Looking into the future the Pelican feeding its young from a self-induced wound in its own
breast (as depicted, mysteriously, on the state flag of Louisiana) is accepted as an
appropriate symbol of both self-sacrifice and rebirth. Through his selfless efforts, man is
raised from the slavery of ignorance to the condition of freedom conferred by wisdom.
Given the current state of affairs in Louisiana, one hopes that the understanding of the Pelican
as a symbol shall point the way towards a new consciousness of ourselves as a whole, and lead us
to face our futures with strength, grace, wisdom and faith, to learn from our mistakes and carry
our successes and zest for living to future generations.
Après Moi le Deluge: After Me Come the Floods
September 5, 2005
By Paul Jay, Chair,
Reprinted from: http://www.iwtnews.com
Independent World News
The leader of the most powerful country on earth, with
an unquestioned faith in his divine right to rule and
the absolute power of the centralized state, was the
namesake for Louisiana.
When he died in 1715, Louis XIV had built France into
the dominant power in Europe, but he bankrupted the
nation, forcing him to levy high taxes on the
peasantry while the nobility paid none at all. Most
people lived in poverty while the King built an
empire.
During the empire’s demise his great great grandson
Louis XV ruled France and its possessions, which
included the colonial city of New Orleans. He lived
for indulgence and luxury as his people descended
further into despair. It is said near his end he
uttered the words "Après moi le deluge." After me come
the floods.
Centuries later, the people of New Orleans met those
floods, as contemporary rulers -- political and
economic -- abandoned them to their fate. The words
"Après moi le deluge" have come to epitomise the
psychology of those who ruin people and the earth with
no thought for tomorrow, and the destruction of New
Orleans will stand as the naked exposure of a fading
American dream.
"Guardians of freedom and the American way of life"
say the recruitment ads for the National Guard. For
the 38% of New Orleans who lived in poverty and at
least 37 million others across the nation who suffer
in grim conditions, the fantasy of the ‘American way
of life’ vanished long ago. The reality is a growing
gap between rich and poor, under both Republican and
Democratic administrations.
And unfortunately for the people of New Orleans, too
many of their National Guardsmen, instead of helping
evacuate citizens at their time of need, had been sent
away to bring "freedom and the American way of life"
to Iraq.
Of course, that fantasy is also collapsing as the
truth is starting to seep through to the American
public of the thousands of civilian deaths, the
collapse of infrastructure, the developing civil war,
the strength of the insurgency, and the creation of
conditions for the unleashing of Al Qaeda’s fanatic
reign of terror against the Iraqi people.
Other mythologies remain intact, like the success
story of the liberation of Afghanistan, where life
expectancy is just 44.5 years, one in five children
die before they reach the age of five and where
violence against women remains near Taliban times.
The UN estimates that every year 400,000 Afghans are
affected by natural disasters, with little done to
prevent them or help the people afterwards. Here the
citizens of New Orleans share a new kinship with
Afghans.
Perhaps the fact that most of the people who were
abandoned to the flood were of African descent may
give them a new sense of solidarity with the estimated
85 million Africans that the UN says will die of HIV
and other diseases over the next two decades. Millions
of people abandoned by the rich, industrialized world.
But not only African-Americans felt abandoned in New
Orleans.
In one of those rare moments when television’s barrier
between viewer and real world breaks down, we saw one
of the most gut-wrenching moments of Katrina coverage
when Aaron Broussard, President, Jefferson Parish,
Louisiana broke down in tears on NBC’s "Meet the
Press."
"The aftermath of Hurricane Katrina will go down in
history as one of the worst abandonments of Americans
on American soil ever in US history," he said. "It’s
not just Katrina that caused all these deaths in New
Orleans here. Bureaucracy has committed murder here in
the greater New Orleans area and bureaucracy has to
stand trial before Congress now."
Mr. Broussard continued: "The guy who runs this
building I'm in, emergency management, he's
responsible for everything. His mother was trapped in
St. Bernard nursing home and every day she called him
and said, 'Are you coming, son? Is somebody coming?'
And he said, 'Yeah, Mama, somebody's coming to get
you. Somebody's coming to get you on Tuesday.
Somebody's coming to get you on Wednesday. Somebody's
coming to get you on Thursday. Somebody's coming to
get you on Friday.' And she drowned Friday night....
Nobody's coming to get us.... The secretary has
promised. Everybody's promised. They've had press
conferences. I'm sick of the press conferences. For
God sakes, shut up and send us somebody."
Mr. Broussard broke down sobbing, his face buried in
his hands. The moment was raw, unfiltered, and
powerful. The words "Bureaucracy has committed murder
here in greater New Orleans" ripping through the
rhetoric and evasion by President Bush and Michael
Chertoff, head of Homeland Security.
Why can’t there be television with this honesty every
night?
In fact, much of TV news coverage of Katrina in New
Orleans has been remarkable, actually giving some
representation of reality. Like CNN’s Soledad
O’Brian's reporting how often she heard people at the
convention center ask her "why are we being treated
like animals?" Remarkable in its contrast with what
passes for news most nights on national television,
where rarely do the poor get to speak or are reported
on. It took such a calamitous event to open the space
to be heard at all. How long before it closes?
Until now, corporate TV coverage of the Bush
administration has been little better than the fawning
nobles in the court of Louis XIV. News rooms have been
intimidated by the post 9/11 atmosphere. Dan Rather
called it the fear of having a "flaming tire of lack
of patriotism put around your neck." They have been
limited by ownership that puts short-term profit
position and corporate interests ahead of the
principles of journalism and a duty to inform people
in a way that enables them to exercise their rights of
citizenship.
Ron Suskind, in a well-known article for the New York
Times Magazine, wrote that the Bush administration is
a "faith-based presidency." He quoted a senior White
House official dismissing journalists and others of
"the reality-based community" and saying "We are an
empire now, and when we act, we create our own
reality."
It’s dangerous indeed to have a president who
believes, as Suskind reports, mostly in his instincts
and a faith that he is being directed by God – witness
the invasion of Iraq, which ignored the many experts
who predicted the current turmoil. Katrina is another
example of how disconnected from reality this White
House is.
But only when a news media uncritically reports on
these policies and actions - that caves to jingoistic
pressure and reports on propaganda as if it’s news -
is it possible for such an administration to inspire
faith in those they lead.
There are windows that open, when glimpses of reality
pierce through the haze.
After the 2000 elections, the disenfranchisement of
thousands of African Americans in Florida and the
appointment of a president by a politicised Supreme
Court laid bare the reality of race, class and power
in America. For a few weeks such stories appeared on
television newscasts. Then ranks closed, the
leadership of the Democratic Party dropped the fight,
and most TV journalists dropped the story. The fog of
TV entertainment culture and spin seeped back to lull
people to sleep.
Another moment occurred in the days following the
exposure of the Abu Ghraib prison scandal, when the
brutal nature of the US occupation of Iraq was
revealed. But after a few days of demanding
accountability, TV news returned to business as usual.
Ordinary soldiers wound up as scapegoats, leaders went
unpunished. Now a second batch of photos is being
suppressed by the US government, with little sign of
protest from major TV news (a lawsuit has been filed
under the Freedom of Information Act by the ACLU, the
Centre for Constitutional Rights, Physicians for Human
Rights, Veterans for Common Sense and Veterans for
Peace).
Another porthole opened after Katrina. Journalists
asked tough questions, demanding accountability for
the administration’s negligence in ignoring warnings
that the levees would give, cutting the budget for
repairs, for not helping to evacuate people without
means. Cameras showed us at least some of the
suffering (more than we have seen in Iraq). The words
"race" and "class" and "poverty" are breaking through
for the first time in years. It’s as if there is a
tear in the fabric of time, but how long until it
closes?
One of the things we heard most on TV in these post
Katrina days is "How could this happen in America?"
One answer is the role TV news and entertainment plays
in covering up such serious threats, not to a mythical
"American way of life," but to our very existence as a
civilized people.
It was incredible that all the major TV networks and
non-news cable stations continued regular
entertainment programming while thousands of Americans
drowned, starved, and died. "Après moi, le deluge" is
also the slogan of the corporate boardrooms that
decide who runs television.
If there is to be a more civilized society, there must
be journalism that lifts the veil on the realities of
life every day, not just in those moments when the
scale of destruction asserts itself.
That’s why we are creating Independent World
Television, funded by thousands of small donors, free
of corporate and government funding.
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