At some point in the not-too-distant past the Democratic Party
became the party of “infrastructure investment.” It sounded better than “government
spending.”
In George Lakoff’s world, what matters is how it sounds, not
whether it works.
Of course, the Democratic Party is not alone. Republicans
have often jumped on the infrastructure bandwagon. Unfortunately, New Yorkers
have just discovered that all of the infrastructure money was not invested in
New York’s infrastructure.
Today, the situation in much of Manhattan is horrific. The
situation in the outer boroughs and the suburbs is worse.
ABC News reported:
The
residents of Staten Island are pleading for help from elected officials,
begging for gasoline, food and clothing three days after Sandy slammed the New
York City borough.
“We’re
going to die! We’re going to freeze! We got 90-year-old people!” Donna Solli
told visiting officials. “You don’t understand. You gotta get your trucks down
here on the corner now. It’s been three days!”
Staten
Island was one of the hardest-hit communities in New York City. More than
80,000 residents are still without power. Many are homeless, and at least 19
people died on Staten Island because of the storm.
One of
the devastated neighborhoods was overwhelmed by a violent surge of water.
Residents described a super-sized wave as high as 20 feet, with water rushing
into the streets like rapids.
In the midst of this calamity New York’s Mayor Michael
Bloomberg declared yesterday that the show must go on. He meant that New York
City would not call off the marathon scheduled for this Sunday.
Rather than deploy the police force to help New Yorkers in
need, Bloomberg wants to use it for the marathon.
Bloomberg made more news yesterday when he announced that he
would endorse President Obama’s re-election.
As New York’s wealthiest individual Bloomberg does not sweat
the small stuff, like jobs and economic growth. The issues that matter for him
are climate change, gun control, marriage equality, abortion rights and
immigration.
It’s astonishing to see such a savvy and successful
businessman get suckered by trendy liberal causes.
Bloomberg has been major for more than ten years now. He has
done nothing to shore up New York’s deteriorating infrastructure. It makes
sense to see him blaming it all on climate change.
If the problem lies with climate change, we can supposedly
solve it by building more wind farms and solar panels. If the problem is
deteriorating infrastructure, then we need vastly more construction.
Not to put too fine a point on it, but the climate change
model embodies feminine values; the reconstruction model privileges masculine values. The
first is clean; the second involves the kind of dirty work that men excel at.
As you might have guessed, a man who is called Nanny
Bloomberg came down on the side of the feminine.
Throughout his mayoralty Bloomberg has squandered his
political capital on Nanny state issues: transfats, large sodas and the Ground Zero
Mosque.
As I have noted on this blog, when it came time to take on
the municipal unions that were prevent economic development in New York’s
disadvantaged neighborhoods, Bloomberg issued perfunctory statements and let it
go at that.
Compare Bloomberg’s failed leadership on these issues with
Chris Christie’s willingness to go toe-to-toe with the unions.
Nearly two years ago, when the city was buried by a
snowstorm, Victor Davis Hanson offered the best and most concise analysis of Michael
Bloomberg’s governing style.
Hanson wrote:
New
York City mayor Michael Bloomberg was a past master of lecturing about the
cosmic while at times ignoring the more concrete. Governing the boroughs of an
often-chaotic New York City is nearly impossible. Pontificating on the evils of
smoking, fatty foods, and supposed anti-Muslim bigotry was not only far easier
but had established the mayor as a national figure of sensitivity and caring.
He was praised for his progressive declarations by supporters of everything
from global warming to abortion.
But
Bloomberg’s carefully constructed philosopher’s image was finally shattered by
the December 2010 blizzard and his own asleep-at-the-wheel reaction. An
incompetent municipal response to record snowfalls barricaded millions in their
borough houses and apartments, amid lurid rumors of deliberate union-sponsored
slowdowns by Bloomberg’s city crews.
New York was unprepared for Hurricane Sandy. Decades worth
of municipal and state misgovernance laid the groundwork for the current
catastrophe.
Some scientists did predict what would happen, but no one
paid them any heed. Leaders like Michael Bloomberg, to say nothing of the local
media citizenry considered the likelihood so improbable that it was
unworthy of their attention or public funds.
When people consider an eventuality so improbable that
it does not require preparation it is a black swan event.
The New York Times reminded us that scientists had been
predicting something like Sandy for a long time now.
It reported:
For
nearly a decade, scientists have told city and state officials that New York
faces certain peril: rising sea levels, more frequent flooding and extreme
weather patterns. The alarm bells grew louder after Tropical Storm Irene last
year, when the city shut down its subway system and water rushed into the
Rockaways and Lower Manhattan.
On
Tuesday, as New Yorkers woke up to submerged neighborhoods and water-soaked
electrical equipment, officials took their first tentative steps toward considering
major infrastructure changes that could protect the city’s fragile shores and
eight million residents from repeated disastrous damage.
Ask yourself this: who was mayor during the time when the
scientists issued their dire warnings?
Many will say that the storm is telling us that we need
bigger government. The real problem, however, is that big government,
especially the kind that sees itself as everyone’s Nanny, misallocates
resources:
Walter Russell Mead noted:
The
problem with nanny state governance isn’t just that it’s intrusive. It isn’t
just that it stifles business with over-regulation, and it isn’t just that it
empowers busybodies and costs money. It’s that it distracts government
from the really big jobs that it ought to be doing.
Mayor
Bloomberg has done an admirable job under great pressure as the city reels from
Sandy’s attack. But an ounce of prevention beats a pound of cure. The city
needed flood protection for its subways and electricity grid—and it didn’t get
it. If the Mayor had spent less time and less of his political capital focusing
on minutiae, this storm could have played out very differently.
Caring for those who are injured and dispossessed after a
storm is not the same thing as building a great city that can survive a storm.
3 comments:
Bloomberg likes to make rules for other people; he's not so big on following rules himself. He repeatedly landed his helicopter at the E 34th St helipad, which is CLOSED weekends (for noise reasons), as is clearly stated in the FAA's Airport & Facilities Directory.
Then he got into sort of a snit that anyone would raise the issue, and his spokesweasel tried to assert that "CLOSED" meant only that heliport services were not available on weekends, which is clearly not what the term means as used in aviation...it means just what it sounds like it means.
Like Obama, he likes talk-talk, and ignores work-work.
If one lives in a "Blue area," how many times does government have to act to control more and more of your life, fail to prepare and take the requisite actions to protect its citizens, be there when needed, et al before one figures out that just maybe there is something terribly wrong with the "Blue model?" Can one not recognize how tenuous one's existence is in areas like these? One disaster and one loses the ability to be mobile, attain the needs for survival and safety almost disappears.
Worse yet is that the elected officials have more respect for a marathon than they do for its citizens. I just do not understand the mind set that makes itself dependent upon government instead of self. Is the lure of "free stuff" so entrancing that one never recognizes that nothing is free.
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