally attempts to violate, section
[6821] shall be fined in accordance with title 18,
United States Code, or imprisoned for not more than
5 years, or both. |
Sen. Upchuckie Schumer's
minions at the DSCC are surely upholding the best traditions of
the Democratic Party. I wonder how far up the ladder this
one will go.
More ==>
AP |
Newsday |
NY
Post |
Wash Post |
Wash Times |
What a Difference a
Few Ounces of Grey Matter Can Make
Wednesday, September 21, 2005
By Sean Robins |
| New Orleans Mayor Ray
Nagin's got nothing on
Lyda Ann Thomas,
the Mayor of Galveston, Texas, one of the coastal cities (island,
actually) in the deadly crosshairs of Category Five Hurricane
Rita, now bearing down upon the Texas-Louisiana Gulf coastlines
with winds in excess of 165 mph. Just as sure as the
"bowl" of New Orleans got filled almost to the brim when the
levees could no longer contain Katrina's flood waters, Galveston
on the brink of a category five swipe by Hurricane Rita, may
suffer enormously.
But Mayor Thomas isn't
waiting for President Bush to nudge her along, to tell her that
now it is time to get her people out. She's doing
what any rational-minded, clear-thinking, intelligent public
official should do: She's taking action on her own authority,
without a federal invitation, without federal
hand-holding, and without a lot of whining about what
someone else is going to do for them. She's
the someone doing something.
It is said that one
picture is worth a thousand words. How about two
pictures? They've got to be worth at least a couple
thousand words. They certainly speak for themselves:

Galveston, Texas: Now this is
the way to run an evacuation. On Wednesday,
several days before the expected late-Friday,
early-Saturday landfall of Hurricane Rita, getting the
people out of harms way. |

New Orleans, Louisiana: Hundreds of
useless, sunken school buses, sit untouched by local
authorities, before, during and after Hurricane
Katrina devastated the city, and the levees failed,
while locals such as Nagin complained that thousands of
residents had no way out. |
Unlike Mayor Nagin--who
unfortunately did not take Katrina as seriously as he should
have in view of the imminent and constant peril that is New
Orleans--Mayor Thomas, and the people of Galveston, clearly
learned the lessons taught by the Galveston Hurricane of 1900, a
category four storm with winds of "only" 135 mph, which
virtually destroyed the island, and killed an estimated 6,000 to
12,000 persons.
Galveston is taking no
chances. . .they are evacuating now.
Unfortunately, Nagin seems
to have learned little, if anything from Katrina. While
Gen. Honore seems to have his end of the New Orleans-Hurricane
Rita evacuation
well in hand,
Mayor Nagin's actions are incomprehensible. Two days
after Nagin was finally forced to admit things were getting
too dicey for the city's continued "repopulation"--the city's
web site contains a "Situation
Report" dated yesterday which states:
|
Due to
Hurricane Rita, re-entry has been suspended until
further notice. Citizens are advised to evacuate the
city if possible. The mandatory evacuation order
remains in effect for New Orleans. City officials
will continue to monitor the storm and deliver
updates. |
So, according to the City,
there is a suggested "mandatory evacuation order" in effect
which, "if possible," Mayor Nagin would like residents, who had
returned to New Orleans at his urging, to follow.
More==>
The Galveston Hurricane of 1900 |
Rita Bears Down on
Gulf Coast. . .Its a Five
Tuesday, September 20, 2005
By Sean Robins |
Hurricane Rita continues
its track toward the Texas-Louisiana Gulf Coast. Now a
Category Four hurricane, Rita's winds have increased to 150 mph,
and it is verging upon being Category Five.
 |
Projected Three-Day path of Hurricane Rita, as of 5:00 pm
Eastern (4 pm Central) Time Wednesday. As of this
time, with 165mph winds, Rita has strengthened to a
Category Five.
AT 4 PM CDT...2100Z...THE EYE OF
HURRICANE RITA WAS LOCATED NEAR LATITUDE 24.4
NORTH...LONGITUDE 86.8 WEST OR ABOUT 600 MILES
EAST-SOUTHEAST OF GALVESTON TEXAS AND ABOUT 700 MILES
EAST-SOUTHEAST OF CORPUS CHRISTI TEXAS.
RITA IS MOVING TOWARD THE WEST NEAR 13 MPH AND THIS
MOTION IS EXPECTED TO CONTINUE DURING THE NEXT 24 HOURS.
MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS ARE NEAR 165 MPH...WITH HIGHER
GUSTS. RITA IS AN EXTREMELY DANGEROUS CATEGORY FIVE
HURRICANE ON THE
SAFFIR-SIMPSON SCALE. SOME FLUCTUATIONS IN INTENSITY ARE
LIKELY DURING THE NEXT 24 HOURS.
HURRICANE FORCE WINDS EXTEND OUTWARD UP TO 70 MILES FROM
THE CENTER...AND TROPICAL STORM FORCE WINDS EXTEND
OUTWARD UP TO 175 MILES.
|
 |
Satellite Image of Hurricane Rita, heading west over the
Gulf of Mexico, toward the Texas-Louisiana coasts, at 4:45 pm Eastern Time Wednesday. |
|
Gen. Honore to Press
Corps.: "Don't Get Stuck on Stupid"
Tuesday, September 20, 2005
By Sean Robins |
From
a Press Conference this evening--allegedly conducted by Mayor (come...no
go...no stay...no get out!) Nagin--concerning the current
planning for New Orleans evacuation redux, as Hurricane Rita
makes her way across the Gulf. . .
The Press Gaggle assembled
to receive information concerning the plans, so that they
could do their job of getting the information out to the
thousands of residents who have already returned to the city,
began to get completely out of control. . .
Lt. Gen. Russell Honore,
who is in command of the U.S. forces still helping out there,
had had enough of the nonsense of the First Estate, and set them
to rights. No mere description suffices. You have
to read this for yourself:
HONORE:
And Mr. Mayor, let's go back, because I can see
right now, we're setting this up as he said, he
said, we said. All right? We are not
going to go, by order of the mayor and the
governor, and open the convention center for
people to come in. There are buses there.
Is that clear to you? Buses parked.
There are 4,000 troops there. People come,
they get on a bus, they get on a truck, they
move on. Is that clear? Is that
clear to the public?
FEMALE
REPORTER: Where do they move on...
HONORE:
That's not your business.
MALE
REPORTER: But General, that didn't work
the first time...
HONORE:
Wait a minute. It didn't work the first time.
This ain't the first time. Okay?
If...we don't control Rita, you understand?
So there are a lot of pieces of it that's going
to be worked out. You got good public
servants working through it. Let's get a
little trust here, because you're starting to
act like this is your problem. You are
carrying the message, okay? What we're
going to do is have the buses staged. The
initial place is at the convention center.
We're not going to announce other places at this
time, until we get a plan set, and we'll let
people know where those locations are, through
the government, and through public
announcements. Right now, to handle the
number of people that want to leave, we've got
the capacity. You will come to the
convention center. There are soldiers
there from the 82nd Airborne, and from the
Louisiana National Guard. People will be
told to get on the bus, and we will take care of
them. And where they go will be dependent
on the capacity in this state. We've got
our communications up. And we'll tell them
where to go. And when they get there,
they'll be able to get a chance, an opportunity
to get registered, and so they can let their
families know where they are. But don't
start panic here. Okay? We've got a
location. It is in the front of the
convention center, and that's where we will use
to migrate people from it, into the system.
MALE
REPORTER: General Honore, we were told
that Berman Stadium on the west bank would be
another staging area...
HONORE:
Not to my knowledge. Again, the current
place, I just told you one time, is the
convention center. Once we complete the
plan with the mayor, and is approved by the
governor, then we'll start that in the next
12-24 hours. And we understand that
there's a problem in getting communications out.
That's where we need your help. But let's
not confuse the questions with the answers.
Buses at the convention center will move our
citizens, for whom we have sworn that we will
support and defend...and we'll move them on.
Let's not get stuck on the last storm.
You're asking last storm questions for people
who are concerned about the future storm. Don't
get stuck on stupid, reporters. We are
moving forward. And don't confuse the
people please. You are part of the public
message. So help us get the message
straight. And if you don't understand,
maybe you'll confuse it to the people.
That's why we like follow-up questions.
But right now, it's the convention center, and
move on.
MALE
REPORTER: General, a little bit more about
why that's happening this time, though, and did
not have that last time...
HONORE:
You are stuck on stupid. I'm not going to
answer that question. We are going to deal
with Rita. This is public information that
people are depending on the government to put
out. This is the way we've got to do it.
So please. I apologize to you, but let's
talk about the future. Rita is happening.
And right now, we need to get good, clean
information out to the people that they can use.
And we can have a conversation on the side about
the past, in a couple of months
|
Now that's they way
to run a disaster response.
Watch a video snippet
of the last exchange between Honore and a reporter, who is
"stuck on stupid."
Listen to the entire
exchange quoted above. Its going to be a
classic. |
Liberal Media Imploding: 500 Jobs
Lost at Times & Co. Continues Mainstream Media's Downward
Spiral
Tuesday, September 20, 2005
By Sean Robins |
 The
New York Times Co. announced today that it would be cutting an
enormous 500 jobs from its payroll over the next six months,
including some 45 newsroom positions at the
Times and 35
at its sister paper, the
Boston Globe.
Another 200 jobs were cut in a similar move earlier this year.
Officials at the Times appeared to express confusion and
uncertainty in discussing the hastily-announced move, the
specifics of which have yet to materialize. What does
appear to be clear, however, is that the mounting financial woes
of the giants of yesterday's mainstream media are continuing
unabated in the face of intensifying, and ever more successful
competition from the new media.
Similar industry moves of
late have included the elimination of a hundred positions
through attrition by Philadelphia Newspapers, Inc., publisher of
the Philadelphia
Inquirer and
Daily News.
Likewise, layoff rumors and buyout offers at the
San Francisco Chronicle
have led to the loss of another 200 job so far, with more likely
to come. In August, the
Houston Chronicle
eliminated about 7% of its workforce, not including editorial
staff. Massive budget cuts beset the Boston Herald
in May, a hundred jobs were lost at the Seattle Times in
January, and only a spate of buyouts spared employees the axe at
Newsday, last December.
Circulation figures for
most of the formerly-prime names are down, as are ad revenues
almost across the board. The old dinosaurs, such as the
Times, have made attempts to "keep up" with the changing
editorial atmosphere, but so far have proven clueless.
Many, such as the Times, have created online presences
with significant editorial and news content, but often lag
behind even their own print editions, and impose roadblocks to
their use. An increasingly-popular ploy is the "Requires
free registration" scam, in which users are forced to
"register" and then log in with a username and password each
time the site is visited. The intent is to track user
habits, and solicit targets for e-mailing lists, but the effect
is to discourage visits to their sites.
The Times, just
this past week, announced the implementation of a fee-based
partition to their site, in which users will be made to pay for
access to opinion content. When the Wall Street Journal,
several years ago, changed to a fee-for-access model for its
site, readership collapsed, and it has since seen fit to reopen
portions of its content on a no-charge basis, at
OpinionJournal.com.
Why do so many woes betide
the "mainstream" media these days? If you have to ask,
you've probably been asleep since the Reagan Administration.
Cable news. Talk Radio. Internet. Independent
news sources. Alternative media out the wazoo. The failure
of the old guys to understand that they're no longer the only
game in town, and the arrogance to think that they can continue
to get away with the abuses that have embodies the Liberal Media
for generations.
A recent "performance" by
embittered ex-newscaster Dan Rather, in which he soils himself
whining over the effects of competition in the modern age of
journalism, which bleating about the "atmosphere of fear in
newsrooms," as well as anything else, demonstrates the hopeless
plight in which the mainstream media finds itself. They
just don't get it. And probably never will. As I
noted
last month, and
Times' own Executive Editor Bill Keller made clear, the
mainstream journalist looks for more than simply reporting
the news, they "think they can made the world better." And
in so doing, the First Rule of Journalism (at least as it was
taught when I attended journalism school)--be objective--is
abandoned completely, in favor of the avid pursuit of personal
(and overwhelmingly liberal) ideologies.
So as the Far Left
Liberalism has fallen out of favor from the real, mainstream
of America, so too the voice of the Olde Media is falling upon
deaf ears, and falling advertising rates.
More ==>
AP |
AP |
E&P |
E&P |
E&P |
Reuters |
WNBC
| |
Mayor Nagin's Big Gamble: New Orleaners
Start to Return, as Rita Heads Their Way
Monday, September 19, 2005
By Sean Robins |
|
The
National Weather Service has issued hurricane warnings from the
Bahamas through northern Cuba, Southern Florida and the Keys,
due to the progress and strengthening of Tropical Storm Rita.
Throughout the Florida Keys and some parts of Southern Florida,
mandatory evacuations have already taken place. Rita is
moving at about 14 mph in a west-northwesterly direction, with
maximum sustained winds of 70 mph. Though still
technically a tropical storm, the NWS is predicting that Rita
will likely become a hurricane by late Monday.
This is just how Hurricane
Katrina began.
Since Nagin revealed his,
shall we say "ambitious" plans for the "repopulation" of
hurricane devastated New Orleans, Coast Guard Vice Admiral Thad
Allen--who took over for ex-FEMA head, Michael Brown--has been
strenuously warning the Mayor to go slow in bring people back.
The city has not yet been dried out, its literally coated with
the mucky biological hazard that weeks of standing water has
brought, there is no drinkable water supply, few areas with very
limited electricity or sewers, and no food supply, other than
the little people have brought with them. Yes, the
enormous levee breaches which turned the city into a virtual
Atlantis have been "plugged up," not unlike the boy with his
finger in to dike, the repairs are largely temporary in nature,
and the levees are still fragile. Allen has warned that
they may not be up to the test of another near-term storm or
assault by heavy rains.
Nonetheless, Mayor Nagin
has expressed his confidence in his "plan" to bring as many as
180,000 residents back to New Orleans over the next week.
President Bush weighed in
on Nagin's plans today, and at a press conference this morning,
expresses skepticism about bring residents back into the city at
this early date:
| THE PRESIDENT: Well, we
have made our position very clear. Admiral
Allen has made the position very clear of this
government, and that is that we share the goal of
the Mayor, but we have got concerns. There are
environmental concerns, which Administrator Johnson
shared with us today.
Let me give you a real concern
that I think everybody ought to pay attention to,
and that is this Tropical Storm Rita, which now
looks like it's going to head out into the Gulf, and
could track Katrina, or it could head further to the
west. But, nevertheless, there is deep concern
about this storm causing more flooding in New
Orleans.
And so Admiral Allen has reflected
our -- the concerns of this administration.
And we want to work with the Mayor. The Mayor
is working hard. The Mayor has got this dream
about having a city up and running. And we
share that dream. But we also want to be
realistic about some of the hurdles and obstacles
that we all confront in repopulating New Orleans.
Q Will you express that concern
yourself to the Mayor?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, I just did.
But, as well, absolutely. Secretary -- "Secretary,"
I call -- Andy Card, former Secretary, and now Chief
of Staff Card is reaching out to him -- has reached
out to him earlier. But, listen, Admiral Allen
is our man on the ground. Admiral Allen speaks
for the administration. He is -- and the Mayor
knows our position. But I repeat, and the
Mayor needs to hear, and so do the people of New
Orleans, our objective -- listen, I went there, and
stood in Jackson Square to say, we want this city to
reemerge. As I said, I can't imagine America
without a vibrant New Orleans. It's just a
matter of timing, and there's issues to be dealt
with. If it were to rain a lot, there is
concern from the Army Corps of Engineers that the
levees might break. And so, therefore, we're
cautious about encouraging people to return at this
moment of history. |
The message to Mayor Nagin
was about as clear as clear can be: You're taking a gamble, a
big one. . .and if you're wrong, You're wrong!
Given Nagin's pathetic track record with his handling of
Hurricane Katrina, can further disaster be far behind?
This morning, at the
continued insistence that his plans for the repopulation of New
Orleans were premature, Nagin accused Thad Allen of being "the
new crowned federal mayor of New Orleans." Nagin reacted
to comments made by Allen, as recently as this morning, in which
he noted further that "without potable water and a 911 system,
the public will not be protected, and we would not recommend
anyone going back."
Curiously, among Nagin's
more recent comforting statements, made to his returning
residents, was "You are entering at your own risk."
Inspired by the courageous
pronouncements of their Mayor, New Orleaners appear poised to
repopulate their crumbling city in droves. At least, many
of those who will not be living in newly-purchased homes, way
out of harm's way, in places such as Dallas, Texas. Oh,
where, by the way, Mayor Nagin
has sent his family
to live.
Update: Even
a blockhead as thick as Mayor Ray Nagin eventual gets the
message, as even he could no longer ignore Tropical Storm Rita
bearing down on the Gulf, and a possible date with the Louisiana
coastland perhaps New Orleans. Late this afternoon, Nagin
called for a halt to the city's repopulation, and warned those
who have already returned, that they may be asked to evacuate by
some time on Wednesday.
Perhaps this time, it
won't be too late to assure the safety of the New Orleaners who
heeded Nagin's hot-head call to immediately repopulate the city.
They--at least if they choose to--have a chance to get out of
Rita's way.
More ==>
ABC News
|
AP |
Intl Herald Trib |
LA Times |
Miami Herald |
Nola.com |
NYT |
Wash Times |
Disappointed Dean Reynolds: Doesn't Get
What He Came For
Friday, September 16, 2005
By Sean Robins |
ABC
News reporter, Dean Reynolds, not unlike many of his
comrades-in-propaganda, saw a golden opportunity in
President Bush's New Orleans
speech yesterday, in which he set forth his grand
vision for the restoration and revitalization, not only of a
city and its infrastructure, but its cultural history, and of
its people.
The Golden Opportunity
in question? Why, getting a bunch of New Orleans'
downtrodden and dispossessed on camera rubbishing the President,
and disparaging his plan for the city, with the speech still
fresh in the minds of his interviewees.
It's a tried-and-true,
classic Plan "A" for liberal journalista. Only problem. .
.it blew up in Dean's face. I mean, he tries, he really
tries, to get his interviewees to go south on George W., but
they just won't cooperate. First, Reynolds wants to know
if they believe what Bush said in his speech. They
do. Then, Dean asks if they're angry that the federal
response was too slow. No, they aren't. But they
are angry with their city and state, and in particular,
Mayor Nagin. And they tell Dean this repeatedly.
Still, Dean tries to
re-direct their anger back to the President. He tries to
tell these "foolish" people who don't quite seem to get it, that
George W. Bush is the devil, that he wants them to suffer. .
.that his speech was just so many words, so much fluff.
But they refuse to bite. Dean finds "very little
skepticism" among his flock.
So, then he wants to know
whether the President could have done something to get them out
quicker than they did. One woman tells Dean that it was
really her fault, because she didn't want to leave, and
then it was too late. Another woman says that she did
get out in time. But what about the flooding afterward?
Who do they blame for that? (Surely, it must be the
President.) Again. . .not the President. The local
officials, the Mayor. They were given lots of money for
the levees, but didn't use it.
But, read the exchanges
for yourself. It is fascinating to watch Dean's act
of self-immolation:
Dean
Reynolds: I'd like to get the reaction of Connie London who spent several horrible hours at the Superdome. You heard the President say repeatedly
that you are not alone, that the country stands
beside you. Do you believe him?
Connie: Yeah, I believe him, because here in Texas, they have truly been good to us. I mean.
. .
DR: Did you get a sense of hope that you could return to your home one day in New Orleans?
Connie: Yes, I did. I did.
DR:
Did you harbor any anger toward the President
because of the slow federal response?
Connie: No, none whatsoever, because I feel like our city and our state government should have been there before the federal government was called in. They should have been on their jobs.
DR: And they weren't?
Connie: No, no, no, no. Lord, they wasn't. I mean, they had RTA buses, Greyhound buses, school buses, that was just sitting there going under water when they could have been evacuating people.
DR: Now, Mary, you were rescued from your house which was basically submerged in your neighborhood. Did you hear something in the President's words that you could glean some hope from?
Mary: Yes. He said we're coming back, and I believe we're coming back. He's going to build the city up. I believe that.
DR: You believe you'll be able to return to your home?
Mary: Yes, I do.
DR: Why?
Mary: Because I really believe what he said. I believe. I got faith.
DR: Back here in the corner, we've got Brenda Marshall, right?
Brenda: Yes.
DR: Now, Brenda, you were, spent, what, several days at the Superdome, correct?
Brenda: Yes, I did.
DR: What did you think of what the President told you tonight?
Brenda: Well, I think -- I think the speech was wonderful, you know, him specifying that we will return back and that we will have like mobile homes, you know, rent or whatever. I was listening to that pretty good. But I think it was a well fine speech.
DR: Was there any particular part of it that stood out in your mind? I mean, I saw you all nod when he said the Crescent City is going to come back one day.
Brenda: Well, I think I was more excited about what he said. That's probably why I nodded.
DR: Was there anything that you found hard to believe that he said, that you thought, well, that's nice rhetoric, but, you know, the proof is in the pudding?
Brenda: No, I didn't.
DR: Good. Well, very little skepticism here. Frederick Gould, did you hear something that you could hang on to tonight from the President?
Fred: Well, I just know, you know, he said good things to me, you know, what he said, you know. I was just trying to listen to everything they were saying, you know.
DR: And Cecilia, did you feel that the President was sincere tonight?
Cecilia: Yes, he was.
DR: Do you think this is a little too late, or do you think he's got a handle on the situation?
Cecilia: To me it was a little too late. It was too late, but he should have did something more about it.
DR:
Now do you all believe that you will one day
return to your homes? I mean, do you all want to return to your homes? We're hearing some people don't even want to go back.
Mary: I want to go back.
DR: You want to go back.
Mary: I want to go back. That's my home. That's all I know.
DR: Is it your home for your whole life?
Mary: Right. That's my home.
DR: And do you expect to go back to the house or a brand new dwelling or what?
Mary: I expect to go back to something.
I know it ain't my house, because it's gone.
DR: What is the one mistake that could have been prevented that would have made your lives much better? Is it simply getting all of you out much sooner or what was it?
Mary: I'm going to tell you the truth. I had the opportunity to get out, but I didn't believe it. So I stayed there till it was too late.
DR: Did you all have the same feeling? I mean, did you all have the opportunity to get out, but you were skeptical that this was the really bad one?
Woman: No, I got out when they said evacuate. I got out that Sunday and I left before the storm came. But I know they could have did better than what they did because like they said, buses were just sitting there, and they could have came through there and got people out, because they were saying immediate evacuation. Some people didn't believe it. But they should have brung the force of the army through to help these people and make them understand it really was coming.
Connie: And really it wasn't Hurricane Katrina that really tore up the city. It was when they opened the floodgates. It was not the hurricane itself. It was the floodgates, when they opened the floodgates, that's where all the water came.
DR: Do you blame anybody for this?
Connie: Yes. I mean, they've been allocated federal funds to fix the levee system, and it never got done. I fault the mayor of our city personally. I really do.
DR: All right. Well, thank you all very much. I wish you all the best of luck. I hope you don't have to spend too much more time here in the Reliant Center and you can get back to New Orleans as the President said. Ted, that is the word from the Houston Astrodome. And as I said, when the President said that the Crescent City will rise again, there were nods all around this parking lot.
|
Finally, Dean has had
enough, and beats a hasty retreat.
I guess everyone can't
hate the President all the time. Better luck next time,
Dean. |
Rep. William Jefferson (D-La.): Abusing
the Guard in Time of Emergency
Wednesday, September 14, 2005
By Sean Robins |
| United States
Representative, William Jefferson. African-American.
Affluent. Democrat. Above it all.
Jefferson was one of the
numerous local and national African-American politicians and
activists who have been quick to cry race and class in the
Federal government's handling of the response to Hurricane
Katrina, while ignoring the sheer incompetence of local
officials. But Rep. Jefferson's personal actions speak
much louder than words, in defining him as just another Leftie
hypocrite.
ABC News
reported earlier today
that the U.S. Rep. whose Congressional district includes New
Orleans, and which his pricey home in a ritzy neighborhood are
located, William Jefferson, commandeered National Guard troops
engaged in rescue efforts to take him to his water-logged home
so that he could "rescue" some of his own personal possessions.
According to the report, which was confirmed by Lt. Col. Pete
Schneider of the Louisiana National Guard, Jefferson convinced
troops to "ferry" him on a "tour" of flooded areas of the city
in five ton truck, a so-called "high water vehicle," with six
guardsmen, after which he suggested a detour to his home.
After keeping the soldiers waiting on his front porch for about
an hour, Jefferson returned to the truck with three suitcases, a
large box of unknown contents, and a laptop computer.
To further complicate
matters, the heavy truck got stuck in the mud of Jefferson's
lawn, and was eventually pulled free by a second Guard truck
called to the scene. In the meanwhile, a rescue
helicopter, diverted from other rescue operations, spent the
better part of an hour attempting to "rescue" Jefferson,
although he refused to board the 'copter.
Jefferson has recently
been the subject of an FBI investigation concerning financial
dealings in an international telecommunications deal.
According to the Times-Picayune, the FBI is interested in
Rep. Jefferson's involvement with Atiku Abubaker, the Vice
President of Nigeria--whose Maryland home was also searched by
the FBI--and Aliyu Mahama, the Vice President of Ghana.
One area which the FBI is reportedly investigating is whether
Jefferson made illegal payments to government officials in Ghana
and Nigeria, to further a deal allegedly on behalf of a
high-tech startup company, iGate, Inc., located in Virginia.
Both Jefferson and his
daughter, Jamila E. Jefferson, are reported to be board members
and investors in another startup company, Gridline
Communications Corp., a broadband supplier out of Texas.
According to the Washington Post, the FBI's investigation of
Rep. Jefferson has been ongoing for about a year.
Both Jefferson's New
Orleans and Washington homes, as well as that of his accountant,
were the subjects of an FBI search. One report states that
a large amount of cash was found secreted in a freezer in
Jefferson's home. In the wake of Jefferson's unorthodox
Guard visit to his home, officials are now interested to know
whether his visit was for the purpose of removing materials
related to their investigation.
More==>
ABC News
|
The Advocate |
allAfrica.com |
Amsterdam News |
AP
|
AP |
AP |
Daily Ind. (Nigeria) |
Times-Picayune |
Sandy "Pants" Berger
Gets Off Light
Friday, September 9, 2005
By Sean Robins |
 Although
U.S. Magistrate Judge Deborah Robinson significantly increased
(from $10,000 to $50,000) the fine which Sandy
("I-forgot-I-had-documents-in-my-pants") Berger must pay for
stealing, and later destroying, several copies of a key
terror-related memo from the Clinton Administration--Berger's
sentence let him off shockingly easy. In addition to the
fine--which will likely be covered one way or the other by
Democratic sources--Sandy will lose his security clearance for
three years.
Excuse me?
You mean to say that after three years this now-convicted
criminal--who stole and destroyed documents which might have
been key to certain charges which might have ended up
embarassing his former boss, Bill Clinton; who blatantly
obstructed the 9/11 Commission's investigation into pre-9/11 and
Clinton-era security lapses; who lied to federal investigators
about what happended to copies of documents; and who has yet to
completely 'fess-up about his role in the scam, and give an
honest accounting of his actions--will actually get his
security clearance back!?
How can the doofuses at
the Department of Justice--who agreed to the deal--and the
doofus on the bench (herself a Reagan appointee), be so
stupid. While I certainly applaud Judge Robinson for
departing upward on the amount of the fine imposed, permitting
Berger to ever regain his security clearance is simply
irresponsible. Fool me once, shame on you. . .fool me
twice, shame on me. Well, shame on all of us for time and
again making the wrong choices when dealing with those, like
Clinton-loyalist Sandy Berger, who is willing to sabotage the
security of his own country, in fealty to a higher allegiance
(all bow before the ex-Presidential Perv), the "Honorable"
William Jefferson Clinton.
The notion that someone
who sticks it to his own country, who sabotage's to any
degree efforts to make his own country safer, who holds his
personal allegiances to a higher importance than his national
allegiances--should never be permitted access to any
classified documents, information or facility; nor should he be
again welcomed in the halls of our government. |
Gov. Kathleen
Blanco: A Growing Picture of Criminal Incompetence
Thursday, September 8, 2005
By Sean Robins |
Just
how far does the criminal incompetence of Louisiana Governor
Kathleen Blanco and her administration extend? Only time
will tell. But we now know, according to officials in the
Red Cross, who were operating in New Orleans during and
following Hurricane Katrina, that it extends to the thousands of
filthy, starving, dehydrated evacuees stranded in the Superdome.
While the locals (including Gov. Blanco and Mayor Nagin), as
well as every squalling, writhing Democratic opportunist within
a thousand miles, were demanding to know why President Bush and
FEMA failed to provide for the evacuees, it turns out that they
were provided for, and by FEMA, through its
arrangements with the Red Cross.
Read the following
exchange, between
Fox News Channel's Brit Hume
and correspondent Major Garrett, from yesterday's Special
Report, about FEMA and its interaction with state officials
and the Red Cross, and what happened at the Superdome.
Read it all the way through. . .it starts slow, with a good
explanation of what FEMA really does, but then drops the
bombshell:
Fox News' Brit Hume: First, the focus of all
of the attention has been FEMA, Federal
Emergency Management Agency, what is FEMA?
Fox News' Major Garrett: Federal Emergency Management Agency, 2,500 full time
employees, 4,000 stand by employees. The mission statement very simple: prepare,
respond, help, recover, reduce risk. How does it do it? By coordinating with
state and local entities and other groups The Salvation Army, Red Cross,
dedicated to helping the needy when disaster strikes.Hume: So FEMA is
relatively, it isn't very labor intensive it
mostly works through other agencies?
Garrett: It works through other agencies. But
it has been moved into the Department of
Homeland Security. And in this crisis, It is a
bit a victim of its own bureaucratic
boastfulness. Earlier this year the new national
response plan released by the Department of
Homeland Security promised this - "seamless
integration of the federal government when an
incident exceeds local and state capabilities."
In the minds of many Americans, this one did.
And FEMA, at least initially, in the minds of
some, did not respond enough.
Hume: The words seamless don't exactly spring
to mind. But look, they are down there, The Red
Cross, for example, is there.
Garrett: Standing by, ready.
Hume: Standing by, ready. Why didn't FEMA
send The Red Cross into New Orleans when we had
all of the people there on that bridge overpass
and elsewhere. Why not?
Garrett: First of all, no jurisdiction. FEMA
works with The Red Cross, The Salvation Army and
other organizations but it has no control to
order them to go one place or the other.
Secondarily, The Red
Cross was ready. I got off the phone with one of
their officials. They had a vanguard, Brit, of
trucks with water, food, hygiene equipment, all
sorts of things ready to go where? To the
Superdome and convention center. Why weren't
they there? The Louisiana Department of Homeland
Security told them they could not go.
Hume: This is isn't the Louisiana branch of
the federal Homeland Security? This is --
Garrett: The state's
own agency devoted to the state's homeland
security. They told them you cannot go there.
Why? The Red Cross tells me that state agency in
Louisiana said, look, we do not want to create a
magnet for more people to come to the Superdome
or convention center, we want to get them out.
So at the same time local officials were
screaming where is the food, where is the water?
The Red Cross was standing by ready, the
Louisiana Department of Homeland Security said
you can't go.
Hume: FEMA does, presumably at some point,
have some jurisdiction over some military
forces. Of course, the first responders there
are the National Guard. Why didn't FEMA send the
National Guard in? You heard that cry from many
people.
Garrett: FEMA does not have jurisdictional
control over any state's National Guard, only
the governor does. The governor in this case,
Kathleen Blanco, A democrat, did use the
Louisiana National Guard for some purposes, did
not deploy them in massive numbers initially and
they were not used to move any of these relief
organizations in and they could have been for
the very same reason I talked about earlier, the
state decided they didn't want the relief
organizations where the people needed it most
because they wanted those people to get out.
Hume: But even today we know that Governor
Blanco has now decided that a mandatory
evacuation may not be necessarily after all. But
we can go into that later. What about the use by
her of the National Guard to impose law and
order during the early looting and all of that?
Garrett: She had a choice, as I am told. She
could have taken up the offer from FEMA to
federalize all of the activities in Louisiana,
meaning that FEMA would be in control of
everything. Not only law enforcement, but
everything else. She declined to give them that
authority. So essentially FEMA was trapped
between two bureaucracies. One the Department Of
Homeland Security where many of its decisions
have to be reviewed and in some cases approved,
and a recalcitrant state bureaucracy that wasn't
going to give them the authority they needed to
make things happen, among them, the National
Guard.
Hume: What about this evacuation problem?
It's clearly was something that New Orleans
faced, knew it faced to some extent.
Garrett: And the city [sic] of Louisiana.
They have a whole plan that contemplates dealing
with an evacuation in the effect of a hurricane
three, four or five. Their own plan says,
100,000 residents minimum from the New Orleans
area will have to be evacuated. This plan makes
it clear ...
Hume: You mean, can't get out on their own.
Garrett: These people will have not have
their own vehicles. Not only that, It stipulate
that these people are disproportionately poor,
sick and in need of special transportation
assistance. Brit, I think in these
circumstances, bureaucratic language is
important. Let's go to this. This is what the
state says: "the Department of Health and
Hospitals has the primary responsibility for
providing medical coordination for all of the
special-needs populations, i.e. hospital and
nursing home patients, persons on home health
care, elderly persons and other persons with
physical or mental disabilities." Brit, I don't
think you can come up with a better description
of the people we saw, day in and day out, at the
Superdome and the convention center, than this
very population that the state's own plan said
needed to be transported to a safe place and
provided services.
Hume: Apparently no plan, no provision, no
facility for doing that.
Garrett: No facility for doing that. Not only
that, those who reviewed the plans the state put
together before were critical of it. In 2002 the
New Orleans Times Picayune had a whole story
about this saying no one believes the evacuation
plans are possible, feasible or will be carried
out. They proved to be accurate.
Hume: It sounds like the state will have much
to answer for in the investigation coming before
Congress as well as the federal government.
Garrett: It appears to be.
|
Hume's last comment, that
the "the state will have much to answer for" as the aftermath is
investigated, is an enormous understatement.
The Red Cross' own
web site contains a
recently-posted "FAQ" concerning Hurricane Katrina, titled "Why
is the Red Cross not in New Orleans?" It seems
to have been hastily-posted in the wake of the yesterday's
revelations from Major Garrett:
Why is the Red
Cross not in New Orleans?
-
Access to New Orleans
is controlled by the National Guard and local
authorities and while we are in constant contact
with them, we simply cannot enter New Orleans
against their orders.
-
The state Homeland
Security Department had requested--and continues
to request--that the American Red Cross not come
back into New Orleans following the hurricane.
Our presence would keep people from evacuating
and encourage others to come into the city.
- The Red
Cross has been meeting the needs of thousands of
New Orleans residents in some 90 shelters
throughout the state of Louisiana and elsewhere
since before landfall. All told, the Red Cross
is today operating 149 shelters for almost
93,000 residents.
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