Posted on 09/03/2015 4:50:33 PM PDT by markomalley
It is always refreshing to read conservative ideals being lauded in a liberal publication, and The Atlantic's interview with Federal Emergency Management Agency director Craig Fugate is no exception.
Staff writer David Graham sat down with Fugate to look back at why the Katrina response failed and discovered that during disasters or otherwise, "citizens can't just wait for the government to save them."
If one reads the interview carefully, it will be clear that though the conversation hinges on natural disasters and the government's response, the long-held conservative ideal of self-preservation of the citizen rises to the top in all its glory. The very ideal that keeps the control in the hands of the public, not sacrificed to a government savior.
Looking back over the Hurricane Katrina disaster, Fugate noted, "We had almost by default defined the public as a liability. We looked at them as, 'We must take care of them, because theyre victims.'" This led him to the logical conclusion that it is the citizen nurse, doctor, construction worker, all servants of the community who are more than willing to rise to the occasion and offer help well before the government, seeing that community as helpless victims, gets itself involved.
Fugate continued:
Post-traumatic stress was this huge thing we had created to describe what people are going through in disasters, and how disasters are so traumatizing and leave lifelong scars, but when you started reading the research, it said for most people thats not what happens. Certain symptoms you go through are quite normal, and we should be normalizing that, not making it exceptional. The best way to reduce the long-term impact is to get people back in control.
Yet the response Fugate observed by the government during that event "was literally to take all the control away from them."
"As long as you use vocabulary like 'victims,' youre going to treat the public like a liability and you have to take care of them," Fugate said.
The first responders, Fugate added, are not the lights and sirens, but citizens willing to act.
From the interview:
Graham: Were people doing this on their own? Was FEMA in the way?
Fugate: Yes. It was getting in the waynot FEMA physically all the time, but in the way we wrote our plans and the way we did our training. What we built was government-centered problem solving. Everything was built on what government was going to do because the expectation from the media and everyone else was, The governments going to be in charge and if anything goes wrong, its the governments fault, so therefore the governments gotta fix everything. This is a kind of creepy thing I sometimes run into in the response community. Its all about the person thats doing the rescuing. Its like No! Its all about the people were trying to help. If that makes you feel good, great. But the reason youre doing it isnt to feel goodits to address what they need, but also to empower them and give them control.
Fugate goes on to explain that this victim mentality has been allowed to fester in the minds of the public and the halls of the government for far too long. Many see his refocusing the image of the public as survivors as revolutionary and radical. But Fugate says the idea of a whole community response is anything but "innovative:"
The whole community and all this other nonsense that all these people think is new and radicalized, it's like, guys, this is pretty basic stuff. But it does force us into thinking about disasters where government-centered problem solving will fail when our communities need us the most.
Welcome to the Victimocracy
This is really good.
He strikes at the heart of the control-them-by-making-them-think-they-are-victims, and taking away thought and autonomy.
Preppers’ PING!!
FEMA
You either prepare and stand on your own beholden to no one or you become dependent on others to provide your basic needs and become their serf. Me I dont want to be beholden to anyone for providing what is needed for me and mine. I certainly dont want to have to kiss some gubberment third class bureaucratic to try and coax some help from them, I dont want some jack booted thug herding me in line and telling me where to stand, sit, eat or sleep. And last but not least I dont want to be shut up in with a bunch of zombies and have to worry about not only trying to get basic necessities but having to fight to keep what I manage to get.
It is your choice you can prep or you can stand around on a bridge waiting’ and waiting, and waiting, for FEMA to bring you a bottle of water, a MRE, a warm blanket and a kiss for your boo-boo and maybe you can even get your picture as you stand there on the national news, that is if the ‘zombies’ and ‘yutes’ don’t get to you first.
You have seemed some of the responses on the prepper threads some people are just bound and determined to stand on that bridge waiting for FEMA even a few FReepers.
This guy works for Obama?
L
I’m not going to wait for anyone, I’d probably die rather quickly at this point.
The anti-preppers just amaze me, I really don’t get it.
Maybe they will come along and explain? Naaaww....
SOME writers have so confounded society with government, as to leave little or no distinction between them; whereas they are not only different, but have different origins. Society is produced by our wants, and government by our wickedness; the former promotes our happiness POSITIVELY by uniting our affections, the latter NEGATIVELY by restraining our vices. The one encourages intercourse, the other creates distinctions. The first is a patron, the last a punisher.Society in every state is a blessing, but Government, even in its best state, is but a necessary evil - Thomas Paine, Common Sense (1776)
Not for much longer.
Yeah, sooner or later he'll be investigated for something or wake up with a dead girl in his bed.
A live boy would be ok though, might even save him his job.
Hell, he’d get promoted to Secretary of the Interior!
I had a lot of Christian friends who went to New Orleans after Katrina to help, they said most of their time was spent filling out simple forms for FEMA ‘give-aways’ because about 50% of the population in New Orleans cannot read or write.
Maybe he could run the Federal Hershey Highway Administration (FHHWA).
Strange to read something that makes sense from the Atlantic...
The MO of the regime is suddenly to find child porn on your government-issued laptop, and let the charges take their course.
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