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Old 09-02-2005, 10:59 AM
Rudey Rudey is offline
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Join Date: May 2001
Location: Taking lessons at Cobra Kai Karate!
Posts: 14,928
Quote:
Originally posted by Sistermadly
Regardless of the source, you can't ignore that the FEMA budget has been slashed in recent years. That's going to have a serious effect on any disaster. I shudder to think what might happen in the weeks to come -- let's not forget that we're in the peak of hurricane season, and speaking as someone who lives on the edge of a huge subduction fault, a catastrophic earthquake could hit the US at any time.

It's also pretty offensive to me that the FEMA director seems to be so willfully blind to the economic and social realities of the people who are most effected in New Orleans. Without sounding like a bleeding heart, I'll just say it's callous and short-sighted to blame the people for the situation they're in, particularly when most of the people who are suffering are either (1) living paycheck to paycheck; (2) on federal assistance; (3) are the working poor without access to private transportation; (4) don't have the financial resources or extended family network in place to make leaving New Orleans possible.
I provide an explanation of the cuts to FEMA's budget below. It really can't be ignored I suppose.

But really what also bothers me is the need to spend the same amount of money or more, with improvements in technology and economies of scale, on everything in the government. It seems you really can't help people unless you overpay. It's like paying $100 for 100 pennies. Of course that's not administration or party-specific (see Halliburton). We do it with federal budgeting for roads and bloated budgets for fire prevention and the list goes on and on.

-Rudey
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