Okay, so we’re about to go through another round of
Congressional “reforms” of the disaster relief biz. The (Homer)
Simpsonian D’OHS is badly in need of reform, and that’s just how
it’ll be done: badly. Now, the prez is talking about handing the
whole mess over to DoD. Bad idea, as follows:
1. The states shouldn’t be shoved out of the picture because the
feds will always — inevitably — be the second response. The Posse
Comitatus Act — which prevents, in almost all circumstances, the
use of federal troops to perform law enforcement tasks, was meant
to preserve states’ authority over their own citizenry. Let’s not
throw the federalist baby out with the Rita floodwaters. Repealing
or mangling the PCA could give the Feds more power than the
founders ever intended. We don’t want military government of states
and cities. We want responsible (i.e., un-Louisianan) local
governments to function quickly and effectively to provide primary
police and national guard assets;
2. The money isn’t there. The Defense budget is about 3.2% of
GNP, lower than it was in the Cold War. We’re barely — and I do
mean barely — managing the war as is, getting along on the
“supplemental appropriations” passed every year. The DOHS gets many
billions to protect and manage the homeland. If DoD is tasked to do
that job, it those billions will have to be given to the Pentagon.
There ain’t no peace dividend in time of war.
3. DOHS — which is still a cluster@#*^ — has spent billions on
elaborate plans to prevent and manage terror, and all they have to
show for it is a lot of expensive studies. They control everything
from some intel functions to immigration. Better to fix DOHS and
make FEMA better than to lay this on DoD.
4. Soldiers are meant to kill people and break things. I don’t
want them cross-trained as homebuilders, plumbers, and baby
sitters.
5. DoD can — and should — provide massive logistical support
in any big disaster. Any more direct role is inconsistent with its
mission and prone to abuse of federal power.
Nuff said, for now.