The Bursting Point

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September 4, 2005
The Bursting Point
By DAVID BROOKS
As Ross Douthat observed on his blog, The American Scene, Katrina was the anti-9/11.

On Sept. 11, Rudy Giuliani took control. The government response was quick and decisive. The rich and poor suffered alike. Americans had been hit, but felt united and strong. Public confidence in institutions surged.

Last week in New Orleans, by contrast, nobody took control. Authority was diffuse and action was ineffective. The rich escaped while the poor were abandoned. Leaders spun while looters rampaged. Partisans squabbled while the nation was ashamed.

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.

And the key fact to understanding why this is such a huge cultural moment is this: Last week's national humiliation comes at the end of a string of confidence-shaking institutional failures that have cumulatively changed the nation's psyche.

Over the past few years, we have seen intelligence failures in the inability to prevent Sept. 11 and find W.M.D.'s in Iraq. We have seen incompetent postwar planning. We have seen the collapse of Enron and corruption scandals on Wall Street. We have seen scandals at our leading magazines and newspapers, steroids in baseball, the horror of Abu Ghraib.

Public confidence has been shaken too by the steady rain of suicide bombings, the grisly horror of Beslan and the world's inability to do anything about rising oil prices.

Each institutional failure and sign of helplessness is another blow to national morale. The sour mood builds on itself, the outraged and defensive reaction to one event serving as the emotional groundwork for the next.

The scrapbook of history accords but a few pages to each decade, and it is already clear that the pages devoted to this one will be grisly. There will be pictures of bodies falling from the twin towers, beheaded kidnapping victims in Iraq and corpses still floating in the waterways of New Orleans five days after the disaster that caused them.

It's already clear this will be known as the grueling decade, the Hobbesian decade. Americans have had to acknowledge dark realities that it is not in our nature to readily acknowledge: the thin veneer of civilization, the elemental violence in human nature, the lurking ferocity of the environment, the limitations on what we can plan and know, the cumbersome reactions of bureaucracies, the uncertain progress good makes over evil.

As a result, it is beginning to feel a bit like the 1970's, another decade in which people lost faith in their institutions and lost a sense of confidence about the future.

"Rats on the West Side, bedbugs uptown/What a mess! This town's in tatters/I've been shattered," Mick Jagger sang in 1978.

Midge Decter woke up the morning after the night of looting during the New York blackout of 1977 feeling as if she had "been given a sudden glimpse into the foundations of one's house and seen, with horror, that it was utterly infested and rotting away."

Americans in 2005 are not quite in that bad a shape, since the fundamental realities of everyday life are good. The economy and the moral culture are strong. But there is a loss of confidence in institutions. In case after case there has been a failure of administration, of sheer competence. Hence, polls show a widespread feeling the country is headed in the wrong direction.

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.
 
oh please.

for gods sake! the huricane was on the news for 2 weeks .
it went past florida a week before hitting N.O............
it was not a rich /poor thing... it was a smart /stupid thing.!!!!!!!!!

every body in the area saw it was getting more and more powerful...if they did not get ready ..thats their problem!
ITS CALLED SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST!
gods way of getting rid of the weak and letting the rest of the herd thrive...
if you were dumb enough not to have 17 bucks to hop on the bus and get out of the area you deserve to die! fuck off and good ridence!

the only people i feel sorry for where those who were stuck due to the fact that were wheelchair bound ,or other wise incapitated.

when i was kid i lived on Osage ave on philadephia...thats right..the one mayor Goodie blew up and burned down the whole block in a shoot out with M.O.VE......i saw the first few cop cars and then a few more.. and i knew it was time to get to somewhere else.. i was a little kid and i got my dog and split.called my dad and said check out the news at work. he saw our block and house get burned down on tv.

the point of the story... if a deaf kid see's trouble and leaves why dont a bunch of grown ups ??>>>with a weeks notice that the shit is going to hit the fan>>>..STAY??????
if you are that fucking stupid ,WE DONT NEED YOU!!!
even my freind from mexico saw this ..and said screw this i am going back to tijauna before that thing blows me away like a $2 crackwhore!

its not like the tsunami where there was no warning.
if you got screwed blame your self for living in HURICAN ALLY!!!!
DUH!DUH!DUH!DUH!
WHAT THE FUCK DID YOU THINK WOULD HAPPEN? A BLIZZARD.AN EARTHQUAKE????A VOLCANO?? DUH! YOU HOUSE IS GONNA BLOW AWAY! BUILD IT OUT OF CANCRETE AND STEEL AND ABOVE THE WATER LEVEL OF THE LAKE! DUH!!!!!

SLAP YOUR MOMMA FOR NOT TEACHING YOU BETTER! NO EXCUSES!!!
NO ,I AM POOR ..I HAVE NO CAR...I AM WEIRD...
I CANT HEAR!!!! pitty me!!!
i know people who where born deaf, and speak ,read and write 5 languages.!! so why cant these stupid morons in N.O. get out?


so i close with....use your brain to control your life and take responsability for yourself. dont blam the government, or other people...yourself..and maybe your momma.

and yes, i blame my self for having bad spelling.
 
:( This is such a sad tradegy that has befallen on New Orleans, Mississippi and Florida.

In New Orleans, the citizens were given enough notice to evacuate their homes because they lived below the sea level. A lot of people listened, did what they were told to do, and were able to get to safer groundage. Whereas the ones that were not able to get out, due to their handicap, had to wait to find other ways of being saved.

The National Guard, the Red Cross and citizens around the USA, people around the world did gather together to help in someway these victims of this terrible hurricane that hit their homeland. Whether it be monetary donations, clothing, food, survival supplies, even the outpouring of people opening their doors to these victims to take shelter. Everyone has pulled together to help these people the best way possible.

Yes, there has been looting, vandalism, shootings which is through the means of desperation just to survive and live, even though it was wrong.

What we have to focus on now, is the way everyone has pulled together and helped these people in someway or another. We need to focus on the good that is being done for these people now. The National Guard has been so wonderful in their rescue missions, getting food and supplies to these people, and they should be commended for their actions.

As for the people who died, lost family members and friends, I hope and pray they will find solace and their hearts will be at rest.

We are a great nation, and now even greater because of this devastating blow that has destroyed these states, and where we come in to help them, roll up our sleeves, dig into our pockets and most importantly have given from our hearts.

Each and everyone of us now needs to pray, help and hold out our hands to these people who have suffered such great losses and give these victims hope that someday, they will be on the road to recovering from this terrible devastation.
 
It is truly a shame that those who were able did not evacuate when they were told. The mayor had ordered a mandatory evacuation. Mandatory means "must do"! I symphathize with people who physically couldn't evacuate without help. All the more reason to resent people who could evacuate but refused. Those people used up valuable shelter space and resources that were needed by the people who couldn't evacuate by themselves. Many of those who stayed behind did so intentionally so they could take advantage of the situation for looting. You can see healthy young men looting; those are not old diabetic ladies in wheelchairs.

Unfortunately, there is also a segment of our society that becomes very dependent on government aid. That dependency destroys initiative, and creates inertia. The attitude becomes, "I can't move until someone carries me out."

If for some reason I was in the Super Dome shelter for the hurricane, I would not have stayed more than 24 hours in there. I realize that after a few days, people were not allowed to leave. But for the first few days, they could have gotten out. Pick up your stuff and begin walking! There is no way I would sit and wait. If everyone who could walk did so, that would have reduced the burden at the shelter for the eldery and sick people who could not walk. Just think how far they could walk in three days, instead of sitting in the shelter for three days! At least you could be out in the fresh air and daylight.
 
I still believe those people should've left their houses before Hurricane Katrina arrived....they were warned about the hurricane arriving before it hit...so they should've been better prepared.
 
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