Katrina: A Fundamental Shift in American Politics Will Occur

People Are Mad As Hell and Unwilling To Take It Anymore



A seismic rift developed between the classes in America this past week, the results of which may be unclear at this juncture but are sure to be as devastating to the body politic of the United States — and perhaps beyond their shores — as the impact of Hurricane Katrina on the American South.
This past week, as tens of thousands of New Orleans’ citizens awaited rescue from the cataclysmic effects of Hurricane Katrina, the U.S. government — woefully miscalculating the level of destruction they would face — failed to respond in a timely, humane, responsible and competent manner to one of the most devastating domestic crises in American history.
As conservative columnist David Brooks writes in his incisive New York Times essay …

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, 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.

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 1970s. Maybe this time there will be a progressive resurgence … All we can be sure of is that the political culture is about to undergo some big change.


To point out just how incompetent and staggeringly ineffectual the Bush administration was in its response to the rapidly deteriorating situation in New Orleans, CNN’s Tom Foreman set about to examine what is being said about Katrina today by Department of Homeland Security Chief Michael Chertoff compared to what was said in the past. Chertoff Fact Check consists of video clips of the various positions taken by DHS Secretary Chertoff and FEMA Director Michael Brown before and after Katrina struck.
The response by the Bush administration to the needs of its citizens can be characterized as cruel and heartless and assuredly nothing less than incomprehensible and unforgivable. In words that haunt the soul, Aaron Broussard, President of Jefferson Parish, appearing Sunday on Meet the Press, said, “the cavalry never came.” You can read the transcript, but the video is so much more powerful. The video is accessible by clicking on the permalink here, and then clicking on one of the video links.
As a coda to tonight’s post, VanRamblings offers another video, one of the harrowing pieces of television reportage as you’re ever likely to see watch. The video is accessible by clicking on the permalink here, and then click on either one of the video links. While Aaron Brown on CNN stated, “We have turned the corner,” Fox News’ Geraldo Rivera and Shepard Smith reported on the thousands of people trapped in what Geraldo called “this Hell on Earth” at the convention center. No one had been bused out. Shepard was on the I-10 and is devastating in his description of the “hundreds and hundreds and hundreds” of people denied exit, all of whom were left without food, water or medicine, for days.

Pivot Legal Society: Advancing the Interests and Improving
The Lives of Marginalized Persons Through Law Reform


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From time to time you read about the Pivot Legal Society, Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside advocacy organization dedicated to using law reform, legal education, and strategic legal action to advance the interests and improve the lives of those on the fringes of society: sex workers, drug addicts, and the homeless, among other disenfranchised groups of people.
As the Pivot Legal Society explain in their mission statement

The basic concept underlying Pivot’s name and mission is that a critical pressure point of social change is to be found at the lower edge of legal and social boundaries. By systematically challenging the attitudes and institutions of power than enable marginalization, Pivot strives to move us towards a more tolerant, inclusive and compassionate society. By aggressively advancing the interests and defending the legal entitlements of the most disenfranchised, Pivot aims for a ‘trickle-up’ effect of respect and acceptance that will ultimately benefit all.


Of course, in advocating for citizens the general populace (not to mention the police) would sooner ignore, or incarcerate, Pivot’s actions on behalf of their constituency are not always met with the degree of equanimity one might hope for. Vancouver Police Chief Jamie Graham, in particular, frequently lashes out at Pivot, and its Executive Director, John Richardson.
As for Mr. Richardson, rather than respond with invective, he instead offers a reasoned rejoinder, as was the case when Pivot issued the 28-page report Towards More Effective Police Oversight, in which the society called on the Vancouver City Council Peace and Justice Committee to vote to endorse “integrity testing” of Vancouver police officers …

“An integrity test creates a realistic condition or situation designed to generate a natural reaction by an individual or individuals so that their conduct, behaviour and professional standards can be assessed,” say the report’s authors. “Much in the same way that the VPD’s bait car programme reduces the incidence of auto theft, an effective integrity testing program can help reduce the instances of misconduct in relation to marginalized persons by VPD officers.”


Fortunately, not all sectors of society look upon the work of the Pivot Legal Society with disfavour. In 2004, the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network recognized the Pivot Legal Society for their humanitarian work furthering Action on HIV/AIDS and Human Rights, winning praise, as well, from the BC Chapter of the Canadian Bar Association, among others.
From their advocacy work representing Vancouver sex-trade workers, to their work with housing activists supporting the Woodward’s housing squat (Windows Media Player), and their ongoing work responding to alleged police misconduct, the Pivot Legal Society performs a service for all of us.
If you would like to subscribe to the Pivot mailing list, please click here. Information on membership in the Pivot Legal Society is available here. If you, or someone you know, have been or feel you may become subject to police harassment, you may wish to avail yourself of the instructions on the Pivot Legal Card. And finally, donations to Pivot are readily accepted.

Prison Break: A Potential Breakout Hit for Fox Television
Fall 2005 Television Season Kicks Off at 8 p.m. Tonight


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The weather is cooling, the sun seems to be heading back behind the clouds, and the rains appear to be on their way. What does this mean for most of us? Yes, the fall TV season is about to commence.
This year the fall television season is set to kick off a bit early with the début tonight of Prison Break, one of the more lauded new shows of the fall TV season. Globe and Mail television columnist John Doyle writes …

Prison Break (Fox, Global, starts Monday) is about a guy who goes to prison to get his brother out. He’s got the blueprint of the prison’s design tattooed on his body. That’s the gist. Fast-paced, kinetic, moody and filled with characters either brutal or beatific, it grabs you by the throat and takes you on a wild ride. Michael (Wentworth Miller) is the hero. His brother, Lincoln (Dominic Purcell), is on death row and scheduled to die in a few months. As Michael sees it, Lincoln has been framed for the murder of the brother of the vice-president of the United States. There’s been a cover-up and, in some way, the Catholic Church is involved. The prison setting is dangerous and filled with foreboding. The warden (played by Stacy Keach, who did time in prison in England in the 1980s) is well-meaning but wary of Michael and Lincoln. Heavily promoted by Fox, the series gets a jump-start by launching this week. With little else new to watch, it could get viewers instantly hooked.


John Crook, reporting for zap2it.com, provides some background on Prison Break. USA Today’s Bill Keveney also weighs in on tonight’s début of Prison Break, as does USA Today critic Robert Bianco, who says “check it out”.
Meanwhile, The Vancouver Sun’s Alex Strachan says, “a breakneck-paced thriller about a prison break will make the weeks fly by before a new season of 24 débuts in January … Prison Break is a fast-paced, rousingly good entertainment — a rock ’n roll roller-coaster ride that hurtles along the tracks like a runaway train.” Strachan awards Prison Break an A- rating.
The fact that first-rate actors Peter Stormare (Minority Report, Chocolat) and Robyn Tunney (The Craft, The Secret Lives of Dentists) have opted to set aside their movie careers in order to star in Prison Break speaks volumes about its probable quality. The series débuts tonight at 8 p.m. on your local Global TV outlet (BCTV locally), with a 2-hour season première.
Update: Following a week of fun and frolic, VanRamblings finally got around to watching the 2-hour season première of Prison Break. Our assessment, overall: comme çi, comme ça. Although the actors’ performances are across-the-board solid and praiseworthy, the writing is at best pedestrian, the production values (camera work, cinematography) second rate, and the story line cheesy and requiring of such a level of suspension of disbelief as to pull you out of the narrative. The good thing? We won’t be adding Prison Break to our regular television viewing this upcoming fall TV season, allowing us time instead this autumn to pine away for lost love, now found.

CBC Unplugged: We Don’t Need No Stinkin’ Transmitters


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Missing your daily fix of CBC radio? Wonder when the time will come when you’ll next hear World Report, or the folks who bring you The World at Six will make their triumphant return, so that you’ll know what’s really going on in the world?
And what about The House? How are we supposed to figure out what the shenanigans of those Ottawa-based hooligans on Parliament Hill really mean if Anthony Germain and company aren’t available to help us tread through the shoals of the affairs of the Canadian political miasma?
And just how much stinkin’ BBC News can a woman (or man) listen to and watch before going completely bonkers? We want Peter Mansbridge back on the air, and we want The National to begin broadcasting NOW !!!
No NHL hockey in Canada for a year. A piece of cake. But, if you’re anything like the author of VanRamblings, a week without the CBC is the equivalent of what we believe a week in hell would be like. And that just ain’t no fun.
CBC Unplugged has come to our rescue, and not a moment too soon. In a story on The Tyee, British Columbia’s feisty online presence reports …

Locked-out CBC employees are working together to put out their own radio programmes, under the collective name of CBC Unplugged. They will broadcast on conventional radio stations and across the Internet through a new technique called podcasting, in which people download audio files from the web and listen to them on their iPods or other digital audio players.


The initial CBC Unplugged podcast is available here, and the second full hour broadcast is available here (Windows Media Player required).
A bit of sanity has returned to the universe. And not a moment too soon.