Criminal Negligence
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10.02.06
Americans tend to be a forgiving people. Republicans lost track of nine billion dollars during the Iraq reconstruction? Bah — a few dollars are bound bound to fall between the cracks. President Bush sat around eating cake while a city drowned? Well, it wasn’t the whole city — just the black part. American soldiers tortured and sexually abused some detainees? Oh, gee, that’s terrible, but it was just a few bad apples over there.
But this — this pedophilia scandal — this Americans will not forgive. Not when the victims were our boys, placed under the protection of adults who failed to safeguard them.
A few things seem clear to me: first, that despite Republican efforts to minimize the story, it’s not going to go away.
Second, Denny Hastert is going down. Someone is going to have to take a fall for this one, and even some conservatives agree that it should be him.
Third, the more Republicans dally, and gin up fake investigations, the worse it’s going to get for them.
Fourth, when it comes to security moms, “moms” comes before “security.” Witness this diatribe from conservative commentator Bay Buchanan:
I know one thing: that e-mail they call an “overly friendly e-mail” that had predator stamped all over it. No one in this country can suggest otherwise. You’re in a leadership position. You have a colleague you know is at least a potential predator and we have the pages coming through his office every day? They had an obligation, that same day, to investigate him further, to call in the FBI, if that was an appropriate action and also to call in those pages and make certain every one of them was interviewed to see if there is any problems here that goes deeper than what they already knew. They failed the parents of this country is what they did.
Fifth, even before this Republican sex scandal, child predators were all over the news. Witness Oprah, who has made it her personal mission to stop child predators. Chris Hanson of Dateline NBC seems to be on TV every night, catching child predators as they close in on their prey. What will these television anchors, who have spent so much time and energy excoriating child predators, have to say about ex-Congressman Foley, and the Republicans in power who enabled him to continue harassing young boys?
Sixth, Iran, here we come.
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09.16.06
Read it and weep (via Memeorandum):
After the fall of Saddam Hussein’s government in April 2003, the opportunity to participate in the U.S.-led effort to reconstruct Iraq attracted all manner of Americans — restless professionals, Arabic-speaking academics, development specialists and war-zone adventurers. But before they could go to Baghdad, they had to get past Jim O’Beirne’s office in the Pentagon.
[. . .]
O’Beirne’s staff posed blunt questions to some candidates about domestic politics: Did you vote for George W. Bush in 2000? Do you support the way the president is fighting the war on terror? Two people who sought jobs with the U.S. occupation authority said they were even asked their views on Roe v. Wade .
Many of those chosen by O’Beirne’s office to work for the Coalition Provisional Authority, which ran Iraq’s government from April 2003 to June 2004, lacked vital skills and experience. A 24-year-old who had never worked in finance — but had applied for a White House job — was sent to reopen Baghdad’s stock exchange. The daughter of a prominent neoconservative commentator and a recent graduate from an evangelical university for home-schooled children were tapped to manage Iraq’s $13 billion budget, even though they didn’t have a background in accounting.
No wonder we’re now digging trenches around Baghdad. . .
Or, as Digby puts it:
But the way the administration went about creating the CPA illustrates everything you need to know about the childlike sciolism of these so-called grown-ups. They insisted on invading a well contained country of 25 million people, ripped its society to shreds, and then put a bunch of low level cronies and inexperienced schoolkids in charge of creating a Club for Growth wet dream in the desert. And they spent billions and billions of dollars failing to do anything but lay the groundwork for civil war. I don’t know if it’s possible to screw up on a grander scale than that.
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08.28.06
“9th ward diagonal car 1″
Matt Cohen, August 26, 2006
Broken bottles, broken plates,
Broken switches, broken gates,
Broken dishes, broken parts,
Streets are filled with broken hearts.
Broken words never meant to be spoken,
Everything is broken.
– Bob Dylan, “Everything is Broken”
Last year, I posted the lyrics to Bob Dylan’s “Everything is Broken,” and linked various phrases to images from the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. The degree to which Dylan’s words fit the events unfolding before us was uncanny.
A year later, New Orleans remains a city crippled not only by a natural disaster, but by a man-made one: a Republican administration that sat on its ass and ate birthday cake while a city drowned has compounded that frightening lack of human decency by breaking promise after promise to those in the region.
Of course, only a fool would think that that has been an accident. Bush put Karl Rove in charge of the administration’s post-Katrina strategy, an act of bad faith of such magnitude that one recoils from the sheer monstrosity of it. As Dan Froomkin noted at the time:
Rove’s leadership role suggests quite strikingly that any and all White House decisions and pronouncements regarding the recovery from the storm are being made with their political consequences as the primary consideration. More specifically: With an eye toward increasing the likelihood of Republican political victories in the future, pursuing long-cherished conservative goals, and bolstering Bush’s image.
That is Rove’s hallmark.
And that is exactly what has come to pass: a bungled recovery process that has allowed the wreckage of the storm to fester under the hot Louisiana sun. And it’s all being done with political objectives in mind, as Frank Rich noted in the The New York Times this past Sunday:
Douglas Brinkley, the Tulane University historian who wrote the best-selling account of Katrina, “The Great Deluge,” is worried that even now the White House is escaping questioning about what it is up to (and not) in the Gulf. “I don’t think anybody’s getting the Bush strategy,” he said when we talked last week. “The crucial point is that the inaction is deliberate — the inaction is the action.” As he sees it, the administration, tacitly abetted by New Orleans’s opportunistic mayor, Ray Nagin, is encouraging selective inertia, whether in the rebuilding of the levees (“Only Band-Aids have been put on them”), the rebuilding of the Lower Ninth Ward or the restoration of the wetlands. The destination: a smaller city, with a large portion of its former black population permanently dispersed. “Out of the Katrina debacle, Bush is making political gains,” Mr. Brinkley says incredulously. “The last blue state in the Old South is turning into a red state.”
All across the media landscape, the Bush administration is being shown for what it is: a callous political machine that cares only for its own survival.
That is going to be brought home over the next two days, as President Bush attempts to whitewash his response to the storm with a series of PR stunts. After all, you don’t introduce new products in August: you just shine up the old lies and put them out on the shelf in some new packaging.
As noted here a few days ago, Matt Cohen, who blogs at 1115.org, decided to take a first-hand look behind the Bush administration’s spin. Traveling down to New Orleans with his camera, Matt has posted a powerful set of pictures on flickr that document the all-too-slow recovery of New Orleans (I thank him for granting me permission to use a few of his images here), and he has just written a searing account of his trip through the 9th Ward.
It’s called A Victory Lap for Broken Promises:
But all of that is just the least bad part. What remains of Lakeview and the Lower 9th Ward is a national embarrassment. One year after Katrina, and some houses rest off their foundations and in the streets. Cars sit upside down or crushed, some even under buildings washed away by flood waters. Water-damaged and mud-caked objects are distributed inside houses and in yards. Block after block, the damage appears infinite. The fact that $44 billion has been released for recovery, yet the ruins of the 9th ward are allowed to stand almost frozen in time, is nothing short of disgusting. With so many of our ruling Republican majority subscribing to the “Broken Window” theory, it’s amazing that the ultimate broken window is the flood damage allowed to remain across New Orleans.
It’s an amazing post that showcases the best of what blogs can do. Please go and read it.
Of all of the images that Matt has posted, the one below struck me most deeply:
“HOME This was HOME,” the spray-painted eulogy reads. The house still stands, but the home inside it is gone, for now. It will be vanquished permanently, if the Bush administration has its way.
And that is something that we will never forget.
Update: Please visit Shakespeare’s Sister for many more perspectives on the first anniversary of Hurrican Katrina. In her post, Shakes argues convincingly that “Katrina was the inevitable failure in the wake of Bush Conservatism’s success.”
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By Matt
posted in Politics, Best Posts, George W. Bush, New Orleans, Hurricane Katrina, Conservative Ideology, FEMA, Michael Brown, Criminal Incompetence, Criminal Negligence, Bob Dylan, Natural Disasters, Photography, Bush Administration
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09.28.05
With Michael Brown spouting revisionist history on Capitol Hill, now seems like a good time to remind ourselves of FEMA’s criminal incompetance during the Katrina aftermath. Under Michael Brown, Michael Chertoff, and George W. Bush, this agency actively and explicitly prevented help from reaching victims in need.
From an earlier post:
Update: Terrance has a list of some other things we need to remember as the right attempts to reframe Katrina.
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09.22.05
Think Progress alerts us to the news that US Department of Justice denied Philadelphia crucial funds to protect the city against terrorism:
Philadelphia is trying to improve its first responder capabilities, but the government isn’t helping out. The U.S. Department of Justice Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS) has decided that Pocatello, Idaho (population 51,466), needs emergency communications equipment more than Philadelphia (population 1,517,550) does.
COPS denied Philadelphia $6 million to upgrade its first responder equipment so that police officers, firefighters, and paramedics could use their radio equipment underground and in tunnels, which the current equipment will not do.
Philly Future has more on the story.
A commenter on Think Progress notes that “The state of Wyoming gets nearly as much distributed funds as Philly. Why? Look at who is VP.”
Doling out crucial homeland security funds to states unlikely to face terrorist attacks isn’t just stupid: it’s criminally negligent and corrupt behavior on the part of the Bush administration.
Or, as I like to call it, Republican business-as-usual.
If anyone in this country still wondered whether a Republican administration and a Republican-controlled Congress put America’s security first and foremost, this move should provide final evidence that it does not.
Given a choice between politics and security, the Bush-Cheney administration chooses politics every time. Whether it’s screwing first-responders and the (Democratic) cities they protect, or nominating political hacks for vital posts, this President is, as Nancy Pelosi said recently, downright dangerous to his own country.
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09.16.05

Bruce Chambers, Orange County Register (click for larger view)
Tom Watson asks us to look at this photo, which seems to sum up so much of the heartbreak, tragedy, and heroism in the aftermath of Katrina.
The Post-Gazette and The OC Register (registration required) have the full story behind this photograph; Will Bunch adds additional details — including FEMA’s criminal obstruction of such rescues — in this Attytood post.
Will writes:
And when George W. Bush says that he accepts full responsibility for what happened, don’t forget this picture and that this is exactly what he and his clueless political hacks at FEMA are responsible for: The near lethal starvation over 16 agonizing days of a 74-year man in New Orleans.
One of Tom’s commenters dubbed this photograph “Our modern day Pietà.” I can think of no better description for it.
In a previous post, On Looking at Photographs of the New Orleans Dead, I wrote that “only when we are willing to look at what our nation has wrought can it be saved, if it still can be saved.”
But the error contained in the title of that post is now clear: for it is not only photographs of the dead that reveal the painful cost of this administration’s criminal negligence, but also photographs of the near-dead, the barely-living, and the just-hanging-on.
When you look at this photo, keep Will’s post in mind: the men and women bearing Edgar Hollingsworth’s frail body saved his life by actively disobeying FEMA orders.
If there is hope to be found in this photograph, it is in the faces and actions of these rescuers. Their determination to do what is right, in the face of so much that is wrong, is nothing less than inspiring.
But one has to wonder how many others were passed by because they did not have the strength to cry out for help.
Edgar Hollingsworth is expected to survive.
The prognosis for the dignity of our nation is much less sanguine, as long as our leaders continue to ignore the weak and the poor.
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09.14.05
Via The Heretik and Cookie Jill, comes this revolting story:
From the Hattiesburg American:
Power crews diverted
Restoring pipeline came first
By Nikki Davis Maute
Shortly after Hurricane Katrina roared through South Mississippi knocking out electricity and communication systems, the White House ordered power restored to a pipeline that sends fuel to the Northeast.
That order - to restart two power substations in Collins that serve Colonial Pipeline Co. - delayed efforts by at least 24 hours to restore power to two rural hospitals and a number of water systems in the Pine Belt.
At the time, gasoline was in short supply across the country because of Katrina. Prices increased dramatically and lines formed at pumps across the South.
“I considered it a presidential directive to get those pipelines operating,” said Jim Compton, general manager of the South Mississippi Electric Power Association - which distributes power that rural electric cooperatives sell to consumers and businesses.
“I reluctantly agreed to pull half our transmission line crews off other projects and made getting the transmission lines to the Collins substations a priority,” Compton said. “Our people were told to work until it was done.
[snip]
White House call
Dan Jordan, manager of Southern Pines Electric Power Association, said Vice President Dick Cheney’s office called and left voice mails twice shortly after the storm struck, saying the Collins substations needed power restored immediately.
Jordan dated the first call the night of Aug. 30 and the second call the morning of Aug. 31. Southern Pines supplies electricity to the substation that powers the Colonial pipeline.
Mississippi Public Service Commissioner Mike Callahan said the U.S. Department of Energy called him on Aug. 31. Callahan said department officials said opening the fuel line was a national priority.
[snip]
Compton said workers who were trying to restore substations that power two rural hospitals - Stone County Hospital in Wiggins and George County Hospital in Lucedale - worked instead on the Colonial Pipeline project.
The move caused power to be restored at least 24 hours later than planned.
Mindy Osborn, emergency room coordinator at Stone County Hospital, said the power was not restored until six days after the storm on Sept. 4. She didn’t have the number of patients who were hospitalized during the week after the storm.
“Oh, yes, 24 hours earlier would have been a help,” Osborn said.
To think that “shortly after the storms struck,” Cheney’s first instinct was to protect the Northeast’s oil supply. . . it’s beyond revolting.
I thought that I could not be any more surprised or disgusted by the Bush administration’s callousness and disregard for human life, but they have proved me wrong for the hundredth time.
We need to throw these heartless bums out of office now.
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09.09.05
Caught between grief and rage, anger and shame, I’ve been searching for something that would begin to release the knot in my chest.
I once was lost, but now I’m found:

George Bush Doesn’t Care About Black People (MP3). (By The Legendary K.O. Produced by Kanye West. Words by Big Mon and Damien a/k/a Dem Knock-Out Boyz) [Via All-Spin Zone]
Download, listen, and repeat, repeat, repeat.
Because George Bush isn’t the only Republican who hates “naygers”.
This is the soundtrack to the revolution.
Blast it from the fucking rooftops.
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By Matt
posted in Politics, Books, Movies, Music, Television, George W. Bush, New Orleans, Hurricane Katrina, Race, Conservative Ideology, FEMA, Criminal Incompetence, Criminal Negligence
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09.08.05
What are the roots that clutch, what branches grow
Out of this stony rubbish? Son of man,
You cannot say, or guess, for you know only
A heap of broken images, where the sun beats,
And the dead tree gives no shelter, the cricket no relief,
And the dry stone no sound of water.
– T. S. Eliot, The Waste Land

Rick Bowmer/AP
Some will see these photographs as an exploitation of tragedy; others will see them as unduly macabre;
and some will recognize that only when we are willing to look at what our nation has wrought can it be saved, if it still can be saved.
Found via Talk Left and Pam’s House Blend, they are graphic and disturbing. Click on them at your own risk:
Avoid them at your nation’s risk.
In an essay that appeared in an 1863 issue of The Atlantic Monthly, Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote about Matthew Brady’s photographs of the Civil War dead — the first wartime photographs that brought the reality of war to American breakfast tables. Holmes wrote:
Many people would not look through this series. Many, having seen it and dreamed of its horrors, would lock it up in some secret drawer, that it might not thrill or revolt those whose soul sickens at such sights. It was so nearly like visiting the battlefield to look over these views, that all the emotions excited by the actual sight of the stained and sordid scene, strewed with rags and wrecks, came back to us, and we buried them in the recesses of our cabinet as we would have buried the mutilated remains of the dead they too vividly represented.
We cannot allow the dead of New Orleans to be locked in a secret drawer or buried in the recesses of our cabinet. Not if we want our republic to rise from its knees and live again. Not while these people hold the reins of power.
There are too many stories yet to be told. We need to hear them. We need to see them.
But even that is not enough.
There I saw one I knew, and stopped him, crying: ‘Stetson!
‘You who were with me in the ships at Mylae!
‘That corpse you planted last year in your garden,
‘Has it begun to sprout? Will it bloom this year?
‘Or has the sudden frost disturbed its bed?
‘O keep the Dog far hence, that’s friend to men,
‘Or with his nails he’ll dig it up again!
‘You! hypocrite lecteur! –mon semblable,–mon frere!
– T. S. Eliot, The Waste Land
Clearly, the federal officials purportedly in charge of the disaster recovery efforts bear the heaviest burden for these deaths. The President who appointed them, and those who continue to support him, have revealed themselves for the callous, inhumane, immoral creatures that they are.
But I can’t help feeling that we are part of the problem, too. By continuing to participate in this corrupt and morally bankrupt society, we all bear some measure of the burden.
We live in a country whose President openly wonders “what didn’t go right?” as FEMA orders 25,000 body bags.
He will never know, because he will never face these dead.
But we can, and we must.
The last five posts I’ve written, and then deleted, have all been titled “What’s the Point?” In the face of our failed efforts to make a change before this disaster, I’m still trying to figure out the answer to that question, but the one thing I do know is that everything is different now. After Katrina, things cannot continue to go on as they did before. Something has to change. Everything has to change.
We need action. We need to open the doors of this cabinet of horrors, this grotesque nation of repulsive privilege and old bigotry.
We need a revolution.
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By Matt
posted in Politics, Science & Health, Media Criticism, Best Posts, George W. Bush, Corruption, Missing Persons, Police State, New Orleans, Hurricane Katrina, Race, Journalism, Newspapers, Magazines, FEMA, Michael Brown, Criminal Incompetence, Criminal Negligence
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09.07.05
From the New York Times
At a news conference, Pelosi, D-Calif., said Bush’s choice for head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency had “absolutely no credentials.”
She related that she had urged Bush at the White House on Tuesday to fire Michael Brown.
“He said ‘Why would I do that?”‘ Pelosi said.
“‘I said because of all that went wrong, of all that didn’t go right last week.’ And he said ‘What didn’t go right?”
I don’t even know where to start.
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