28 September 2005
Brown Shifts Blame for Katrina Response
by jasontrommA combative Michael Brown blamed the Louisiana governor, the New Orleans mayor and even the Bush White House that appointed him for the dismal response to Hurricane Katrina in a fiery appearance Tuesday before Congress. In response, lawmakers alternately lambasted and mocked the former FEMA director.
22 September 2005
AOL poll: President slays mayor on storm
by jasontrommWith close to 600,000 participants, public rips Nagin response to hurricane Katrina as 'poor'
20 September 2005
19 September 2005
15 September 2005
Lettre ouverte au président des États-Unis - M. Bush, les vacances sont terminées!
by nhoizeyLe Devoir publie aujourd'hui une lettre de Michael Moore adressée au président des États-Unis. Cette lettre a été rendue publique hier sur le site Internet du cinéaste.
14 September 2005
12 September 2005
10 September 2005
07 September 2005
Louisiana Democrat Officials Could Lose the Katrina Blame Game
by jasontromm (via)The Bush administration is being widely criticized for the emergency response to Hurricane Katrina and the allegedly inadequate protection for "the big one" that residents had long feared would hit New Orleans. But research into more than ten years of reporting on hurricane and flood damage mitigation efforts in and around New Orleans indicates that local and state officials did not use federal money that was available for levee improvements or coastal reinforcement and often did not secure local matching funds that would have generated even more federal funding.
05 September 2005
Killed by Contempt - New York Times
by multilinkothe undermining of FEMA began as soon as President Bush took office. Instead of choosing a professional with expertise in responses to disaster to head the agency, Mr. Bush appointed Joseph Allbaugh, a close political confidant. Mr. Allbaugh quickly began trying to scale back some of FEMA's preparedness programs.
You might have expected the administration to reconsider its hostility to emergency preparedness after 9/11 - after all, emergency management is as important in the aftermath of a terrorist attack as it is following a natural disaster. As many people have noticed, the failed response to Katrina shows that we are less ready to cope with a terrorist attack today than we were four years ago.
But the downgrading of FEMA continued, with the appointment of Michael Brown as Mr. Allbaugh's successor.
Mr. Brown had no obvious qualifications, other than having been Mr. Allbaugh's college roommate. But Mr. Brown was made deputy director of FEMA; The Boston Herald reports that he was forced out of his previous job, overseeing horse shows. And when Mr. Allbaugh left, Mr. Brown became the agency's director. The raw cronyism of that appointment showed the contempt the administration felt for the agency; one can only imagine the effects on staff morale.
That contempt, as I've said, reflects a general hostility to the role of government as a force for good. And Americans living along the Gulf Coast have now reaped the consequences of that hostility.
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