AS the true horror of the social disaster in the
Gulf Coast left in Katrina’s wake becomes more
evident with each passing day, two questions are
being asked: Was the flooding inevitable? Why did
the government fail to prevent so much suffering?
Unfortunately, the answers are not surprising for a
society where profits come before human lives, and
where working-class people – especially the most
vulnerable – are expected to bear the brunt of the
resulting consequences.
LACK OF PREPARATION: "I SUPPOSE THAT’S THE PRICE
WE PAY"
Commentators on all sides are now debating
whether or not the deadly flooding in New Orleans
could have been prevented. A September 1 AP
article notes that scientists had predicted the
worst: "experts repeatedly cautioned that the
protective system was unlikely to prevail if a
Category 4 or Category 5 hurricane like Katrina hit
the city." Despite the 2004 hurricane season being
the worst in decades, however, the federal
government made the biggest cuts in hurricane and
flood-control funding for New Orleans in history,
preventing millions of dollars’ worth of necessary
work from being completed, according to a September
2 Editor & Publisher article: "On June 8,
2004, Walter Maestri, emergency management chief for
Jefferson Parish, Louisiana, told the Times-Picayune:
‘It appears that the money has been moved in the
president's budget to handle homeland security and
the war in Iraq, and I suppose that's the price we
pay.’"
The idea that there was no money to make the city
safe because of the imperialist occupation of Iraq
is absurd. It’s not that the funds were being used
elsewhere; it’s that the potential threat to Gulf
Coast residents simply was not a priority. The real
priority for the imperialist rulers is ensuring
their resources and markets throughout the world at
gunpoint, not protecting workers and farmers and
their homes and livelihoods, at home or abroad.
FAILURE TO EVACUATE
The flooding around New Orleans the day after the
hurricane hit was responsible for the most deaths.
Many critics are focusing on the lack of troops and
vehicles to rescue people from the floodwaters. But
why did tens of thousands, if not hundreds of
thousands of mostly working-class Black people
remain in the area throughout the storm?
On Thursday, August 25, when Katrina hit Florida,
it was already clearly a threat to the region, but
New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin did not urge residents
to leave until Saturday, later changing it to a "mandatory"
evacuation on Sunday. And while the federal
government declared an "emergency" for the region,
residents were on their own to get out and find
somewhere else to say. As in any class-divided
society, those with more economic resources fared
better.
In an August 30 interview on the August 30 CNN
television program "Larry King Live," Louisiana
Governor Kathleen Blanco stated that commercial
airlines stopped flying into New Orleans a day
before Katrina hit because they would lose money
without any passengers coming in, even though the
airline companies could have sent planes to evacuate
people for another 24 hours. However, even as
standstill traffic jams filled every road leading
out of the area, neither the state nor federal
governments took steps to ensure the commercial
flights continued or to use military aircraft in
their place. And while the city apparently provided
some buses to shelters, it did not mobilize hundreds
of school buses that could have been used to take
people to safety.
In a region where so many live in poverty – 25%
in New Orleans, for example –, the hurricane came at
the end of the month, when many people had run out
of money. State vehicles could have been used; the
government could have called on privately owned
buses, trains and airlines to take people out of
harm’s way. None of that happened.
"Many people didn't have the financial means to
get out," Alan LeBreton, 41, an apartment
superintendent from Biloxi told a Reuters
reporter. "That's a crime and people are angry about
it."
"WE’RE JUST A BUNCH OF RATS"
Before Katrina hit, thousands of people flocked
to the Superdome and New Orleans convention center,
designated as shelters. Countless news reports have
described the inhuman, degrading conditions at both
places: no food, water, electricity, hygiene or
medical care; dead bodies abandoned for days; people
fainting in 90-degree heat waiting for
transportation that didn’t come; robberies in the
darkness at night.
This was New Orleans: in the richest country in
the world; a favorite tourist destination; with
revenues generated from one of the nation’s biggest
ports; where 20% of the nation’s oil and gas are
produced, yet nothing had been prepared. People went
from being trapped in the water to being trapped at
the "shelters."
On Friday, September 2, refugees at the
convention center quoted by the New York Times
said they had been told, even by police officers
in squad cars, that buses were on the way. But the
buses didn’t come for days. "We've been lied to so
much," said Raymond Whitfield, 51, who works at a
coffee processing plant.
"This is a freaking setup," said Lela Mosgrove, a
nurse who was sent there after the nursing home
where she worked was evacuated. She told the AP
that she had not eaten in 24 hours. "I don't know if
they are trying to kill us or what."
"We're just a bunch of rats," Earle Young, 31, a
cook who stood waiting in a throng of perhaps 10,000
outside the Superdome, told the NYT. "That's
how they've been treating us."
THE VICTIM BECOMES THE CRIMINAL
As people became desperate, some began breaking
into stores and warehouses looking for food, water,
medicine, anything. While some anti-social elements
took advantage of the disaster to rob people and
even hospitals, the government and media tried to
play up "crime and lawlessness" as the biggest
problem, instead of the tens of thousands of hungry,
homeless and sick people.
A September 1 Reuters article reported
that, while victims, dead and alive, were still
being found by rescuers, Mayor Nagin declared a
state of martial law and "ordered police to drop
their search-and-rescue operations to concentrate on
stopping widespread looting and violence." That same
day, Governor Blanco told reporters, "We will do
what it takes to bring law and order to our area.
I'm furious. It's intolerable." The U.S. President
chimed in, also on September 1, when thousands of
people had been sleeping on the ground with no food
or water, surrounded by filth, for four full days.
George W. Bush declared on ABC's "Good Morning
America": "I think there ought to be zero tolerance
of people breaking the law during an emergency such
as this…"
Boat searches for survivors had been stopped "in
areas where our employees have been determined to
potentially be in danger," stated Russ Knocke, a
Department of Homeland Security spokesman, blaming
gunshots, to the Los Angeles Times.
One news photo showed a U.S. Army helicopter
refusing to land amidst evacuees at the convention
center because of the "danger" of a "riot" by
desperate refugees below; instead, troops dropped
supplies to the ground and flew away – the one and
only deposit of food and water there since Katrina
hit, according to a Saturday, September 3 LAT
article. The helicopter did not return.
When thousands of armed troops and military
vehicles began pouring into the area by the end of
the week, their mission was above all to "control"
people.
On Saturday at the convention center, about a
dozen people who headed down the street to look for
food and water were turned back by a soldier who
pulled a gun, an AP article reported. "We had to get
something to eat. What are they doing pulling a gun?"
said Richard Johnson, 28. In another telling scene
that same day at the Superdome described by the
Houston Chronicle, evacuees were told to move
aside as 700 guests and staff at the adjoining Hyatt
Regency hotel went to the front of a line for buses.
"How does this work?" exclaimed Howard Blue, 22. "They
are clean, they are dry, and they get out ahead of
us?" When he tried to get into the hotel line, he
was returned to his original spot by Guardsmen, who
assisted hotel guests and staff with their luggage.
LIVES BEFORE PROFITS
Even big-business media commentators have had to
compare the unfolding social catastrophe to the very
different response in Cuba to natural disasters.
In a September 1 Chicago Sun-Times column,
Michael Sneed wrote: "…A top Sneed source who has
lived in Cuba on and off for 20 years" told him "When
a hurricane is approaching Cuba, Castro has set up a
system to bus everybody out of harm's way before
disaster hits. We knew the hurricane was going to
hit New Orleans and Mississippi hard. Why didn't we
send buses in to get the poor people out before
disaster hit? We spend millions on recovery and
rescue AFTERWARDS . . . when we could have
alleviated so much death BEFORE?"
In a 2001 Guardian