| cont. from previous post
Nagin failed to devise or administer an evacuation plan — remember that famous photo of dozens of school buses that were left to be swamped by the flood waters instead of being used to evacuate flood victims?
Instead, Nagin spent the entire crisis complaining about what other people weren't doing to save his city. When asked where he was during the crucial moments of the disaster, Nagin snapped back, to the world at large, "Where were you?" — as if a random resident strolling the streets of Buffalo bears more responsibility for the plight of New Orleans than the city's own mayor.
That Nagin is still mayor of New Orleans, one year later, is the worst possible indictment of the city's corrupt culture. In 1979, the people of Chicago voted out their mayor because he failed to ensure the timely plowing of the streets after a heavy snowstorm. Ray Nagin presided over an unprecedented collapse in city government, and the people of New Orleans re-elected him. A large number of New Orleans voters are still stuck in the fantasy of holding everyone responsible for their lives except themselves.
William Jefferson also represents the local political culture well. He's the congressman whose home district is in central New Orleans — and he's also the congressman recently caught hiding $90,000 worth of bribe money in his freezer. Nagin and Jefferson are typical political products of the welfare state. Their job is not to protect citizens' lives and property, but to dole out vast sums in vote-buying patronage to their supporters and constituents, and occasionally to skim a little off the top for themselves.
And that brings us to the role of the federal government. The federal government's problem is not lack of spending. Over the decades, Louisiana's congressional delegation has funneled billions of dollars to a vast system of canals and levees, which failed — not because they were inadequately funded, but because they were inadequately designed and built.
And what about federal spending on the rebuilding of New Orleans? The federal government, far from ignoring the Gulf Coast, has pledged the astonishing sum of $120 billion, far more than for any previous natural disaster. Tens of billions of dollars have already poured out of the federal coffers — largely to disappear into the unreformed swamp of Louisiana political corruption.
Yes, this is about a failure of government, all right. It's about the failure of big government and the welfare state and the whole philosophy behind them. It is about the vital necessity to move away from government handouts and toward personal responsibility and private initiative. Hurricane Katrina demonstrated that the moral difference between self-reliance and dependence on government is ultimately the difference between life and death.
The only institution for which the press has any praise on the anniversary of Hurricane Katrina is, naturally enough, the press. They have spent much of this week congratulating themselves on what a marvelous job they did — which is the surest indication that they have completely missed the real story.
__________________ Quote:
Originally Posted by wordsmythe Damn YOU for making me agree in public with you.
But when you're right you're right. | "Wal-Mart, you may want to look into this." |