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All
of you out there weeping and wailing about the suffering of those
displaced and made homeless by Hurricane Katrina can cut out your
histrionics. As it turns out, Hurricane Katrina, far from being a massive
natural disaster with horrific consequences, has actually been a boon to
the poor and destitute of Louisiana and Mississippi. That's right, thanks
to Hurricane Katrina, some of the poorest of Americans are now better off.
Who knew?
Well, Barbara Bush apparently knew. While touring hurricane relief centers
in Houston on September 5, the former First Lady paused to dispel the myth
that Hurricane Katrina was disastrous to its alleged victims. Remarking on
American Public Media's "Marketplace" radio program, Babs explained, "And
so many of the people in the arena here, you know, were underprivileged
anyway, so this -- this (slight chuckle) is working very well for them."
And there it is, the truth of that oxymoron, "compassionate conservatism."
Barbara Bush, in no more than an off-the-cuff remark, concisely summed up
the real attitude of conservatives regarding the poor in America. It's an
attitude of patronizing contempt.
Consider the import of Babs' assessment of the "underprivileged anyway"
who managed to survive Hurricane Katrina. According to Babs, the poor and
underprivileged had nothing to lose anyway, so they didn't really suffer
any harm from Hurricane Katrina. The poor and underprivileged are of so
little significance, have so little value, that their suffering elicited a
chuckle from Mamma Bush and the declaration that sleeping on cots in an
arena with several hundred strangers, without even the semblance of
privacy, "is working very well for them."
Never mind that those who were the object of Babs' condescension may have
lost loved ones, friends, and pets. Never mind that their psychological
trauma is just as real and as painful as the "privileged" who survived
Katrina. Never mind that those who "were underprivileged anyway" have been
equally displaced from their homes. Never mind that they now find
themselves without their former senses of self and community, having been
relocated to foreign communities with nothing to call their own except
that with which they managed to escape. They were underprivileged, so who
cares?
The comments of Mamma Bush expose the truth of her son's administration
and the frightening direction in which this country is headed.
Conservatives, at least those is positions of power, aren't compassionate.
They can claim to be all they want and can even come up with trite
catchphrases like "compassionate conservatism." When it comes right down
to it, however, the self-anointed compassionate conservatives won't be
satisfied until the last vestiges of governmental support and assistance
to America's poor are eliminated.
Regardless of Katrina's exposure of the false promise of the American
dream, President Bush and his Republican cohorts remain dead-set on
permanently repealing the estate tax, and making further cuts to the
already heavily trimmed capital gains and estate taxes. In other words,
Bush and his fellow men of compassion want to permanently cut taxes on the
rich to the tune of $70 billion. At the same time, they're determined to
make $35 billion in spending cuts from entitlement programs, including
slashing $10 billion from Medicaid and Medicare. (Apparently, affordable
health care is an entitlement to which the poor are no longer entitled.)
To conservatives, compassion means enriching the rich while impoverishing
the poor.
This is not a new phenomenon. Since Bush took office, the median household
income for working-age households has fallen $2,572, or 4.8 percent.
Between 2003 and 2004 alone, it fell 1.2 percent. By contrast, the real
average income of the top five percent of American households (a.k.a., the
rich) rose by 1.7 percent in the same period. Similarly, since Bush took
office, 5.4 million Americans, including 1.4 million children, have been
added to the nation's poverty rolls, totaling 37 million impoverished
Americans in 2004. America's population of working poor (those who work
but still live in poverty) increased by 563,000 in 2004 alone. The number
of Americans without health insurance has grown by 6 million since 2000,
leaving nearly 16 percent of all Americans uninsured.
Come to think of it, maybe Babs was on to something. Those
"underprivileged anyway" survivors of Katrina currently living in shelters
like those in Houston and just might be better off. They're fed, clothed,
and provided medical care. They're provided with social services. They're
the beneficiaries of billions of dollars in federal aid. In short, they're
cared for.
That's a hell of a lot better than the treatment they've received from
Bush and his cadre of compassionate conservatives.
What a frightening thought.
Ken Sanders
is a writer based in Tucson, Arizona. Visit his weblog at:
www.politicsofdissent.blogspot.com/.
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Other Articles by Ken Sanders
*
Is Anyone
Any Better Off?
* The False
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* C'mon
Dubya, Talk to the Lady
* From
Tehran, With Love
* Valuing
Form Over Substance In Iraq
* Is DeLay
Morally Devoid
* Don't
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* Time To
Outgrow Our Naiveté
* Christian
Pity Party
* Rove's
Trove of Trouble
* Condemned
to Relive the Past
* Who Put
These Guys in Charge?
* One
Nation, Unconvinced
* Beyond
Impeachment: The Bush Administration As War Criminals
* Policy of
Deceit
* High
Crimes and Misdemeanors
* One
Nation, Under Experiment
* Trained
to "Disassemble"
* Iraq:
Bush's Land of Make-Believe
* On the
Brink of "Complete Strategic Failure" in Afghanistan
* Red,
White, and Without a Clue
* Shooting
the Messenger
* Touching
Evil: Holding Hands with Uzbekistan
* Crony
Capitalists
* Iraq in
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* Smoking
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* We're Not
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* What the
Pre-War Intelligence Reports Won't Tell You About Iraq's Nukes
* The
"Freedom" of Afghanistan's Women
* Fallujah:
Dresden in Iraq
* Suffer the
Children
* The
Starving of the Five (Hundred) Thousand
* Iraq: The
Not-So-Proverbial Powder Keg
* Turning
Out the Lights on the Enlightenment
* Bush,
Schiavo, and the Stench of Hypocrisy
* Supporting
the Troops
* Scoffing
the Rule of Law
* Putting
the "Mock" in Democracy
* Torture’s
Our Business ... and Business is Good
* Remember
Afghanistan?
* The United
States’ Hypocritical Nuclear Policy
*
The “Other” Iraqi Conflict
* Cause for
Alarm: Regime Change Redux
* Still
Playing Cute With the Law
* The
Boogeyman and Social Security
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