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September 5, 2005
A Failure of Leadership
by Bob Herbert
"Bush to New Orleans: Drop Dead"
Neither the death of the chief justice nor the frantic
efforts of panicked White House political advisers can
conceal the magnitude of the president's failure of
leadership last week. The catastrophe in New Orleans
billowed up like the howling winds of hell and was carried
live and in color on television screens across the U.S. and
around the world.
The Big Easy had turned into the Big Hurt, and the
colossal failure of George W. Bush to intervene powerfully
and immediately to rescue tens of thousands of American
citizens who were suffering horribly and dying in agony was
there for all the world to see.
Hospitals with deathly ill patients were left without
power, with ventilators that didn't work, with floodwaters
rising on the lower floors and with corpses rotting in the
corridors and stairwells. People unable to breathe on their
own, or with cancer or heart disease or kidney failure,
slipped into comas and sank into their final sleep in front
of helpless doctors and relatives. These were Americans in
desperate trouble.
The president didn't seem to notice.
Death and the stink of decay were all over the city.
Corpses were propped up in wheelchairs and on lawn
furniture, or left to decompose on sunbaked sidewalks. Some
floated by in water fouled by human feces.
Degenerates roamed the city, shooting at rescue workers,
beating and robbing distraught residents and tourists,
raping women and girls. The president of the richest, most
powerful country in the history of the world didn't seem to
notice.
Viewers could watch diabetics go into insulin shock on
national television, and you could see babies with the pale,
vacant look of hunger that we're more used to seeing in
dispatches from the third world. You could see their
mothers, dirty and hungry themselves, weeping.
Old, critically ill people were left to soil themselves
and in some cases die like stray animals on the floor of an
airport triage center. For days the president of the United
States didn't seem to notice.
He would have noticed if the majority of these stricken
folks had been white and prosperous. But they weren't. Most
were black and poor, and thus, to the George W. Bush
administration, still invisible.
After days of withering criticism from white and black
Americans, from conservatives as well as liberals, from
Republicans and Democrats, the president finally felt
compelled to act, however feebly. (The chorus of criticism
from nearly all quarters demanding that the president do
something tells me that the nation as a whole is so much
better than this administration.)
Mr. Bush flew south on Friday and proved (as if more
proof were needed) that he didn't get it. Instead of
urgently focusing on the people who were stranded, hungry,
sick and dying, he engaged in small talk, reminiscing at one
point about the days when he used to party in New Orleans,
and mentioning that Trent Lott had lost one of his houses
but that it would be replaced with "a fantastic house - and
I'm looking forward to sitting on the porch."
Mr. Bush's performance last week will rank as one of the
worst ever by a president during a dire national emergency.
What we witnessed, as clearly as the overwhelming agony of
the city of New Orleans, was the dangerous incompetence and
the staggering indifference to human suffering of the
president and his administration.
And it is this incompetence and indifference to suffering
(yes, the carnage continues to mount in Iraq) that makes it
so hard to be optimistic about the prospects for the United
States over the next few years. At a time when effective,
innovative leadership is desperately needed to cope with
matters of war and peace, terrorism and domestic security,
the economic imperatives of globalization and the rising
competition for oil, the United States is being led by a man
who seems oblivious to the reality of his awesome
responsibilities.
Like a boy being prepped for a second crack at a failed
exam, Mr. Bush has been meeting with his handlers to see
what steps can be taken to minimize the political fallout
from this latest demonstration of his ineptitude. But this
is not about politics. It's about competence. And when the
president is so obviously clueless about matters so
obviously important, it means that the rest of us, like the
people left stranded in New Orleans, are in deep, deep
trouble.
Bob Herbert joined The New York Times as an Op-Ed
columnist in 1993. His twice a week column comments on
politics, urban affairs and social trends. |