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Edited on Fri Sep-02-05 04:53 PM by Nikki Stone 1
Today's media event was well designed for both domestic and international consumption. Domestically, people had been worried sick for 4 1/2 days over dying people in a flooded ghost town. Today's media blitz was designed to relieve the emotional turmoil---the equivalent of "THe United States Marines have arrived!"
All the right images were shown: rescue vehicles, food and water trucks, people being airlifted out--a drop in the bucket, but effective PR. The pix of Bush hugging people--including two African American girls. (I'll bet ol' Bill told him to do that.) Whoever is handling spin in the White House is a master at it. The faithful came back to the fold; the angry middle of the roaders responded to the emotion and decided he was a hero; the liberals got mad because the real message of this whole thing got lost, but the message wasn't for us anyway. The international community got an image--whether they believe it or not--of a President in charge who cared for his people.
The only people who weren't fooled were those who have kept very informed about the issues, those of us who would vote for a banana slug before we'd vote for Junior, and the African American community who knew very well they had been left for days and resented being used for a photo op. I saw those tired people on CNN: one raised a hand to tiredly and bleakly wave, but the rest didn't look at the camera, knowing that they were being used.
And how many people are still dying? We didn't see them today, so we don't know.
The worst thing is that the cell phones are now working occasionally and the friend I have been dying to hear from finally called around the same time as the media circus. She's alive and well, thank God. Wonder if they timed the cell tower repairs for the time of the media event. Then again, I am the suspicious type.
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