CBS News Sunday Morning Contributor Nancy Giles
on the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina
From September 4, 2005
After
meeting with Louisiana officials last week, Rev. Jesse Jackson said: "Many
black people feel that their race, their property conditions and their
voting patterns have been a factor in the response." He continued: "I'm
not saying that myself."
Then I'll say it.
If the majority of the hardest hit victims of Hurricane Katrina in New
Orleans were white people, they would not have gone for days without food
and water, forcing many to steal for mere survival.
Their bodies would not have been left to float in putrid water.
They would have been rescued and relocated a hell of a lot faster than
this. Period.
I mean, reporters and crews are getting to stranded people, and government
and military agencies can't? Why doesn't CNN run FEMA?
When I saw pictures of black people taking things from stores, my first
thought was: "How are those Air Jordans necessary for your survival?"
Then it hit me: People needed shoes and clothing. Some escaped the floods
with just the clothing on their backs
We have American citizens, not "refugees" from an underdeveloped country, still waiting for shelter.
Waiting.
Waiting.
You leave children, pregnant women, the elderly, even the able-bodied, in
a city destroyed with no help, no food, no water, no electricity for
three, four, five days? What would you do if your family was starving, and
you saw people dying in the street?
And why didn't the stores in the disaster areas simply make their goods
available to these desperate folks? Surely, they've got insurance.
Love thy neighbor. Didn't I read that somewhere?
The real war is not in Iraq, but right here in America. It's the War on
Poverty, and it's a war that's been ignored and lost. An estimated 37
million Americans are living in poverty. New Orleans is one of the poorest
cities in the country, with 40 percent of its children living in poverty.
Mississippi has the highest poverty rate of any state. We've repeatedly
given tax cuts to the wealthiest, and left our most vulnerable American
citizens to basically fend for themselves.
The whole world is watching. And once again, a day late and a dollar
short, words of wisdom from our president: "This is a huge task that we're
dealing with." "These are tough times." "Give cash."
Once again, he finds the photo op: Some black folks to hug, some white men
in Mississippi to bond with. He flies over the messy parts of New Orleans,
waves and leaves.
The president has put himself at risk by visiting the troops in Iraq, but
didn't venture anywhere near the Superdome or the Convention Center, where
thousands of victims, mostly black and poor, needed to see that he gave a
damn.

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