It is true some Americans consider the sad and devastating fate meted out to the refugees in New Orleans and other areas along the Gulf Coast to be a strictly “natural disaster,” and therefore dislike left-wing “politicization” of the ongoing tragedy.
The right-wing has also jumped on this bandwagon, calling leftists “cynical” to blame Bush for “causing” the hurricane. These sentiments are severely misplaced; the first is a product of simply not knowing all the facts, and the second is, quite predictably, a product of malicious deception.
No honest human being would describe the deaths of theatergoers in a fire as a simple “misfortune” if it turned out that the theater owner locked all the fire exits. Those burned alive inside the building would not be the victims of “just an accident” if the one responsible for their safety and means of escape failed them out of malice or negligence. Similarly, none can seriously claim the suffering inflicted on the refugees in New Orleans is merely the result of a “natural disaster” – for their plight has been exacerbated by an administration that cares more for profit and the misadventure in Iraq than for the people of New Orleans.
The arrival of a deadly hurricane was not a surprise. In 2001, the Federal Emergency Management Agency called a major hurricane hitting New Orleans one of the three “likeliest, most catastrophic disasters facing this country.” So what happened to FEMA? Bush began privatizing the agency, with a Bush official in the agency calling it an “oversized entitlement program.”
Two years later, FEMA was dissolved from cabinet level to an appendage of the Department of Homeland Security. Bush appointed one of his political cronies to head the organization, Michael Brown, a man with absolutely zero experience in managing disasters; his last job was in the International Arabian Horse Association.
Meanwhile, a full one-third of the Louisiana National Guard is stationed in Iraq. The government has scrambled to supply enough manpower to the thinly stretched and overwhelmed forces along the Gulf Coast. Thanks to this administration, our troops are dying in a foreign country whose people resent our presence instead of saving Americans who are pleading for help in our own country. This is the disgraceful kind of “homeland security” the “patriotic” frauds of the right have provided for America.
The right-wing ideologues responsible for this fiasco imagine Americans to be so stupid that they keep repeating the mantra, “Bush could not stop the hurricane!” as if this were really the contention. Meanwhile, they themselves “politicize” the issue in their typically racist way, cruelly blaming the mainly poor and black victims by demonizing them as “looters” and excusing the sickeningly slow aid efforts as the result of a handful of people shooting at the military.
In reality, many of the refugees in New Orleans did not own cars to evacuate the city. And since the authorities offered no help, only affluent whites could cruise out with ease. Those left behind were therefore forced to take supplies from stores to avoid dying from hunger and dehydration. In those crowded bowls of death and misery known as the Superdome and the New Orleans Convention Center, the “looters” have been the heroes of women and children, bringing in diapers, baby formula and food.
The American right, drowning in its moral cesspool of contempt for blacks and awe of money, blames the victims for taking desperately needed supplies that have already been written off as insurance losses by companies anyway. Only those perched at the desk of Fox News could focus on the tiny minority of people taking TVs and luxury items, while utterly ignoring the outstanding fact that the real looting has been carried out by Bush and his rich allies, who have robbed the people blind to line their own pockets, thus leaving the poor helpless in the face of disaster.
Just as the floodwaters breached the barriers of the woefully inadequate levee system, the absurd mythology of an “equal America for all” has been completely breached by the inescapable reality of suffering and desperation witnessed along the Gulf Coast. That race and class are the two most prevalent markers of life and death in America is now clear to all but the purblind, and particularly clear to the poor of New Orleans.
No doubt these victims will face many challenges and have many questions as they search for loved ones and struggle to rebuild their lives. But it will not be long before they demand to know one thing above all: ‘Who locked our fire exits?’
— Mohammad Junaid Alam is a senior journalism major.