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Hey! What happened to the racism?

February 18, 2006 04:44 AM / FUBAR .

By STAR PARKER

The House released its investigative report on Hurricane Katrina this week, under the title "A Failure of Initiative." The report is an indictment of government failure at all levels _ federal, state and local.

In 379 pages, plus 141 appendices, the report documents government failure in major areas that, if handled better, could have reduced the death and damage caused by Katrina.

But it is also important to note what the report does not say. Nowhere is there any conclusion that the poor response resulted from racism.

We may recall, as the disaster in New Orleans was unfolding before our eyes, the allegations from Al Sharpton, Jesse Jackson and others on the black left, that the poor response was racially motivated.

These allegations were, of course, absurd. I wrote then that this was a tragic case in point of the inherent inefficiencies in government. Yet, the baseless and inflammatory allegations of the usual black demagogues achieved their destructive objectives.

Jackson, Sharpton and others who play the same game are not and will not be deterred by the demonstrable absence of truth in their pronouncements. They know that truth is irrelevant to their objectives. Those objectives _ exploitation of a vulnerable black populace and getting coverage by media more interested in sensation than careful analysis _ are achieved by making preposterous claims. Validity of these claims doesn't enter into the equation.

We might simply ask how is it that Sharpton, whose initial claim to fame was the infamous Tawana Brawley scam, can continue to make clearly false allegations on racially sensitive issues and still be regularly invited to appear in the media and be interviewed as a serious analyst and commentator.

The damage that the Sharptons and Jacksons cause is twofold.

First, there is the damage of the allegations themselves. A poor, black population, with a history that is unquestionably defined by injustice, is fertile ground for demagogues. History and circumstance make these folks susceptible to claims that they suffer because of an inherently hostile and racist "establishment."

The result is empowerment of the demagogues _ Sharpton and Jackson get rich and powerful _ and the blacks they are talking to are driven deeper and deeper into a destructive funk defined by hate, hopelessness and dependence. The very mindset crucial to producing change and renewal _ faith, hope, personal responsibility _ is driven into oblivion by these politics of hate and blame.

Secondly, the demagogues promote ideas that are exactly the opposite of what blacks, or anyone, need. The Katrina debacle showed us, in the most tragic way, the limitations inherent in big government. Yet, despite the clarity of this picture, black politicians will continue to sell the idea that big government is the answer to black problems.

Let's recall that Katrina was the first big challenge faced by the Department of Homeland Security, created as a response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks. In true Washington fashion, the response to the 9/11 tragedy was a commission, a fat report and creation of a new bureaucracy. The newly created Homeland Security Department incorporated under one roof more than 20 former semiautonomous agencies _ including the Federal Emergency Management Agency _ with a total of 184,000 employees and a $40 billion budget.

USA Today reported a few days ago about the widespread fraud in the FEMA Expedited Assistance Program. This is the program whereby $2,000 payments are available to each household in the disaster area. According to USA Today investigators, FEMA records show that 481,624 households in the four affected Louisiana parishes have received payments; however, census data documents only 398,629 households living in these four parishes. The implied an overpayment due to possible fraudulent claims amounts to $166 million.

Now that government has demonstrated failure in dealing with the disaster, Louisiana politicians want government to play a major role in the recovery. In response to local pressure (Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco has threatened to try and block a federal sale of oil and gas leases off the Gulf Coast), Congress is appropriating another $30 billion over and above the $100 billion that it has already appropriated for rebuilding New Orleans.

Certainly, government has a legitimate role.

Creation of wealth and prosperity isn't part of that role. Private initiative is the only answer to black poverty and to rebuilding New Orleans. The only beneficiaries of government programs are politicians _ black and white.

(Star Parker is author of "Uncle Sam's Plantation: How Big Government Enslaves America's Poor and What We Can Do about It" and president of CURE, Coalition on Urban Renewal and Education, www.urbancure.org.)


© Copyright 2006 by Capitol Hill Blue

Comments

Parker makes two good points and one bad one. The good points: The demagoguery is not helping anyone other than the demagogues, and the mindset it produces is counterproductive - driving people deeper into the cycles of hate and despair.

The bad one: Big Gummint is Bad. This is pure conservative ideology. Katrina did not show us "the limitations inherent in big government," it showed us the limitations of those who do not believe in governing. This is what happens when you elect and appoint people who want to dismantle your government.

Parker admits "a history that is unquestionably defined by injustice" but seems blind to the causes of that injustice, or to the only possible source of justice: Government. It should be obvious that white Southerners are unwilling to admit blacks to a position of equality; someone must compel them to do so. Who other than Big Gummint can do that?

Posted by albionwood at February 18, 2006 11:49 AM

The one thing that nobody is stating after reviewing the coverage and failed response to the victims of this disaster,is probably the most important fact that was revealed by the cameras of the press,and all anyone had to do was open their eyes and see,instead of just looking.That fact?The failed response was not against the races,it was against the economically disadvantaged people of the area,which,by chance,happened to be Americans of AFRICAN descent in the majority.The failed response was not racially motivated,but it WAS a clear example of the attitudes of the neo-nazis in power...If you have no money,we can care less what happens to you,or your loved ones,because in our eyes,people in your status mean nothing to us anyway...

Posted by Capt.Broussard at February 18, 2006 01:31 PM

Louisiana was a disaster before Katrina was a weather depression off the coast of Africa.
Katrina opened everyone's eyes to Louisiana. When FEMA entered into the story, it was shown to be totally inadequate due to the people in charge. The last piece to the story, was our government. When it stepped in to be the savior, it was shown to be just as inadequate.
There wasn't one person that knew what to do. They all acted against each other and the result was people who were to be rescued, died.
What is still tragic, only one person was made the patsy. The rest are still with us, still in power to do more damage, when the opportunity arises.

Posted by David Rosenberg at February 18, 2006 04:16 PM

I think the main issue should be while these poor people died and NO flooded, george w. was on vaction and stayed on vacation, eating cake, strumbing a guitar and relaxing. I am a social worker and I would not have stayed on vacation if I could save my clients. I expect no less from my leader. He talks about spying on us to keep us safe, but how safe were the people in NO> The worse part is that it isn't getting any better in NO. THere are still dead bodies in the rubble, there is still rubble. There are trailers in another state waiting for someone to do something with them. There is a morgue which cost billions that just closed down and they still don't have all the bodies. WHy did the employee's need exercise equipment at a morgue? THis is an American city, it's not in a third world country, why hasn't the federal government done it's job?

Posted by rebecca bank at February 18, 2006 04:57 PM

OK, Big Deal: Failure at all levels of Goverment.

We all have known that for some time, Now how about geting off your buricratic asses and get some real help all along the gulf coast insteed of just talking about it.

Many People in south Florida are still in need of help too.

Put your money where your mouth is, "we will do everything possible to help the People" JUST TALK THAT IS ALL IT IS, ACTION IS WHAT THE PEOPLE NEED AND WANT.

Les

Posted by Lesley at February 18, 2006 05:31 PM

The author seems quite serious in writing this utter nonsense about a real disaster that befell Americans of the gulf coast, both Black and White. Anyone who really thinks that the "Department of Homeland Security" was created "in response to the 9/11 attacks" is obviously bamboozled by the Orwellian doublespeak daily emanating from the Bush Administration. The Katrina debacle has nothing to do with demagogues of any color, but everything to do with Big Government. Not the foolishness we hear from so-called liberals and conservatives, but truly Big Government, of the variety described by George Orwell in 1984. This is government so big it seeks to place itself above the law, control every aspect of our lives, and brazenly commit mass murder if it suits its designs. Katrina was but a glimpse of the bleak Orwellian future in store for these United States because Americans who once could be best identified by likes of a Thomas Paine or a Thomas Jefferson, are now best identified by the likes of a Homer Simpson or a Hank Hill!

Posted by William at February 18, 2006 10:02 PM

Ahhhh... So we can blame the pathetic
response to the needs of Blacks in News
Orleans after Hurricane Katrina on the
activisim of Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson?

Brilliant analysis. The same sort of Orwellian
"brilliance" that has American soldiers dying
in Iraq right now because of the deliberate
myth of "weapons of mass destruction." Even
more brilliant: The idea that if a report doesn't
mention racism, well, by golly, THERE WAS
NONE!!

Nice commentary: I'll save it for my students--
Disinformation 101.

Nuu

Posted by Nuu On at February 19, 2006 11:30 AM

Listen up, . . . Does anyone have any information leading to the "Project Seal?" It is a project that was forwarded to the Wellington Defense Headquarters in the late 1940's. It is a Tsunami Bomb. It creates Tsunami's.

Posted by seeking the truth at February 19, 2006 11:45 AM

All this talk about racism, Al Sharpton, Jesse Jackson, is bullshit! George W. Bush is not a racist. He said so himself. Actually, what he meant was that he hates poor people.

The well-to-do whites and blacks made it out of New Orleans before the levies cracked. GW's mama said it all. This is probably not an exact quote, but she said, "We couldn't resolve the public housing problem in New Orleans, but God did." How could any rich kid grow up in that environment, and not turn out biased?

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