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By Arianna Huffington
Here's one for the Hypocrisy Hall of Fame: At the same time
the administration is putting Karl Rove's "pin-the-blame-on-the-locals" plan
into effect, President Bush told reporters gathered at a
cabinet meeting, "I think that one of the things that
people want us to do here is play a blame game. We've got
to solve problems. We're problem solvers. There will be ample
time for people to figure out what went right and what went
wrong. What I'm interested in is helping save lives."
How noble. A week and thousands of lives too late... but
noble. He makes it sound as if anyone interested in trying
to figure out what went so horribly wrong in the aftermath
of Katrina is somehow impeding the recovery. As if we can't
help the victims and analyze the debacle at the same time.
As if any time spent by reporters ferreting out the truth
-- and by Congress overseeing -- would otherwise be spent
tossing sandbags on the levee, disinfecting the Superdome,
or driving evacuees to Houston.
As if those seeking answers will have blood on their hands.
That's certainly the ominous rhetorical tack being taken
by Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff. He's all
about moving forward, and not looking back (which isn't surprising
given how many corpses he'd see in his personal rear-view
mirror). "What would be a horrible tragedy," he
said, "would be to distract ourselves from avoiding
further problems because we're spending time talking about
problems that have already occurred." Gee, Mr. Secretary,
I thought that was called Òlearning from your mistakes.Ó
So the White House is for time management and against "finger-pointing" -- a
two-talking-points-for-the-price-of-one Chertoff scored when
he asked, "What do you want to have us spend our time
on now? Do we want to make sure we are feeding, sheltering,
housing, and educating those who are distressed, or do we
want to begin the process of finger-pointing?" Well,
when you put it that way...
Also receiving the time management/finger-pointing memo
were White House spokesman Scott McClellan, WH Communications
Director Dan Bartlett, and former FEMA Director Joe Allbaugh:
"This is not a time for finger-pointing or playing
politics," said Scotty.
"I know a lot of people right now want to point fingers
and criticize, but people should keep their powder dry," said
Allbaugh.
"If we focused more of our attention on decisions
that have already been made, rather than those before us,
there's potential for making far greater mistakes... We really
don't have time to play the political game right now," echoed
Bartlett.
With that kind of message discipline, how long before the
media start parroting the party line? With a few brave exceptions
like Jack Cafferty, the correct answer would be... right
about now. "Not a great time for finger pointing is
it?" asked Miles O'Brien on CNN's American Morning. "When
you hear it's not the right time to point the finger, doesn't
that seem reasonable?" asked anchor Carol Costello a
few hours later on CNN's Daybreak.
Now, it's bad enough when the media start carrying the
administration's water (especially when it's as fetid as
the toxic muck still covering New Orleans), but it's much,
much worse when the opposition's leaders grab a bucket and
join in. "Our government failed those people in the
beginning," said Bill Clinton. "And I personally
believe there should be a serious analysis of it...but I
don't think we should do it now. I think that in a few weeks,
we should have some sort of Katrina commission. It should
be bipartisan, non-partisan, whatever..." Exactly: "Whatever." As
in: Who gives a crap, because it will have about the same
impact as all these too-long-after-the-fact commissions have
-- next to none. Who knows, maybe this time President Bush
will be willing to actually testify under oath -- and without
Dick Cheney. Or maybe Mike Brown will pull a Condi and let
it slip about a "historical" PDB entitled "FEMA
Determined to Strike Out in NO."
President Clinton's helpful assertion was quickly picked
up by the president's father who used it as a cudgel against
anyone trying to (if you'll pardon the expression) "point
the finger" at his son: "People want to blame someone...
I thought President Clinton put it pretty well today when
he said, 'Let's get on with it and then there'll be plenty
of time to assign blame.'"
Look, if we've learned anything from watching shows like
CSI, Law & Order, and their endless progeny, it's that
you can't let a crime scene grow cold. You've got to start
collecting and analyzing the evidence while the DNA is still
fresh and let David Caruso or Vincent D'Onofrio start sweating
the perps while the passions are still running high.
And make no mistake, what we saw go down -- and not go
down -- in New Orleans was definitely a crime... a crime
that is in many ways still in progress. Sixty percent of
the city remains underwater; up to 160,000 homes in the state
of Louisiana have been submerged or destroyed; 60 to 90 million
tons of solid waste need to be cleaned up; experts warn that
it make take "years" to fully restore clean drinking
water; and an outbreak of vibrio vulnificus -- a cholera-like
bacterial disease -- has been reported among some Katrina
evacuees.
This is clearly going to be a very long recovery process.
And the sooner we've identified those responsible for the
Katrina tragedy, the sooner we can make sure they're not
around to screw up the recovery.
So, yes, now is precisely the time for assessing blame.
Let a thousand pointed fingers bloom!
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