About that plan for Katrina…

About three months ago, the federal government’s response to Hurricane Katrina was an international fiasco. Bush’s handling, in particular, was widely derided, his competence further came into question, and his approval rating fell even further. Time magazine reported a couple of weeks after the storm hit that the Bush gang had crafted a “Three-Part Comeback Plan.” Part One of the plan looks almost quaint in retrospect.

The first: Spend freely, and worry about the tab and the consequences later. “Nothing can salve the wounds like money,” said an official who helped develop the strategy. “You’ll see a much more aggressively engaged President, traveling to the Gulf Coast a lot and sending a lot of people down there.”

That was then. Now, Bush hasn’t seen the Gulf Coast since Oct. 11. The massive Marshall Plan-style rebuilding hasn’t happened and the “comeback plan” looks like a rough draft written on the back of a napkin. Consider what Time’s Mike Allen heard last week from Bush aides.

White House strategists believe they have ended the slide in Bush’s approval ratings, which lately have been topping 40% again. “It’s time for the Bush comeback story!” one coached Time for this article. “The perfect storm has receded. We have better news in Iraq, oil prices are down, and Katrina has kind of fallen off the radar screen in terms of public concern.”

It’s a fascinating juxtaposition. They see improvements on the war and gas prices, but they don’t see Katrina’s devastation at all. It’s not the situation on the Gulf Coast has improved; it’s that the situation now lacks political significance. If people in DC aren’t talking about the hurricane anymore, then Bush’s failures lack salience, which makes it easier to sell a “comeback story.”

In September, the president pledged to “do what it takes” and “stay as long as it takes” to rebuild New Orleans “higher and better.” Now, however, New Orleans doesn’t matter nearly as much, not because the conditions have improved, but because the political world has moved on.

It’s the politics of incompetence followed by the politics of limited attention spans.

And if anyone in the DC area wishes to support or attend a rally organized by displaced residents of New Orleans, here is a link with some information. http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/05344/620380.stm

One of the organizers is a good friend of mine and sure could use the support.

  • How is it that 40 percent of Americans think this man is doing a good job? He’s presided over three major catastrophes in his five years in office–9/11, Iraq and Katrina–that he’s at least partially responsible for. And yet, he takes no responsiblity, shows no remorse, gives no indication of having any appreciable job skills, and instead turns to smears and obfuscation to address any criticism. A major American city, responsible for a good chunk of our culture, just disappears under Bush’s watch and yet 4 out of 10 people say this man is doing a “heckuva job.” What does that say about us as a nation?

    I’m beginning to think in our collective apathy, stupidity, ignorance and rampant self-adsorption we really do get the leadership and government we deserve.

  • Bush reminds me *way* too much of Quentin Tarantino’s character in Pulp Fiction (transcription from the IMDb):

    Jimmie: Let me ask you a question. When you came pulling in here, did you see a sign out in front of my house that said Dead Nigger Storage?
    Jules: Jimmie, you know I ain’t seen no…
    Jimmie: Did you see a sign out in front of my house that said Dead Nigger Storage?
    Jules: [pause] No. I didn’t.
    Jimmie: You know WHY you didn’t see that sign?
    Jules: Why?
    Jimmie: ‘Cause it ain’t there, ’cause storing dead niggers ain’t my fucking business, that’s why!

    * * *

    I’ll freely admit that’s crude (and that the casual use of the n-word by a suburban white guy probably isn’t a substantial step towards the reduction of racial prejudice and insensitivity). But at least Jimmie isn’t the *PRESIDENT* – someone whom we *used* to be able to expect to be willing to use the power of the government to keep Americans from being killed. Culture of life, my ass.

  • I am one of those people whose house flooded in Katrina and is still
    waiting for Bush to make good on any of his empty promises to
    help rebuild New Orleans and the Gulf region.
    But, no, nothing has happened here. We are still waiting.
    Apparently, we aren’t able to give George any more positive
    photo ops to make his sorry administration look good.
    The wrecked buildings and dead cars are still here to see.
    Some cleanup has been done- by LOCAL people not Bush.
    Greyline Tours is offering a chance for outsiders to come and
    see what Katrina did to New Orleans for only $35 per ticket
    ($3 of which will be donated to local charities). Maybe
    W can catch a ride on one of these “disaster tours” to see
    what his inaction is doing to us.
    If I were the Democratic leadership I would use this issue
    in next year’s elections to show the nation what a disaster
    having a Republican-dominated government is for the USA.

  • At least now MOST people in Louisiana know to expect zero from the chimp. Most, but not all. there are still SOME idiots here who think reagan is the last great human being in recent remembrance

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