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understandinglife Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-13-05 12:56 PM
Original message
Hey Tehran - do the deal!
DUer Gregorian responded, in part, to Land Shark's brilliant essay "Aides wouldn't Bother * ?? There's More here, & Impeachment Ain't Enough! by stating "Bush is nothing compared to what is about to happen."
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=104&topic_id=4753704&mesg_id=4756641


This has been my message, repeatedly.

We control the water, the oil and the airspace of much of the Middle East because of our strategic base locations in Iraq and elsewhere along the Persian Gulf and the eastern coast of Africa. Bush and the neoconsters not only have no intention of giving it up, they are soon going to consolidate their control.

We have strategic nuclear strike capabilities second to none on the planet. Tehran and a few surrounding sites are trivial.

That done, we have total control of the airspace and the oil and the water in the Middle East.

Any sophisticated "head of state" is now fully informed of how little regard Bush and the neoconsters have for the law or for life or for the environment of the planet -- Iraq, Gitmo, extensive renditions for torture purposes, Kyoto, and now, New Orleans.

New Orleans told the world that the entire Executive Branch of the United States Government partied and vacationed while its citizens drowned. Got that; the folk in Beijing and the Kremlin and every other capitol of the world, did.

Bush and the neoconsters care for only two things, their unrestrained acquisition of power and total control of the planet's remaining oil and natural gas. They control that, everyone pays them. Given that the 'big guys' -- Russia, China, and India are led by folk who do not want to be vaporized, they are not going to do squat to stop Bush and the neoconsters. Nothing.

So, unless We The People ... do something real soon now to stop Bush and the neoconsters from proceeding with their "creative destruction" of whatever they see as an impediment to their PNAC goals, we are going to witness the only country ever to use nuclear weapons, use them again -- probably within weeks, if not sooner.

See New Orleans for what it was meant to be -- a message to the entire world that Bush, Cheney, Rice, Rumsfeld and all their buddies partied while American citizens drowned. That's the message.

The mullahs in Tehran undoubtedly 'get it' and they face a simple decision matrix -- give America an exclusive to all their oil and announce an alliance with Bush, or bend over and kiss their ass good bye.

Oh, and for those who think that Bush would not allow 10,000 or more of our troops on the ground in Iraq to take a hit from Iran as an excuse to nuke the Iranians ...... That's why the mullahs are in such a bind - hit us first and they know they're vapor; don't hit us and they're vapor. What's that called - 'between a rock and a hard place.'

Hey Tehran - do the deal!

Oh, and hey my fellow Americans -- time is running out for you to be citizens of something other than a rogue imperialist state.


Peace.
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understandinglife Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-13-05 01:22 PM
Response to Original message
1. a society that has traded in its moral principles for market principles.
As we all sit in dismay watching the bodies float through the streets of New Orleans on TV, it may seem like the free market bears no real connection to this weather-driven event. And yet what we are watching is the ultimate product of our market-driven society: the eradication of the lower class – in this case poor African Americans -- by economic cleansing. While a hurricane may be the agent, Katrina is shining a spotlight on the reality of what America has become, a society that has traded in its moral principles for market principles.

The free market is not just an economic theory, it is an entire belief system based on the principle of competition, i.e. me vs. you. This system cannot survive, however, unless it is restrained by a framework of higher values based on the principle of unity, i.e. us. The tremendous success of America has always been the product of the delicate balance between these two belief systems, one emanating primarily from the world of business, and the other from the Judeo-Christian tradition. However, for diverse reasons—technological and cultural—market forces have become extraordinarily strong in recent decades, to the point where the market belief system now permeates all aspects of American life. The result is that we no longer care about “us” the way we once did, with devastating results.

<clip>

A Me Society will never build a great civilization and it is folly to promote any theory that maintains otherwise. We need to understand that the market belief system is only part of our society, and the lower part at that. Without those values that promote social unity, be they cultural, familial, religious, aesthetic, moral, or democratic, the water will continue to rise.

From Economic Cleansing in America by Paul Stiles on September 13, 2004

More at link:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/paul-stiles/economic-cleansing-in-ame_b_7272.html


And, I submit that that economic cleansing, on the part of Bush and the neoconsters extends to every impoverished person on the planet.

I think Bush and the neoconsters have zero regard for life; they've done the math, they know the population on the planet today is not sustainable, they know that without water and power much of that population will be dead within a decade or less, and if we need any evidence of how willing they are to let it happen just look at Darfur, what AIDS is going to do to much of the population of sub-Saharan Africa, their reluctance to contribute on an appropriate scale to the UN Millennium Project, and New Orleans.

They do not care about life - except their own. They have told us precisely what their real goals are in all their PNAC pronouncements and most Americans do not know what PNAC is.


Peace.



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understandinglife Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-13-05 01:31 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. Senator Byrd, not surprisingly, provides the guidance we all need.
Hopefully, many will read what he stated, today, in its entirety, and, most importantly, begin to act on it.

September 13, 2005

Senator Byrd calls for "A Debate on National Priorities"

Senate floor speech


Chapter 3, Verses 1-8 of the Book of Ecclesiastes in the Bible begins, "To everything there is a season and a time for every purpose under heaven." It is time for a national debate, and its purpose is our country's future.



Sometimes it takes a catastrophe to put events into perspective -- to shake us and sharpen our clarity of vision. The wrath of Katrina, tragic and devastating for thousands, must certainly have caused many thinking Americans to consider anew the proper priorities for our country. Who among us has not wondered if the efforts to rescue and evacuate Gulf Coast residents suffered because too many National Guardsmen have been detailed and detained in Iraq? What thinking American has not pondered why we had such a painfully slow response to a behemoth storm which we knew for days would likely turn New Orleans into a cauldron of despair? Is there anyone in our great country that did not feel the painful outrage of the citizens of New Orleans and Louisiana and Mississippi as they waited for days without food and water or knowledge about loved ones?


Who among us did not shrink in dread from the specter of our fellow citizens' bodies floating in the murky flood waters or stacked in hospital stairwells for want of anywhere else to house them? Could this be happening in a major American city? Could we be so inept at dealing with this tragedy? The events of the past several days seem to have reduced our much touted American know-how and technology to little more than children's toys, strangely impotent in a real crisis. I know that many Americans cringed, as I did, at the vision of callous neglect of our poorest and most vulnerable citizens which flashed around the world, making the United States appear to be a nation unmindful of its own, a nation unable to handle a disaster about which it had ample notice, a country loudly touting our form of government to the world, while failing to provide even the most basic protections to our own citizens.


If Katrina has any redeeming impact, it must be to cause us to see ourselves as others must surely see us. I regret to say that the picture cannot be a pretty one. That image is certainly not one that reflects the humanitarian goodness and morality of the vast majority of the American people. The perception of the United States in these troubled times should be a cause of major concern for everyone who holds public office. Regardless of political party, it is time to look at where we are, and where we are going.


Few would now argue that the war in Iraq has improved the world's view of the United States. It was an unnecessary and ill-conceived conflict which distracted us from our proper course of bombing the terrorist training grounds of Afghanistan. I have never bought the absurd claim by some that we are fighting terrorists in Iraq so we will not have to fight them here at home. That claim is a non sequitur at best and, at worst, a patent distortion of what has happened in Iraq. The war in Iraq created a hot bed of terrorism where none existed before. And it insured Osama bin Laden an endless supply of recruits, now even more fanatic in their hatred after scandals at Abu Ghraib, and the destruction of so many innocent lives in Iraq as a result of our invasion.


"For everything there is a season..." sayeth the Bible. The season has come for Americans to look homeward. Instead of continuing to spend billions in Iraq, let us husband those our hard-earned tax dollars and spend them here at home. The Iraqi people must slowly find their own way now. Further U.S. dictated deadlines are counter productive. We cannot force-feed democracy to Iraq. To keep large numbers of American soldiers in Iraq much longer only earns the United States more enmity, reinforcing our unfortunate global image as conqueror not liberator. The Iraqi people must begin to take it from here. In fact, there is no longer a "war" in Iraq. We started that conflict and we met the goals established at its outset. Now there is a slow, festering, internal political struggle pitting Shiite against Sunni, against Kurd, which will play itself out, perhaps for decades, until it either devolves into outright civil war or resolves into some sort of compromise which suits those who live in the country of Iraq. We cannot resolve Iraq's internal issues. It is time for the United States to begin to bring our troops home.


The invasion of Iraq was never supposed to be an open-ended peacekeeping mission, with our troops mired amid the chaos of continuing urban warfare. We need to bring them home, with a hearty, "Job well done." We should begin with the National Guard. Obviously, they are needed here. They are an integral part of our first responder team in the event of a terrorist attack or if, God forbid, another natural disaster were to strike.


It is time to come home, America. Time to look within our own borders and within our own souls. There are many questions to be answered and many missions to accomplish right here on our own soil. We have neglected too much for too long in our own backyard. "To every thing there is a season, ... a time to break down and a time to build up..."


If we had spent the money a few years back to rebuild those levees on the Gulf Coast, thousands would be alive today. Perhaps we can finally see the value of that budgetary stepchild called public works. All across this country there are years of neglect of the basic infrastructure of the United States that cry out for attention. We have delayed for decades and the needs are only growing. There are antiquated sewer and water systems, built a century ago, in our major cities. Washington, D.C. has water not always safe to drink. Rural communities live with black mud coming out of their faucets. There are unsafe bridges, aging reservoirs, schools without adequate heat or modern learning tools all around our land. Homeland Security needs are underfunded. Yet, we continue to commit billions to rebuild Iraq, while our own needs go begging. Is it not now painfully evident to everyone that we must make basic investments in our own country a national and urgent priority?


Imagine a major terrorist attack on the heels of a catastrophe like Katrina. I have to believe that Osama or one of his henchmen is taking notes as we struggle with the devastation left in Katrina's wake.


Our economic resources are stretched dangerously thin, and so is our military might. We have taken on too much, turned our backs on cooperation with the international community, decided to go it alone and pursue some grandiose scheme of remaking the world in our own image. By now it should be clear to all that grand experiments are very, very costly. It is time for a national epiphany. The sound of Katrina's bugle must be heeded. We cannot continue to commit billions in Iraq when our own people are so much in need, not only now, in New Orleans, but all across America for everything from education to health care to homeland security to securing our own borders. We need to stop making excuses, stop spinning the facts, and come to grips with the unpleasant truth. The government of the United States is failing the American people.


Where is the national debate about our priorities which Katrina should prompt? What does it take to wake us up? It is a debate that must begin, if not on this Senate Floor, then in the barber shops and grocery stores of America and in the print and broadcast media of this great nation.


It is past time for that debate and high time for all of us to realize that there is nothing more patriotic than taking a good, hard, honest look at our national priorities. We the people always have that right. A strong republic depends upon just that kind of periodic soul-searching. Does our moral sense of ourselves translate into government policies? I believe that, presently, it does not. We have a disconnect in government policy in everything from a tarnished U.S. image abroad to a failure to address gasoline shortages, and skyrocketing prices that will certainly slow our economic engine and take their toll on working people. Instead of asking the public not to buy more gas than needed, I wish somebody would ask the giant oil companies to pass up some profits and help hold down gas prices as a patriotic gesture for our country. Would that be so outrageous? And why have we not had the vision to invest in alternative energy sources on a grand scale to free us from the addiction to foreign oil?


For too long our great land has been allowed to drift toward balkanization -- a separation between the haves and have nots, with the lower end of the income scale at risk from a tattered safety net, and a neglected infrastructure, lacking the jobs and the housing they need, the health care to stay well, the insurance to cover hospital stays, or the educational opportunity to prepare for the future. I remember an America that used to feel more like one country -- an America that shared the sacrifice of war, and tightened its belt so we could pay for it. Now we borrow to go to war, and cut taxes to spare those in high brackets from sacrifice. Where is the sense of shared destiny? It has taken nature's own weapon of mass destruction, a category 4 hurricane, to remind us that we are all Americans, and that our government has a moral obligation to serve us all.


This country is on the wrong track and the course needs correcting. Continued denial serves no good purpose. Further loss of American life in Iraq may permanently sour the American people on future military action, and damage recruitment for our all-volunteer force. "To every thing there is a season,... a time to kill, and a time to heal..." We have seen the fallacy of sending too many members of the National Guard to the Middle East. As I speak, we have lost 1,886 sons and daughters in Iraq and there seems to be no end in sight. We have 137,000 troops still serving in Iraq with 2,000 more scheduled to go in in October. We are building at least four semi-permanent bases in Iraq structured to hold 18,000 troops each. That does not sound like "staying not one day longer than needed" to me.


In truth, most Americans no longer support a massive deployment in Iraq. Nor do they understand the mission of that continued deployment. Despite repeated directives by the Congress, the "powers that be" refuse to actually budget for Iraq, so that a total picture of our fiscal situation is deliberately obscured. We are driving our country ever deeper into debt, and stretching every resource we possess to the breaking point. Prudence demands that we reassess our posture. Our inept and pathetic response to Katrina has underlined our vulnerabilities and writ them large before the world. The American people deserve better than this.


I call upon the leaders of this country to come together and to work together to repair our storm- ravaged Gulf Coast and help salvage the lives of its victims, but more than that. I call upon the Congress to inventory our homeland with an eye to the future. Let us look around America and target our deficiencies. Let us work with state and local communities to shore up our weaknesses. We must react in a crisis, of course, but, for God's sake, let us finally understand that we must also anticipate the future, and be unafraid to commit the resources to make us strong at home. The lesson of Katrina most surely is that an ounce of prevention is worth several tons of cure. And we need to also learn that we cannot long remain a world power if we continue to let America crumble from within. The alarm bells are sounding and we must answer the call. This is no time to play for partisan advantage. This is certainly not the season to circle the wagons and hunker down. We need not stretch our brains to write new talking points or invent new excuses. And please, oh please, let us not resort to the trusty bureaucratic ruse of simply reorganizing government agencies once again.


It is time for real leadership. It is the season for true humility. The Bible says, "Pride goeth before destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall." For years we have been getting it wrong in Washington, but if we have the will, we can begin to get it right. The American people deserve leaders with the honesty to take responsibility for failures, and the wisdom to change when change is so obviously and urgently needed. May God grant us the grace.

http://www.byrd2006.com/news/news.cfm?ID=9



Peace.

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OneGrassRoot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-13-05 01:54 PM
Response to Reply #2
5. This is so powerful, needs own thread ....... thank you ......n/t
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donkeyotay Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-13-05 02:15 PM
Response to Reply #2
9. If only our president had a fraction of Byrd's soul and intellect
A few of my favorite snippets from this speech:

Is there anyone in our great country that did not feel the painful outrage of the citizens of New Orleans and Louisiana and Mississippi as they waited for days without food and water or knowledge about loved ones?

. . .

I know that many Americans cringed, as I did, at the vision of callous neglect of our poorest and most vulnerable citizens which flashed around the world, making the United States appear to be a nation unmindful of its own, a nation unable to handle a disaster about which it had ample notice, a country loudly touting our form of government to the world, while failing to provide even the most basic protections to our own citizens.

. . .

We need to stop making excuses, stop spinning the facts, and come to grips with the unpleasant truth. The government of the United States is failing the American people.







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understandinglife Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-13-05 01:55 PM
Response to Reply #1
6. " ...anti-poverty organizations said they viewed the watered-down language
... in the emerging document as a step backwards.

"We are really depressed," said Max Lawson, a policy adviser for the aid organization Oxfam International. "We are left clawing our way back to commitments made three years ago. When we start defining success as simply standing still, that's a terrible situation to be in."

Link:

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/13/international/13cnd-nations.html?hp&ex=1126670400&en=e99627b923f74b75&ei=5094&partner=homepage


Simple message from Bush, Rice and Bolton - if you are poor you are going to die.


Peace.
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understandinglife Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-13-05 03:52 PM
Response to Reply #6
16. "Bolton Threatens to Wreak Havoc on the Global Poor"
Unbeknownst to the US public, however, at the very time impoverished Americans are being showered with support from the world community, the Bush administration’s newly appointed UN ambassador, John Bolton, has been waging an all-out attack on the global poor.

<clip>

But even before the first world leader landed in New York, John Bolton threw the process in turmoil. In a letter to the other 190 UN member states, Bolton wrote that the United States “does not accept global aid targets” — a clear break with the pledge agreed to by the Clinton administration. (While some countries, including Sweden, Denmark, the Netherlands and Luxembourg have already reached the aid target of 0.7 percent, the United States lags far behind, spending a mere 0.16 percent of its GDP on development.)

<clip>

Finally, with global resources that could used to alleviate poverty instead going into the never-ending arms race, Bolton’s agenda moves us in the direction of an even more dangerous and violent world. He tried to eliminate the principle that the use of force should be considered as an instrument of last resort, slash references to the International Criminal Court and calls for the nuclear powers to make greater progress toward dismantling their nuclear weapons, and cut language that would discourage Security Council members from blocking actions to end genocide.

John Bolton’s slash-and-burn style has convinced many global leaders that the US agenda is not to reform the United Nations but to gut it. In fact, Bolton even called for deleting a clause saying the United Nations should be provided with “the resources needed to fully implement its mandates.”

From On Eve of World Summit, Hurricane Bolton Threatens to Wreak Havoc on the Global Poor

by Medea Benjamin


Much more detail at the link:

http://www.commondreams.org/views05/0913-36.htm


Q.E.D.


Peace.

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raysr Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-13-05 01:45 PM
Response to Original message
3. The other "big guys" are
plenty capable of doing some "vaporizing" on their own!
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understandinglife Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-13-05 01:53 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. Yes. But, they won't because they are just as unenthusiastic about ...
... Tehran and radical Islam as are Bush and the neoconsters.

Our agenda is perfectly obvious in the billions we have spent hardening and expanding the capacity of strike bases in Iraq, and elsewhere. Bush controls air space, oil and water. It's just a matter of time before Bush solidifies control over the southern Iranian oil resources and does away with the rest.


Peace.
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DoYouEverWonder Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-13-05 03:48 PM
Response to Reply #4
15. The only thing BushCo wants to protect
is property and resources. They could care less about protecting people. The mask come off with this storm and what the world saw is pure darkness and corruption. It's not just a cancer on the presidency, it has metastasized through the entire Bush Administration.

It's time for them to go. Americans don't do this to other Americans.

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donkeyotay Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-13-05 02:03 PM
Response to Original message
7. That seems to be the message. For all he cried about Saddam
gassing his own people, Bush vacationed while Americans died. Kind of reminded me of him reading "My Pet Goat" while the WTCs burned. Maybe that is the takeaway message, "Hey world, we're such bad-assed rat bastards we shop while our own people die for water. Do you think we care about yours?"

See New Orleans for what it was meant to be -- a message to the entire world that Bush, Cheney, Rice, Rumsfeld and all their buddies partied while American citizens drowned. That's the message.

Course, it could be rip-roaring incompetence, or maybe this is the truth.



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understandinglife Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-13-05 02:14 PM
Response to Reply #7
8. I wish it was incompetence. But, we all know by now that these folk ...
.... do exactly what they plan to do and they do it effortlessly -- from stealing the 2000 national election to waging an UN-Constitutional war to ............. .

Nothing accidental. And, they realize that even as folk begin to dislike what they are doing, because of the "American psyche" almost no one will challenge them and most will make excuses until it is too late.

And, folk, if it's not 'too late' yet, you have only moments more to wait.

Wake up, America. Please wake up.

They partied and played and vacationed and slept well, while your fellow citizens -- impoverished children, elderly, hospitalized patients, .... -- WERE LEFT TO DROWN OR DIE OF DEHYDRATION.

Please see it for what it is, soon.


Peace.
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understandinglife Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-13-05 02:34 PM
Response to Original message
10. Nonpartisan congressional research report finds Louisiana governor took
.... necessary steps

by John Byrne

The Congressional Research Service (CRS) issued a report Tuesday afternoon asserting that Louisiana governor Katherine Blanco took the necessary and timely steps needed to secure disaster relief from the federal government, RAW STORY has learned.

The report, which comes after a request by Rep. John Conyers (D-MI) to review the law and legal accountability relating to Federal action in response to Hurricane Katrina, unequivocally concludes that she did.

"This report closes the book on the Bush Administration's attempts to evade accountability," Conyers said in a statement. "The Bush Administration was caught napping at a critical time."

More at Link:
http://rawstory.com/news/2005/Nonpartisan_congressional_research_report_finds_Louisiana_governor_took_nece_0913.html


Yes, they were sleeping or partying or playing or vacationing or buying a new estate.

Yes. That is exactly what they were doing.

And, now we know that the Governor did everything she possibly could.

Bush and neoconster "incompetence" - NOPE.

Bush and neoconster willful neglect - Yep.

And, we are already seeing all the reasons why and Halliburton and Blackwater and ... shareholders are already planning on what their next yacht is going to be or where their fifth home is going to be located.

Once again, if it were not for Congressman Conyers and other leaders within the Congressional Black caucus, no one in the Congress of the United States of America would have done jack shit to verify that Bush and the neoconsters slept and partied while the poor, the young, the infirm drowned or died of dehydration.


Peace.

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understandinglife Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-13-05 03:37 PM
Response to Reply #10
14. Link to the letter from the CRS to Congressman Conyers:
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understandinglife Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-13-05 02:43 PM
Response to Original message
11. "This presidency is deadly, knows it, and doesn’t care."
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understandinglife Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-13-05 03:01 PM
Response to Original message
12. Charlie Cray: Watch Who's Cleaning Up
Watch Who's Cleaning Up

by Charlie Cray
- director of The Center for Corporate Policy in Washington, D.C., and co-author of The People's Buisness: Controlling Corporations and Restoring Democracy (Berrett-Koehler, 2004)

September 13, 2005

Some of the same crony contractors who cleaned up in Iraq are beginning to sign big contracts with FEMA. Moreover, the same inexperience and bureaucratic ineptitude that handicapped the agency’s initial response threatens to convert the agency into “an oversized entitlement program,” as former FEMA head-turned Halliburton lobbyist Joe Allbaugh put it in his 2001 confirmation hearings.

The money allocated to rebuild has to be spent. But the current emergency has created a rush to skimp on competitive bidding processes designed to increase potential savings and enhance work quality. A handful of no-bid, “cost-plus” contracts similar to the ones handed out in Iraq have already been signed—with some of the same companies. This time the administration has begun to use the current emergency as an excuse to circumvent routine competitive-bidding processes, while virtually deflecting the hundreds of businesses that have been calling the Army Corps and FEMA to learn how they can get in on the action. We can expect new tales of wasted money and shoddy work.

Bechtel, the giant construction and engineering firm hired through a no-bid contract to rebuild Iraq’s electricity and water infrastructure, is reportedly in negotiation with FEMA for a contract to provide temporary housing, as is Fluor, another politically connected company that also worked in Iraq.

<clip>

The survivors of the hurricane deserve a speedy and effective clean-up and reconstruction effort. America’s taxpayers who are underwriting that effort expect the bidding process to be fair and transparent. In their unbridled greed, the corporate “disaster lobby” is pushing a wave of earmarks and deficit expenditures that threaten to further bankrupt the nation’s treasury at the same time that it fails the people of the Gulf. It's still too early to sniff any corruption in the doling out of post-disaster contracts by FEMA, but given the Bush administration’s track record in Iraq, we—and our representatives in Congress—should all be paying close attention.

Link:

http://www.tompaine.com/print/watch_whos_cleaning_up.php


What's it going to take?

Or is it truly, already -- Too Late?


Peace.
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understandinglife Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-13-05 03:13 PM
Response to Original message
13. "Bush says Syria must change its behavior when it comes to blocking
... democratic reforms in Lebanon and allowing terrorists to cross the border into Iraq.

http://www.aina.org/news/20050913143854.htm


Syria is merely part of Bush and the neoconster's messaging to Tehran.

Bush whacks Syria; which he is going to do soon, and Tehran (an ally of Syria -- http://www.guardian.co.uk/iran/story/0,12858,1416319,00.html) either tries to whack the US or 'loses face' in the Islam world.

Either way, Bush and the neoconsters have Tehran where they want them.


Peace.
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mod mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-13-05 04:31 PM
Response to Original message
17. Kick. Important -but I really have to make dinner.
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DemReadingDU Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-13-05 06:53 PM
Response to Original message
18. Thanks again U.L.
always great articles and opinions
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