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Republican-linked firms all stand
to profit from Hurricane Katrina reconstruction contracts.
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Hurricane Looting Not Over Yet
By Jesse L. Jackson, Sr.
Special to SeeingBlack.com
Who
are the real Hurrican Katrina looters? Tell us here!
The victims have been dispersed to states across the country. Many
still sleep on cots in arenas, desperately trying to locate family
members separated in the furies of Katrina. They are struggling
with a staggering psychological toll—destruction of homes,
loss of jobs, suffering, abandonment, displacement to a new city,
prospects unclear, past literally under water.
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Jesse Jackson, Sr. warns
of post-Katrina
corporate looting.
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But while the victims are simply trying to get their bearings,
the barracudas are circling. Naomi Klein, who witnessed this in
Iraq, calls it "disaster capitalism." Congress has appropriated
$62 billion already. Hundreds of billions more will be spent on
reclaiming the Gulf Coast, rebuilding and relocation. The feeding
frenzy has begun.
Already Halliburton is on hand with a no-bid contract for reconstruction.
Fluor, Bechtel, the Shaw Group— Republican-linked firms—are
lining up for contracts. Lobbyists like Joe Allbaugh, close friend
of George Bush, and James Lee Witt, close friend of Bill Clinton—both
former heads of the Federal Emergency Management Agency—are
advising their corporate clients to get teams on the scene. Normal
rules of contracting and competition are being waived in the emergency.
Big bucks are on the table. It is a time to be wired politically.
The ideologues are in the hunt, too. Newt Gingrich is circulating
memos calling for turning the region into a massive enterprise zone,
slashing corporate taxes, reducing regulations. The oil lobby is
pushing for drilling in Alaska and off the shores of the United
States. Right wing activist Grover Norquist calls for cutting taxes
on the wealthy even more to stimulate the economy. Arizona Republican
Rep. Jeff Flak suggests conservatives use the crisis to try out
their favorite ideas—vouchers for education and health care.
President Bush characteristically issued an executive order effectively
lowering the wages of reconstruction workers—and hiking the
profits of their companies. He wiped out the requirement to pay
prevailing wages in the disaster region, apparently thinking that
$9 an hour for construction workers was too high a price to pay.
The government can save money, no doubt, by exploiting illegal immigrant
labor.
The New Orleans business establishment has already created a headquarters
in Baton Rouge. They want to reopen the French Quarter, which didn't
suffer much flooding in 90 days. They are planning to lobby for
one of the 2008 presidential nominating conventions—although
it is hard to imagine that Republicans would want to remind folks
of the administration's monumental failure. They're talking about
capturing the next available Super Bowl.
Business optimism and energy are vital for rebuilding New Orleans.
Big dreams and big schemes are essential to the human spirit that
will bring the Gulf Coast back. But those who were abandoned in
the Superdome are looking at another manmade catastrophe. Dispersed
in 40 states, Katrina's victims are struggling to get by, as companies
pick up contracts and others get the jobs. If New Orleans is rebuilt
as an enterprise zone, private investors will wait for the government
to clean up the mess and then build luxury condos to replace affordable
housing. They'll turn New Orleans into a theme park, with its former
residents unable to afford to come back.
We shouldn't let disaster capitalists make a killing while those
who suffered the greatest devastation are left out of the mix. We
need a serious plan to rebuild vital infrastructure, to make New
Orleans sustainable, to develop affordable housing and mass transit,
to rebuild schools. Tax breaks and enterprise zones will end up
building floating casinos and luxury condos. We need public investment,
linked to a Civilian Construction and Conservation Corps that gives
priority to housing, hiring, training and putting to work the poor
people who lost.
The Bush administration's inaction and indifference after Katrina
hit abandoned the poor and added to their suffering. It would be
tragic now if action by the Republican Congress and the Bush administration
added to the misery. These people already have had their past swept
away by Katrina's furies. We should ensure that their future is
not erased by right wing ideologues rewarding disaster capitalists
and excluding those who suffered the most from the deal.
This essay first appeared in the Chicago Sun-Times.
— October 11, 2005

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