Townhall...
Politicizing
Hurricanes Again
By Brent Bozell
8/31/2011
Al
Sharpton’s claim to fame is he has
never found a crisis he couldn’t exploit -- even when one doesn’t exist.
On
Friday’s pre-hurricane episode of
his MSNBC show, “PoliticsNation,” he warned “Hurricane Irene is
nonpartisan”
and that it is threatening both red and blue states. But,
nonpartisanship
doesn’t extend to hurricane coverage on TV, where liberals once again
boast
about the glories of government disaster aid, and conservatives are
trashed as
lunatics for wanting to limit the untrammeled growth of spending on
natural
disasters.
Sharpton
began his show by announcing
“The desperate race to get ready and keep people safe reminds us all
how
essential our government is.” Nonsense. It reminds us how essential
personal
responsibility is.
Then
he turned to former Democratic
Gov. Ed Rendell and asked, “What is your take on this anti-government
rhetoric
in the middle of this crisis, unprecedented crisis for people on the
East
Coast?”
Unprecedented?
Hurricane Irene was
frightening and had a death toll that stands at 37. But compared to
hurricanes
like Katrina and Rita, she was a nuisance. Hysteria politics were
definitely
overcoming the reality that had yet to occur. Rendell replied: “It is
absolutely stunning, Al. It reminds me of the saying, ‘The inmates are
running
the asylum.’ It’s lunacy.”
Both
men were referring to House
Majority Leader Eric Cantor who asked for spending offsets to the
expected
federal hurricane relief train that’s coming. That’s hardly “lunacy”
when the
projected deficit for this year is $1.3 trillion, and the country’s
flat broke.
Rendell
next slammed Gov. Rick Perry’s
campaign promise to make Washington “inconsequential” and repeated
himself.
“These guys are absolutely nuts.”
Sharpton
also brought on Dana Milbank
of The Washington Post to beat this dead horse into paste. “In the
abstract,
people say big government is a bad thing, you need to shrink the
government,”
he lectured. “Now we see what big government is. Big government is the
satellites that give you these images and this data so we know where
the storm
is going. And big government is FEMA (Federal Emergency Management
Agency) and
all the others who step in to help people when they’re hurt by this.”
While
Cantor and Perry were painted as
loons, Democrats were portrayed as the dictionary definition of
responsiveness.
On Sunday, NBC “Meet the Press” host David Gregory read former
President George
W. Bush’s Katrina regrets from his memoir, and then expressed delight
at the
Twitter messages of liberal Newark Mayor Cory Booker. “Heading on a
pizza run.
I’m going to deliver 10 pizzas to those standing in our shelter at
JFK,”
boasted the mayor. Gregory turned to a radical-left professor guest
with a
please-bash-Bush softball. “If you have the contrast, Michael Eric
Dyson,
between President Bush regretting the fact that he did a flyover of the
storm
zone, and here’s Mayor Booker personally delivering pizzas.”
Last
December, NBC offered the same
gooey congratulations to Newark’s mayor during a massive snowstorm.
“Nightly
News” anchorman Brian Williams celebrated Booker as a “one-man snow
removal
machine,” shoveling constituent sidewalks and helping get an ambulance
to a
dialysis patient.
But
the most jaw-dropping hurricane
spin preceding Irene came when several networks presented Ray Nagin,
the
famously incompetent mayor of New Orleans, as an expert on hurricane
preparedness. The networks forgot, but people remembered the pictures
of a lot
filled with flooded buses never used to evacuate the poor and news of
the mayor
who fled Katrina for the safety of Dallas. Jokes immediately popped up
on
Twitter. “Bringing on Ray Nagin to talk about hurricane preparedness is
like
bringing on Michael Moore to talk about weight loss.”
On
Friday morning, CBS “Early Show”
host Chris Wragge not only failed to ask Nagin about his failures in
New
Orleans, but called him an “expert in the field” twice and concluded by
oozing
to Nagin, “if people aren’t heeding the advice of their local
officials, they
should definitely heed your advice.”
On
Friday afternoon, MSNBC interviewed
Nagin...twice. “Hardball” substitute host Chris Jansing made a complete
mockery
of the show’s name by never asking Nagin about his own failures,
getting no
closer to reality than asking, “Do you think that there are lessons
learned
from Katrina that can make this one not so bad? Not so painful?”
At
least mid-afternoon anchor Martin
Bashir asked Nagin to accept blame for his own failures during Katrina,
albeit
after touting him as an expert who’d arrived to “explain what leaders
must do
to avoid the mistakes that were made six years ago.”
You
turn on the TV because you just
want to track the storm. Instead, you have to brace for another
thunderous
surge of insufferable analysis and lectures about how crazy
conservatives don’t
care if people live or die.
Read
it at Townhall
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