NOLA is not an ideological playground

The president, earlier this week, articulated an approach to Gulf Coast reconstruction that emphasized the importance of local citizens and officials rebuilding the communities as they see fit.

“My attitude is this: The people of New Orleans can design the vision; the people of New Orleans can lay out what New Orleans ought to look like in the future; and the federal government will help. The people of Louisiana can lay out their vision of what Louisiana will look like, and the federal government can help. I think the best policy is one in which the federal government doesn’t come down and say, here’s what your city will look like. The best policy is one where the local folks say, here’s what we want our city to look like and let’s work together to achieve that vision.”

So far, so good. The problem is, no one on the right seems to agree with the approach the president described. Bill Berkowitz, for example, noted today that the Heritage Foundation has been watching the Gulf Coast closely — and it has a few suggestions.

Just as the Iraq War has been a Petri Dish for the neoconservative foreign policy agenda, rebuilding the Gulf Coast in the wake of Hurricane Katrina could prove to be the mother of all testing grounds for a passel of active Heritage Foundation’s domestic policy initiatives.

Washington, DC’s most prestigious and influential right wing think tank has been rocking and rolling since Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans and the Gulf Coast.

According to the Wall Street Journal, it’s not just the Heritage Foundation.

Congressional Republicans, backed by the White House, say they are using relief measures for the hurricane-ravaged Gulf coast to achieve a broad range of conservative economic and social policies, both in the storm zone and beyond.

Some new measures are already taking shape. In the past week, the Bush administration has suspended some union-friendly rules that require federal contractors pay prevailing wages, moved to ease tariffs on Canadian lumber, and allowed more foreign sugar imports to calm rising sugar prices. Just yesterday, it waived some affirmative-action rules for employers with federal contracts in the Gulf region.

Now, Republicans are working on legislation that would limit victims’ right to sue, offer vouchers for displaced school children, lift some environment restrictions on new refineries and create tax-advantaged enterprise zones to maximize private-sector participation in recovery and reconstruction. Yesterday, the House overwhelmingly passed a bill that would offer sweeping protection against lawsuits to any person or organization that helps Katrina victims without compensation.

“The desire to bring conservative, free-market ideas to the Gulf Coast is white hot,” says Rep. Mike Pence, the Indiana Republican who leads the Republican Study Group, an influential caucus of conservative House members. “We want to turn the Gulf Coast into a magnet for free enterprise. The last thing we want is a federal city where New Orleans once was.”

Remember, just three days ago, the president said the last thing people have to worry about is folks in Washington trying to “design the vision” from thousands of miles away. Just 48 hours later, however, Edwin Meese, the former Reagan administration attorney general, and a bunch of right-wing lawmakers, got together in a 40-member study group in DC to draft “free-market solutions” that can — and, in their minds, should — serve as a literal blueprint for the region’s future.

Mrs. Carpetbagger plays a computer game called SimCity. It’s more or less a city-planning simulation where you can design residential, commercial, and industrial parts of an area however you’d like. Set the tax rates, alter the physical landscape, create parks, build highways, etc. There’s no real ideology too it; the player just designs a city the way he or she wants it to be. Apparently, it’s rather addictive.

The Gulf Coast, however, is not a game. New Orleans is not a blank canvas waiting for a right-wing artist. The people who have called this area home are not characters in a conservative fantasy.

“They’re going back to the playbook on issues like tort reform, school vouchers and freeing business from environmental rules to achieve ideological objectives they haven’t been able to get in the normal legislative process,” said Rep. Rahm Emanuel (D., Ill.)

Note to the right: leave these poor people alone. They’ve been through enough.

I am from New Orleans and the thought of outsiders no matter who they are coming in with their notions and ideals on how bet to rebuild my city freaks me out. No way in freakin’ burning hell would I want the nuts over at the Heritage foundation getting their dirty mits on my home town.

It just makes my stomach roil. They would take the charm of the Cresent City and replace with the whitebread that has become much of America. That is the absolutely last freakin’ thing most New Orleaninans want for their city and frankly I don’t think the tourists would want it either.

There is a word for that CARPETBAGGER.

Do I think things like education, the management of the port and politics in generally need to get in shape in New Orelans – heck yes. But the paternalistic crap practice by the political right is gag inducing.

If Mississippi wants that fine – and it wouldn’t surprise me at all – look who is Governor mister Washington-GOP establishment himself. But then they aren’t talking about Mississipi are they? They aren’t even talking about the rich in Uptown or the Garden District who send their kids to Newman, Country Day, Sacred Heart? They are talking about the poor and minorities in New Orleans. And we all know what that means.

  • And to cap it off, Karl Rove has been put in charge of the reconstruction efforts. That in and of itself shold answer any questions about whether this will be an ideological and political boondoggle.

  • This is why I will use “free market principles” to sell my home that remained high and dry and unlooted uptown to the highest bidder and get the f*** out. N.O. will not be the same after these real looters get their greedy hands all over the reconstruction.

  • oops, should have read down before I posted on this thread. I see you’ve already noted the Rove connection.

    Breathtaking, isn’t it?

  • Mrs. Carpetbagger plays a computer game called SimCity…Apparently, it’s rather addictive.

    File that one under Too Much Information, Mr. Carpetbagger. ;->

    As for the substance of the post, I think ET and Bubba have it exactly right.

  • There is a word for that CARPETBAGGER.

    What a good point. Oddly enough, that didn’t even occur to me.

  • ET – I like the way that you phrased it about the charm of your city and replacing it with a whitebread version, although I’m doubtlful that it would even qualify for that. After reading Carpetbagger’s post I kept wondering if we were in for a corporatized version of jazz music.

    One of the best times that I have had in life was spending a week in New Orleans for the Jazz and Blues festival, and I can’t imagine these soulless ghouls getting their hands on the birthplace of a truly great American art form.

  • The whole reaction by (most of) the whole country to this situation in the Gulf has been WAY over the top. Not since 911 have we seen such over reaction. NO was not leveled. It’s not a goddamned blank slate. Even though damaged to varying degrees, many irreparably, most structures are still standing. It was a flood, not a nuke. Many, if not most, of the people are probably going to come back. This is not going to be the “grand experiment” the conservatives want, no matter how tightly they tie government funding to their desired outcomes. However, some things will probably change, but I think the people of New Orleans will work hard to preserve the heritage and character and of their city.

  • Smiliey – I too hope the people of my hometown manage to ward of kno-it-alls. Unfortunately, the leading light of N.O. business I would be safe guessing all voted for Bush.

  • Smiley–it would be very nice if what you say comes to pass. However, for all intents and purposes an entire county–I say it again–an entire county will likely require bulldozing, and significant toxic cleanup. That goes beyond a flood and is in fact more like a nuke hitting the place. These folks are already getting jobs, putting children into schools, and obtaining housing elsewhere, in less expensive higher wage cities that have better public schools in general. Odds are that a very large chunk of these folks will not be coming back, especially when it is likely to be at least 2 years before that are will be livable again. Other areas within the city itself (N.O. East in particular) are in similar shape. Former reps,, senators and other politicians are currently in DC trying to push this thing along–which is difficult to do considering the state of the city at the moment. Their number 1 concern, and it is a very real concern, is that people will not come back AND that folks who did not lose everything will get so pissed at the way the recontruction will proceed that they will sell and move on–their particular concern is with those, black and white, who have significant training and education who are able to find employment elsewhere in the country. N.O. will take a big hit on population, that is a given. But the tone and tenor of how the proposed reconstruction is in fact proposed, organized, supervised and funded will also be a factor in whether many who can return will in fact return for good. There is no big margin for error. And I fear that there are no politicians, at the fed, state or local level, who will be competent, nonpartisan and impartial enough to ensure that the proper path is taken.

  • Please, no, not Ed Meese (shudder)!! I was hoping I could go to my grave without having to hear that name again.

    I pray this doesn’t come to pass…New Orleans has been #1 on my list of US cities I’d like to visit, precisely because it is probably the most untraditionally American city in the country. It would be a crying shame to turn it into Stepfordville, USA.

    Don’t these morons understand that our diversity is the source of our strength and goodness? They want to turn us into some bland, flavorless tribe that looks alike, thinks alike, prays alike… sound familiar? (Can you say Third Reich?) On Bill Mahr’s show last night George Carlin called our country “facist” and the conservative guy they had on (I forget his name – they all look alike to me) went nuts. And Carlin said something like, “Listen, you don’t have to wear a uniform and jackboots to be a facist.”

    Say the rightwing nutjobs get their wish and turn us all into foam-at-the-mouth self-righteous Christian zealots. Where’s the fun for them in that? Who would they have to rail against, who would they blame for all the country’s problems (cuz believe me, there WOULD BE problems)? The population would probably die out because hate is the only thing that seems to arouse these folk.

    They should reconsider, but of course they won’t because none of them are capable of anticipating the outcome or consequences of their policies.

  • SRY,

    Once they have conquered America, they will turn their shriveled hearts and hatred onto the world. World Dominion…

  • SRY

    Once they turn the entire population into automaton christian zealots the entire population will be much more susceptible to domination and, well, advertising. Corporate interests will be very successful, especially with an unquesioning populace willing to do whatever, or buy whatever, they are selling. The rich will get very much richer and the poor will have a warped version of Jesus and shitty product placement to keep them content.

  • I’m just wondering how much of what they wish to accomplish is properly in the federal sphere and how much is the states’? And how will they accomplish this – by predicating access to reconstruction funding to local adoption of right wing policies – i.e., blackmail?

  • We are being sold out in New Orleans to the highest bidders.
    Why isn’t the news media investigating this? Why is everyone all the sudden from the Governor on down making nice to Bush and his
    gang of thieves? We do not want the Republican vision of the world to
    infiltrate our city and remake in their image. Leave New Orleans alone.
    We owe Bush NOTHING, he owes us EVERYTHING! He abandoned us and then used us for his pathetic, fake photo ops so he could look like a President. I am sick of this display of phony concern for New Orleans and the Gulf Coast eminating from Washington. All that Bush and Rove care about is damage control to THEMSELVES not us.
    Things must be pretty bad if they have to keep coming down here to
    reassure us of their concern.
    They need to get the hell out of Louisiana. They have done enough
    harm already.

  • After San Francisco, New Orleans was my favorite city. I hope no one manages to ever turn it into a theme park or a whitebread whatever. I also hope no one manages to “eminent domain” the place into a “more productive” drilling field.

    That said, I don’t think any of that will happen. As an old friend of mine, Anne Rice, wrote recently in the NY Times OpEd, New Orleans will come back, just as San Francisco did long ago. The French Quarter seems to be back already. Same with the Garden District. One day, not too long away, I know I’ll be muching a muffaletta or red-beans-and-rice or downing a Sazerac or having any of three different styles of Pompano (my favorite was en papillot) at Arnaud’s. My mouth waters just writing this out.

  • CB,
    Just a quick note, SIM City is pretty complex, so complex that we spent a semester in college building cities. It’s a requirement for Urban Planning majors.

    Anyways, basically you have to charge the lowest taxes possible, give the people the best services (police/fire/airports/power plants/stadiums) while keeping an even balance of residential, commercial, and residential zoning. It as close to simulated government planning you can get without really doing it.

    To bad none of the people actually doing the planning will actually have planning experience. Since you are unfamiliar with the program, play it and see what happens when your ideology hits the ‘real’ planning. A disaster, it takes a lot of trial and error to figure out what works and what doesn’t.

    But then again there are secret codes to get unlimited funds, hey maybe they can make it work.

  • bubba – what’s your source on a whole parish (I assume that’s what you mean) needing to be bulldozed? Do you knowhow big an area that is in south LA? I saw dire predictions of things like that before the storm hit but nothing after it hit. It seems unlikely to me (I’m from LA and most of my family is in Baton Rouge. I haven’t heard anything like that from them). But if you have a reliable source, then …

  • smiley

    National Guard, Parish officials. Entergy officials. Local police. Local firefighters. My wife is (well, was) a teacher at one of the local high schools. Lot’s of friends who live in all parts of the Parish. Ever been to St. Bernard Parish? It is a toxic sludgy mess. All of it–well at least all that is left not counting the coastal areas that may be redefined further inland after this storm. Will that suffice?

  • bubba – thanks. I was aware that the area is a mess and toxic to boot. Still, you said that an entire parish would have to be *bulldozed* which implies leveled, including the school where your wife worked. I haven’t heard anything like that but maybe you’re right.

  • smiley

    due to the nature, height and extent of the flooding and all contents/pollutants in the water, all houses will likely need to be bulldozed and rebuilt–IF the owners had flood insurance AND if they choose to return (please note that most who lived there were not necessarily required to have flood insurance as the area was not deemed a high flood risk, apparently). however, practically 60 % of our friends and acquaintances who lived there are taking jobs and getting children enrolled elsewhere, and stating that they probably will not return. It is going to be at least 2 years before the schools are up and running–my wife’s school is an absolute mess and also caught fire. the two other high schools sustained heavy damage, one lost its entire roof I understand–and they were shelters initially. Employees have all been told to find employment elsewhere because of this. Utility sources say all stations will need to be rebuilt from the ground up. For St. Bernard Parish I am afraid that literally and figuratively it will be bulldozed in nearly its entirety. I hope it comes back, but I would bet that it eventually comes back maybe a third of its size–to service the oil/refinery operations and the offshore oil rigs. and the longer this reconstruction takes, and the manner in which it is accomplished, will factor in to the equation as to how many folks actually return. Then there is new orleans east which also was under deep flood waters. that area has a huge population. don’t have as much info on that area, but there will likely be extensive bulldozing there as well.

  • bubba – thanks again for filling us in on what’s going on down there. Why isn’t the MSM telling us this stuff? No need to answer — because it makes things look worse than the prevailing conventional wisdom (Death toll not as high as expected!!! French Quarter reopening!!! Bush walks on water to rescue conjoined twins!!! Saints win the Super Bowl and Tigers win the Rose Bowl!!! – at the same moment!!!). I hope the extent of the bulldozing will not be a wide as you report.

  • smiley

    i think part of the reason the msm, or cccp as others call it, has not yet covered it is because there likely was little to no access to the area. it was, in its entirety, under 15 to 20 feet of water for most of the time. it is also a mostly blue collar area, primarily white, that also was completely screwed by the lack of response from fema and dhs. i think it goes to show that the administrations slow response was not race based but was in fact class/wealth based–had this been uptown/garden district or old metairie then the response may have been entirely different. these folks, as well as the lower income blacks/hispanics/whites in N.O. were completely forgotten about and harmed by the feds. the msm may start covering it a bit more now as there will be some access, but remember it literally is a cess pool of oil/chemicals lcoked in feet deep muck, with unsafe air and difficult trekking.

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