Government Corruption |
CHUCK DEVORE: Comparing Biden-Harris bungled Helene response to past disasters |
2024-10-06 |
[FoxNews] Media attacked Bush over Katrina, but ignores Biden-Harris failures as Americans suffer. For five days, the U.S. Army’s helicopters stayed on the ground. The Biden-Harris administration’s response to Hurricane Helene has been slow, weak, and deadly—but, except for Fox News, you wouldn’t know it from the major media. Hurricane Helene made landfall on Thursday, Sept. 26, at 11:10 p.m. The following Thursday, a reporter asked President Joe Biden about the storm zone. Biden responded, "Oh, storm zone? I don’t know which storm you’re talking about…" Biden then recovered and claimed, "They are getting what they need, and they are very happy across the board." The day before, five full days after the storm dumped up to 30 inches of rain in some mountain locations, Biden ordered 1,000 active-duty troops to provide assistance with 22 helicopters as well as tactical vehicles from Fort Liberty (formerly Fort Bragg), some 250 miles east of hard-hit Asheville, N.C. There are about 50 utility helicopters in the 82d Airborne Division’s Combat Aviation Brigade at Fort Liberty. The military installation in Fayetteville, the U.S. Army’s largest, has almost 100,000 active-duty and reserve soldiers available for presidential call-up—so, Biden sent 1% of Fort Liberty’s personnel and less than half of the base’s much-needed helicopter inventory. Meanwhile, the federal government’s emergency management arm, FEMA, warned it’s out of money because it has spent $1.4 billion on aid to "sanctuary cities" swamped with illegal aliens and mostly fake asylum seekers. FEMA said it sent 150 generators to the stricken region. But there are at least double that number of generators available for purchase within an hour’s drive of any typical city. Displaced citizens in the Appalachian region hit by Helene are at risk of illness due to contaminated water—and in danger from human traffickers who prey upon the confused, weak, and vulnerable. The hundreds of military police from Fort Liberty’s 503rd Military Police Battalion and the 82nd MP Company could prove a powerful deterrent in shelters—if they were activated. So, how does the Biden-Harris disaster response compare to other recent events? The media and Democrats heaped scorn on President George H.W. Bush’s federal response to the L.A. Riots in 1992 and then again on President George W. Bush’s Hurricane Katrina actions in 2005. I was a California Army National Guard captain during the 1992 L.A. Riots. Within three days, we had 10,000 Guard soldiers on the ground, quelling looting and arson. Rioting started the evening of April 29. The following evening, a National Guard MP company was on the scene. The next day, 4,000 Guard soldiers were in the city and President Bush ordered active-duty Army and Marine forces into action as well as 1,000 federal law enforcement officers. By May 2, there were 10,000 Guard members and 3,500 active-duty soldiers and Marines keeping order in L.A. So, the elder Bush ordered 3,500 active-duty personnel into L.A. three days into the emergency while Biden took five days to decide to send 1,000 soldiers to help. Hurricane Katrina made landfall on Monday, Aug. 29, 2005, around 4:30 a.m. At Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco’s request, President George W. Bush had issued an emergency declaration on Saturday, Aug. 27, two days before landfall. Within a day of impact, U.S. Coast Guard helicopters were already working, rescuing some 350 people from rooftops. Bush viewed the devastation from the air on Aug. 31 and was roundly criticized for flying over, rather than seeing things on the ground. On Sept. 1, Bush asked Gov. Blanco to allow a federal takeover of the relief efforts, which by then included 15,256 Guard members expected to grow to more than 40,000 personnel from neighboring states. Bush visited the scene of the disaster only two days after landfall. Two days after Helene, Biden was on the beach in Delaware, "commanding," as he claimed, with two hours of phone calls. Vice President Kamala Harris was fundraising on the West Coast. The U.S. military’s chain of command for this disaster runs from Biden to Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin to the commander of the U.S. Northern Command. Biden’s slow and confused response to Hurricane Helene—taking two more days to come to grips with the crisis than did his two recent predecessors—speaks of a president who is out of touch and not up to the job. The Biden-Harris administration’s sluggish and half-hearted disaster response has put hundreds of thousands of Americans at risk in Helene’s swath of destruction. Biden’s lackluster engagement in the most powerful office on the planet puts the entire nation in peril as the world spirals into chaos while Harris focuses her time and energy on running to replace Biden while hiding from the media. |
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Home Front: Politix |
Indian-American Governor Suggested For Republican VP |
2008-03-09 |
Somehow, being the first Indian-American and the youngest person ever elected to govern a US state wasn't enough. Within weeks of taking office, rising Republican star Piyush "Bobby" Jindal's name was thrown into the ring as a possible vice-presidential candidate by influential conservative talk show host Rush Limbaugh. And some say the 36-year-old son of Punjabi immigrants could make a great president if he plays his cards right. A cowboy boot-wearing social conservative, Jindal built his political support among Christian conservatives and middle-class whites with his promises to cut taxes, tighten government spending and impose a total ban on abortions. Since taking office on January 14, the new governor is winning respect from blacks, liberals and other traditional Democrats with his ethics reforms and a vigorous approach to economic progress. "Bobby Jindal is striking a chord with Democrats. They're saying, 'I love Bobby Jindal and I am so glad he's our governor," said Democratic media consultant Cheron Brylski who calls Jindal "Louisiana's last hope." "There is also an overwhelming pride about having a minority governor," she said in an interview. Jindal's youthful enthusiasm and ability to bridge calcified divides of race and party has led some to see him as the Republican party's answer to Democratic presidential hopeful Barack Obama. "Jindal is not near the poet that Obama is -- yet -- but he has a great story to tell," said political consultant Allan Katz. Born in Baton Rouge in 1971 to recent immigrants from India's northern Punjab state, Jindal's career in this southern state once known for deep racial differences has been meteoric. His father, an engineer and one of nine children of a poor rural family, came to the United States so that his mother could continue her graduate work in nuclear physics. Jindal took easily to US culture. As a boy, he adopted his nickname "Bobby" from a character on "The Brady Bunch" television show. As a teenager, he converted to Roman Catholicism from Hinduism. A policy wonk and Rhodes scholar who graduated from Oxford University, Jindal was appointed secretary of Louisiana's health department at age 24. Three years later he was handed the helm of the state's higher education system after being tapped by President George W. Bush to head a national commission on medical insurance reform. In his first major political setback, Jindal was narrowly defeated by Kathleen Blanco when he ran for governor in 2003. But he was then elected to Congress in 2004 from a suburban New Orleans district, and won reelection in 2006, one year after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita devastated New Orleans and put a harsh spotlight on state and local government incompetence -- opening the door for his second quest for the governor's office. Katz says he has not seen so much public enthusiasm for a governor in decades. "Bobby Jindal is off to a great start," he told AFP. "He knows how to build public support, work the media and to bring public pressure to get his stuff passed." For now, Jindal is focused on lifting the state of Louisiana from the barnacled bottom of national quality-of-life rankings. His first foray was to attack the culture of corruption which has long dominated Louisiana politics. Sunday, Jindal launches another special session aimed at improving infrastructure, cutting taxes on business, and boosting hurricane protection and coastal restoration as the legislature sorts out how to spend a 1.2 billion dollar surplus... India would utterly lose its marbles, in a good way, if he was selected for VP. |
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Bobby Jindal governor of Louisiana |
2007-10-22 |
![]() Mr. Jindal and his 11 challengers were running to replace Gov. Kathleen Babineaux Blanco, a Democrat who decided in March not to run for re-election. She was widely criticized for her handling of the response to Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005. Mrs. Blanco had defeated Mr. Jindal in the 2003 runoff election. At 11 p.m. local time last night, with 87 percent of the precincts reporting, Mr. Jindal had 588,002 votes (53 percent), enough to avoid a Nov. 17 runoff. His closest challenger, millionaire state Sen. Walter Boasso, a Democrat, had 196,104 votes (18 percent), followed by New Orleans businessman John Georges, an independent, with 156,962 (14 percent) and Public Service Commissioner Foster Campbell, a Democrat, with 141,346 votes (13 percent). |
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Mayor Nagin's State of New Orleans Address: Gimme |
2007-05-31 |
![]() Nagin called on Bush to forgive millions of dollars in disaster loans the city took out after Hurricane Katrina struck Aug. 29, 2005, to help it continue to operate. He also called on Gov. Kathleen Blanco to tap into the state's surplus to help the city and other parts of the state still struggling to recover from Katrina and Hurricane Rita, which struck a month later. "Use the $3 billion surplus to ensure a strong future for our state," Nagin urged state lawmakers. "As New Orleans recovers, so does Louisiana." The speech comes just two days before the start of a new hurricane season, and against the backdrop of a city still fighting to recover from a storm 21 months ago. While more than half the city's pre-Katrina population is back, according to one recent estimate, swaths of some neighborhoods remain in shambles, with houses empty and many small businesses ailing or shuttered. Violent crime, including a rash of recent killings that has brought the city's murder total for the year to at least 78, is a worry. And progress so far has been largely driven by private efforts, as local, state and federal officials have traded blame over the slow pace of rebuilding. As of mid-month, the city said it had received just $163 million in federal rebuilding aid, a fraction of the $1 billion or more it says it will need just to restore what Katrina damaged and with little earmarked for permanent infrastructure work. Nagin named a recovery director in December, and the director, Ed Blakely, unveiled a targeted $1.1 billion rebuilding plan in March. But funding for that plan is tenuous, with at least one-third of the money in doubt as the state considers using it to help bail out a homeowner aid program. |
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Blanco Bows Out of LA Governor's Race |
2007-03-21 |
Governor Kathleen Blanco (D-LA) has officially announced she will not seek re-election in the upcoming governor's race. She issued a letter to her staff Tuesday afternoon, stating: "Today, I am announcing that, after much thought and prayer, I have decided not to seek re-election as your governor." The news of Blanco's decision comes as no surprise to anyone who can read a poll. Governor Blanco struggled to keep her political life alive for months following hurricanes Katrina and Rita. The storms are blamed for not only destroying much of south Louisiana but Blanco's political career. But she kept up the face of a governor determined to stay the course, saying nearly 18 months ago, and again just last week, she would be on the ballot next October. |
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Governors lose in power struggle over National Guard |
2007-01-16 |
A little-noticed change in federal law packs an important change in who is in charge the next time a state is devastated by a disaster such as Hurricane Katrina. To the dismay of the nations governors, the White House now will be empowered to go over a governors head and call up National Guard troops to aid a state in time of natural disasters or other public emergencies. Up to now, governors were the sole commanders in chief of citizen soldiers in local Guard units during emergencies within the state. A conflict over who should control Guard units arose in the days after Hurricane Katrina in 2005. President Bush sought to federalize control of Guardsmen in Louisiana in the chaos after the hurricane, but Gov. Kathleen Blanco (D) refused to relinquish command. Over objections from all 50 governors, Congress in October tweaked the 200-year-old Insurrection Act to empower the hand of the president in future stateside emergencies. In a letter to Congress, the governors called the change "a dramatic expansion of federal authority during natural disasters that could cause confusion in the command-and-control of the National Guard and interfere with states' ability to respond to natural disasters within their borders." The change adds to tensions between governors and the White House after more than four years of heavy federal deployment of state-based Guard forces to fight in Iraq and Afghanistan. Since the 2001 terrorist attacks, four out of five guardsmen have been sent overseas in the largest deployment of the National Guard since World War II. |
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Gov Blanco (LA) gets snubbed in dinner auction |
2006-12-14 |
Funny we have to hear about this from The Guardian, eh? I googled "Governor Blanco auction" and this was the article I got. A local news agency's opinion website had a citizen tut-tutting the business class's snub of the Gov, and even said that Mr. Maddox (after paying $1 for dinner with the Gov at the mansion) gave the tickets to the Univ. of LA-Monroe "to do with how they saw fit." Quite the snub, methinks, right, Nigel? NEW ORLEANS (AP) - A chance to dine with embattled Gov. Kathleen Blanco fetched a winning bid of $1 at a recent fundraising auction hosted by a group of business leaders. Shows ya what LA's business class thinks of the Gov. There may be some sanity left in the most corrupt State in the Union. The president of the Monroe Chamber of Commerce, in northeastern Louisiana, said she called Blanco's office Tuesday to apologize for a "poor joke gone awry." Unlike Kerry's "stupid troops" joke, I actually get this one, and find it quite humorous! "It's something we deeply regret," chamber president Sue Edmunds said Wednesday. "Our organization has worked very well with the governor. We have been pleased with her efforts on behalf of this community." Dinner with Blanco was the last item up for bid at the fundraising auction last week. Edmunds said the bidding opened at $1,000 and dropped to $500 before the auctioneer accepted a $1 bid from bank executive Malcolm Maddox, a regional chairman for Capital One. Others were trying to bid on the dinner when the bidding abruptly closed, according to Edmunds. Sure! I can't fathom that a local Chamber of Commerce would refuse a higher bid. "We were all stunned," she added. "It was at the end of the auction, so there was no way to go back and amend that." An apologetic Maddox came forward Monday to donate $1,000 to the chamber, Edmunds said. He won't be dining at the governor's mansion, however: A chamber official will go in Maddox's place. more at link |
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Home Front: Culture Wars |
6 Killings Prompt Nagin's Call For National Guard |
2006-06-21 |
![]() Outraged New Orleans city leaders also called for state police help after a special meeting to address the killings in an area near the central business district. Detectives are knocking on doors and looking for anyone with information on the killings. Five teenagers were gunned down in a blaze of semiautomatic fire early Saturday. Police said drugs or revenge are possible motives in the teens' deaths. A was man was stabbed to death in an argument over beer on Sunday. Capt. John Bryson said police have no new leads to the killers, and are "begging citizens" who may have information to call Crimestoppers. City Council members are promising swift action against violence as the city tries to repair itself after Hurricane Katrina. Councilman Oliver Thomas said rising crime could slow both residents' return home and the return of tourism -- the city's biggest business before the hurricane. John Gagliano, chief investigator for the Orleans Parish coroner, identified the dead to The Times- Picayune newspaper as Reggie Dantzler, Iruan Taylor and Marquis Hunter, all 19 years old; 16-year-old Arsenio Hunter, and 17-year-old Warren Simoen, all of New Orleans. Bryson said none of the victims had any convictions, and police cannot comment on whether a victim had any other police record. National Guard troops roll into New Orleans |
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Hurricane Drill in Louisiana Canceled |
2006-05-24 |
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) -- A mock evacuation that was supposed to be part of a two-day statewide hurricane preparedness drill was canceled after a misunderstanding about who had jurisdiction over a Federal Emergency Management Agency trailer park. The two-day statewide drill that began Tuesday was aimed at avoiding the chaos that followed last year's deadly Hurricane Katrina, which hit the state Aug. 29 and killed more than 1,000 people. The drill is expected to continue Wednesday. The mock evacuation was to take place in the state's largest FEMA trailer park in Baker, 10 miles from Baton Rouge. The park has more than 500 camper-style travel trailers that house about 1,500 people displaced by Katrina. Officials are concerned about the safety of travel trailer residents in rough winds. There are more than 200,000 people statewide living in unfinished homes and mobile trailers. But the Baker evacuation was canceled because of an apparent communication breakdown, said JoAnne Moreau, director of the East Baton Rouge Parish Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness. "We were unable to get any information from the state or federal government on what policies or procedures were for evacuating those sites - whose jurisdiction it was," Moreau said. "We're very disappointed we didn't get to work with the people who live on the trailer site." After the parish canceled the drill, FEMA asked park management to drive around the park with bullhorns and simulate an evacuation notice, according to Tony Robinson, response and recovery director for FEMA Region 6, which includes Louisiana. Baker Police Chief Sid Gautreaux said that evacuating the people in the trailers is a problem because residents are not allowed to have land-based telephone lines, their cell phones do not have good signals and a majority of them do not have transportation. In New Orleans, dozens of make-believe evacuees boarded evacuation buses while state and federal officials in Baton Rouge planned to reroute traffic and call up the National Guard as a fictitious "Hurricane Alicia" swirled in the Gulf of Mexico. As the drills got underway, "Alicia" was less than two days away after taking a somewhat erratic and unpredictable path in the Gulf of Mexico and building to dangerous Category 3 strength. Gov. Kathleen Blanco threw officials at the state Office of Emergency Preparedness in Baton Rouge a curve - adding a scenario in which a nuclear power plant north of Baton Rouge caught fire, forcing the closure of U.S Highway 61 as an evacuation route. Bar-coded wrist bands and computers will help officials keep track of evacuees. Last year, as Hurricane Katrina approached, thousands of New Orleans' poor were left behind because they had no transportation, could not afford to leave or did not know where to go. The Louisiana Superdome and the convention center became shelters of last resort where thousands sweltered for days, suffering through shortages of food and water. Mayor Ray Nagin has said there will be no shelters in the city this time. Scientists predict the 2006 Atlantic hurricane season, which begins June 1 and runs through November, could produce 16 named storms, including six major hurricanes. |
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In New Video, Blanco Says Levees Are Safe |
2006-03-03 |
![]() In fact, the National Weather Service received a report of a levee breach and issued a flash-flood warning as early as 9:12 a.m. that day, according to the White House's formal recounting of events the day Katrina struck. Critics have maintained the Homeland Security Department responded too slowly to the breaches, delaying repair efforts and allowing flooding to worsen. Formal reports of New Orleans' levee breaches reached the White House by 6 p.m., and the administration confirmed the damage by the next morning, according to the White House's recount. In the video of the conference call, Blanco appears uncertain about the reliability of her information and cautioned that the situation "could change." Blanco said floodwaters were rising in parts of the city "where we have waters that are 8 to 10 feet deep, and we have people swimming in there." "That's got a considerable amount of water itself," the governor said. "That's about all I know right now on the specifics that you haven't heard." |
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Rift showing between Blanco and black lawmakers |
2005-11-10 |
Melinda Deslatte / Associated Press BATON ROUGE -- A noticeable public rift has developed between Gov. Kathleen Blanco and Louisiana's black lawmakers at a critical time for a state struggling to recover from back-to-back hurricanes. Disagreements have emerged over the types of hurricane recovery items that Blanco included in the special legislative session to deal with the aftermath of hurricanes Katrina and Rita and the items that she didn't put up for debate. But the Louisiana Legislative Black Caucus called attention to its displeasure this week when the group filed a lawsuit against Blanco, saying the governor didn't have the legal authority to slash $431 million in state spending by executive order. The caucus asked a judge to reverse those deep budget cuts that Blanco handed down Saturday. The developments have added new wrinkles to a tense budget-cutting process in the Legislature and a special session that was supposed to be a significant stamp on hurricane recovery for Louisiana by Blanco and lawmakers. The disputes cut into Blanco's traditional support from Democratic black lawmakers and put her at odds with many of the legislative leaders she helped select. Louisiana's governor has a heavy hand in choosing top leaders in the Legislature and committee chairman. Blanco blamed the disputes on tough choices that must be made in a state grappling with a nearly $1 billion budget deficit and coping with a massive blow from natural disasters of an unprecedented scale. "It never can be a wonderful exercise when you start cutting things," the governor said Thursday. "I respect the fact that they're feeling a lot of pain." Sen. Cleo Fields, who filed the lawsuit on behalf of the caucus, said it wasn't spurred by specific items that Blanco cut -- reductions that spanned state agencies and removed spending for lawmakers' pet projects and dollars they get from grant funds often derided as "slush funds." Blanco said she believed the core complaint of the black caucus was the $6 million cut to the grant funds. Fields, D-Baton Rouge, said the Legislature is charged with spending money and balancing the budget. He said the governor can make certain cuts but exceeded her authority in the depth of the reductions she made based on incorrect advice from the state's attorney general. A hearing on the lawsuit was set for Nov. 18. Lawmakers can undo the governor's budget cuts in the special session, but several said Blanco set a poor tone for a session where she pleaded for unity in reconstruction efforts after slashing the budget on her own. "Personally, I just think it was a bad move on her part," Fields said. Caucus members said the cuts meted out by Blanco could harm health care, social services and educational programs that are crucial for people already hurt by the hurricanes. "We're talking about all of those things that go to the very people who need help the most," said Rep. Cedric Richmond, D-New Orleans, chairman of the black caucus. Richmond said the state has trust funds it could tap and could make smaller spending cuts while Congress also continues to consider the types of federal aid it may give to Louisiana. The black caucus offered some modest cuts but didn't have a complete list of how it proposes dealing with the state's $959 million deficit. Beyond the cuts, several black lawmakers disagree with Blanco's plans to revamp the New Orleans school system and take more authority away from the local school board. Many caucus members also were unhappy that the governor's framework for the special session didn't include housing for the displaced and more individual tax relief. "There's no conversation about incentives for people to come back home," Richmond said. Both the governor and the black caucus say the disagreements don't spell doom for the legislative session. Blanco said she has continuing conversations with her legislative leadership, including members of the black caucus. "We're not operating in a void," she said. At a press conference Thursday, caucus members asked when they last spoke to the governor simply laughed -- but they pledged that they wanted to work with the governor on recovery efforts. "I am still in support of the governor," said Sen. Sharon Broome, D-Baton Rouge. "But perhaps those individuals who may have been advising her in the process did not advise her wisely on inclusiveness." "We're committed to recovery and rebuilding efforts as she is. We're just saying we want to be part of the team in that process," Broome said. |
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La. Gov. Blanco appoints state recovery authority | |||||
2005-10-17 | |||||
BATON ROUGE, Louisiana (Reuters) - Gov. Kathleen Blanco appealed for an end to the bickering that has dominated Louisiana's hurricane recovery on Monday as she announced the creation of a new panel to oversee the process.
Xavier University President Norman Francis will lead the panel and former CNN executive Walter Isaacson will serve as its vice chairman.
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