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View Full Version : Beyond immediate politics Katrina may be a boon to conservatives philosophically


astro
09-05-2005, 08:52 AM
I was reading this George Will opinion piece and he made some good points re the liberal and conservative reactions to Katrina.

For many the notion of societal security is likely to trump social justice concerns re the poor and dispossessed .

Leviathan in Louisiana
It is likely that Katrina's lingering reverberations will alter the makeup of the nation's mind far more than 9/11 did (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9014028/)

Regardless of where individual Americans begin or end in fitting Katrina into their interpretation of reality, the storm's furies and, even more, the social furies it unleashed will deepen Americans' sense that, in Aristophanes' words, "whirl is King, having driven out Zeus." In the dystopia that is New Orleans as this is written, martial law is a utopian aspiration. Granted, countless acts, recorded and unrecorded, of selflessness and heroism attest to the human capacity for nobility. But this, too, is true: The swiftness of New Orleans' descent from chaos into barbarism must compound the nation's nagging anxiety that more irrationality is rampant in the world just now than this nation has the power to subdue or even keep at bay.

Which is to say, Katrina will condition the debate about Iraq. Here is why.

Politics is a distinctively human activity, but it arises from something not distinctively human—from anxiety about security, and fear of violent death. On the firm foundation of this brute fact, Thomas Hobbes erected a political philosophy that last week reacquired urgent pertinence.

In 1651, in "Leviathan," Hobbes said that in "the state of nature," meaning in the absence of a civil society sustained by government, mankind's natural sociability, if any, is so tenuous that life is "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short." Thoughtful conservatives—meaning those whose conservatism arises from reflections deeper than an aversion to high marginal tax rates—are conservative because they understand how thin and perishable is the crust of civilization, and hence how always near society's surface are the molten passions that must be checked by force when they cannot be tamed by socialization

ElvisL1ves
09-05-2005, 09:07 AM
For some, yes. For others, and I think most of us, the attitude is "There but for the grace of God go I", tempered by the ol' Golden Rule. The dispossessed from NO are our people, us, and but for quirks of fate any of us could similarly need help. Such help, on the large scale that is sometimes needed, can be provided only by government, which of course is nothing more than the people acting collectively. The disaster shows that we need it and we need it to be well run. Have you noticed the near-universal condemnation of the administration's performance here? How does that compare to the fuck'emall from your cite?

Will's concept that the thinness of our protection from chaos can only be protected by force is no better than an apologia for fascism. He needs to stick to baseball.

A compassionate, human view that I'm sure many more of us agree with from James Carroll (http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2005/09/05/katrinas_truths/):At the same time, the abstraction of ''poverty" has been made concrete. Face after anguished face appeared on television to tell us, This is what it is like to live with absolutely no margin of safety or comfort. There was dignity in those faces, at times nobility. Mostly, though, there was pain.
...

United States, after a generation of tax-cutting and downsizing, has eviscerated the public sector's capacity for supporting the common good. The neglect of civic infrastructure, the destruction of social services, the abandonment of the safety net, the myth of ''privatization," the perverse idea, dating to the Reagan era, that government is the enemy: It all adds up to what we saw last week -- government not as the enemy, but as the incompetent, impotent bystander.

Since the topic is a comparison to Iraq:This is what war looks like, and the harsh reality is that the United States has been the source of exactly such devastation elsewhere. Obliterated cities, populations pushed into refugee camps, young American soldiers overwhelmed by the impossibility of their mission -- this is Iraq today. Oil is part of the Gulf Coast story and part of Iraq's story, too. We are at war for oil, a war we cannot win. Four dollar gasoline. The truth is crashing over us, a tsunami of it.

astro
09-05-2005, 09:16 AM
"Four dollar gasoline"

"Four dollar gasoline"


For some odd reason that little word cluster has a powerful memeic resonance.

Scott Plaid
09-05-2005, 09:50 AM
I don't know much about conservatives, but the last few words were a WTF moment for me.So Katrina has provided a teaching moment. This is a liberal hour in that it illustrates the indispensability, and dignity, of the public sector. It also is a conservative hour, dramatizing the prudence of pessimism, and the fact that the first business of government, on which everything depends, is securityLet me see if I understand this facet of conservative thought: Governments screw things up. Private sectors often don't. Thus, we need to have people pay private companies to provide firemen, police, rescue services.

Ha! Like that would matter one lick to the people affected by this storm, since they would not be able to afford such services, if it was left to the private sector.

astro
09-05-2005, 09:59 AM
I don't know much about conservatives, but the last few words were a WTF moment for me.Let me see if I understand this facet of conservative thought: Governments screw things up. Private sectors often don't. Thus, we need to have people pay private companies to provide firemen, police, rescue services.

Ha! Like that would matter one lick to the people affected by this storm, since they would not be able to afford such services, if it was left to the private sector.

:confused: Are we reading the same quote? I don't think he's saying that at all.

Scott Plaid
09-05-2005, 10:14 AM
:confused: Are we reading the same quote? I don't think he's saying that at all.No, I am not claiming that he said it, but am instead quoting a few sentences in which he shares a germ of an idea "Private sector good, government bad!" and then I expressed my limited view of the conservative philosophy as a whole, not necessarily what he expressed in the article. Perhaps I am misunderstanding how the conservatives see thing, but looking over past posts (http://boards.straightdope.com/sdmb/showthread.php?t=326957) , that is what it sounds like.

Scott Plaid
09-05-2005, 10:55 AM
I have just read over some past threads. I see now that while phrases like "This is a liberal hour in that it illustrates the indispensability, and dignity, of the public sector." Pops up in conservative thought, it pops up more in libertarian thought. Thus, while I think such an attitude is wrong headed, I am aiming at what is for the most part the wrong people. Not that conservatives don't believe this too, just not enough for me to claim "Conservatives believe such and such"

Larry Borgia
09-05-2005, 11:03 AM
Since when was Hobbes a conservative? Hobbes' pessimism led him to advocate an all powerful state which could not be checked by constitutional limits or popular dissent. I doubt that many of the SDMB conservatives would sign up for that. (Brutus maybe, at least according to his political compass score, but he's no longer posting.) I certainly doubt Ronald Reagan--whatever one thinks of him--would agree.

Hobbes and Locke often get lumped together because they both used a mythical "social contract" as a jumping off point for their reasoning. But their conclusions are poles apart.

Will is an eloquent writer, and he sure knows how to name drop, but his intelligence is vastly over-rated IMO. To paraphrase Vizzini, I do not think the books he references say what he thinks they say.

The best conservatives and liberals are admirable in their optimism about people, though that optimism leads to different conclusions. This doesn't mean they are pollyanna's. We didn't need Katrina to remind us of the fragility of social order. There are countless examples of chaos the world over. But we also know that totalitarianism is not the alternative to chaos, but is another evil to be fought. Katrina left appalling damage, and the response has been a massive clusterf--k, with much blame to be assessed on all levels of government. But, without minimizing the human agony this storm and our ill-preparedness have caused, it will not cause the collapse of U.S. civilization.

To be fair to Hobbes, there is a lot of wisdom in Leviathan. And Hobbes lived through a time of chaos far worse than Katrina is causing, which may make totalitarianism seem like a good thing at the time, in a like way to the way a freezing winter may make a boiling hot summer seem like a good thing at the time. But I don't think many of us on either side of the political spectrum would really endorse the more extreme conclusions of Hobbes.

BobLibDem
09-05-2005, 11:12 AM
I very much doubt this will be remembered as conservatism's great moment. The poll numbers will be very interesting, I'm predicting a five point drop in Bush's ratings.

Now for the libertarians: How would these disasters be handled in Libertaria? This is my opinion a perfect example of the moral bankruptcy of libertarianism. We are indeed our brothers' keepers. There is indeed a role for government assistance.

Sam Stone
09-05-2005, 11:46 AM
Not one of Will's better articles. It meanders all over the place, his points are vague, and his conclusion isn't really supported by his own statements.

If anything, I think Katrina is simply going to widen the divides that are already in the country. Racists are going to blame blacks. Liberals will blame the Republican government. Republicans will blame the Democratic state and local governments. Liberals will use this as an excuse to demand giving more power to the federal government. Conservatives will use it to argue that the government can't do everything and we should rely more on individuals. Conspiracy theories will fly on both sides.

As far as I can tell, the main political effect of Katrina is that politics are about to get a lot uglier.

BrainGlutton
09-05-2005, 12:37 PM
Hobbes' Leviathan supports belief, not in conservatism, but in authoritarianism -- in the need for an all-powerful state to keep order and for the people to just accept it and obey. That is essential to only some variants of conservatism, and not the kinds with which I had assumed Will to be associated.

Sam Stone
09-05-2005, 01:46 PM
Hobbes' Leviathan supports belief, not in conservatism, but in authoritarianism -- in the need for an all-powerful state to keep order and for the people to just accept it and obey. That is essential to only some variants of conservatism, and not the kinds with which I had assumed Will to be associated.

Well, yes and no. Leviathan supports the idea of an all-powerful sovereign to settle the disputes of men and maintain civil society, but the reasoning for doing so is very conservative - Hobbes believed that it was in each individual's self-interest to support a sovereign because only in a civil society could he lead a better life.

So the conservative or even libertarian view of Hobbes could be that the legitimate role of the state is to protect individuals from the natural state of conflict between men, so as to maximize each individual's personal freedom. There's nothing in Hobbes that would support, say, redistribution of wealth or other social outcomes. Hobbes is more about, "I'll agree not to punch you in the nose if you agree not to punch me, so that neither of us will have to worry about broken noses. And to keep you honest, let's have this sovereign with the guns enforce our social contract."

That's a pretty limited view of government, in and of itself.

BrainGlutton
09-05-2005, 02:02 PM
As far as I can tell, the main political effect of Katrina is that politics are about to get a lot uglier.

As a Canadian, you might not fully understand that ugliness in American politics has long since passed the point of diminishing returns. If I come across a dog carcass crawling with maggots, technically I can make it uglier by taking a shit on it, but who's really going to appreciate the difference?

Wesley Clark
09-05-2005, 02:12 PM
I very much doubt this will be remembered as conservatism's great moment. The poll numbers will be very interesting, I'm predicting a five point drop in Bush's ratings.

I don't see how this could possibly be a boon for conservatives.

Most of those left behind were poor and/or non-white. Conservatives aren't known as the party favoring the poor & non-white, fair or not.

Also, global warming may have made Katrina worse and there are some conservaties who do not take GW seriously.

Also (not to Bush bash) but funding for levees in Louisiana by 80% before the flood by this administration.

So I can't see it happening, conservatives are portrayed as being indifferent to the poor, indifferent to minorities (true or not), indifferent to global warming and the conservative president and conservative government drastically cut funding for flood levees (to be fair to Bush he didn't know this was going to happen) so the idea that people will flock to conservatism as a result of Katrina is highly unlikely. Hopefully this will build up a nation that is more conscious of our treatment for the poor and that does more to rectify that ugly facet of american life.


Now for the libertarians: How would these disasters be handled in Libertaria? This is my opinion a perfect example of the moral bankruptcy of libertarianism. We are indeed our brothers' keepers. There is indeed a role for government assistance.

Very much so. It would be much much worse if we lived in a libertarian nation.

Tyrrell McAllister
09-05-2005, 02:26 PM
I believe that these events will give strength to the most pessimistic elements of both liberal and conservative thought.

The liberal is optimistic about how naturally peaceful individual people are. He believes that a relatively small amount of government force is required to keep us from trying to hurt each other. However, he is pessimistic about our inclination to share and our ability to organize large projects successfully. He believes that the government must force us to share by taxing us, and that the government is best suited to maintaining the infrastructure on which our society depends, such as, in this case, levees. Thus, the liberal will support a weak state in matters of personal action, but a strong state in matters of distribution of resources.

The conservative, on the other hand, takes the reversed position. She has confidence that individuals will be generous without government coercion, and that private charities will largely suffice to protect victims of bad luck from utter ruin. Moreover, she believes that things like levees are best kept in the hands of private entities or, perhaps, small local governments. However, she is pessimistic about how naturally peaceful people are. She is inclined to agree with George Will about how "thin and perishable is the crust of civilization, and hence how always near society's surface are the molten passions that must be checked by force when they cannot be tamed by socialization." Hence, she will support a weak state when it comes to distribution of resources, but a strong state in matters of personal action.

Both of these positions contain an internal tension. If you believe that individuals are naturally peaceful, why do you believe that they must be forced to share (by taxation)? Or, conversely, if you believe that individuals are naturally violent, why need they not be forced to share? I am not saying that either of these positions are logically inconsistent, but followers of either philosophy should feel some obligation to address these apparent contradictions.

At any rate, I'd say that Katrina confirms both the liberal's and the conservative's pessimistic views, while presenting a problem for both of their optimistic views. But, naturally, each side focuses on the confirmation for his or her own view and the threat to the other's.

The libertarians may be roughly described as taking the optimistic positions of both the liberals and the conservatives and repudiating both of their pessimistic positions. In the end, they are the losers here. Which is a shame, because that is the view I consider closest to my own.

rjung
09-05-2005, 02:46 PM
A visual counterargument to George Will. (http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v725/highacidity/bathtub.jpg)

Sam Stone
09-05-2005, 03:12 PM
Very much so. It would be much much worse if we lived in a libertarian nation.

Really? Since this is all hypothetical, I can make the following counter-claims:

1. In a libertarian nation, fewer people would have waited around trusting authorities to 'do something'. More people might have prepared for their own survival and evacuation.

2. In a libertarian nation, the federal government would still be responsible for disaster management (most libertarians agree, anyway). But it would have been able to focus much more on that, since it wouldn't be encumbered by the eight zillion other things it's trying to do at the same time.

3. As a corollary to #2, a federal government in a libertarian society would be much leaner and focused on its 'core' responsibilities - military, police, emergencies. Less red tape, fewer bureaucrats in the chain of command, etc.

4. In a libertarian country, without federal flood bailouts and rebuilding assistance, fewer people would live in disaster-prone areas in the first place. Federal flood insurance is actually a pretty big welfare scheme for rich people, who build big coastal mansions and summer homes in dangerous areas that would normally be uninsurable, relying on federal flood insurance to bail out them out from the results of their poor housing locations.

5. In a libertarian country, the levees might have been maintained by private companies instead of a patchwork quilt of political districts fighting turf wars among each other. And given the potential liability cost of a levee break, they probably would have had liability insurance. And the company underwriting the liability insurance would have had a hell of a lot more incentive to make sure the levees were engineered correctly than some political stooge.

6. In a libertarian country, other mechanisms for aiding disaster relief might have arisen. Perhaps we'd have a huge private company that specializes in disaster rescue and relief that would contract to cities for their protection. It's hard to say what mechanism we might have, because the presence of the federal government has prevented alternatives from being contemplated.

And I could go on. This is a complex subject, and to just hand-wave away alternatives to the current situation as being 'obviously worse' is not warranted.

Wesley Clark
09-05-2005, 05:09 PM
Really? Since this is all hypothetical, I can make the following counter-claims:

1. In a libertarian nation, fewer people would have waited around trusting authorities to 'do something'. More people might have prepared for their own survival and evacuation.

I don't know what this is based on, many people are still refusing to leave LA even when offered. I also don't think its realistic to assume that just because you cut gov. aid that people become self reliant. Some crumble and that is just the reality of the situation.


2. In a libertarian nation, the federal government would still be responsible for disaster management (most libertarians agree, anyway). But it would have been able to focus much more on that, since it wouldn't be encumbered by the eight zillion other things it's trying to do at the same time.

I'm not sure how that would change anything. Nobody from gov. organizations like the highway project are working on LA doing life/death rescue. So it wouldn't matter. Life & death rescue missions and major medical interventions, which are what are truly important, probably wouldn't be affected by projects to build highways in Boston or NASA space programs.


3. As a corollary to #2, a federal government in a libertarian society would be much leaner and focused on its 'core' responsibilities - military, police, emergencies. Less red tape, fewer bureaucrats in the chain of command, etc.

This is conjecture. They may also privatize all of these functions to the point where there is gross inequality between rich & poor, or so there is only superficial coverage or inefficiencies. I have read reports that for profit hospitals cost more than non profits.

http://www.pnhp.org/news/2004/june/forprofit_hospitals_.php

There is no guarantee that libertarianism/privitization would lead to better situations.

[QUOTE=Sam Stone]
4. In a libertarian country, without federal flood bailouts and rebuilding assistance, fewer people would live in disaster-prone areas in the first place. Federal flood insurance is actually a pretty big welfare scheme for rich people, who build big coastal mansions and summer homes in dangerous areas that would normally be uninsurable, relying on federal flood insurance to bail out them out from the results of their poor housing locations.

Conjecture. The federal government has a project in California where they offer flood insurance cheaply to people who build houses in high flood areas. http://abcnews.go.com/Business/Insurance/story?id=94181

If they didn't have the insurance they'd have to rely on disaster management to bail them out.

[QUOTE=Sam Stone]
5. In a libertarian country, the levees might have been maintained by private companies instead of a patchwork quilt of political districts fighting turf wars among each other. And given the potential liability cost of a levee break, they probably would have had liability insurance. And the company underwriting the liability insurance would have had a hell of a lot more incentive to make sure the levees were engineered correctly than some political stooge.

Again, some studies show private industry is better, some show public is better. There is no telling for sure. Who would fund levee building in a libertarian economy as there is no profit motive? There would be no profit motive for something like that, so it wouldn't happen. In libertarian situations people ignore what is good in the long term in favor of what is good in the short term, it is darwinism which is unintelligent. It is cheaper to dump waste in the ocean and pollute the skies and not repair levees, but in the long run it'll cost far more in lives and money than it would've cost in the short term. The only reason many industries have safety practices isn't because of adam smith's invisible hand it is because the gov. forced them to take up more expensive practices (cleaning their pollutants, adding safety features, etc).

[QUOTE=Sam Stone]
6. In a libertarian country, other mechanisms for aiding disaster relief might have arisen. Perhaps we'd have a huge private company that specializes in disaster rescue and relief that would contract to cities for their protection. It's hard to say what mechanism we might have, because the presence of the federal government has prevented alternatives from being contemplated.

Hopefully that would work better. But again, there is no telling. Besides the gov. already farms out a good deal of its industries to private contractors such as military hardware or infrastructure building. I don't know about disaster relief, but I see no proof that it would automatically be better under libertarianism.


And I could go on. This is a complex subject, and to just hand-wave away alternatives to the current situation as being 'obviously worse' is not warranted.

No, in my experience libertarians have a philosophy that gov is incompetent and private orgs are competent and they base their opinions on assumptions like 'people are totally rational and totally in charge of their lives'. These are emotional viewpoints, and while I admit the idea that libertarianism is automatically bad is also an emotional viewpoint, so are the core principles of libertarianism. They are not factually deduced philosophies based on what is best or what works, they are philosophies which are emotionally driven by emotions like individualism and fear of authority. What is emotionally congruent and what is the best idea have nothing to do with each other. In some situations libertarianism will work better, in some it will not. But by and large I am glad we do not live in a libertarian government because I think the situation would've been alot worse if we did.

Wesley Clark
09-05-2005, 05:14 PM
Another problem with libertarianism is the rich/poor dichotomy.

Pharmaceutical companies claim to spend much of their time/effort building life saving drugs, but about 3/4th of the drugs they create are nothing more than clones of pre-existing drugs (ie, a new SSRI, a new proton pump inhibitor, a new ACE inhibitor, etc. Essentially another drug in a class that already exists). Also, while we work on 3rd or 4th cures for baldness for rich nation thousands of people die from lack of medicines in the third world because they can't afford any of the medicine. This is a side effect of uncontrolled libertarianism and privitization, the fact that minor luxuries for the rich can become more important than life or death help for the poor.

Since one of the major problems of the Katrina catastrophe is that the poor were hardest hit I think it would be even worse under libertarianism, as the poor are the least important to for profit companies.

BrainGlutton
09-05-2005, 06:07 PM
Well, yes and no. Leviathan supports the idea of an all-powerful sovereign to settle the disputes of men and maintain civil society, but the reasoning for doing so is very conservative - Hobbes believed that it was in each individual's self-interest to support a sovereign because only in a civil society could he lead a better life.

So the conservative or even libertarian view of Hobbes could be that the legitimate role of the state is to protect individuals from the natural state of conflict between men, so as to maximize each individual's personal freedom. There's nothing in Hobbes that would support, say, redistribution of wealth or other social outcomes. Hobbes is more about, "I'll agree not to punch you in the nose if you agree not to punch me, so that neither of us will have to worry about broken noses. And to keep you honest, let's have this sovereign with the guns enforce our social contract."

That's a pretty limited view of government, in and of itself.

Arguable, but irrelevant. The premise of the OP is that Hurricane Katrina "may be a boon to conservatives philosophically." The spectacle of looters and snipers might serve to illustrate the authoritarian side of Hobbes' philosophy, that government is necessary to keep order and defend individual life, liberty and property; but it does nothing at all to strengthen the limited-government side of that philosophy, the view that government is necessary only to keep order, etc.

Bosda Di'Chi of Tricor
09-05-2005, 06:12 PM
Well, liberals don't care about George Will's opinions.

And, apparently, Washington conservative don't care, either; or at least nowhere near as much as they do about TV preachers' opinions.

Face it: Intellectual Conservatives are as disconnected from the Republican leadership as liberals are.

Sam Stone
09-05-2005, 07:45 PM
Arguable, but irrelevant. The premise of the OP is that Hurricane Katrina "may be a boon to conservatives philosophically." The spectacle of looters and snipers might serve to illustrate the authoritarian side of Hobbes' philosophy, that government is necessary to keep order and defend individual life, liberty and property; but it does nothing at all to strengthen the limited-government side of that philosophy, the view that government is necessary only to keep order, etc.

Well, I wasn't arguing the premise in the OP. I was specifically arguing about the interpretation of Leviathan above.

Wesley Clark: It's funny that your argument against my points is that they are 'conjecture'. OF COURSE they are. The entire argument is a hypothetical! When you say something like, "There's no way libertarianism could have worked here", then you open yourself up to examples of how a libertarian society might have dealth with this. To dismiss them as 'conjecture' is pointless. Rather, you need to explain, with counter-examples or logic, why my examples are flawed.

John Mace
09-05-2005, 08:37 PM
No, in my experience libertarians have a philosophy that gov is incompetent and private orgs are competent and they base their opinions on assumptions like 'people are totally rational and totally in charge of their lives'.

Your experience (or your interpretation of it) is incorrect.

As I'm sure you know, liberterians take the name of that philosophy from the latin word for freedom. Libertarians start with the assumptiont that freedom is an end in itself, and the sole purpose of government is to secure freedom for it's citizens.

There certainly is an argument to be made that government agencies tend to be ineficient, but that's not central to the libertarian idea. Nor do libertarians assume that people are always rational.

You are criticizing a strawman explanation of libertarian ideas, I'm afraid. You might want to read up on what Libertarianism is actually about if you are going to discuss it on this board.

BobLibDem
09-05-2005, 09:05 PM
5. In a libertarian country, the levees might have been maintained by private companies instead of a patchwork quilt of political districts fighting turf wars among each other. And given the potential liability cost of a levee break, they probably would have had liability insurance. And the company underwriting the liability insurance would have had a hell of a lot more incentive to make sure the levees were engineered correctly than some political stooge.

6. In a libertarian country, other mechanisms for aiding disaster relief might have arisen. Perhaps we'd have a huge private company that specializes in disaster rescue and relief that would contract to cities for their protection. It's hard to say what mechanism we might have, because the presence of the federal government has prevented alternatives from being contemplated.

#5- why on earth would a private company build the levees? How could they possibly make a profit? Who would they charge? Just like the classic example, who builds the lighthouses in Libertaria? Who would build Fifth Avenue in New York?

#6- pie in the sky. Sure, a private company could contract out disaster relief. But a disaster the scope of Katrina would bankrupt it in hours. Once the company is bankrupted, who steps in?

There is not now, has never been, and never will be a libertarian nation on the face of the earth. Just why do you suppose that is?

Wesley Clark
09-05-2005, 09:11 PM
Well, I wasn't arguing the premise in the OP. I was specifically arguing about the interpretation of Leviathan above.

Wesley Clark: It's funny that your argument against my points is that they are 'conjecture'. OF COURSE they are. The entire argument is a hypothetical! When you say something like, "There's no way libertarianism could have worked here", then you open yourself up to examples of how a libertarian society might have dealth with this. To dismiss them as 'conjecture' is pointless. Rather, you need to explain, with counter-examples or logic, why my examples are flawed.

I have. Libertarianism is pro privitization, privitization favors profit, and only the wealthy can offer profit and profit does not necessarily equal good short or long term planning. My personal belief is that since many of those who got it the worst in NO were poor that things would be worse under libertarianism and privitization. Also I do not know libertarian perspectives on the environment, but global warming may have made Katrina worse. Also, the example I posted earlier about John Stossel is an example of gov. intervention. If people get cheap flood insurance they don't need FEMA help, this saves money. If there was no FEMA help it may cost even more, so inefficiencies keep raising the costs.

The only way I think libertarian views would've helped is if the companies that provided flood insurance to the NO area had a voice in building levees and river walls to prevent floods as floods would've cost them billions. Had they had a voice they might have done more to encourage levees to be built.

Mr2001
09-05-2005, 09:17 PM
6. In a libertarian country, other mechanisms for aiding disaster relief might have arisen. Perhaps we'd have a huge private company that specializes in disaster rescue and relief that would contract to cities for their protection. It's hard to say what mechanism we might have, because the presence of the federal government has prevented alternatives from being contemplated.
Not a private company like this one (http://leninology.blogspot.com/2005/09/politics-of-weather-3-shyness-of.html), I hope.

Wesley Clark
09-06-2005, 06:45 PM
The pharmaceutical analogy still holds as an example of assuming libertarianism and the pro-profit privitization it creates is a better way of life. Companies create unnecessary 4th and 5th treatments for baldness or switch an atom in a molecule of prozac to put it back on patent for wealthy western countries while millions of poor people are dying from preventable diseases. Since the poor were hit hardest I tend to think in libertarianism that things would be even worse. The wealthy and upper middle class areas probably would've been fine if flood insurance companies built the levees, but the poor can't afford flood insurance and/or their claims would be minor so building levees to protect them would've been largely unimportant to a for profit company. Only those who can offer profit get help, and the poor largely can't do that. Either they can't afford flood insurance, or they'd buy crappy flood insurance so no effort to protect them would've been made.

Kimstu
09-06-2005, 07:03 PM
Actually, after seeing some of the questions that are being asked in other threads around here (e.g., "Was the NO disaster caused by 'welfare state' attitudes?" "Do Bell Curve racial differences in intelligence exist? If so, what does that imply for the NO disaster?"), I'm starting to think that Katrina's main effect on conservative philosophy will be to make anti-black/anti-poor rhetoric temporarily respectable again. Bleah.

Fear Itself
09-06-2005, 07:23 PM
I think when people reflect on who bears the blame for the shortcomings of the recovery effort, they will be thinking less like George Will, and more like Winston Churchill: "The responsibility [of government] for the public safety is absolute and requires no mandate. It is in fact, the prime object for which governments come into existence." Harry Truman said it better:"The buck stops here."Any attempt to spin responsibility away from the White House is whistling past the graveyard, and I don't think it will fly.

Dewey Cheatem Undhow
09-06-2005, 07:58 PM
Libertarianism is pro privitization, privitization favors profit, and only the wealthy can offer profit and profit does not necessarily equal good short or long term planning. Only the wealthy can offer profit? Gee, I guess that's why Wal-Mart is such a success -- their relentless drive to cater to the limousine set.

Wesley Clark
09-06-2005, 08:06 PM
Only the wealthy can offer profit? Gee, I guess that's why Wal-Mart is such a success -- their relentless drive to cater to the limousine set.

Flood insurance is very expensive, and I doubt the poor in New orleans could've afforded it. So I don't see why for profit companies would care about what happened to them anymore than pharmacetical companies care about malaria.

Walmart caters to several economic classes, not just the poor so that is not a good example because by 'wealthy' I do not mean millionaires, I just mean people above a certain limit (maybe household incomes of 30k or so). When my brother & his wife made 20k a year they shopped at walmart and when they made 100k a year they shopped there.

rjung
09-07-2005, 12:20 AM
Any attempt to spin responsibility away from the White House is whistling past the graveyard, and I don't think it will fly.
It's worked for them in the past; why not now?

SentientMeat
09-07-2005, 04:31 AM
Are the CIA (http://observer.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,6903,1153513,00.html) classed as "conservative"?

Whether they are or not, it would appear that extreme climate events merely serve up a new load of enemies for conservatives to advantageously demonise, and the electorate will fall for it yet again in 2009.

Wesley Clark
09-07-2005, 07:26 AM
It's worked for them in the past; why not now?

I don't think the public will stand for it. With 9/11 I didn't really care that the gov. tried to avoid any/all responsibility. But with this we had tons of warnings about the levees breaking, and FEMA's management was grossly incompetent and FEMA is headed by a crony with no real world experience. I will be enraged if the bush admin tries to avoid any/all responsibility for this and just gives medals to everyone.

RTFirefly
09-07-2005, 07:25 PM
So Katrina has provided a teaching moment. This is a liberal hour in that it illustrates the indispensability, and dignity, of the public sector. It also is a conservative hour, dramatizing the prudence of pessimism, and the fact that the first business of government, on which everything depends, is security That may be true in the broader meaning of liberalism and conservatism.

However, roles have reversed between the two parties in my lifetime with respect to prudence and pessimism. For a generation, the Democratic party has been the party to support if you want somebody in charge who's aware that things can go wrong, and wants to be ready just in case; and the GOP is the party of massive riverboat gambles, like the Reagan and Bush II tax cuts, the war in Iraq, and the failure to do anything serious about gasoline conservation. And on an ongoing basis, the Dem party is the party of spending those comparatively small amounts of money to deal with problems before they get big; the GOP is the party of cutting spending where they can't ladle serious contracts to their donors.

I've always wanted a government that was prudent and pessimistic; that's why I left the GOP in 1980, and it's why I became a Dem during the Clinton years.

Not one of Will's better articles. It meanders all over the place, his points are vague, and his conclusion isn't really supported by his own statements. How does that differ from a typical Will column?

The guy's been coasting on reputation for a couple of decades. Can someone take both Broder and Will out behind the barn and shoot them? It seems to be what one needs to do to retire an incompetent columnist from the nation's editorial pages. It's like they've got tenure or something.

As far as I can tell, the main political effect of Katrina is that politics are about to get a lot uglier.That's gonna be awfully difficult. The GOP slime machine has set an exceedingly high standard in recent years. Can you say "Swift Boat"?

Jonathan Chance
09-07-2005, 09:34 PM
Well, I agree that Will has been coasting on his rep for a long time. No doubt.

But this bit:
Politics is a distinctively human activity, but it arises from something not distinctively human—from anxiety about security, and fear of violent death. On the firm foundation of this brute fact, Thomas Hobbes erected a political philosophy that last week reacquired urgent pertinence.

Urgh. It's always been my impression that politics arises from the desire to control the actions of others. It's the interaction of competing standards of behavior that most players wish to impose on others. Dress is up as 'security' or 'social norms' or 'fairness' or whatever...in the end it's about controlling others.

That's the dirty secret of the political process.

Zoe
09-09-2005, 02:45 AM
Thoughtful conservatives—meaning those whose conservatism arises from reflections deeper than an aversion to high marginal tax rates—are conservative because they understand how thin and perishable is the crust of civilization, and hence how always near society's surface are the molten passions that must be checked by force when they cannot be tamed by socialization

The news that the crust of civilization is thin and perishable is really going to terrorize the generations that I've taught that have lived in the projects or friends that live from paycheck to paycheck.

Capt B. Phart
09-10-2005, 05:25 PM
...are conservative because they understand how thin and perishable is the crust of civilization...

The Lefties at the Guardian (http://www.guardian.co.uk/print/0,3858,5280443-103390,00.html) seem to understand the exact same thing
Katrina's big lesson is that the crust of civilisation on which we tread is always wafer thin. One tremor, and you've fallen through, scratching and gouging for your life like a wild dog....[blah.blah].... Hobbesian.....[blah,blah]... The Big Easy shows us the Big Difficult, which is to preserve that crust.

The recognition that the veneer of civilisation is thin is not unique to left or right - the arguments about who has the best method of preserving it are not new.