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#11
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![]() b'asskisser lied about something, attempted to cover it up with fictionalized web 'cut'n'pastes, and continues to push that as the truth. "Bush lies" = 544,000 hits in .07 seconds http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=%22Bush+lies%22 "Basskisser lies" = 0 hits http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&l...&btnG=Sear ch Proof positive of Basskissers sterling reputation. Sam |
#12
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On 14 Sep 2005 14:00:42 -0700, "Sam" wrote:
b'asskisser lied about something, attempted to cover it up with fictionalized web 'cut'n'pastes, and continues to push that as the truth. "Bush lies" = 544,000 hits in .07 seconds http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=%22Bush+lies%22 "Basskisser lies" = 0 hits http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&l...&btnG=Sear ch Proof positive of Basskissers sterling reputation. Sam Check it out: Results 1 - 10 of about 7,890,000 for kevin lies. (0.59 seconds) You did it wrong. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." |
#13
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grin,
If the Internet says it is so, it must be so. "Sam" wrote in message oups.com... b'asskisser lied about something, attempted to cover it up with fictionalized web 'cut'n'pastes, and continues to push that as the truth. "Bush lies" = 544,000 hits in .07 seconds http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=%22Bush+lies%22 "Basskisser lies" = 0 hits http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&l...&btnG=Sear ch Proof positive of Basskissers sterling reputation. Sam |
#15
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![]() Starbuck's wrote: Gould, You have never responded to my posts about the importance of local and st= ate governments being the front line defense in emergency situations. Did you rethink your position and decide it is important that all local and state governments learn from the disaster so it does not happen in another area? We need to make sure the mistakes of New Orleans, Louisiana and FEMA are = not repeated. If we focus all of our attention on FEMA and Bush, it is for political gain, and not because anyone is really interested in correcting the problem. Since you did not respond, I had the feeling you agreed your original position was made in haste. You apparently missed my observation that when an entire region is wiped out the local and state governments often lose the resources required to muster an effective response and that's exactly why help needs to be brought in from the outside. (That and the fact that somebody needs to coordinate efforts when the disaster goes beyond the city limits, the county line, or even an individual state border). wrote in message oups.com... PocoLoco wrote: On 14 Sep 2005 08:01:13 -0700, wrote: wrote: This is good stuff. By Mark Morford, SF Gate Columnist Wednesday, September 14, 2005 Printable Version Email This Article Mark Morford Archives Subscribe to Notes & Errata Subscribe to RSS Feed Who is this guy? --------------------------------------------------------------------= ------------ The Storm That Ate The GOP - Who will pity the soulless Republic... 09/14/2005 George W. Bush Still Rocks! - Stop criticizing! The rich man's C... 09/09/2005 Burning Man Defies Katrina? - In the wake of epic tragedy, how c... 09/07/2005 Can you hear that? That low scraping moan, that painful scream, that compressed hissing wail like the sound of an angry alligator caught = in a vice? Why, it's the GOP, and they're screaming, "No, no it can't be, oh my God, please no, this damnable Katrina thing is just an unstoppable PR disaster for us!" After all (they wail), who woulda thought dissing all those poor bla= ck people and letting so many of them die in filth and misery in the Superdome while our pampered CEO president enjoyed yet another vacat= ion would cause such an ugly backlash, such harsh criticism of the glorious, rich-=FCber-alles GOP creed? Who knew it would lay bare our deeply inbred agenda of social injust= ice and civil neglect, and our systematic abuse of the country? This sto= rm thing is so not the thing we need right now because, oh my God look, just look! We've been so golden! We've had the run of the candy stor= e! We have been gods among swine! Can you hear them? Hastert to DeLay to Frist to Santorum to Rove to Cheney to Bush himself, across the board and all down the snickering party line they keen, "It's not fair! We've been planning this regim= e, this overthrow for 40 years! We've worked so damn hard to drive a we= dge into the culture and an ice pick into the heart of the nation, worki= ng like demons on meth to mangle this country's economy and sense of pr= ide so as to boost corporate profits and lock down our wealth and empire= !" And now Katrina. And now a furious backlash we never predicted that could very well spell the death of our wanton free-for-all gluttony. Damn you, Mother Nature! Damn you, uppity female! Just listen. Isn't that Dick Cheney, lying awake at night as the leeches drain his soul, muttering his woes to a well-narcotized Lynn= e? "Dammit, Lynney, what went wrong? We've got the House locked up and = the Senate locked up and we can cram through any law or any referendum or toxic Patriot Act we like with next-to-zero outcry and no discussion= on the floor ..." We're successfully stuffing the lower courts with hundreds of homophobic neoconservative misogynist appointees and now we even own the Supreme Court -- the Supreme Court, pudding-thighs! -- and even = the increasingly impotent California governor is more in our back pocket than we imagined. We've had the whole goddamn country under our thumb for five years, squirming like a stuck rat as we make out like robber barons. What a run we've had! We've threatened major media into numb complia= nce and we run the FCC the way a pimp runs a cheap hooker and we've got a loudmouth right-wing pundit manning nearly every ideological outpost= in every corner of the media globe while millions of stupefied 'Murkins still believe Fox News is a genuine source of integrity and honesty. Look at us go! And don't forget, to back it all up and shore up the base, we've got= so many hate-spitting pseudo-religious bonk jobs broadcasting their bile across roughly 1,600 militant Christian Midwestern talk-radio shows = it would make Jesus himself cringe in pain, and even that soulless cret= in Pat Robertson is comfy enough to start suggesting we assassinate foreign leaders who dare to dis BushCo. Look what we've accomplished! We launched two brutal, devastating, unwinnable wars. We've let Osama bin Laden run happy and free for ov= er four years, and counting. We just passed an obscene $12.3 billion energy bill that ensures our heroin-like dependency on foreign oil f= or the next two decades while misinformed 'Murkin GIs die in Iraq protecting us from $5 gallons of gas. Damn, we're good! We torture innocent detainees in Iraq and abuse inmates at Guant=E1n= amo and chip away at women's rights and demonize homosexuals, and we str= ip the forests and gut the Clean Air Act and pollute the water and devastate the economy and cut welfare spending (whew!), and still the lemming people think we're gods because we keep them wrapped in fear and a whole pile of carefully orchestrated Rove-ian lies. We are, in short, f--ing geniuses. But now, this. Now BushCo's spineless Katrina response and our party= 's obvious contempt for lazy poor people who don't own SUVs and Lockheed-Martin portfolios means Dubya's ratings have plummeted below 40, as many of his precious pet agenda items head for the Dumpster, including the gutting of Social Security and the gutting of Medicare and even more tax cuts for his wealthy cronies. Damn you, Mother Nature! Even the media has stepped it up, taken off the kid gloves and begun hurling angry, pointed questions at BushCo for the first time in four years, ever since we muzzled them with one part threat and one part Rove and all parts corporate stranglehold. Hell, the damn media was = on the ground in New Orleans within 24 hours of Katrina, beating our untrained monkeys from FEMA by three days. Who the hell do they think they are? Ain't it a bitch? And now there are those who say the impermeable fortress o' pain known as the GOP might just lose the South next election due to its obvious lack of care for the lower classes, unle= ss we can somehow scare them poor people into not voting again, or tell them if they vote Democrat they won't get any health care or food stamps or relief money or any of Barbara Bush's patronizing rich-grandma cookies. Hey, it worked last time. So goes the GOP lament. Of course, it's not all bad (they say). Hell, the oil companies are as giddy as schoolgirls at being able to false= ly jack up prices to over whopping 70 bucks a barrel, despite a recent (temporary) glut of supply. Halliburton is squealing like Jenna Bush= at a kegger at scoring the contract to help rebuild New Orleans' infrastructure thanks to the fact that the former head of FEMA is no= w a Halliburton lobbyist, and the GOP plan to decimate FEMA and militari= ze emergency efforts is going -- pardon the pun -- swimmingly. But something has shifted. Something is ugly and toxic in the water. This is what, I imagine, the GOP overlords are asking each other over cocktails and baby seal kabobs and whale-blood transfusions: Do you think the people are finally beginning to sense it? Are they finally waking up? You think they know that the fact that Bush is finally taking a modicum of responsibility for his administration's failure = -- something he never, never does -- is a sign of true GOP desperation?= Do you think they recognize that BushCo isn't really spending a dime on Katrina relief, that the $52 billion they just crammed through Congr= ess without any discussion isn't actually going toward repairs and rebuilding at all? You think people sense that all of it, every single dime, is going toward -- you guessed it -- PR? Spin control? You know it's true. Ev= ery government truck and every National Guardsman and every aid package = and every miserable FEMA agent you see is merely in place to try and sho= re up Bush's miserable poll numbers, his dwindling support. Hell, it's = the only reason Bush -- or his party -- does anything for the "good" of = the nation. But holy crap, it sure is expensive. It sure is annoying. It sure ta= kes the GOP off its game of warmongering and finger-pointing and padding the pockets of the rich and pulverizing the economy like a ... like a ... yes, OK, like a hurricane. Damn you, Mother Nature. Morford expects far too much from Katrina. The sheeple will get back in line and once again do as they're told very quickly. Those who don't believe that God's Plan for the United States centers around a far right theocracy will at least dutifully repeat that "There's light at the end of the tunnel, and we'd be so much worse off with the Democrats in charge." Count on it. Watch for the GOP to net an additional 3 seats in the Senate next year, and increase its majority in the house. This is a new day, when a political party does not rise and fall with the poll numbers of the point man, but rather depends on the vitality of its spin machine and the complacency and/or control of the media. We haven't seen any more effective control and manipulation of the media since the heydays of communism and nazism, and the media is now so much more intensely present in all aspects of life that it is propaganda, not policy or debate, that shapes the future of the US. The GOP is alive and well. Within two weeks, most people will be marvelling at the low death toll and congratulating Bush on a job well done.......(forgetting entirely that the FEDGOV sat on the sidelines and didn't do any job at all for several days afer the flood began). While sloganeering "Remember 9-11" and marching with "Support Our Troops" signs, the majority will soon turn on the Democrats for daring to try to use a national calamity to advance their political position. Just watch. Few things are as rare as "common" sense. b'asskisser, Moore, krause, and now Gould! Should the President have disregarded the Posse Comitatus Act? Should he have invaded NO using the Insurrection Act? Or should he have just disregarded the shooters and sent in the unarmed FEMA folks to the Superdome and Convention Centers where the local government wanted to let folks die? -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." I guess I don't really know, but none of those questions relates to my opinion that the newspaper columnist is wrong about Katrina damaging the long-term propects for the GOP. Aging people become increasingly self centered, cautious, financially reluctant (particularly when retired on a fixed income), and nervous about security. You guys have a lock for another 25-30 years. Don't worry. :-) |
#16
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Gould,
No I didn't miss that response. Since I am not blinded by my political beliefs, I understand the magnitude of the disaster was substantially amplified due to the mismanagement of local authorities and the state authorities. If a city, county or state do not take appropriate action 72 hrs in advance, there is nothing anyone can do to prepare for locals who refuse to implement a evacuation plan. I think most people realize FEMA needs to make vast improvements, and hopefully they will. Only an biased political hack would expect FEMA to be able to compensate for the inability of local and state agencies to implement an effective evacuation plan. That would be similar to me pouring gas all over my home, setting it on fire, and then yelling at the fire dept. because my home burned to the ground. Since I have always assumed you were not a biased political hack, I thought you might have reconsidered your position about placing all the blame on FEMA. We should be worried about having an organization made up of local, state and national agencies to protect us from natural or man made disaster. It is not acceptable to say, yeah, I might have screwed up, by why didn't you realize I was too incompetent to implement my evacuation plan. If we are going to stop further lose of life, all agencies are going to have to admit their mistakes and take concrete steps to correct these mistakes. wrote in message oups.com... Starbuck's wrote: Gould, You have never responded to my posts about the importance of local and state governments being the front line defense in emergency situations. Did you rethink your position and decide it is important that all local and state governments learn from the disaster so it does not happen in another area? We need to make sure the mistakes of New Orleans, Louisiana and FEMA are not repeated. If we focus all of our attention on FEMA and Bush, it is for political gain, and not because anyone is really interested in correcting the problem. Since you did not respond, I had the feeling you agreed your original position was made in haste. You apparently missed my observation that when an entire region is wiped out the local and state governments often lose the resources required to muster an effective response and that's exactly why help needs to be brought in from the outside. (That and the fact that somebody needs to coordinate efforts when the disaster goes beyond the city limits, the county line, or even an individual state border). wrote in message oups.com... PocoLoco wrote: On 14 Sep 2005 08:01:13 -0700, wrote: wrote: This is good stuff. By Mark Morford, SF Gate Columnist Wednesday, September 14, 2005 Printable Version Email This Article Mark Morford Archives Subscribe to Notes & Errata Subscribe to RSS Feed Who is this guy? -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The Storm That Ate The GOP - Who will pity the soulless Republic... 09/14/2005 George W. Bush Still Rocks! - Stop criticizing! The rich man's C... 09/09/2005 Burning Man Defies Katrina? - In the wake of epic tragedy, how c... 09/07/2005 Can you hear that? That low scraping moan, that painful scream, that compressed hissing wail like the sound of an angry alligator caught in a vice? Why, it's the GOP, and they're screaming, "No, no it can't be, oh my God, please no, this damnable Katrina thing is just an unstoppable PR disaster for us!" After all (they wail), who woulda thought dissing all those poor black people and letting so many of them die in filth and misery in the Superdome while our pampered CEO president enjoyed yet another vacation would cause such an ugly backlash, such harsh criticism of the glorious, rich-über-alles GOP creed? Who knew it would lay bare our deeply inbred agenda of social injustice and civil neglect, and our systematic abuse of the country? This storm thing is so not the thing we need right now because, oh my God look, just look! We've been so golden! We've had the run of the candy store! We have been gods among swine! Can you hear them? Hastert to DeLay to Frist to Santorum to Rove to Cheney to Bush himself, across the board and all down the snickering party line they keen, "It's not fair! We've been planning this regime, this overthrow for 40 years! We've worked so damn hard to drive a wedge into the culture and an ice pick into the heart of the nation, working like demons on meth to mangle this country's economy and sense of pride so as to boost corporate profits and lock down our wealth and empire!" And now Katrina. And now a furious backlash we never predicted that could very well spell the death of our wanton free-for-all gluttony. Damn you, Mother Nature! Damn you, uppity female! Just listen. Isn't that Dick Cheney, lying awake at night as the leeches drain his soul, muttering his woes to a well-narcotized Lynne? "Dammit, Lynney, what went wrong? We've got the House locked up and the Senate locked up and we can cram through any law or any referendum or toxic Patriot Act we like with next-to-zero outcry and no discussion on the floor ..." We're successfully stuffing the lower courts with hundreds of homophobic neoconservative misogynist appointees and now we even own the Supreme Court -- the Supreme Court, pudding-thighs! -- and even the increasingly impotent California governor is more in our back pocket than we imagined. We've had the whole goddamn country under our thumb for five years, squirming like a stuck rat as we make out like robber barons. What a run we've had! We've threatened major media into numb compliance and we run the FCC the way a pimp runs a cheap hooker and we've got a loudmouth right-wing pundit manning nearly every ideological outpost in every corner of the media globe while millions of stupefied 'Murkins still believe Fox News is a genuine source of integrity and honesty. Look at us go! And don't forget, to back it all up and shore up the base, we've got so many hate-spitting pseudo-religious bonk jobs broadcasting their bile across roughly 1,600 militant Christian Midwestern talk-radio shows it would make Jesus himself cringe in pain, and even that soulless cretin Pat Robertson is comfy enough to start suggesting we assassinate foreign leaders who dare to dis BushCo. Look what we've accomplished! We launched two brutal, devastating, unwinnable wars. We've let Osama bin Laden run happy and free for over four years, and counting. We just passed an obscene $12.3 billion energy bill that ensures our heroin-like dependency on foreign oil for the next two decades while misinformed 'Murkin GIs die in Iraq protecting us from $5 gallons of gas. Damn, we're good! We torture innocent detainees in Iraq and abuse inmates at Guantánamo and chip away at women's rights and demonize homosexuals, and we strip the forests and gut the Clean Air Act and pollute the water and devastate the economy and cut welfare spending (whew!), and still the lemming people think we're gods because we keep them wrapped in fear and a whole pile of carefully orchestrated Rove-ian lies. We are, in short, f--ing geniuses. But now, this. Now BushCo's spineless Katrina response and our party's obvious contempt for lazy poor people who don't own SUVs and Lockheed-Martin portfolios means Dubya's ratings have plummeted below 40, as many of his precious pet agenda items head for the Dumpster, including the gutting of Social Security and the gutting of Medicare and even more tax cuts for his wealthy cronies. Damn you, Mother Nature! Even the media has stepped it up, taken off the kid gloves and begun hurling angry, pointed questions at BushCo for the first time in four years, ever since we muzzled them with one part threat and one part Rove and all parts corporate stranglehold. Hell, the damn media was on the ground in New Orleans within 24 hours of Katrina, beating our untrained monkeys from FEMA by three days. Who the hell do they think they are? Ain't it a bitch? And now there are those who say the impermeable fortress o' pain known as the GOP might just lose the South next election due to its obvious lack of care for the lower classes, unless we can somehow scare them poor people into not voting again, or tell them if they vote Democrat they won't get any health care or food stamps or relief money or any of Barbara Bush's patronizing rich-grandma cookies. Hey, it worked last time. So goes the GOP lament. Of course, it's not all bad (they say). Hell, the oil companies are as giddy as schoolgirls at being able to falsely jack up prices to over whopping 70 bucks a barrel, despite a recent (temporary) glut of supply. Halliburton is squealing like Jenna Bush at a kegger at scoring the contract to help rebuild New Orleans' infrastructure thanks to the fact that the former head of FEMA is now a Halliburton lobbyist, and the GOP plan to decimate FEMA and militarize emergency efforts is going -- pardon the pun -- swimmingly. But something has shifted. Something is ugly and toxic in the water. This is what, I imagine, the GOP overlords are asking each other over cocktails and baby seal kabobs and whale-blood transfusions: Do you think the people are finally beginning to sense it? Are they finally waking up? You think they know that the fact that Bush is finally taking a modicum of responsibility for his administration's failure -- something he never, never does -- is a sign of true GOP desperation? Do you think they recognize that BushCo isn't really spending a dime on Katrina relief, that the $52 billion they just crammed through Congress without any discussion isn't actually going toward repairs and rebuilding at all? You think people sense that all of it, every single dime, is going toward -- you guessed it -- PR? Spin control? You know it's true. Every government truck and every National Guardsman and every aid package and every miserable FEMA agent you see is merely in place to try and shore up Bush's miserable poll numbers, his dwindling support. Hell, it's the only reason Bush -- or his party -- does anything for the "good" of the nation. But holy crap, it sure is expensive. It sure is annoying. It sure takes the GOP off its game of warmongering and finger-pointing and padding the pockets of the rich and pulverizing the economy like a ... like a ... yes, OK, like a hurricane. Damn you, Mother Nature. Morford expects far too much from Katrina. The sheeple will get back in line and once again do as they're told very quickly. Those who don't believe that God's Plan for the United States centers around a far right theocracy will at least dutifully repeat that "There's light at the end of the tunnel, and we'd be so much worse off with the Democrats in charge." Count on it. Watch for the GOP to net an additional 3 seats in the Senate next year, and increase its majority in the house. This is a new day, when a political party does not rise and fall with the poll numbers of the point man, but rather depends on the vitality of its spin machine and the complacency and/or control of the media. We haven't seen any more effective control and manipulation of the media since the heydays of communism and nazism, and the media is now so much more intensely present in all aspects of life that it is propaganda, not policy or debate, that shapes the future of the US. The GOP is alive and well. Within two weeks, most people will be marvelling at the low death toll and congratulating Bush on a job well done.......(forgetting entirely that the FEDGOV sat on the sidelines and didn't do any job at all for several days afer the flood began). While sloganeering "Remember 9-11" and marching with "Support Our Troops" signs, the majority will soon turn on the Democrats for daring to try to use a national calamity to advance their political position. Just watch. Few things are as rare as "common" sense. b'asskisser, Moore, krause, and now Gould! Should the President have disregarded the Posse Comitatus Act? Should he have invaded NO using the Insurrection Act? Or should he have just disregarded the shooters and sent in the unarmed FEMA folks to the Superdome and Convention Centers where the local government wanted to let folks die? -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." I guess I don't really know, but none of those questions relates to my opinion that the newspaper columnist is wrong about Katrina damaging the long-term propects for the GOP. Aging people become increasingly self centered, cautious, financially reluctant (particularly when retired on a fixed income), and nervous about security. You guys have a lock for another 25-30 years. Don't worry. :-) |
#17
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... Or should he have just disregarded the shooters and sent in the unarmed FEMA folks to the Superdome and Convention Centers where the local government wanted to let folks die? -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." I guess I don't really know, but none of those questions relates to my opinion that the newspaper columnist is wrong about Katrina damaging the long-term propects for the GOP. Aging people become increasingly self centered, cautious, financially reluctant (particularly when retired on a fixed income), and nervous about security. You guys have a lock for another 25-30 years. Don't worry. :-) The Republicans have a lock, because the Dem's keep running such **** poor candidates! |
#18
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On Wed, 14 Sep 2005 20:09:41 -0400, "Starbuck's"
wrote: Gould, No I didn't miss that response. Since I am not blinded by my political beliefs, I understand the magnitude of the disaster was substantially amplified due to the mismanagement of local authorities and the state authorities. If a city, county or state do not take appropriate action 72 hrs in advance, there is nothing anyone can do to prepare for locals who refuse to implement a evacuation plan. I think most people realize FEMA needs to make vast improvements, and hopefully they will. Only an biased political hack would expect FEMA to be able to compensate for the inability of local and state agencies to implement an effective evacuation plan. That would be similar to me pouring gas all over my home, setting it on fire, and then yelling at the fire dept. because my home burned to the ground. Since I have always assumed you were not a biased political hack, I thought you might have reconsidered your position about placing all the blame on FEMA. We should be worried about having an organization made up of local, state and national agencies to protect us from natural or man made disaster. It is not acceptable to say, yeah, I might have screwed up, by why didn't you realize I was too incompetent to implement my evacuation plan. If we are going to stop further lose of life, all agencies are going to have to admit their mistakes and take concrete steps to correct these mistakes. Chuck's response: I guess I don't really know, but none of those questions relates to my opinion that the newspaper columnist is wrong about Katrina damaging the long-term propects for the GOP. Aging people become increasingly self centered, cautious, financially reluctant (particularly when retired on a fixed income), and nervous about security. You guys have a lock for another 25-30 years. Don't worry. :-) Perhaps we need a "Can't Handle the Problem Act" whereby the governors immediately transfer operational control of all assets to the FEDGOV. The National Guard units would not be federalized, but the operational control would rest with FEMA, or whoever the big cheese becomes. What else should the act contain? -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." |
#19
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![]() PocoLoco wrote: On Wed, 14 Sep 2005 20:09:41 -0400, "Starbuck's" wrote: Gould, No I didn't miss that response. Since I am not blinded by my political beliefs, I understand the magnitude of the disaster was substantially amplified due to the mismanagement of local authorities and the state authorities. If a city, county or state do not take appropriate action 72 hrs in advance, there is nothing anyone can do to prepare for locals who refuse to implement a evacuation plan. I think most people realize FEMA needs to make vast improvements, and hopefully they will. Only an biased political hack would expect FEMA to be able to compensate for the inability of local and state agencies to implement an effective evacuation plan. That would be similar to me pouring gas all over my home, setting it on fire, and then yelling at the fire dept. because my home burned to the ground. Since I have always assumed you were not a biased political hack, I thought you might have reconsidered your position about placing all the blame on FEMA. We should be worried about having an organization made up of local, state and national agencies to protect us from natural or man made disaster. It is not acceptable to say, yeah, I might have screwed up, by why didn't you realize I was too incompetent to implement my evacuation plan. If we are going to stop further lose of life, all agencies are going to have to admit their mistakes and take concrete steps to correct these mistakes. Chuck's response: I guess I don't really know, but none of those questions relates to my opinion that the newspaper columnist is wrong about Katrina damaging the long-term propects for the GOP. Aging people become increasingly self centered, cautious, financially reluctant (particularly when retired on a fixed income), and nervous about security. You guys have a lock for another 25-30 years. Don't worry. :-) Perhaps we need a "Can't Handle the Problem Act" whereby the governors immediately transfer operational control of all assets to the FEDGOV. The National Guard units would not be federalized, but the operational control would rest with FEMA, or whoever the big cheese becomes. What else should the act contain? -- John H A color code, of course. Hell, we've spent billions of dollars on the new Homeland Security department, and all that we've gotten out of it, is a color code for terrorism. Still yellow, too. |
#20
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JohnH,
That is a scary thought, that we would allow the Fed's to by pass the Constitution and all state and national laws anytime they think it is advantageous. I am sure Chuck has rethought his position, and understands the local and state authorities need to be prepared if he is going to be protected from natural and manmade disasters. It is important that we identify those areas where NO and LA and FEMA failed so everyone can learn and not duplicate those mistakes. "PocoLoco" wrote in message news ![]() On Wed, 14 Sep 2005 20:09:41 -0400, "Starbuck's" wrote: Gould, No I didn't miss that response. Since I am not blinded by my political beliefs, I understand the magnitude of the disaster was substantially amplified due to the mismanagement of local authorities and the state authorities. If a city, county or state do not take appropriate action 72 hrs in advance, there is nothing anyone can do to prepare for locals who refuse to implement a evacuation plan. I think most people realize FEMA needs to make vast improvements, and hopefully they will. Only an biased political hack would expect FEMA to be able to compensate for the inability of local and state agencies to implement an effective evacuation plan. That would be similar to me pouring gas all over my home, setting it on fire, and then yelling at the fire dept. because my home burned to the ground. Since I have always assumed you were not a biased political hack, I thought you might have reconsidered your position about placing all the blame on FEMA. We should be worried about having an organization made up of local, state and national agencies to protect us from natural or man made disaster. It is not acceptable to say, yeah, I might have screwed up, by why didn't you realize I was too incompetent to implement my evacuation plan. If we are going to stop further lose of life, all agencies are going to have to admit their mistakes and take concrete steps to correct these mistakes. Chuck's response: I guess I don't really know, but none of those questions relates to my opinion that the newspaper columnist is wrong about Katrina damaging the long-term propects for the GOP. Aging people become increasingly self centered, cautious, financially reluctant (particularly when retired on a fixed income), and nervous about security. You guys have a lock for another 25-30 years. Don't worry. :-) Perhaps we need a "Can't Handle the Problem Act" whereby the governors immediately transfer operational control of all assets to the FEDGOV. The National Guard units would not be federalized, but the operational control would rest with FEMA, or whoever the big cheese becomes. What else should the act contain? -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." |
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