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Katrina and BP, Two Sides of the Same Coin
American Thinker ^ | 16 June 2010 | W. R. Wansley

Posted on 06/16/2010 10:25:31 AM PDT by K-oneTexas

Mississippi's Governor Haley Barbour, in the wake of hurricane Katrina, often blunted attempts of the media to goad him into criticizing the rescue efforts of President George W. Bush by stating, "Louisiana has the same president as Mississippi has." That is to say Bush's supposed inaction in the New Orleans' "come rescue me" fiasco was in sharp contrast to the boot-strap spirit of the people of the Mississippi Gulf Coast.

Now the Gulf oil spill has shed more light on the consequences of reliance on the federal government to a national disaster. In Katrina, a group of people relied on government to take them out. In the Gulf, a group of people have been trying to get in -- to apply American ingenuity to clean up the oil spill or prevent it from reaching the shore. Both groups have been held up -- by government.

In Katrina, many New Orleans people, after generations of government dependence, stayed behind, drained of initiative by their government's seeming ability to come to their aid. Those who depended on themselves rather than government did leave while those who had faith in government had no initiative to control their own destiny.

In the Gulf oil spill, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal has begged for approval to put up temporary sand bars as a barrier to the oil. The EPA, worse than saying no, delayed and studied and pondered and then said no. We have seen countless stories in the news of innovation and ingenuity by Americans attempting to bring proven applications, equipment and tactics to bear on the oil. Each attempt is met with the same federal dithering, inaction and impedance.

In Katrina, energy and effort that should have been put into getting people out was instead diverted into protest, complaint and blame. Government conditioned these people to expect that government would deliver them. Regardless, the would-be rescuers were thwarted in their efforts by an ineffective Democratic governor who put politics over rescue, and an inept Democratic mayor who was just plain in over his head.

In the Gulf oil spill, there are presently dozens of individuals and small companies that have the ability to solve the oil clean up problem. After they show their process to the media, the inevitable question is asked, "Have you shown this to BP or the EPA?" Their all too familiar and depressingly consistent reply is, "yes, and they are considering it" or "yes, and they said they would get back to us". They have been "considering it" for over 50 days now.

In Katrina, the people of the Mississippi Gulf Coast were hit by the brunt of the storm surge. Total devastation. This wasn't just some flooding caused by the breach of a Democrat Parish maintained levy. The people of the Mississippi Gulf Coast are for the most part a mixture of industrious workers and former industrious workers called retirees. Their ability to make do and to utilize the outpouring of basic supplies of ice and water from individuals and corporations from upstate and around the country was a resounding success.

In the Gulf, one company has a fiber mat (Fibertect) that absorbs oil. Another company has a machine (the Voraxial Separator) that seperates oil from water. Several folks have demonstrated the incredible effectivness of plain ol' hay to absorb its weight in oil. Then there are Peat moss mats and hair mats that do the same. Again, people standing by waiting for the go ahead. BP says they have to get cleared from the Obama Administration and the Administration saying they are talking to BP - nothing happens.

Another company has a proprietary "molecule mat"; another has a "hydrophobic sand" and many have their on concoction of natural oil-eating microbes. One Florida Company has a soap made of plant extracts another has a type of dry ice that sticks to the oil and lifts it off the then clean sand. One man has tons of an airplane dispensed natural earth material that is extremely lipophilic (oil loving) which traps, holds and sinks the oil to be destroyed by oil eating bacteria. His reply from the EPA: "it is against regulations to intentionally sink oil".

One thing all these solutions have in common: they are private enterprise endeavors showing ingenuity from inventors and innovators who, yes, want to do good but you see they, gasp, may also want to make a buck in the process. Never mind that all these things were invented and developed long before the current crisis. One poor fellow -- the one with the hay solution -- actually was shown on the You Tube video wearing overhauls. While the man who came up with a floating hair mat after the Prince William Sound spill is from north Alabama. Now we really can't have that sort of thing going on, now can we?

Milton Friedman once asked why people assume that political self-interest is somehow nobler than economic self-interest. "Just tell me, he said, where in the world you find these angels who are going to organize society for us?" Why, from a community organizer, of course. The private sector cleaning up the oil spill; private charities feeding people; Private gun owners protecting their family and property; now we really can't have that sort of thing going on, now can we?

Government PC pressure causes misallocation of resources into bad investments. Over the past couple of years, BP has spent millions of dollars publicizing its green initiative. Who can forget those disingenuous commercials, like the one of a teenage boy holding up some pathetic plant saying something like, "we can grow our own renewable fuel." BP also gave heavily to the Obama presidential campaign. It would seem they have not had a good return on these investments.

Bush didn't cause the hurricane and Obama didn't cause the oil spill but Obama did say that the federal government was best suited to deal with such disasters. Bush had a state and local government to deal with. But the oil spill is 100% federal -- or at least it was -- for now the oil has made its way to shore, protected all along its slow malevolent journey by Obama's federal government. It is his seeming inability to deal with private enterprise by allowing them to rescue the shoreline that is at issue here.

Touting windmills and solar panels instead of developing our 400 year supply of domestic natural gas while also discouraging relatively benign on shore and shallow water drilling are designed to do one thing: maintain a made up problem that government claims itself to be indispensable in solving -- but never does. It has no intention of solving problems but only "managing" them.

Katrina and the Gulf oil spill prove that, at best, government can only get in the way. But at worst -- like so-called global warming, lack of border security and unfunded Social Security -- they are all part of the same thing: government created problems that government prevents from being solved. The resultant discourse leads to weakening the resolve of the people to resist the "helping" heavy hand of government.

Put another way, government has an incentive to not solve problems, the Arizona immigration law being a perfect case in point where government has really shown its hand. Problems are its fuel -- fuel needed to empower itself and enslave its subjects. In the now infamous words of Obama Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel: a crisis is a terrible thing to waste.

Only time will tell just how much of Obama's ineptitude and impotence is by design -- for it would seem no one -- not even an unqualified community organizer -- is this pathetically incompetent. As with the Afghanistan troop deployment, once again, Obama dithers and the situation festers. Photo ops on the Gulf are to paper over his supposed ineptitude. Brave words are to gloss over his supposed impotence. If he is looking for someone's "buttocks" to boot, maybe he should look at the one whose rear end is up in the air in a notorious picture bowing to the Saudi King.


TOPICS: Government
KEYWORDS: bp; lping; obamaskatrina

1 posted on 06/16/2010 10:25:31 AM PDT by K-oneTexas
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To: K-oneTexas

EPA —> environmental/economic pollution agency.


2 posted on 06/16/2010 10:35:07 AM PDT by Paladin2
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To: Abathar; Abcdefg; Abram; Abundy; akatel; albertp; AlexandriaDuke; Alexander Rubin; Allerious; ...
In Katrina ... Those who depended on themselves rather than government did leave while those who had faith in government had no initiative to control their own destiny.

In the Gulf oil spill ... We have seen countless stories in the news of innovation and ingenuity by Americans attempting to bring proven applications, equipment and tactics to bear on the oil. Each attempt is met with the same federal dithering, inaction and impedance.


Excellent.



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3 posted on 06/16/2010 10:36:23 AM PDT by bamahead (Few men desire liberty; most men wish only for a just master. -- Sallust)
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To: K-oneTexas

With Katrina those in New Orleans suffered because of their chosen “leaders” on the local side of things.


4 posted on 06/16/2010 10:42:39 AM PDT by MissEdie (America went to the polls on 11-4-08 and all we got was a socialist thug and a dottering old fool.)
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To: MissEdie

I agree. If memory serves the feds and FEMA were ready to come however the Louisiana Governor (or a State Agency) would not ask to declare a national emergency to allow the feds to take charge.

Unlike neighboring Alabama.


5 posted on 06/16/2010 10:45:14 AM PDT by K-oneTexas (I'm not a judge and there ain't enough of me to be a jury. (Zell Miller, A National Party No More))
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To: K-oneTexas

One thing left out of this excellent article is how the various ethnic communities dealt with Katrina. The residents of the Ninth Ward mostly waited for some government agency to come in and fix things. Many are still waiting, and quite perturbed about the “slow response.”

The Vietnamese community immediately rolled up their sleeves and got to work repairing their own shops and homes, not waiting for someone else to do it for them.

Of course, the MSM unfairly tarred Bush with the responsibility for dealing with Katrina, even though Nagin and Blanco both shared the primary responsibility of submitted formal requests for federal intervention.

Like personal safety and defense, you can never successfully delegate responsibility for you own well being to someone else.

You’d think our fearless leader would have enough wisdom to look at all solutions presented, rather than using this crisis for a way to ram his green agenda down America’s throat...


6 posted on 06/16/2010 10:50:37 AM PDT by Tigerized (pursuingliberty.com)
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To: K-oneTexas

Well except this time it is the Federal Government’s job for the clean up.


7 posted on 06/16/2010 10:58:31 AM PDT by Freddd (CNN is down to Three Hundred Thousand viewers. But they worked for it.)
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To: Freddd

I guess it is out of State Waters but in US waters so yes.

However I wonder:

Why were the States not allowed to act withing theirown boundaries to protect state and citizens property?

Why we can not accept assistance from others who might know more and have a bit more expertise in these matters than the ‘Brain Trust’ we have assembled?

Soooooooo many questions ... soooooooo few answers!


8 posted on 06/16/2010 11:02:34 AM PDT by K-oneTexas (I'm not a judge and there ain't enough of me to be a jury. (Zell Miller, A National Party No More))
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To: K-oneTexas
Every time I hear the name Katrina, I think "I'm Walking on Sunshine, oh yeah!"

Don't think that about BP.

9 posted on 06/16/2010 11:09:04 AM PDT by Tanniker Smith (Obi-Wan Palin: Strike her down and she shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.)
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To: Tigerized

Most people aren’t aware that the Democrats held a congressional hearing on Katrina in order to further hype the Bush administration’s failings. They invited the craziest “community activists” they could find and had people claiming to have heard the bombs explode that Bush used to flood New Orleans. One old loon said she saw the explosions “from my porch”.


10 posted on 06/16/2010 11:10:38 AM PDT by Deb (Beat him, strip him and bring him to my tent!)
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To: K-oneTexas; bamahead; traviskicks; freepatriot32; Annie03; Blue Jays; BroncosFan; billybudd; ...
See: KATRINA: WHAT WENT RIGHT

Debunking the Myths of Hurricane Katrina: Special Report (Popular Mechanics)

An Unnatural Disaster: A Hurricane Exposes the Man-Made Disaster of the Welfare State

11 posted on 06/16/2010 11:40:24 AM PDT by FreeKeys (Letting ignorant folks vote is like giving a hammer to a toddler. Or a nuclear weapon to a nutcase.)
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To: K-oneTexas

Have you plugged the damn hole yet, Mack Daddy?

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/2505164/posts?page=248#248


12 posted on 06/16/2010 11:46:08 AM PDT by Matchett-PI ("If Obama Won, Then Why Won't Democrats Run on His Agenda?" ~ Rush Limbaugh - May 19, 2010)
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To: FreeKeys

Bookmark.


13 posted on 06/16/2010 12:03:53 PM PDT by Cyropaedia ("Virtue cannot separate itself from reality without becoming a principal of evil...".)
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To: bamahead

Reminds me of what happened with the Hayman fire in CO years back. Folks in a town in the path of it wanted to use their bulldozers to make a fire break around the town and the Feds wouldn’t let them. Environmentalists crying about taking down the trees with no thought that they would all be burned up ANYWAY... Absolute insanity. Everything is left up to the government now — no community spirit (unless its AFTER the gov’t has failed in one way or another). Everyone assumes it’s someone else’s job, and for those who are willing to tackle the problems themselves they are even TOLD it’s someone else’s job and to steer clear — even if there really is not gov’t counterpart on the job already...


14 posted on 06/16/2010 12:14:37 PM PDT by LibertyRocks (http://libertyrocks.wordpress.com ~ Anti-Obama Gear: http://cafepress.com/NO_ObamaBiden08)
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To: K-oneTexas
Milton Friedman once asked why people assume that political self-interest is somehow nobler than economic self-interest...

This line is worth the entire article.

15 posted on 06/16/2010 1:07:22 PM PDT by gogeo ("Every one has a right to be an idiot. He abuses the privilege!" Groucho Marx)
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To: All
Here's the full text of President Obama's speech about the BP disaster/gusher in the Gulf of Mexico ...

Obama's Remarks To Nation On Oil Spill [Full Text]


16 posted on 06/16/2010 1:46:59 PM PDT by Star Traveler (Remember to keep the Messiah of Israel in the One-World Government that we look forward to coming)
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To: Matchett-PI
Actually, he's making fun of Sarah Palin, and her comments about plugging the hole.

Keep it up, Obama, you're just making yourself more irrelevant by the day.

17 posted on 06/16/2010 1:55:28 PM PDT by SuziQ
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To: K-oneTexas

“In Katrina, the people of the Mississippi Gulf Coast were hit by the brunt of the storm surge. Total devastation. This wasn’t just some flooding caused by the breach of a Democrat Parish maintained levy.”

The levees, not levy, failed due to a design flaw by the Army Corps of Engineers. This was a fact that was admitted to by their then chief, Lt.General Carl Strock, when he testified before a senate committee in April of 2006. Because of that and the subsequent flooding that resulted, 80% of New Orleans, a city with a pre Katrina population of approx. 460,000 people, was laid to waste.

Excerpt from article linked below-

” A botched design has long been suspected by independent forensic engineers probing the levee failures. A panel of engineering experts confirmed it last month in a report saying the “I-wall” design could not withstand the force of the rising water in the canal and triggered the breach.

But until Wednesday the corps, which designed and oversaw construction of the levees, had not explicitly taken responsibility for the mistake.

“We have now concluded we had problems with the design of the structure,” Strock told members of the subcommittee that finances corps operations. “We had hoped that wasn’t the case, but we recognize it is the reality.”

Experts from the National Science Foundation, the external review panel for the corps, said potential problems have been known for some time. They cited a 1986 corps study that warned of just such separations in the floodwalls.

But Strock told the panel that the corps was unaware of the potential hazard before Aug. 29, when Hurricane Katrina drove a massive surge of water against New Orleans’ storm-protection system. He said the corps is evaluating all the levees to see whether they, too, could fail in the same way.”

http://web.archive.org/web/20070930185042/http://www.nola.com/frontpage/t-p/index.ssf?/base/news-5/1144306231230500.xml


18 posted on 06/16/2010 4:44:15 PM PDT by Mila
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To: K-oneTexas
Some good information here, but I don't know about the conclusion.

Business weren't more environmentally conscious before government came on the scene and they won't be if government bows out of environmental regulation entirely.

Plus, BP hasn't been a paragon of responsibility. They contracted out a lot of their operations, so they really aren't on top of what they're doing. Their internal screw-ups aren't so very different from what goes on in government.

Rather than pitting good business against bad government or vice versa, one has to understand how all sorts of systems break down, make mistakes, and undermine their own stated objectives.

19 posted on 06/16/2010 5:19:20 PM PDT by x
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