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Born at the Crest of the Empire

Wednesday, January 04, 2006

FEMA's failure was philosophical in nature

I was watching Abramoff so closely yesterday I didn't make the normal rounds and I missed alot of good blogging. Lesson learned.

Motherlode picked this one up, a Rolling Stone piece on the failures of FEMA.

So, too, is the fact -- now plain for all to see -- that the Department of Homeland Security, the arm of the federal government responsible for ensuring our safety in times of national emergency, has become little more than an arm of big business, a radical experiment in President Bush's brand of market-based government......

Bush appointed inexperienced friends to top posts, outsourced essential government services to the party's corporate backers and gave anti-terrorism programs priority over everything else, including disaster preparedness. Homeland Security became the only federal agency ever designed to hollow out government and enrich an administration's corporate cronies.

With scandal after scandal, the older ones seem to be forgotten. Katrina was only five months ago, but since then there has been so much.

4 Comments:

  • Disturbing thoughts.

    By Blogger historymike, at 11:22 AM  

  • its everyones job to try and keep importnat things in the news after they have been dropped. you are good at it!

    By Blogger michael the tubthumper, at 12:54 PM  

  • on another topic...there probably isn't much you don't know in this but take a look...

    http://tinyurl.com/dreve

    By Blogger michael the tubthumper, at 1:00 PM  

  • Thanks, Michael. Obviously, I have read and heard alot of Chomsky, but that's actually a fair amount more.

    The cultural limitations of thought have always been pretty interesting to me, how our "freedoms of thought and action are actually pretty limited by the cultural fishbowl we swim in. Part of that is defined by the media structures which somewhat define our reality. The range of argument is pretty narrow. How much pollution is acceptable? should we cut taxes by 10%? Is the military big enough? Anybody outside the range on these questions is not allowed on "responsible media." Why don't we ever talk about the nature of taxation, a public debate on pollution, what role our military will play.

    Thanks, got me thinking.

    Mike

    By Blogger mikevotes, at 2:27 PM  

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