I saw a meme the other day that said, "On September 11, 2001, the Coast Guard coordinated the evacuation of 500,000 people from the area surrounding Ground Zero by creating a volunteer fleet of military, merchant, city and private vessels. It took just 9 hours and moved more people than the Dunkirk Evacuation at the start of WWII." Well, look what's possible when they're people who are cared about.
Michael Eric Dyson does a great job of explaining just why the mostly poor, mostly black people of New Orleans were not cared about, why Kanye West's statement that "George Bush doesn't care about Black people) was pretty much accurate, that not only is there a deep history of racist neglect & violence, but it is ongoing: when evacuees tried to walk over the Mississippi Bridge into the suburb of Gretna, police fired shots over their heads to get them to turn around.
In the best case scenario, the horrifically inadequate response was "just" bureaucratic incompetence. But the truly disturbing part is that there were SO MANY offers for help that were turned down. The Red Cross was told they couldn't go into New Orleans because "it might encourage people to believe it was safe to remain". The mayor of Chicago, prior to the storm, offered FEMA the use of "44 Fire Dept rescue & medical personnel & gear, over 100 Chicago police officers, 140 Streets & Sanitation workers, 146 Public Health workers, 29 trucks, 2 boats, and a mobile clinic." Of that, "FEMA only requested a single tank truck" AFTERWARD. The US Marine ship the USS Bataan was in the Gulf before Katrina, followed the hurricane into the port in order to be ready to help, had 600 hospital beds & 1200 sailors that were never called into service. The American Bus Association tried to assist with evacuation & couldn't get in touch with anyone from FEMA. Walmart trucks with bottled water were turned away. 1,000 firefighters on route were sent back. And on & on. It appears to be a much deeper problem than simply not being able to figure out the correct procedure.
Dyson also give a history of the government's evolving sense of responsibility in disaster relief. In the past century or so, the buck has been passed around from agency to agency, defunded, and ultimately in the hands of an administration like GW Bush's that believes that government should be limite, it was bound to not have adequate allocation for helping those who need help the most. The focus was also shifted from natural disasters, which in the case of New Orleans was predicted by many, to terrorism, which, let's face it, is a comparatively less likely threat. Hurricanes WILL happen, every year.
Just, UGH. Bush was a shithead for so many reasons, but I hope this goes on the books as one of the worst things he did. Fuck him & his 533 vacation days.