We're From the Government. We're Here to Help.
by
Ron Paul
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In the wake
of hurricane Irene, the Federal Emergency Management Agency is expected
to come hat in hands asking for more money from Congress. Like the
rest of the government, it is broke. It has been suggested that
any additional funds allocated to FEMA should come from cuts elsewhere.
This seems harsh and lacking in compassion to big government advocates
who do not understand economics, but I would go a step further.
FEMA should never have been established. It is based on misguided
ideas of disaster relief.
This seems
shocking to those who have never been subjected to the secondary
disaster that is the arrival of FEMA on the scene of a catastrophic
event. But explaining FEMAs ineptness is not the same thing
as saying no one should help people affected by disasters. Quite
the opposite.
Victims
of disasters should get any and all help possible, and there is
virtually no limit to the generosity and compassion of good American
people after devastation hits. One only need to remember the outpouring
after Katrina to know this is true. FEMA, however, did more to get
in the way of relief than to actually provide and facilitate it.
The examples are numerous. When the call was put out for volunteer
firefighters, they volunteered by the thousands. It was FEMA, for
reasons of control and bureaucratic ineptitude, who made sure they
were not, in fact allowed to actually help. When a group of firefighters
arrived from Houston, instead of being put immediately on the job,
they were told to sit around and wait. After waiting for two days
doing nothing, they were simply sent home. One thousand volunteer
firefighters were sent to Atlanta to undergo sexual harassment training
while fires actively raged in the city. The ones that remained through
this stupidity were sent to escort the president around or to distribute
fliers instead of putting out fires. Computer engineer Jack Harrison
was told his skills were needed to rebuild technological infrastructure.
After being given the runaround for about two weeks, he was misallocated
as head of security on the cruise ship FEMA had leased, when he
should have been using his skills to help. All manner of help was
turned away or mismanaged by FEMA while people suffered and waited.
Even the Red Cross had its hands tied by FEMA.
It
has only gotten worse since 9/11. Compare the stories of two flotillas
one after 9/11 and one after Katrina. Within an hour of the 9/11
attacks, the largest boatlift in history was organized spontaneously
by locals who saw an immediate need and responded immediately. Over
500,000 terrified New Yorkers were taken off the island by ferries,
tugboats, pleasure crafts, fishing boats and barges when all other
access points had been shut down. A similar flotilla attempt was
privately organized after Katrina. 500 boats caravanned to New Orleans
to rescue patients from hospitals that were out of supplies and
desperate. Unfortunately, FEMA had taken over by then and they were
turned away, empty, while the patients languished, still stranded.
Tragically, the Vermont Air National Guard helicopters were in Iraq
when Irene hit, and they were desperately needed here.
The establishment
of FEMA is symptomatic of a blind belief in big government's ability
to do anything and everything for anyone and everyone. FEMA is a
bureaucratic organization. Bureaucracies, while staffed with well-meaning
people, are notoriously slow and wasteful by their very nature.
When people are starving, injured and dying they need speed and
efficiency, yet FEMA comes along with forms and policies and rubber
stamps. This sort of thing is bad enough at the DMV, but in matters
of life and death where seconds count, this is just not acceptable.
True compassion
would be to get FEMA out of the way.
See
the Ron Paul File
September
8, 2011
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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