The Baton Rouge Advocate is no bastion of the liberal
media, but instead boasts center to slightly center-right editorial
stances. Here
it talks about the recovery plan boosted by conservative U.S.
Rep. Richard Baker that President Bush
killed, for no good reason and without even much of an attempt
at explanation. Let me just say that the BR Advocate is right on
target here.
As the one year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina approaches, it
is Bush's mishandling of the long-term recovery efforts,
not the much-hyped tragedy of the immediate post-storm relief
problems, that deserves to go down as the single worst part of his
legacy as president. Just as liberals like to ignore the very real
local and state (and thus mostly Democratic) culpability in turning
a horrible disaster into an even more horrible catastrophe, and
just as ALL political camps ignore the 40 years of fumbling at all
three levels of government, conservatives are guilty of being
willfully blind to the errors of the Bushies.
Every time I blog on this topic, I am inundated with angry
responses from people who don't even bother to learn the facts
enough to know the difference between a floodwall and a levee, or
the difference between what the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is
responsible for and what the local Levee Board is responsible for,
or the difference between a federal grant and a revolving loan
fund, much less the differences AMONG various Democratic dynasties
in New Orleans and their inter-reactions with Republicans through
the years. The reality is that there is plenty of blame to go
around for the multiple sorrows of New Orleans and the Mississippi
Coast, for which the biggest culprit is cruel Nature herself.
But anybody who wants to see better responses in the future to
disasters natural and otherwise should be willing to look at the
whole picture and to let his own "side" take an appropriate share
of responsibility, lest another major city or region be sentenced
to the human misery that still is a matter of daily life in New
Orleans and on the Mississippi Coast.