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George Bush Investigates!

By Molly Ivins, AlterNet. Posted September 9, 2005.


Dubya vows to get to the bottom of of what went wrong on Katrina.
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George W. Bush has come up with his worst idea since he decided to have the military investigate torture by the military at Abu Ghraib prison. He, George W. personally, plans to investigate to "find out what went right and what went wrong" in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

It's hard to guess where Bush will look first, but maybe he should start with the appointment of "Brownie" to head FEMA, the federal disaster relief agency. "Brownie" is Michael Brown, who was appointed by some president.

At the time, Brownie was deputy director of the agency under Joe Allbaugh -- because he was Joe Allbaugh's college roommate, you see, and Allbaugh was Bush's campaign manager in 2000, you see, which made both of them qualified to manage disasters.

The FEMA press release announcing Brownie's appointment started with his other obvious qualification, "From 1991 to 2001, Brown was the commissioner of the International Arabian Horse Association." It's unclear whether "Brownie" was fired or resigned from the organization in the wake of financial mismanagement and lawsuits.

Hours after Hurricane Katrina made landfall, Brown wrote his boss, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, to ask permission to send 1,000 FEMA employees to the scene to support rescuers and to "convey a positive image" about the government's response. Brownie said he expected the workers to be there two days later. This apparently inspired Bush's comment, "Brownie, you're doing a heckuva job."

Brownie is ably assisted by two top aides, one a former Bush campaign advanceman and the other a former Bush campaign public relations guy.

FEMA was once considered one of our better federal agencies (those in the government-is-the-enemy camp may not believe this, but some government agencies are actually known for effective performance.) Exactly why the right-wing Republicans chose to make FEMA a political football was never clear -- unless you subscribe to the theory that they particularly dislike any government agency that helps people, since that makes government popular and they are bent on making government unpopular.

At any rate, going back to the Reagan administration, conservatives have been hacking away at FEMA -- they mostly just under-funded it, one of their favorite tactics, unless a hurricane hit Florida just before an election. Sorry to sound boringly partisan, but that is the record, and the Clinton administration did work hard at rebuilding the agency.

So now those on the liberal side are saying: "See, that's what happens when you starve government in order to give rich folks tax cuts. Government agencies can't do the jobs they were set up to do."

Silly liberals see this as vindication that they have been right all along. But the Bush administration officials are in full blame-shifting mode: First, they announced repeatedly they don't want to "play the blame game." Then, they start blaming everybody else.

According to The New York Times, Karl Rove and Dan Bartlett, White House communications director, began a campaign this weekend to blame local and state officials. The "woefully inadequate response," said "sources close to the White House," was the fault of "bureaucratic obstacles from state and local officials."

The bottom line is they're playing the race card. As many of you have noted, it IS a racial issue that poor people suffer most in any natural or economic disaster. Because Katrina hit the Deep South, a great many of the poor people affected are black, especially in New Orleans -- both hit hardest and majority black to begin with.

I'm not sure what to say about a cable news station that plays a "loop" of black looters over and over -- about 20 seconds of actual footage, replayed for four minutes, while the voiceover dwells on the looting problem. Obviously, there are some looters in New Orleans and elsewhere, and equally obviously, there are lots of people who were without food or water for days.

The exhausted and desperate black mayor of New Orleans begged for help in an interview late last week. "They're feeding the public a line of bull and they're spinning, and people are dying down here," Mayor Ray Nagin said, talking about the feds. "It's politics, man, and they are playing games. ... They're out there spinning for the cameras. ... I don't want to see anybody do any more goddamned press conferences. ... Excuse my French, everybody in America, but I am pissed. ...

"Don't tell me 40,000 people are coming here! They're not here! It's too doggone late. Now get off your asses and do something, and let's fix the biggest goddamned crisis in the history of this country. People are dying."

The mayor was in tears. I heard two nice, white American "ladies" deploring this interview. "Well! He should remember there might be children listening!" Children still without food and water. What happens to people when they talk about race? Of course, most of us don't actually talk about race any more, we refer to it only indirectly, we talk "those people."

Watch carefully, listen carefully -- minority groups have always been blamed after natural disasters, since the days when the Hungarians were supposed to have cut the fingers off bodies to get the gold rings in the wake of the Johnstown Flood. Dirty Bohunks.

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Molly Ivins writes about politics, Texas and other bizarre happenings.

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Kinda like a Fox Minding the hen house
Posted by: Ely Whitney on Sep 9, 2005 6:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Was it not old Dubya saying early on that things were going well with the rescue efforts even tot he point of giving an atta boy to his apointment MB? If that was the situation in his mind why does he feel it necessary at this point to head up any kind of an investigation?

Once again caught in a quagmire of untruths...LOL

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kablooie
Posted by: kablooie on Sep 9, 2005 7:04 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The voice of reason cries in the wilderness...and no matter what the "blame game" (also known here in the Deep South as "The Wheel of Goat") has to offer, there is no denying that the President of the United States was still on vacation TWO DAYS after the disaster struck. Two (2) days. 48 hours.

Or was it three?

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» RE: kablooie Posted by: kelly.nickell
» RE: kablooie Posted by: Basenjis
Molly I love you...
Posted by: kelly.nickell on Sep 9, 2005 8:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I love it when you talk, Molly.

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» RE: Molly I love you... Posted by: johnny-boy2
The Eyewitness Muse
Posted by: sgtmartin1 on Sep 9, 2005 9:48 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Molly you are the Muse's hero and an inspiration. My offering to the Goddest of Bush-bashers...

The Color of Chaos
Beleaguered FEMA implements color codes to forestall future failures.

EWM - (September 9, 2005) As part of a massive restructuring of the FEMA side of the Department of Homeland Security, Secretary Michael Chertoff is implementing a color-coded system to direct staff on protocols to be followed for a pending natural disaster. The move was made in concert with FEMA Director Michael Brown’s recall to Washington to “pursue other opportunities” after the agency’s botched response to Hurricane Katrina...

The colors will be communicated to FEMA personnel via GPS-controlled mood rings and the threat status will not be announced to the public...

Read Article

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» RE: The Eyewitness Muse Posted by: Basenjis
Bohunk used to mean Hungarian?
Posted by: Samantha Vimes on Sep 10, 2005 4:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How words change!

Bohunk means sexy man, these days. (Beau-hunk, presumably)

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» Try Bohemian - from Bohemia Posted by: dancerkc
» RE: Nimrod Posted by: Unbowed
menckenman
Posted by: menckenman on Sep 10, 2005 5:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In the New Homeland, New Orleans will be a Christian Renaissance (business opportunity), because the flood was obviously caused by the evil degenerate jazz and voodoo culture they have down there.

Good and evil, right? They deserved it. That's what they saying under their breath. That's why you see the "looting" tape over and over.

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» RE: the slide Posted by: Unbowed
» RE: menckenman Posted by: Basenjis
» RE: menckenman Posted by: johnny-boy2
Incompetence Abounds
Posted by: Sandra on Sep 10, 2005 7:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's easier to be incompetent when you have convinced some people that God elected you to office. Of course when you are incompetent you surround yourself with other incompetents so that you are all comfortable. It also helps to own the media and to be the waterboy for large corporations and people of wealth, so that you can stay in power and continue to be incompetent and loving it. We have to acknowledge that Bush has reached the highest levels of incompetence. In that if nothing else, he succeeds.

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» RE: Incompetence Abounds Posted by: diof09
» RE: Incompetence Abounds Posted by: kelly.nickell
» RE: Incompetence Abounds Posted by: kelly.nickell
» RE: Incompetence Abounds Posted by: magistre
» RE: Incompetence Abounds Posted by: hill
» RE: Incompetence Abounds Posted by: cyclone
» RE: Incompetence Abounds Posted by: Basenjis
New twist on the Peter Prinicple
Posted by: Ely Whitney on Sep 11, 2005 8:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
From my vantage point and reflecting back on this BUSH administration this is a very good example of the Peter Principle evolving into a new level of incompetence.

The original principle states that in a hierarchically structured administration, people tend to be promoted up to their "level of incompetence"

What we are experiencing now is that those that are proving an extreme level of incompetence in a present position are not ever demoted but in fact promoted to a new level to which they only create more havoc.

I guess I can understand this as it is typical in most corporate cultures throughout North America. I have yet to meet an upper level management type that likes to have someone smarter than them working as a subordinate on their team. So if that means having stupid people around you to assist with making critical decisions for the success of your company, or country so be it...

Just some thoughts

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Silence!
Posted by: The Butcher on Sep 11, 2005 9:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Where are the voices of America that count?
People who, we outside the US recognize?
Where is the outrage?
Where is the clamour?
Is it gathering?
Or will it be the current pathetic whimper?
Where is Dean? Can't Gore Talk?
Can Clinton get that cigar out of his mouth? What is Ted saying?
Has kerry lost his voice?
Where is Nader?
What is fucking wrong with your country?
We don't need violence, we need a rational national debate but it ain't happening.
Looks like you too busy chompin' on the next burger.

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» RE: Silence! Posted by: rue
» RE: Silence! Posted by: Unbowed
» RE: Silence! Posted by: samo
» RE: a liability Posted by: Unbowed
» RE: Silence! Posted by: Jamboree
Stan Munslow
Posted by: Stanmun on Sep 11, 2005 11:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
GW Bush wants to investigate himself and his own? Incredible. It's bad enough that the man occupying the White House is one of the stupidest human beings on the face of the earth. It's bad enough that he's got the EVIL schtick down cold as well. He's as lazy as a post. He's as compassionate as a pedophile. Now it is even more obvious that the man (using the term very loosely) is as wacko as Michael Jackson. Someone should do a clinical study on him.

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» RE: Stan Munslow Posted by: Basenjis
bohunks
Posted by: Unbowed on Sep 11, 2005 3:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I believe I had heard the word but never really knew what it refered to.

The slightest bit of research came up with this.

The Hungarian connection is not due to the fact that a disproportionate number of the victims were Magyar émigrés; Johnstown and the villages surrounding it were a classic stew drawn from the “melting pot” of 19th-Century America. Instead, what happened was that many outsiders mistook this all-American chowder for an unadulterated and distasteful goulash of Hungarians. According to the seminal history of the disaster, by famed author and biographer David G. McCullough, those “Old American” Europeans who had settled the area first saw the newly-arriving “ethnic” Europeans as a undifferentiated mass of interlopers there to undercut their wages and living standards. “The idea did not please people much,” McCullough wrote. “Nor did it matter whether the contract workers were Italians, Poles, Hungarians, Russians, or Swedes; they were all called Hungarians, “bohunks” or “hunkies.”

http://www.budapesttimes.hu/index.php?head=11&issue=55

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» RE: bohunks Posted by: diof09
The Boys Club
Posted by: Olympiada on Sep 11, 2005 9:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hi Molly, nice clear writing. I like your style.

well first of all, it sounds like a good ole boys club to me with college roommates and all that...what is that called, the glass ceiling, or it's who you know? Anyways, doesn't sound honest, how people get into political positions of power, doesn't sound honest at all...

I like how you are objective about liberals. That is clarity.

And at the risk of someone saying "What difference does it make" again I offer the practice of Buddhism to United States government. There has got to be a practicing Buddhist in there some where.

Why?

Well the Buddhists have this concept of driving all blames into one self. Seems to me like everyone on all levels of government would do good to practice this. Imagine that! Instead of pointing the finger, if everybody had the strength to drive all blames into themself. Wow, what a country that would be.

Shangri-La.

Non-existent.

LOL.

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» RE: The Boys Club Posted by: Basenjis
Relocation Efforts
Posted by: boing007 on Sep 12, 2005 5:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Last night on Larry King Live someone from Mississippi said that people from that state were transferred further inland. After hearing that, I began to wonder why most of the evacuees in New Orleans and parts nearby were transferred to almost every other state in the Union except their own. Sounds fishy to me.

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What's wrong w/America? Idiots in power using the devil sign
Posted by: fedupamerican on Sep 12, 2005 6:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Old Boy Network and Cronyism is running our country...has been and will be.

The following is taken from the bondofsecrecy link below:

"The only agenda of Skull and Bones is to get its members into positions of power and then to have those members hire others to positions of prominence. The organization has an enormous superiority complex that partly fuels their secrecy," said Alexandra Robbins, author of Secrets of the Tomb: Skull and Bones, the Ivy League, and the Hidden Paths of Power.
"I think the problem here is that, frankly, I don't believe that the people who represent our country, especially the president of the United States, should be allowed to have an allegiance to any secret group. Secrecy overshadows democracy," said Robbins, a 1998 Yale graduate who belonged to Scroll and Key, another secret society.

Meet the Press, host Tim Russert asked Bush about his membership in Skull and Bones.
"It's so secret we can't talk about it," answered the president.

" 'I think Skull and Bones has had slightly more success than the Mafia in the sense that the leaders of the five families are all doing 100 years in jail, and the leaders of the Skull and Bones families are doing four and eight years in the White House,' author and Yale graduate Ron Rosenbaum said on the CBS News program 60 Minutes. "
http://www.prisonplanet.com/080304bondofsecrecy.html

Bush and Laura giving the sign:
http://www.prisonplanet.com/Pages/Jan05/210105devilhand.htm

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The Buck Stops Somewhere Else
Posted by: lamar on Sep 12, 2005 8:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The motto of George W. Bush:
The Buck Stops Somewhere Else
It is amazing that the president can't own up to a single mistake? Do the math: Grand total of zero mistakes in over five years in office. At some point it sounds a little like Saddam Hussein's impressive electoral victory margin.

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Twilight Zone
Posted by: mstenger on Sep 12, 2005 12:20 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just keep watching...Bush will emerge from the New Orleans disaster unscathed just like he has everything else. We Americans have become greedy, power-loving monsters in the world. Ultimately, the sight of dying, black, poor Americans (aka "refugees") will have no effect whatsoever on the rest of America. We will do nothing to hold Bush and his minions accountable, and on he will go, blithely, for 3 more years. Gawd! Will we ever get out of the twilight zone? It seems not if we haven't since: the Supreme Court appointed Bush without anyone noticing or caring; 9/11 happened on his watch after a memo spelling it all out was ignored; Bush sat and did nothing but read about goats to kids as Americans were incinerated and falling out of American landmarks; Bush lied us into war with Iraq and nothing came of the Downing Street Memos; Abu Ghraib torture photos became nothing more than a bizarre, curiosity to most Americans; the Patriot Act means big brother is watching and controlling you but doing nothing to protect you and you don't care; Americans sit idly by as credit card companies write laws that congress passes to make sure you never, ever get out of debt if you lose your job and health insurance; Americans sit idly by as congress passes a law making it next to impossible to sue a business that irrepairably harms you; Americans sit idly by as congress cuts taxes to bezillionaires and shoves shit down the throats of the rest of us; the New KKK (Konservative Khristian Kult) takes over our country and Americans think that's just dandy; Bush is "elected" to another term after blatant partisan election fraud by Ken Blackwell in Ohio and elsewhere; Cheney brazenly gives no-bid contracts to Halliburton in Iraq and now New Orleans; poor, black people are dying in New Orleans and the corporate/republican "news" media focus on poor, black people looting (diapers and food) from poor lil' Walmart--Gosh, there goes the economy for krisakes! C'mon...this has to be THE TWILIGHT ZONE!!!!

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» RE: Twilight Zone Posted by: Basenjis
» RE: Twilight Zone Posted by: vic1234
The bottom of it
Posted by: worksg on Sep 12, 2005 12:42 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dubya IS at the bottom of of what went wrong on Katrina.

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» RE: The bottom of it Posted by: johnny-boy2
Response to Author
Posted by: johnny-boy2 on Sep 14, 2005 4:18 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My what a snide column.

That's it.

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» Secret Posted by: Olympiada
PS!
Posted by: johnny-boy2 on Sep 14, 2005 4:22 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When did it become a crime to be white??

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» RE: PS! Posted by: qchapter
» RE: PS! Posted by: johnny-boy2
» RE: PS! Posted by: Riverside
Racial bias stifled real help
Posted by: Riverside on Sep 18, 2005 9:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The majority of whites and most likely all the wealthy whites got out of the way of Katrina well in time. They were carefully warned and they also had ample means to escape. Certainly they had reservations and sadness about leaving behind much of their property and even beloved pets, but they went quickly.

Just how complete were the warnings and explanations that were given to the poor in the region? Certainly most emergency services knew these folks had no way to move quickly. In fact, they probably knew this days in advance of any real danger. How many even comprehended that poor people are slower to leave behind what little they have because it is all they have and they have limited hope of regaining what is lost? How many cared if they even understood this attitude?

If we think that vile politician that cheered the storm for ridding the area of slums was unique, we are fooling ourselves. He just said outloud what many, including leading politicians think. How can we see from this any feeling of compassion for these people? They are going to be trapped, zapped, and ignored as the storm strikes and destroys, and the leaders knew this.

So the first place Mr. Bush needs to look is in the mirror, and that goes for every politician down the line who not once (excepting the Mayor of New Orleans and the Governor) raised a public outcry over what was happening.

Is this America?

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the Blame Game
Posted by: rkewen on Sep 19, 2005 10:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Molly as usual you cut through the BS, and get to the truth - it is just too silly to even imagine that the Duuuuuuuuuuhbya hisself is going to get to the bottom of what went wrong.

The last I heard from the Rove et. al. spin machine is that all that went wrong in NOLA was the fault of the evironmentalists.

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