Thursday, September 01, 2005

Well put

This editorial in the New York Times, entitled "Waiting for a Leader", is worth reading. It's sadly accurate:

George W. Bush gave one of the worst speeches of his life yesterday, especially given the level of national distress and the need for words of consolation and wisdom. In what seems to be a ritual in this administration, the president appeared a day later than he was needed. He then read an address of a quality more appropriate for an Arbor Day celebration: a long laundry list of pounds of ice, generators and blankets delivered to the stricken Gulf Coast. He advised the public that anybody who wanted to help should send cash, grinned, and promised that everything would work out in the end.

We will, of course, endure, and the city of New Orleans must come back. But looking at the pictures on television yesterday of a place abandoned to the forces of flood, fire and looting, it was hard not to wonder exactly how that is going to come to pass. Right now, hundreds of thousands of American refugees need our national concern and care. Thousands of people still need to be rescued from imminent peril. Public health threats must be controlled in New Orleans and throughout southern Mississippi. Drivers must be given confidence that gasoline will be available, and profiteering must be brought under control at a moment when television has been showing long lines at some pumps and spot prices approaching $4 a gallon have been reported.

Sacrifices may be necessary to make sure that all these things happen in an orderly, efficient way. But this administration has never been one to counsel sacrifice. And nothing about the president's demeanor yesterday - which seemed casual to the point of carelessness - suggested that he understood the depth of the current crisis.

While our attention must now be on the Gulf Coast's most immediate needs, the nation will soon ask why New Orleans's levees remained so inadequate. Publications from the local newspaper to National Geographic have fulminated about the bad state of flood protection in this beloved city, which is below sea level. Why were developers permitted to destroy wetlands and barrier islands that could have held back the hurricane's surge? Why was Congress, before it wandered off to vacation, engaged in slashing the budget for correcting some of the gaping holes in the area's flood protection?

It would be some comfort to think that, as Mr. Bush cheerily announced, America "will be a stronger place" for enduring this crisis. Complacency will no longer suffice, especially if experts are right in warning that global warming may increase the intensity of future hurricanes. But since this administration won't acknowledge that global warming exists, the chances of leadership seem minimal.

5 comments:

Greg said...

Very nicely said.

Matt_Sweet said...

Amen to that.

Martijn said...

To a Dutch guy being born after our last flood this all is beyond comprehension.

But before 1953, maintenance of sea protection was also cut by government, untill it all went wrong. Afterwards we did build one of the strongest sea defences and even now, large parts of our dikes along the rivers are not up to the security level we think necessary.

What is really don't understand is why help was not ready. Everybody KNEW a disaster was going to happen given the strength of the hurricane. Even now its utter chaos.

Maybe we need to ask the UN to move in and give aid, because I fear the USA is incapable of providing adequate help.

teh l4m3 said...

Furthermore, I'd like to pooh-pooh the assertions of those few on the left, and especially of those many on the right, that we "not play politics" with Katrina. Bull. The time for questions, for accountability, for a reckoning is now. After watching that poor woman float her husband's body to dry ground by herself, I for one am through pussyfooting around. James Wolcott was spot on.

Wilde said...

But Bush IS right; things will get better and the country will bounce back -- shortly after the next election when he's gone.