Parenti: How the Free Market Killed New Orleans

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Parenti: How the Free Market Killed New Orleans

Postby proldic » Tue Sep 06, 2005 1:49 pm

by Michael Parenti<br><br>The free market played a crucial role in the destruction of New Orleans <br>and the death of thousands of its residents. Forewarned that a momentous <br>(force 5) hurricane was going to hit that city and surrounding areas, <br>what did officials do? They played the free market.<br><br>They announced that everyone should evacuate. Everyone was expected to <br>devise their own way out of the disaster area by private means, just like<br>people do when disaster hits free-market Third World countries.<br><br>It is a beautiful thing this free market in which every individual <br>pursues his or her own personal interests and thereby effects an optimal <br>outcome for the entire society. Thus does the invisible hand work its <br>wonders in mysterious ways.<br><br>In New Orleans there would be none of the collectivistic regimented <br>evacuation as occurred in Cuba. When an especially powerful hurricane hit<br>that island in 2004, the Castro government, abetted by neighborhood <br>citizen committees and local Communist party cadres, evacuated 1.5 <br>million people, more than 10 percent of the country's population. The <br>Cubans lost 20,000 homes to that hurricane---but not a single life was <br>lost, a heartening feat that went largely unmentioned in the U.S. press.<br><br>On Day One of the disaster caused by Hurricane Katrina, it was already <br>clear that hundreds, perhaps thousands, of Americans had perished in New <br>Orleans. Many people had "refused" to evacuate, media reporters<br>explained, because they were just plain "stubborn."<br><br>It was not until Day Three that the relatively affluent telecasters began<br>to realize that tens of thousands of people had failed to flee because<br>they had nowhere to go and no means of getting there. With hardly any<br>cash at hand or no motor vehicle to call their own, they had to sit tight<br>and hope for the best. In the end, the free market did not work so well<br>for them.<br><br>Many of these people were low-income African Americans, along with fewer <br>numbers of poor whites. It should be remembered that most of them had <br>jobs before Katrina's lethal visit. That's what most poor people do in <br>this country: they work, usually quite hard at dismally paying jobs, <br>sometimes more than one job at a time. They are poor not because they're <br>lazy but because they have a hard time surviving on poverty wages while <br>burdened by high prices, high rents, and regressive taxes.<br><br>The free market played a role in other ways. Bush's agenda is to cut <br>government services to the bone and make people rely on the private <br>sector for the things they might need. So he sliced $71.2 million from <br>the budget of the New Orleans Corps of Engineers, a 44 percent<br>reduction. Plans to fortify New Orleans levees and upgrade the system of <br>pumping out water had to be shelved.<br><br>Army Corps of Engineer personnel had started work to build new levees <br>several years ago but many of them were taken off such projects and sent <br>to Iraq. In addition, the president cut $30 million in flood control <br>appropriations.<br><br>Bush took to the airways ("Good Morning America" 1 September 2005) and <br>said "I don't think anyone anticipated that breach of the levees." Just <br>another untruth tumbling from his lips. The catastrophic flooding of New <br>Orleans had been foreseen by storm experts, engineers, Louisiana<br>journalists and state officials, and even some federal agencies. All <br>sorts of people had been predicting disaster for years, pointing to the <br>danger of rising water levels and the need to strengthen the levees and <br>pumps, and fortify the entire coastland.<br><br>In their campaign to starve out the public sector, the Bushite<br>reactionaries also allowed developers to drain vast areas of wetlands. <br>Again, that old invisible hand of the free market would take care of <br>things. The developers, pursuing their own private profit, would devise <br>outcomes that would benefit us all.<br><br>But wetlands served as a natural absorbent and barrier between New <br>Orleans and the storms riding in from across the sea. And for some years <br>now, the wetlands have been disappearing at a frightening pace on the <br>Gulf' coast. All this was of no concern to the reactionaries in the White<br>House.<br><br>As for the rescue operation, the free-marketeers like to say that relief <br>to the more unfortunate among us should be left to private charity. It <br>was a favorite preachment of President Ronald Reagan that "private <br>charity can do the job." And for the first few days that indeed seemed to<br>be the policy with the disaster caused by Hurricane Katrina.<br><br>The federal government was nowhere in sight but the Red Cross went into <br>action. Its message: "Don't send food or blankets; send money." The <br>Salvation Army also began to muster up its aging troops. Meanwhile Pat <br>Robertson and the Christian Broadcasting Network---taking a moment off <br>from God's work of pushing John Roberts nomination to the Supreme <br>Court---called for donations and announced "Operation Blessing" which <br>consisted of a highly-publicized but totally inadequate shipment of <br>canned goods and bibles.<br><br>By Day Three even the myopic media began to realize the immense failure <br>of the rescue operation. People were dying because relief had not <br>arrived. The authorities seemed more concerned with the looting than with<br>rescuing people, more concerned with "crowd control," which<br>consisted of corralling thousands into barren open lots devoid of decent<br>shelter, and not allowing them to leave.<br><br>Questions arose that the free market seem incapable of answering: Who was<br>in charge of the rescue operation? Why so few helicopters and just a <br>scattering of Coast Guard rescuers? Why did it take helicopters five <br>hours to lift six people out of one hospital? When would the rescue <br>operation gather some steam? Where were the feds? The state troopers? The<br>National Guard? Where were the buses and trucks? the shelters and <br>portable toilets? The medical supplies and water?<br><br>And where was Homeland Security? What has Homeland Security done with the<br>$33.8 billions allocated to it in fiscal 2005? By Day Four, almost all<br>the major media were reporting that the federal government's<br>response was "a national disgrace." Meanwhile George Bush finally made <br>his photo-op appearance in a few well-chosen disaster areas---before <br>romping off to play golf.<br><br> In a moment of delicious (and perhaps mischievous) irony, offers of<br>foreign aid were tendered by France, Germany, Venezuela, and several <br>other nations. Russia offered to send two plane loads of food and other <br>materials for the victims. Cuba--which has a record of sending doctors to<br>dozens of countries, including a thankful Sri Lanka during the tsunami<br>disaster---offered 1,100 doctors. Predictably, all these<br>proposals were sharply declined by the U.S. State Department.<br><br>America the Beautiful and Powerful, America the Supreme Rescuer and World<br>Leader, America the Purveyor of Global Prosperity could not accept <br>foreign aid from others. That would be a most deflating and insulting <br>role reversal. Were the French looking for another punch in the nose? <br>Were the Cubans up to their old subversive tricks?<br><br>Besides, to have accepted foreign aid would have been to admit the <br>truth---that the Bushite reactionaries had neither the desire nor the <br>decency to provide for ordinary citizens, not even those in the most <br>extreme straits.<br><br>I recently heard someone complain, "Bush is trying to save the world when<br>he can't even take care of his own people here at home." Not quite true.<br>He certainly does take very good care of his own people, that tiny <br>fraction of one percent, the superrich. It's just that the working people<br>of New Orleans do not number among them.<br><br>-------<br>Michael Parenti's recent books include Superpatriotism (City<br>Lights) and The Assassination of Julius Caesar (New<br>Press), both available in paperback. His forthcoming The Culture <br>Struggle (Seven Stories Press) will be published in the fall. For more <br>information visit: www.michaelparenti.org. mailing list<br> <p></p><i></i>
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