Meanwhile the state of California has had the obligatory
presidential flyover,
photo ops and
pretty speeches.
What happens when Bush scuttles back to the Oval office to forget about
this disaster in order to concentrate on more important disasters such
as losing the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and
demonizing Iran in preparation for
WW III?
History doesn’t repeat itself. People just repeat the same stupid
mistakes. Watch Bush imitate Nikita Khrushchev as he antagonizes the
Russians with a
reverse Cuban Missile Crisis in the form of America’s provocative plan for an
Eastern European Missile Shield.
There’s a
self-inflicted world crisis raging, and before you can say Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, California’s little bonfire won’t even be remembered as a good place to make
S’mores.
All too soon the misery in California will be forgotten by all those
not made homeless. Chaparral wildfires fanned by Santa Anna winds? BFD!
Those wildfires happen every year.
However, what about that Bush promise to California of federal money to
aid those who have lost everything? Where is that money going to come
from? As Tom Doggett of Reuters reported last week, the federal
government is
short of money
to help the poor with their heating bills. “About 30 million low-income
American households who will need help paying heating bills this winter
from a U.S. government program will be left in the cold because of a
lack of funding for the program.”
What, the world’s richest and most powerful country can’t… or won’t
bother to… help its poor? Doggett continues: “The government's Low
Income Home Energy Assistance Program, known as LIHEAP, only has enough
funding to cover 16 percent of the 38 million poor households eligible
for the program.”
But not to worry, the White House has just issued a
Fact Sheet that boasts “Just the Facts: ‘
Over Half the Families in America Are Not Poor.’” How reassuring, the glass is half-full.
Besides, Bush needs
$46 billion more for his wars.
If Cheney can stay awake long enough, maybe he will remember to ask the next
visiting Chinese official for an extension of
the burgeoning US loan.
Disaster relief? Give me a break. That is the idealistic stuff of
Democrats. The last time I looked, the Democrats were as hollow as Fort
Knox.
What about security? Disaster areas tend to invite looting. After the
fires, California might suffer an even bigger disaster of lawlessness.
In bygone civilized days, when a state was hit by a disaster, the state
governor would call out the National Guard which arrangement served the
citizens handsomely. But
where is the National Guard now? They’re in Iraq stretched thinner than your last dab of butter over two pieces of toast.
The absence of the National Guard creates a security void. And, where there’s a vacuum, there’s
the private security contractor waiting in the wings to reap the benefits.
The Powers That Be have thought it all out. Having
negated the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878, Bush can override what was the discretion of state governors.
The New York Times editorial page
wrote last February that it is now “easier for a president to override
local control of law enforcement and declare martial law.” And, always
eager to repeat past mistakes, the Federal Government might
sub-contract security just as they did in New Orleans. That policy will only cost the taxpayers, many of them trying to rebuild homes and lives, at a
significantly higher rate than the National Guard.
And to whom does the private security contractor answer? George W.
Bush. And to what is the private security contractor loyal? The
Almighty Dollar. Neither Bush nor the contractor gives a damn about
you. In cases such as this, security does not mean: “to protect and
serve.” It means control through oppression.
How long will private security contractors remain on the scene? In the business of
milking taxpayer resources, they might even create the conditions that necessitate their continued presence.
Won’t Californians feel so much more secure while being eyed by
gun-toting commandos every time they step out for ice cream, take the
kids to school or attend church?
Niko Kyriakou quotes
Mary Ellen McNish, general secretary for the American Friends Service
Committee who said: “With images of soldiers in New Orleans carrying
M-16s but no medical or relief supplies fresh in the public memory, the
president would still have us believe that a military response is the
preferred response.”
Kyriakou sums up: “relief groups doubt whether giving the military
police power in emergency situations would really increase Americans’
safety.”
And how many more natural disasters will it take before every nook and cranny of America is
filled with Private Security agents?
The sad thing is that in the ordinary course of events there may be
other natural disasters that inspire Bush to send in more private
security firms.
We won’t be the “Land of the Free” for long. Who needs the threat of
foreign armies and terrorists when the bigger threat is Bush’s plan to
install private security armies in our communities?
A word to the wise: Governor Schwarzenegger and the residents of
California can thank George W. Bush for his visit and inspirational
speech. They can applaud as he hugs the desolate and smirks for the
photographers. And then, in response to Bush’s promise of federal
largesse, the Californians can show Bush the door with a polite: “No
thank you.”
Elizabeth Gyllensvard contributed to and edited this story.