Author Topic: New Orleans "relief" efforts  (Read 14830 times)

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Offline Stealth

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Quote
Originally posted by redmenace
What would you rather have him do? What good would it be for Bush to cancel his engagements? Supposedly FEMA was prepared to handle such a situation(although they were not).


he did the same thing the day people flew planes into the world trade center

 

Offline aldo_14

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I thought he hid in a bunker then?

Albeit, when the first airliner hit, Bush was on the way to a Florida school, and continued onwards with that engagement (if not told in the limo, he was definately told once he got out of it at the school).  

This is obviously quite a huge diversion, but the record of Bush' reaction is interesting (and quite bizarre) (see http://www.cooperativeresearch.org/timeline/main/essayaninterestingday.html; Note: some of this may be biased, I'd go primarily by where sources are presented).  It seems like the administration - perhaps the institution as well as the incumbent - was paralyzed rather than springing into action.

But this is beside the point; the point IMO is should an occuring national disaster*  take precedence over other engagements?  I think so, and I'd expect it of those in power in the UK.

*(given that there were surely more facilities available to the Us government to examine the states affected than the TV media, and that the disasterous impact of a Force 4 or 5 hurricane on NO had already been judged)
« Last Edit: September 08, 2005, 09:55:56 am by 181 »

 

Offline Wild Fragaria

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Quote
Originally posted by redmenace
I agree, "the buck stops here." But I get the feeling that certain people want to focus all their angre towards bush and don't want to look towards the grassroots authority, which honestly have a greater responcibility to prepare for this situation than the federal gov't ever could.


Because Bush is the leader of the country.  He is supposed to be competent to make sure his country will always is under good control.  There were so much to do alleviate the outcome of this hurricaner, but nothing was done even when people knew what was going to happen sooner or later.

 

Offline Kosh

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I just saw a news report lately that says the US has accepted aid from China (amoung other countries). My, my, how the mighty have fallen.
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Offline Shrike

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New Orleans "relief" efforts
Quote
Originally posted by karajorma
I don't care whether the criticism is legitimate or not. I just reread the thread and saw only 4 people make the claim that 3rd world nations have handled this situation better. Stealth, Bob, Deep Eyes and myself. Of those 4 I'm the only one who isn't american. So the term isn't applicable to this argument regardless of whether or not Shrike feels the four of us were talking a load of crap or not. Unless of course he's accusing the other 3 of being unamerican.

Let me turn the question on its head. Do you honestly believe that America has handled the situation better than a 3rd world nation would have? As the most powerful nation on Earth you would think that it should have been able to.
A given third world nation?  Typhoons in Bangladesh can cause upwards of a hundred thousand deaths, and that's not a once-in-a-lifetime event like NO.

People keep going on about how third world countries perform better, but nobody's actually posted anything that shows they'd perform better at dealing with New Orleans, which is quite possibly the worst possible city in the entire US at dealing with a hurricane.  The SE Asia tsunami is a red herring because it didn't lead to long term flooding.  New Orleans is still 60% flooded.  How many third world cities of that size have been inundated with only a few days warning?

As I said before, this is not just a hurricane, it's also a flood.  It's definately not a Tsunami.

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Who's bashing America? Certainly none of the people I've mentioned. Certainly not me. If I express concern with the way America is handling a situation I'm America bashing. Yet when Clinton was in power it was okay for everyone to constantly complain about the American government. Why is that? Why is it suddenly bad to say that the government of a country sucks now? Especially when said government has no problem with insulting the government of other countries like France.
 The fact is that this "You hate America" crap is being used to stifle discussioons. Look at the way Shrike used it. To shut up 3 americans who disagreed with him!

The problem is not america bashing. The problem is people who love America so much that they think it's perfect and are unwilling to hear a single word said against it even when it's by other Americans. [/B]
For the record, I'm not an American.  I have no 'fellow Americans'.

As for 'American bashing', how many threads come up on HLP criticising EU policies, or Chinese policies, or others?  Certainly not more or even terribly comparable on an individual basis and quite possibly not even if you added all the US-critical threads and compared them to the rest of the world-critical threads.  People here ***** and piss and moan over almost every stupid or silly thing to come out of the US but don't seem nearly so inclined to do the same to other nations.
 
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Bush did less than the previous administration because he actually cut the funding to a project designed to fix them. Had that project not been cut the levees would have been strengthened and could have withstood a cat 4 like Katrina. So he definately did less.

But lets assume he didn't. What problem can any politician not blame on the previous administration? War in Iraq? Clinton's fault, Bush Snr's fault, Regan's fault all the way back to whoever put Saddam in charge and he can then blame the administrations before him.

The fact is that if there is a problem the politician in charge is responsible for fixing it. The only defence they have is if there wasn't time to fix it since they took over. If Bush wants to blame Clinton for the economy, or the state of the world that's one thing cause that sort of thing takes decades before you can rule out the effects of previous governments. With the levees though Bush had more than enough time to fix them. His government were told they needed to. They didn't. It's his fault. [/B]
As was posted above, there were no plans to upgrade the levees and such a plan would never have been completed in time for Katrina anyhow.  The budget cuts only occured two years ago, and even if the funds had not been decreased it strikes me as exceptionally unlikely that in those two years the levees would have been sufficiently strengthened.  The studies alone for a multi-billion dollar civil engineering project might not even have been done yet.  These things take time.

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Whoever is in charge takes the blame. It's that simple. If you're not willing to accept that then politicians can never do anything wrong cause they can always point to a previous administration and say "It's their fault".  As I've already said if Clinton was in charge I'd have been just as scathing about him.[/B]
And what would this criticism accomplish?  Needless criticism gets in the way of a rational investigation.  I'm quite certain there's much more legitimate criticism you can level against Bush than not spending billions of dollars on a civil engineering project that may not have been needed (speaking hypothetically).  If you're going to criticise Bush for not allocating funds to the levees, it is quite fair to criticise all the previous administrations who did the same.

Should the general hurricane-proofing of the gulf coast region have been a higher priority?  Yes.  Does this blame rest solely on Bush?  Certainly not when previous administrations didn't do anything more.  It's a continued long-term failure that hopefully will be corrected after this.

Hindsight is wonderful in that you can see where you went wrong, but nobody can do everything.

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I'm not going to get into the specifics of one particular hurricane because quite simply I lack the data. I posted the stuff about hurricane Gilbert as an example of a major city getting smacked by something every bit as bad as Hurricane Katrina and coming through it better.  Relief Web was the best site I could find and that's still not enough for questions as specific as yours. I don't know of any site on the web which is.  [/B]
The problem with this comparison is that the main damage to NO is the continued flooding.  Until the levees broke New Orleans was seen as safe and while battered, pretty much intact.  It was the flooding that well and truly screwed things over.

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And yet again you seek to label anyone who disagrees with you. First it was the evil europeans and their anti-americanism and now it's the evil democrats and their desire to make Bush look bad.[/B]
And again, how often do we see threads criticising the actions of other nations on this forum?  And ones with the same vehemence displayed towards many US actions?  Unless you're claiming that the US alone does more stupid **** than the rest of the world combined (which, as much stupid **** as the US pulls I find difficult to believe) then yes, there's a bias.

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Take a look at previous topics. Do Stealth, Bob and Deep Eyes look like dyed in the wool democrats out to score points off of Bush at every opportunity?

This is exactly what I meant about people sticking their heads in the sand. Just simply assume that any point of view that disagrees with your own comes from the other side so you can safely ignore it rather than considering it on it's own merits and perhaps realising that you might be wrong.[/B]
What have they actually said in defense of their claims?  Nobody's sourced any third world countries that got a major city (10,000 people is certainly not major and the city in question was entirely evacuated) struck by a hurricane and then a flood and showed better relief efforts than the US.  For all I know New Orleans is an unprecedented case for an industrialized country.

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Have I not said that this was a colossal f**k up at all levels? What you're doing is trying to claim that the f**k up was only at the state level so that you can absolve the Federal government of all charges. As I've said before that just makes it more likely that this will happen again next time.[/B]
And again, where are the vocal calls from other states over the same response issues in NO?  If the blame was mostly at the federal level then wouldn't all the affected states have been screaming?

I hear Bush this and Bush that, but the criticism of the state-level screwups have been far more muted, even though they're equally important in dealing with disaster relief and the go-to people for preparation.  They didn't even follow their pre-organized plans for dealing with such an eventuality which may have directly led to the large number of people still in NO and the problems facing those remaining.

If you've been saying there's been mistakes on all levels then I'll withdraw my complaint.  But people are blaming Bush at near or total exclusion to the state and municipal authorities when said authorities are as important as the federal government.  If you're going to play the blame-game, at least play it fairly and assing blame where to all the parties.  People on all levels made mistakes.
 
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Who's saying that it is?
Since when have the other 3 members who compared this to a 3rd world disaster ever said that America gets everything wrong. For that matter when have I?
As far as I can see you're putting those words into the mouth of anyone you disagree with in order to score points. [/B]

The moment I say there's a lot of anti-US *****ing here at HLP, I get *****ed at and called some kind of US superpatriot who sees nothing wrong with the US.  Who's putting words in who's mouth now?  Perhaps I just see unwarranted or excessive criticism on top of warranted.  Yes, 'you' (speaking figuratively) don't like the US because of XYZ.  I don't need to hear it every bloody thread that mentions the US like some people who will remain anonymous.

And I believe that will be that last of that out of me, unless someone wants to discuss hovercraft more.  These silly political arguments take far too much time to write and take time away from much more important things in my life. :p

And Re: Hovercraft, I don't believe there is any large number of small hovercraft available.  They're not exactly common compared to boats and their possible utility probably simply doesn't compare to that of a helicopter.
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Offline aldo_14

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New Orleans "relief" efforts
[q]

As I said before, this is not just a hurricane, it's also a flood. It's definately not a Tsunami.
[/q]

That's true.  The tsunami was much worse in both economic impact, casualties, and area of destruction.
« Last Edit: September 09, 2005, 05:21:34 am by 181 »

 

Offline Mefustae

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Originally posted by Shrike The moment I say there's a lot of anti-US *****ing here at HLP, I get *****ed at and called some kind of US superpatriot who sees nothing wrong with the US.  Who's putting words in who's mouth now?  Perhaps I just see unwarranted or excessive criticism on top of warranted.  Yes, 'you' (speaking figuratively) don't like the US because of XYZ.  I don't need to hear it every bloody thread that mentions the US like some people who will remain anonymous.

http://dynamic.gamespy.com/~freespace/forums/search.php?s=&action=showresults&searchid=95939&sortby=lastpost&sortorder=descending

Hmmm...tried a search for "George Bush" and...well...maybe you're right...

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...Woah

 

Offline Bobboau

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Quote
Originally posted by Shrike
People keep going on about how third world countries perform better, but nobody's actually posted anything that shows they'd perform better at dealing with New Orleans, which is quite possibly the worst possible city in the entire US at dealing with a hurricane.  The SE Asia tsunami is a red herring because it didn't lead to long term flooding.  New Orleans is still 60% flooded.  How many third world cities of that size have been inundated with only a few days warning?


flood waters don't affect food/water drops to wich the tsunami was getting two days after, the general rule of thumb is you should have two to three days worth of food and water, because that's how long it might take for resque to show up, this was the case in the tsunami, and it should have been the case here. you say that the flooding was some huge diference, well what about the hundreds of miles of coast that wasn't permaflooded and still didn't get much in the way of help? and still what does water on the ground do to stop helocopters in the sky?
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Offline Wild Fragaria

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Originally posted by Shrike
A given third world nation?  Typhoons in Bangladesh can cause upwards of a hundred thousand deaths, and that's not a once-in-a-lifetime event like NO.

People keep going on about how third world countries perform better, but nobody's actually posted anything that shows they'd perform better at dealing with New Orleans, which is quite possibly the worst possible city in the entire US at dealing with a hurricane.  The SE Asia tsunami is a red herring because it didn't lead to long term flooding.  New Orleans is still 60% flooded.  How many third world cities of that size have been inundated with only a few days warning?

As I said before, this is not just a hurricane, it's also a flood.  It's definately not a Tsunami.


Yep, hurricane Katrina is nothing like Tsunami in December 2004. Both of them are poweful natural disasters, but the aftermath of hurricane is expected to be a long term clean up if it happens in New Orleans because everyone knows about its geographical disadvantage.

On top of that, there were signs and indications from research for years that on how terrifying it could be if a strong hurricane (catagory 3 and above) hit the cities at the coasts line, especially city like New Orleans.  Last year's hurriance -- Ivan (a catagory 5 hurricane) missed New Orlean by the short distant.  It should be a wake up call for the authorities to take action and start planning for the wrose.

Fine, if authorities do not enough time or money to fix the leeve, they should at least plan on how to evacuate people from the area.  Researchers estimated about 20% of the residents will end up staying in the area (the poor, old and helpless).  So try to help them leave the city if the disaster hits.

So it's not a matter of having short notice for what's coming.  It's how the authorities handle the issue, and clearly that they failed horribly.  Of course they are going have to hold full responsible for what they hadn't done.

 

Offline StratComm

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Originally posted by Mefustae

http://dynamic.gamespy.com/~freespace/forums/search.php?s=&action=showresults&searchid=95939&sortby=lastpost&sortorder=descending

Hmmm...tried a search for "George Bush" and...well...maybe you're right...


...Woah


You're not counting the fact that only rarely does his first name even get mentioned.  What's slightly more telling is a search on "Bush" in general; while this may include discussions on shrubbery as well, the number of cases will be infintismal in comparison.

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Offline WeatherOp

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Originally posted by Wild Fragaria


 Last year's hurriance -- Ivan (a catagory 5 hurricane) missed New Orlean by the short distant.


Ivan was a weakening Cat.4 at the time.:p
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Offline Stealth

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New Orleans "relief" efforts
This just in:

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FEMA Chief Relieved of Katrina Duties
AP - 17 minutes ago
WASHINGTON - Federal Emergency Management Agency Director Michael Brown is being relieved of his command of the Bush administration's Hurricane Katrina onsite relief efforts, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff announced Friday. He will be replaced by Coast Guard Vice Adm. Thad W. Allen, who was overseeing New Orleans relief and rescue efforts, Chertoff said.


Big headlines on Yahoo.com caught my attention:  "FEMA CHIEF REMOVED!"


Also, as far as I know, this argument's not about which dealt more destruction:  the hurricane a week ago or the tsunami late last year... it's about which one was handled better.  the Tsunami, in a "third-world country" was handled better than a hurricane that affected a smaller area.  at least people had food within 48 hours after the tsunami, as opposed to almost A WEEK after the hurricane :( :( :(

 

Offline WeatherOp

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Originally posted by Stealth


Also, as far as I know, this argument's not about which dealt more destruction:  the hurricane a week ago or the tsunami late last year... it's about which one was handled better.  the Tsunami, in a "third-world country" was handled better than a hurricane that affected a smaller area.  at least people had food within 48 hours after the tsunami, as opposed to almost A WEEK after the hurricane :( :( :(


Well most of the people who don't have food are the ones who won't get out.
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Offline Shrike

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Originally posted by aldo_14
[q]

As I said before, this is not just a hurricane, it's also a flood. It's definately not a Tsunami.
[/q]

That's true.  The tsunami was much worse in both economic impact, casualties, and area of destruction.
You're missing the point.  As soon as the tsunami was over, mere minutes after it hit (adjusting for differences in travel time), it was over.  You didn't have hours or days of extremely strong winds making low-level flights difficult to impossible and flooding that a week later are still hampering relief efforts.

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Originally posted by Bobboau
flood waters don't affect food/water drops to wich the tsunami was getting two days after, the general rule of thumb is you should have two to three days worth of food and water, because that's how long it might take for resque to show up, this was the case in the tsunami, and it should have been the case here. you say that the flooding was some huge diference, well what about the hundreds of miles of coast that wasn't permaflooded and still didn't get much in the way of help? and still what does water on the ground do to stop helocopters in the sky?
It's my understanding that there were food and water drops going on soon after Katrina struck.  Was there enough is a different matter.

And as useful as helicopters are, they're no substitute for people on the ground.  They can't perform a complete rescue operation by themselves.
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Offline aldo_14

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Originally posted by Shrike
You're missing the point.  As soon as the tsunami was over, mere minutes after it hit (adjusting for differences in travel time), it was over.  You didn't have hours or days of extremely strong winds making low-level flights difficult to impossible and flooding that a week later are still hampering relief efforts.
 


True (albeit the physical damage to buildings and roads was far more severe), but the Tsunami was across a markedly larger area of 13 countries, including a warzone (Aceh).  Over 1.1 million were also left displaced, again across a large area.  As with New Orleans, there was the threat of disease (again, the geographical scale and crippled infrastructure made it more difficult to feasibly relocate survivors from areas with bodies) necessitating action to cleanup bodies.

So IMO it's unfair to suggest the action to get aid to, what, 100,000 survivors in a flooded but limited geographical area (especially the Superdome and adjoing Conference Centre) is in any way harder than getting aid to over 1 million people spread across completely devastated areas spanning 13 nations.  Especially given that Katrina occurred in a nation which had the resources to react with the likes of airdrops or amphibious vehicles, which may not have been true of most of the nations affected by the Tsunami.

 

Offline StratComm

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That's the thing.  The after-the-fact response was inadequate by just about all measures.  However, I saw a particularly relevant quote on CNN sometime from some US official (I don't remember who, I'm afraid):
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We do better in a 3rd world country

The "we" here is key.  I don't see how a 3rd-world country could respond better.  However, Western efforts can certainly do better where beurocracy isn't involved.  There's a pretty fundamental difference there, and saying that a 3rd world country can't respond in a more appropriate manner isn't the same as saying that victims in a 3rd world country cannot be helped in a more efficient way.  The problem is the beurocracy much more than the planning.
« Last Edit: September 09, 2005, 09:38:28 pm by 570 »
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Offline Kazan

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Shrike your understanding is WRONG - for several (3+) DAYS people were left with NO food and water being brought to them.

You didn't have days of strong winds with katrina either - you had probably 12 hours.

Helicopters and boats are complete rescue operations during flood conditions - remember the floods of 1993?

The simple fact of the matter is the feds ****ed up - they put a guy who LIED ON HIS RESUME and his last job was MANAGING A HORSE BREEDERS ASSOCIATION in charge of the Federal Emergency Management Agency - vastly defunded the organization.

COMMITTED FRAUD WITH THE ORGANIZATION IN 2004 (A House Rep from florida brough a large ammount of evidence to light about fraudulent payouts made by FEMA - with their knowledge they were fraudulent and EXAMPLE DOCUMENTS of FROM FEMA showing various organizations how to place these claims -- one county not touched by a single hurricane in 2004 in Florida received $23 million from FEMA for hurricane disaster relief!)

Bush then SCREWED THE POOCH by not listening to the Governer's request for not just a state of emergency but an "expedited major disaster" in Lousiana - bush declared a normal state of emergency.

BUSH THEN DID NOT PREEMPTIVELY ORDER NATIONAL GUARD INTO POSITION

FEMA THEN BLOCKED VARIOUS RELIEF SUPPLIES AND EFFORTS
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Offline Kazan

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Offline karajorma

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Quote
Originally posted by Shrike
A given third world nation?  Typhoons in Bangladesh can cause upwards of a hundred thousand deaths, and that's not a once-in-a-lifetime event like NO.


And do you think the Bagladeshi army is still assembling 4 days after the event? In fact name one third world country where the army was not doing something major 3 days after the event.

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Originally posted by Shrike
People keep going on about how third world countries perform better, but nobody's actually posted anything that shows they'd perform better at dealing with New Orleans, which is quite possibly the worst possible city in the entire US at dealing with a hurricane.  The SE Asia tsunami is a red herring because it didn't lead to long term flooding.  New Orleans is still 60% flooded.  How many third world cities of that size have been inundated with only a few days warning?

As I said before, this is not just a hurricane, it's also a flood.  It's definately not a Tsunami.



Spare me this argument. I've heard it once too often and it's time to call it. Which is worse, something like New Orleans where a single coastal city is severely flooded and all the surrounding roads are underwater or something like the Aceh region where all the roads were destroyed, blocked with fallen trees and the relief had to get through tropical forest in the middle of a warzone in order to get relief efforts in?

Or what about Sri Lanka which had to get the relief in during monsoon season and the heavy flooding that caused?

In both of those countries relief was being brought in long before the six days it took New Orleans to do it with a lot less resources to do it with.

Hell look at the floods in Mumbai last month. The death toll there is comparable to that of New Orleans yet within a week and with a third of the city still underwater they were still managing to send relief to other outlying areas within 6 days from Mumbai itself! And this is despite the fact that the monsoon was still continuing at the time.

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Originally posted by Shrike
As for 'American bashing', how many threads come up on HLP criticising EU policies, or Chinese policies, or others?  Certainly not more or even terribly comparable on an individual basis and quite possibly not even if you added all the US-critical threads and compared them to the rest of the world-critical threads.  People here ***** and piss and moan over almost every stupid or silly thing to come out of the US but don't seem nearly so inclined to do the same to other nations.


I think you've misunderstood the reasons behind this. At the same time as this was going on a thread was posted critisising the way that Britain wants to pass illegal laws that would cover the entire EU. Did you hear an uproar against the UK and round of UK-bashing? No? Wonder why? It's cause any discussion about UK politics goes like this.

1st Poster : Blair is a w**ker because of policy x
2nd Poster : Yep
3rd Poster : Yep
1st Poster : So is Blunkett
2nd Poster : Yep

While a discussion on US politics goes like this

1st Poster : Bush is a w**ker because of policy x
2nd Poster : Yep
3rd Poster : No Bush is great and I want to have his manbabies but that would be a sin!

The reason why no other countries politics descend into an argument as quickly is because very few countries have anyone who rabidly defends their leaders and completely ignores their mistakes. When you find someone doing that you'll notice that the discussion gets just as heated.

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Originally posted by Shrike
As was posted above, there were no plans to upgrade the levees


Doesn't really matter when you consider that Bush cut money that would have been used to maintain the current readiness of the levees.


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Originally posted by Shrike
and such a plan would never have been completed in time for Katrina anyhow.  The budget cuts only occured two years ago, and even if the funds had not been decreased it strikes me as exceptionally unlikely that in those two years the levees would have been sufficiently strengthened.  The studies alone for a multi-billion dollar civil engineering project might not even have been done yet.  These things take time.


They would however had been stronger than they were when Katrina hit. Much of the money was to be used to shore up the defences that already existed instead of preparing new ones. Those projects would have been completed before Katrina hit. The levees may not have held completely but maybe the breeches would have been smaller or less numerous.

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Originally posted by Shrike
Should the general hurricane-proofing of the gulf coast region have been a higher priority?  Yes.  Does this blame rest solely on Bush?  Certainly not when previous administrations didn't do anything more.  It's a continued long-term failure that hopefully will be corrected after this.


If a gambler bets his house on the turn of a roulette wheel do you blame him when he wins or breaks even? The whole thing with taking a gamble is that you take the full blame for the consequences when your gamble doesn't pay off. Bush's only excuse would be if he had tried to fix the levees but couldn't do it in time.


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Originally posted by Shrike
And again, how often do we see threads criticising the actions of other nations on this forum?  And ones with the same vehemence displayed towards many US actions?  Unless you're claiming that the US alone does more stupid **** than the rest of the world combined (which, as much stupid **** as the US pulls I find difficult to believe) then yes, there's a bias.


No bias. As explained above most other countries don't actually like their leaders or most of their policies but simply put up with them in the same way that you put up with asinine **** from your boss at work because you have to.

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Originally posted by Shrike
And again, where are the vocal calls from other states over the same response issues in NO?  If the blame was mostly at the federal level then wouldn't all the affected states have been screaming?


Weren't you the one who has repeatedly stated that the problems in New Orleans are two disasters and not just one? New Orleans is the worst affected area. I assure you that the rest of the states are complaining they just aren't being heard cause everyone is looking at NO.

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Originally posted by Shrike
I hear Bush this and Bush that, but the criticism of the state-level screwups have been far more muted, even though they're equally important in dealing with disaster relief and the go-to people for preparation.  They didn't even follow their pre-organized plans for dealing with such an eventuality which may have directly led to the large number of people still in NO and the problems facing those remaining.


When I said that there had been f**k ups at every level how many replies do you think I got claiming that the governer and mayor couldn't have done more?

Once again we're back to the fact that there are people who seek to absolve Bush of all blame and whitewash the whole federal involvement in the massive cock-up that was the hurricane Katrina relief effort. You hear more people complain about Bush's involvement because he's the one attempting to slime his way out of it and blame everyone else but himself.

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Originally posted by Shrike
If you've been saying there's been mistakes on all levels then I'll withdraw my complaint.  But people are blaming Bush at near or total exclusion to the state and municipal authorities when said authorities are as important as the federal government.  If you're going to play the blame-game, at least play it fairly and assing blame where to all the parties.  People on all levels made mistakes.


I've said that and I haven't seen anyone disagree with me. How many people have you seen say that they Mayor shouldn't have used the school buses if he could?
 Compare that with how many posters have said that the national guard still assembling after 4 f**king days is okay.

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Originally posted by Shrike
The moment I say there's a lot of anti-US *****ing here at HLP, I get *****ed at and called some kind of US superpatriot who sees nothing wrong with the US.


If you re-read my post you'll notice I never said that you were American. I've been at HLP long enough to know better.
However if you seek to stick your head in the sand and ignore the faults of the American government, if you seek to call it America bashing when people complain about the actions of the government of america and if you seek to say that anyone who dares to disapprove of Bush must be a democrat mouth piece,  then you are acting in the exact same way as one of the American superpatriots I'm talking about.

The fact that you're not american matters not one jot if you've swallowed the big lie and actually believe that anylegitimate complaint about Bush's government is an attack on America.
 
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Originally posted by Shrike
I just see unwarranted or excessive criticism on top of warranted.  Yes, 'you' (speaking figuratively) don't like the US because of XYZ.  I don't need to hear it every bloody thread that mentions the US like some people who will remain anonymous.


I'm sure that there is unjustified critisism but where was it in my comments? Or the comments of most of the people who thought the situation was handled badly?

How about you just warn the people who are actually being anti-american instead of just labling all complaints about America as being america bashing. Cause quite frankly I'm not too happy to see people disrupting discussions either.
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