Category Archives: Current Affairs

Bleeping Government!

Someone has put together a wiki called "Hurricane Katrina Timeline" and it’s cured me of the malaise I was beginning to feel;  I’m pretty much ticked off all over again.

For those of you not familiar with them wikis are a kind of "open" website that allows people to contribute to them and edit them freely.  What that means is that you get multiple authors and some will get their facts wrong, or even intentionally write misleading or erroneous contributions.  They are usually corrected by other contributors so the net effect is that you quickly get a comprehensive "document" from multiple sources.

I would never source a wiki for a court case or a research paper, but in general they are reliable sources of information in general.  In this case if even 50% of the information is correct it’s a damning statement about the performance of the US government in response to the Katrina disaster.

Reading List September 5, 2005

  • The Age of Cheap Oil and Easy Ignorance is Over (Dave’s Travels) – Dave says we need to share responsibility for creating the situation that led to the disastrous response to the aftermath of the Katrina disaster.
  • What Dave Said (Rex Hammock) – Rex, who is Dave’s (see above) political polar opposite, says that people with opposite political leanings, but similar "foundational convictions" end up coming full circle to meet each other.
  • You Can’t Cross-Examine a Hurricane (Is that Legal? via Ed Cone) – I’ll let the post speak for itself: "Mike Chertoff is probably one of the 2 or 3 smartest people I have ever known…
    Mike Chertoff is a career prosecutor, and an outstanding one by any
    measure. He is a law enforcement guy in every fiber of his being. It’s
    how he made his name…Mike Chertoff doesn’t know natural disasters.  This is why he would say, without seeing the absurdity of it, that a hurricane followed by breached levees was an unforeseeable succession of catastrophes, rather than foreseeable parts of the same catastrophe…So what do I think? I think that we are seeing what happens when a
    career prosecutor tries his hand at civilian disaster relief. And more
    generally, I think we are seeing what happens when a nation gets so
    fixated on its human enemies that it forgets its other vulnerabilities."
  • Bush’s Hurricane Response Time (Joe Write) – Joe compare’s the time it took Bush to get on the ground after different hurricanes.
  • War on Error (Doc Searls) – Doc describes quite well the issues we face as our national priorities change and we focus on the politics of governance as well as the politics of elections.  Yes, they are different.
  • The Scandal of Katrina (Buzz Machine) – Jeff Jarvis has quotes from two sources, one an editorial from the Times-Picayune and the other an interview with the president of Jefferson Parish that call for the immediate firing/replacement of the leaders of FEMA.  They offer compelling testimony for why this is necessary now, not later. Not sure if I agree with them, but like I said it is compelling.
  • The Bursting Point (New York Times) – David Brooks compares the current climate in America to the 70s; he doesn’t think it’s quite as bad thanks to a robust economy, but he thinks it’s still bad enough that we’ll see political changes.  Personally I’m wondering if the economy might start looking like the 70s too.
  • The Unsinkable Data Center (business2blog) – Seems that there’s a data center in New Orleans that has stayed operational throughout the disaster thanks to a diesel generator and a deeply buried cable.  An employee has kept his blog going throughout as well.  A full article from a Wired magazine about the center is here.  And in the ironic news of the day, the data center was built by Enron:)

Next Elections Could Make for Radical Change

Before you read the rest of this let me say that I know that emotions are running high in America right now, but that said I think we’re all going to have some strong convictions as a result of the national trauma we’ve experienced over the last week.

In a post I wrote a couple of days ago I said that I’m ready to get busy working so that our next round of elections get us a better set of leaders than our current crop, leaders that can make sure our government actually does the bare minimum of providing protection, care and comfort in a time of crisis.  (Please note that if I lived in Louisiana I’d be working, after things have settled down, to get rid of everyone from bottom to top, but since I don’t I’m going to focus on those I can actually vote for.  The leadership has failed at all levels here.) Well, it looks like there are some other online writers who feel the same way.  Here’s the list of those I’ve come across, some liberal and some conservative.  I’ll update if I find more.  It is followed by some quotes I found to be enlightening or thought provoking:

Here are some quotes:

"When the blaming stops and
the fixing truly begins, we’ll need more than our government
organizations to step forward. As citizens, and as groups of citizens,
will need to do what government simply can’t do.

Yes, we need bureaucracies. But bureaucracies can’t imagine anything. Including predictable acts of God.

People, on the other hand, can.

In the War on Error, people will need to take the lead. Governments will need to follow or get out of the way."

Doc Searls

The twin blows of 9/11 and Katrina are a wake up call for our
country.  We aren’t all that.  We are humans just like all the other
humans living on planet earth.  We are vulnerable like everyone else.
We may be be a "superpower" but what is that worth if we can’t protect
our own citizens?

I hope and believe that we are on the cusp of a new political
order.  We’ve had the liberal excesses of the democrat’s run from the
depression through Vietnam.  We’ve had the conservative excesses of the
republican’s run from Vietman through Iraq.

It’s time we get back to electing people to govern who know
something about leading, operating, and managing.  We need pragmatic
moderates who make the hard decisions without caring about the
political impact. We need civil servants in the mold of George
Washington, Teddy Roosevelt, and Dwight Eisenhower.  We need people who
care about the details of governing rather than the details of getting
elected.

–Fred Wilson

The ultimate donation every American can make is at the ballot box.
We need a gov’t filled with people that care and put caring about
people above everything else. This isn’t a political party issue,
rather an issue at the individual level.

When you go to the ballot box and before you make that pick, just ask yourself this:

“If I was in trouble from a 9/11 or Katrina situation, would this
person care? Would they go bananas with making sure I and my fellow
Americans were taken care of?”

Put aside all others issues because this one really matters. It realy can “happen here” and likely will happen again.

We need a gov’t that cares. It really is that simple.

–Rick Segal

We got the government we deserve, all of us, not just the
Republicans. If we’re going to eschew blame, let’s not blame people
who, like us, voted against someone they didn’t think would be a good
president. There were ample reasons to think that Gore and Kerry would
not have been good for our country.

If we have to blame anyone, let’s take the blame ourselves. We
thought we could get by without getting involved. If ever it was
obvious that we must get involved, now is that time. First there are
people to help, so many, that we must all help. Then there’s a city to
rebuild, and that’s going to require a shift in thinking about the
environment. There’s no maybe about it. On Meet The Press yesterday, a
panel of people who clearly know what they’re talking about said that
New Orleans’s present is the future for all coastal cities. A rising
ocean level has the same effect for coastal cities as dropping land
level (which is what happened in New Orleans). We have to change our
way of life if we want New York, Boston, Houston, Miami, Seattle, San
Francisco and Los Angeles to survive. And that’s true of every coastal
city in every country, not just the United States.

–Dave Winer

I guess I’m one of "those people," (however my voting record is clearly
bi-partisan), but when it comes to fundamental and foundational
convictions, I guess Dave and I prove that political persuasions, like
the earth, can be round. When it comes to philosophical or political
arguments, two people can head in opposite directions and go as far
away from one-another as can be imagined. But when they share certain
fundamental convictions regarding character and responsibility and
mutual-respect, they often find themselves meeting up with one other on
the opposite side of their perceived differences.

–Rex Hammock

CNN skewers
the astonishing claim by Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff
— who’s apparently channeling Bush’s earlier lie that no one
anticpated the levee failures — that government planners couldn’t have
predicted the disaster, when exactly these predictions abounded over
the years.

And Knight Ridder looks at the political crony background
of the grossly unqualified — and, as we’ve seen in the past week,
flagrantly incompetent — head of the Federal Emergency Management
Agency, Michael Brown. Naturally, Bush effusively praised this
character during the week, just one more tone-deaf demonstration from
the president.

Now the administration is doing everything it can to shift all responsibility for error
onto the local officials, as the Washington Post reports today. Such
stand-up people, these unnamed characters assassins for a government
that couldn’t pull its act together for long, cruel days, when events
demanded an instant response in the absence of actual planning.

Yes, there’s responsibility to go around in state and local circles. But the federal failings are simply horrendous.

Meanwhile, the heroes keep on working: the police and National Guard
and doctors and nurses and battalions of people who are doing their
jobs at great personal cost. They humble the rest of us. And they shame
the government "leaders" — or would, if shame was a meaningful concept
to the people at the top of the pyramid.

–Dan Gillmor

The first rule of the social fabric – that in times of crisis you
protect the vulnerable – was trampled. Leaving the poor in New Orleans
was the moral equivalent of leaving the injured on the battlefield. No
wonder confidence in civic institutions is plummeting…

Katrina means that the political culture, already sour and
bloody-minded in many quarters, will shift. There will be a reaction.
There will be more impatience for something new. There is going to be
some sort of big bang as people respond to the cumulative blows of bad
events and try to fundamentally change the way things are.

Reaganite conservatism was the response to the pessimism and
feebleness of the 1970’s. Maybe this time there will be a progressive
resurgence. Maybe we are entering an age of hardheaded law and order.
(Rudy Giuliani, an unlikely G.O.P. nominee a few months ago, could now
win in a walk.) Maybe there will be call for McCainist patriotism and
nonpartisan independence. All we can be sure of is that the political
culture is about to undergo some big change.

We’re not really at a tipping point as much as a bursting point. People are mad as hell, unwilling to take it anymore.

–David Brooks

Amazing Web Site for Tracking Katrina Damage

There’s a website called scipionus.com that is a "mashup" of a wiki (an "open" website that allows users to add information themselves) and Google maps that allows people to input data about conditions at specific addresses on the map.

If you go to the site click on any of the balloons in an area you’re interested in, then zoom in.  You can see that people are putting in an address and then information like, "Wind damage, no power and no flooding.  Looting is rampant, pure anarchy."

As Steven Leavitt of Freakonomics describes the site:

"Surfing around, the devastation doesn’t seem as bad on the wiki as it
does on TV. Houses a block or two from Lake Pontchartrain with no
flooding, for instance. This shouldn’t be surprising. TV is only
showing us the worst. The people in good enough shape to be entering
info on the website are probably heavily selected towards those who
fared well. The truth is probably somewhere in between."

Reading List September 3, 2005

  • Ballmer Throws a Chair at "F*ing Google" (John Battelle’s Search Blog) – John has an excerpt from a legal document in the case where Microsoft is suing Google over the hiring of a valued techie.  It is the testimony of someone else who left Microsoft for Google and it involves Ballmer doing a Bobby Knight with a chair and calling Google’s CEO an "f*ing p*ssy."  Nice.
  • Horror Show (Crooks and Liars) – There’s a link to a Hannity & Colmes segment from last night that is remarkable in that the reporters in New Orleans (Geraldo Rivera and Shepard Smith) pretty much take the government to task for the response to Katrina and don’t let the hosts spin this thing at all.

Some People Think It and Say It So Much Better

Prompted by the developments surrounding Katrina, Fred Wilson posted his thoughts on our country and they dovetail nicely with my own.  Of course he says it much better and more concisely than I ever could.  Here’s the most important part:

I hope and believe that we are on the cusp of a new political
order.  We’ve had the liberal excesses of the democrat’s run from the
depression through Vietnam.  We’ve had the conservative excesses of the
republican’s run from Vietman through Iraq.

It’s time we get back to electing people to govern who know
something about leading, operating, and managing.  We need pragmatic
moderates who make the hard decisions without caring about the
political impact. We need civil servants in the mold of George
Washington, Teddy Roosevelt, and Dwight Eisenhower.  We need people who
care about the details of governing rather than the details of getting
elected.

Congress is back up for election next year and alot of governors are on the line as well.  Let’s get started.

Reading List September 2, 2005

  • Destroying FEMA (The Washington Post) – The Post looks at what the Department of Homeland Security is doing to FEMA.
  • Book Publishing and Management: Still Working Out the Kinks (The Post Money Value) – Book publishers are dinosaurs.
  • Katrina Heroes (Reveries.com) – What some people are doing to help Katrina relief cause.  Notable number: as of noon on Aug. 31 about $100 million had been raised from the private sector, and $70 million of that was raised by the Red Cross.

It’s Our Fault, It’s Our Responsibility

Just like most people in America I’ve been watching the reports from New Orleans and the rest of the Gulf Coast and wondering what the hell is going on.  I’m all the adjectives everybody’s been throwing around: shocked, horrified, disgusted, angry, etc.

My first instinct is also like most peoples’ and that is to find someone to blame.  But from past experiences (all bad) like this I’ve learned to vent those sentiments on someone I trust (my wife), wait for the emotions to simmer down and then do some serious pondering. Here’s where my first round of pondering leaves me:

  • The president is an easy target.  I haven’t liked his style or his policies for a while now and of course my first instinct was to say, "Damnit, it’s all his fault for (fill in the litany of reasons here)."  Well, you know, we hired the president and the other leaders in this country.  Ultimately it’s our fault for not demanding better services, better policies, better people to run this country.
  • It’s OUR tax dollars, no matter what Brit Hume and his a-hole buddies think.  Not mine, not yours, not theirs.  It’s ours.  That means that we must demand to know why those tax dollars can’t be used to protect our weak and vulnerable compatriots.  Right now this isn’t about poverty and welfare, that’s a longer, larger debate for  another time.  It’s about the fact that a natural disaster has occured within America’s own confines, something that can happen to any one of us, and we weren’t there to help.  I say "we" because this is our country, these are our hired hands that failed to prepare adequately.
  • I have no problem with people asking the president and the rest of the leadership tough questions now, and not later.  Why?  Because it lights a fire under the asses of those who are giving the orders.  I have no doubt that the grunts are working their butts off in incredibly hard circumstances, but it seems painfully obvious that someone needs to push the people at the top.  Case in point:
  • How the hell did the leadership not have some kind of system in place to regularly check all of the major buildings in New Orleans for survivors, especially in the dry areas?  If a reporter and an entertainer (Harry Connick, Jr.) can get to the convention center and find thousands of starving people in desperate need of help how can leaders not know that?  Their response when asked about the convention center was "We just found out about it."  That’s crap.  And now that they know about it, where’s the help?  At a minimum can’t they just drop some water there for some people? ** Update: at about 2:50 on Friday CNN reported that a relief convoy made it to the Convention Center.**
  • We’re responsible for this.  As such we should do whatever it takes to help, and if that means writing a check to whomever then I guess we need to do it.  But when things are settled down we need to ask why the checks we write to Uncle Sam every year aren’t sufficient to at least provide the minimum of what I government is supposed to provide and that’s the protection of our citizens from unnecessary death and destruction.  Remember, we have our next chance to hire and fire the leadership of this country next year.
  • We need to send the message that this is our country, all of us together.  We should demand that at a minimum the government will provide protection for our people.  Our employees have screwed up and we need to put the screws to them.  Enough is enough.

Finally, I want to say to everyone that I’m sorry.  The adjective I didn’t use before to describe my reaction is the one feeling that dominates my soul today: regret.  I regret not being more forceful in communicating my demands to our leaders.  I regret not being more involved, for being too moderate. In my own small way I’m responsible for what has happened this week, and for that I’m eternally sorry.  I’ll try and make sure it doesn’t happen again.

My family and friends already know that I don’t care if we’re talking Republicans, Democrats, Libertarians or Independents because they’re all the same to me.  I care only about what they actually do, and I can tell you I’m not satisfied with what we’ve got now and if I have anything to do with it they’re gone as soon as possible.

Reading List September 1, 2005

  • Kids Just Get It (The Post Money Value) – While at dinner Rick Segal overheard a child say the following after hearing about benefit concerts being put together for Katrina victims: “How come they have to do music to get help, don’t people just want to help?”
  • Fred Barnes to Katrina Victims: Drop Dead (New Hounds) – Conservative pundits behaving badly.
  • Rant on the Hurricane (The Chairman’s Corner) – The Guilford County (NC) Republican Party is in deep doo-doo.  Why?  Just read a few posts from this guy’s blog for some clues.
  • Wedding Canceled (Patrick Eakes) – Anecdotal testimony from people on the ground in Louisiana.

Reading List August 31, 2005

  • Should New Orleans Be Rebuilt? (BuzzMachine) – Jeff Jarvis asks the question I suspect many Americans are thinking and he gets dozens of remarkably un-troll-like comments.
  • Is Dell Dying? (Slate) – The headline is really, well stupid.  But the article itself takes a hard look at Dell’s real business problems for the near future.
  • Terry’s Fortune Escapes High Point (Off the Record via Ed Cone) – Randall Terry, a local millionaire in High Point, NC died last year and his largest beneficiaries are his dogs ($1,000,000 +) and his foundation.  The foundation is principally focused on funding the NC State Veterinary school and Terry’s old boarding school in Virginia, so High Point won’t get any help from a man remembered as a true scrooge by the editorial writer.
  • Cover Your Eyes, Kids (Patrick Eakes) – Patrick, winner of the most popular Greensboro blog contest (I need to ask him if he gets to wear a tiara), doesn’t like how the NC Senate passed the lottery bill.  He’s right.
  • The Angry, Hate-Filled Left (OpinionEditorials) – I read this site every once in a while to keep an eye on what the "Righties" are saying.  I disagree with a lot of what this guys says, but I agree with his main point: while we (Americans) are all guaranteed the right to free speech that doesn’t mean we should not also show restraint.  By the way his title could just as easily be "The Angry, Hate-Filled Right."
  • Downturns (A VC) – Fred Wilson senses an economic downturn coming and has some good advice on how to deal with it, at least from an investor’s perspective.
  • National Bottle Museum (bookofjoe) – My neighbor, Curt Ewing, is an avid bottle collector will love finding this if he doesn’t already know about it.
  • Logistics of New Orleans’ Kidney Transplant (Moore’s Lore) – Dana Blankenhorn is thinking about the logistics of rebuilding New Orleans.  He’s right, it’s daunting.
  • Conservatism: A House Divided (Conservative Voice via Vie de Malchance) – Pat Buchanan writes an opinion piece on the state of the Republican Party.  My favorite quote: "
    But on spending, Bush and Congress do not even meet the Clinton standard. They qualify as Great Society Conservatives."
  • Copter Parents at 2 O’Clock! (Daniel Drezner) – Colleges are finding that this generation of students has parents that are "hyper-involved" in their lives, interfering with their childrens’ non-academic, problem-solving educational experience.  Sorry to see that namby-pamby parenting extends beyond middle-school.