Tuesday, September 06, 2005

Katrina on Wheelz

"The disaster, it seems to me, is the failure of a philosophy. A philosophy of small government, tax cuts, deficits and privatization. The federal government should have arrived sooner but the federal government was doing other things." ~Stephen Elliott at Salon

That says everything I've been scribbling and scratching out, ranting and ruminating about for a week now. Well, almost:

How does a mayor call for manditory evacuation without evacuating the Intensive Care units in his hospitals?

How many people drowned strapped into their wheelchairs, or on their stairways as they crawled up on their bellies to escape rising water?

How many people starved and dehydrated in close proximity to food, water and help, because their power wheelchair batteries had died during the second day after the storm?

How many people died from insulin shock with dose after dose of ruined insulin in their laps?

After 9/11, the President called for disaster response plans that addressed the needs of people with disabilities. Did anyone actually work on that? Was any provision made in the days leading up to Katrina to evacuate people with disabilities before the catastrophe turned their city into a deathtrap? When Michael Chertoff and Michael Brown were smugly suggesting that the citizens of New Orleans had a responsibility to "Get to a distribution center," did anyone remind them that not everyone can just jump up and wade through the mess?

Katrina proved to me that our nation still forgets the disabled. We are unimportant to our government, the moment hard times arrive. How can we, wheelchair users still living, working, and paying taxes, get big enough, loud enough, to matter?

28 comments:

Zifferent said...

This brings to mind something I've had a thought about recently. (and I know I'm taking it completely out of context.)

I've heard an idea from being bandied about. That the flood washed away the city "clean".

Granted it wasn't always so blatantly worded. Usually it took the form of the person talking about how they can now replan the city and rebuild it anew. Which roughly translated from polical speak means "Any of the poor who didn't drown, die of infections, starvation or exposure we can bus out to other cities that they won't be able to afford to leave, and then we can emminent domain the land cheap and rebuild a nice little palyground for the rich" Although, I did hear one person blurt out the cleansing phrase verbatim.

I know they were talking about the criminal elementof the city, but just for a minute put yourself in the Ultra-Right Wing Republicans' shoes, and that statement takes on a new almost eugenic purpose. I can see Bush and Lott behind closed doors this week gasping for breath between the jokes over the plight of those poor, infirm and of old age that are no longer sucking money away from their pockets. Maybe more of an social/economic cleansing of the city.

How pleasant.

cynthia said...

I've heard this stuff too-- I got in at least one argument over a comparison of Katrina to the great flood or Sodom and Gomorrah...a disgusting, arrogant position to take in the face of ordinary Americans enduring such suffering.

As for NOLA having been "cleansed" of entitlement recipients, I hadn't thought of it exactly that way, but it does seem likely that a "new NOLA" will be built by the rich, for the rich-- It's a very interesting angle from which to contemplate the future of the city, given that the touristy French Quarter has survived. Life goes on (plus newly available real estate) for the developers and businesspeople, permanently dispersing the community displaced by the storm.

I am determined to remember, through all the future finger-pointing and head-rolling, that all levels of government have responsibility for the disaster. Ray Nagin doesn't get brownie points (then or now) for telling residents to jump in their cars and leave, because he did nothing to make transportation or emergency lodging available to the poor, the disabled, or the patients in his hospitals.

What did Louisiana's Governor, State and Federal legislators do? I'll need to look into that.

At the federal level, Chertoff and Brown embarrassed themselves by braying about how everything was under control at the Superdome (!) pretending there was nobody at the Convention Center. If there are not serious repercussions for both of them, it's a travesty.

The President seemed unprepared, uninformed, and disinclined to get involved, at least for the first few days. Why? He seemed to have plenty of compassion for NYC after 9/11, not to mention passion and boundless energy to make things happen. His response to Katrina, a disaster much closer to home for him, has been robotic at best. Is this evidence of the "Sodom and Gomorrah theory" affecting him, or evidence that his famous emotion over the terrorist attacks was motivated not by compassion, but by fear for himself and his family as a target? Either way, it's a disgusting, arrogant position.

Anonymous said...

CWD: Crip World Domination :)

But seriously we do need to speak out and promote awareness at all levels including within our own communities and globally through blogs like this.

cynthia said...

What are we going to do today, Gimpy? ;>}

But seriously, I hope one day this blog has enough readers to make a difference. I know that I haven't been envolved enough with my local community on Disability issues; I guess I need to bite the boring-meeting-bullet and get busy.

Anonymous said...

We have also been talking about this at the Rolling Rains Report (http://www.RollingRains.com)I posted an insightful editorial by Anne Finger there on Sept 12. Mary Johnson has been writing on it at Edge-Centric. Pattie Thomas has been talking about reconstruction using Universal Design at The Ample Rambler. Offline many of us have been strategizing and organizing to rebuild a safer more inclusive city. If the idea of meetings in your local area seem mind-numbing you still have the blogosphere!

Anonymous said...

There are many ways to get involved. What you do here on this site does represent involvement and is important. Great site, keep up the good word. I will certainly link over to your blog.

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Anonymous said...

Slow down, lots of high intellectual stuff and mind numbing thoughts going on. Awareness is one thing, and certainly should be pursued by whatever means one is comfortable with. What seems to be missing on the awareness front is widespread involvement of the grassroots folks. The people with disabilities.

In most cases their lives are so complex, so involved with getting by the daily grind that it becomes difficult to focus on other than personal day-to-day issues of importance, and there are many of those. They have also become conditioned to the abuses of so called assistance services and agencies and tend to anticipate them rather than react to them.

Ground swell I believe it's called. We need to talk to and inspire each other. Any venue will work as long as the participants are tenacious.

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