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Home World North America New Orleans wonders: where are the resources when you need them?

New Orleans wonders: where are the resources when you need them?

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With the Bush preoccupation - and occupation - with Iraq so far costing each and every U.S. citizen over $US700, it's really no wonder Hurricane Katrina's devastating impact is so much greater than it might have been.

Current estimates warn that the cost of the disasterous and completely illegal U.S. invasion of Iraq and its bloody aftermath may soon exceed $US700 billion. That's $US100 billion more than the U.S. spent blundering around in its war on the Vietnamese.

And where's the National Guard when you need it?! Iraq Mess Adds to the Problem
by Juan Gonzales

The battlefields of Iraq seem far removed from the awesome devastation and near-biblical floods unleashed on New Orleans and the rest of the Mississippi Delta by Hurricane Katrina.

But these two tragedies are more closely connected than most of us realize.

Some 7,000 soldiers from the Louisiana and Mississippi National Guard are stationed in Iraq. They include more than 3,000 members of the 256th Brigade Combat Team, a unit based in and around New Orleans.

Those soldiers, who represent 40% of Mississippi's and 35% ofLouisiana's regular Guard strength, were forced to watch helplessly from their barracks in Iraq the past few days as the hurricane swept through their neighborhoods and threatened their families.

Quite simply, the two states hardest hit by this storm were handicapped from the start by not having enough Guard units and military equipment like trucks, Humvees and helicopters on the ground to handle the crisis.

"As much as we need them in Iraq, we also need them at home," Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) warned on CNN just before the hurricane hit Monday.

Yet not until yesterday did President Bush finally take decisive action to provide military reinforcements from other parts of the country or even from regular Army bases in those states.

By then, one of our greatest cities was under water and being evacuated; tens of thousands of its poorest residents were stranded and facing catastrophe; millions were without power, and looters had already waded off with all that could be taken.

"People are hurting and people are being vandalized," said an editorial plea posted yesterday on the Web site of The Sun Herald of Biloxi, Miss. "Yet where is the National Guard, why hasn't every able-bodied member of the armed forces in south Mississippi been pressed into service?"

Except for the floods, the posthurricane destruction and near-anarchy in New Orleans resembled those heartbreaking scenes of the chaos in Baghdad after "liberation."

Those floods are yet another tragedy that the Bush administration will have to explain. They are in no small way connected to the curse that Iraq has become for our nation.

Sure, no one could have prevented a powerful hurricane from hitting the Mississippi Delta. But federal and local government leaders all knew that a direct hit on New Orleans from such a storm could mean catastrophe.

The Times-Picayune of New Orleans published numerous articles during the past two years warning that the city and federal officials weren't prepared.

The newspaper's articles also revealed that Bush was making huge cuts to an Army Corps of Engineers project meant to shore up the levees and pumping stations that protect Delta residents from the waters of Lake Pontchartrain and the Mississippi.

That project, known as the Southeast Louisiana Urban Flood Control Project, has been in effect since 1995. But spending on it has been reduced substantially since 2000.

"It appears the money has been moved into the President's budget to handle homeland security and the war in Iraq, and I suppose that's the price that we pay," the emergency management chief for Jefferson Parish, La., told The Times-Picayune in June 2004. "Nobody locally is happy that the levees can't be finished."

Earlier this year, Bush, this President who is spending more than $1 billion a week on this mess in Iraq, proposed less than $11 million in new funding for Louisiana's flood control project. The Army Corps of Engineers wanted at least $62 million.

Among the items the White House cut from that flood control budget was money to study how New Orleans could cope with a Category 5 hurricane.

Well, the entire country learned how this week. We'll all be paying for that terrible lesson for decades to come.

© 2005 New York Daily News

Published on Thursday, September 1, 2005 by the New York Daily News

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Comments (5)add comment

Anonymous said:

What an outrage! You lefty, terrorist-loving losers have stooped to a new low, using the dead in New Orleans to push your vile anti-Americanism.



How on earth can you blame President Bush for the natural disaster that hit the Gulf States? You try and blame him and other strong leaders like PMs Howard and Blair for all the world ills but take a real look and you will see that 9 times out of 10 it is your decadent anti-business ways that have caused the problem.



Of course President Bush is doing every thing he can possibly do to help the stranded folks. And you can be sure that in the weeks to come you and the rest of the world will see that shining light of freedom and hope that is the United States, blazing in full glory as it rallies round and saves its people in trouble.



God Bless,



Patriot



September 02, 2005

Chato said:

As the plucky little arse-seeking

Oz PM has said on so many occasions,

"All the problems of the world

are caused by the failure of the

poor to admire the rich!

If they only stopped their envy

everything would be fixed by

the tooth-fairy."
September 02, 2005

Anonymous said:

i say send 'em to New York World Trade Centre site: they could build a couple of big ol tower blocks for them colored folks to live in.
September 04, 2005

Chato said:

Fairness MUST be applied to these bludgers

from New Orleans. They could have been rich,

but no, they decided to be poor instead!



In this democratic, free world they MUST be forced

to face up to their MUTUAL OBLIGATION to the rich.

Jesus would have insisted upon no less.



Poor suffering Jesus and his suffering mother Mary.

When I think about how much John Howard has suffered

from watching these ungrateful scum struggling to

save their impoverished, worthless lives...

Fuck the poor! There is no place for them in a fair world!
September 04, 2005

misha said:

Bush's budget cuts to the Southeast Louisiana Urban Flood Control Project are directly responsible for the scale of the hurricane's impact. For years, local critics have been warning about the possible consequences. The resulting catastrophe speaks for itself. But as one victim of Bush's policy succinctly put it in New Orleans this week, it's "just like Iraq but without the bombing". Absolutely!
September 05, 2005

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