Tag Archive | "Safe"

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We won’t get fooled again


There’s this great Who song that you should play before reading this post. One of the greatest rock and roll bands of all time. They sang about their generation and the magic bus, told Tommy to go to the mirror, but today’s song is about not getting fooled again.

A picture named powellUn.jpgFlash back to the United Nations on 2/5/03. An impressive almost Presidential Secretary of State, Colin Powell, delivering some chilling news, not coming right out and saying it, but definitely leading you to believe that Saddam has nukes and chemical weapons and stuff even more horrible and is getting ready to use all of it in some unspecified horrible way. It’s the lack of specificity that makes it so chilling.

Consider the whole scenario. Powell can’t tell us what the danger is because that would violate some security that he can’t violate. Well, I did what a lot of Americans did that day, I sucked it up and got behind my government. And they suckered me. And I’ll never forget it. I got fooled, and used, and a lot of people died, in the name of freedom, and it was all a lie.

We all paid a huge price that day, and the bill may be coming due today, because they’re presenting us with the same scenario, this time about the economy. And we’re not going for it. You can see it in the way things flipped around overnight. A lot of people woke up this morning, like I did, and realized — wait I’ve seen this movie before.

A picture named kingHenry.jpgNow we have another impressive Almost Presidential secretary, Henry Paulson, who says there’s impending doom, but he can’t say exactly what it is, it’s not security this time, but fear of starting another level of bank runs. Senators and Representatives come out of a Thursday night meeting with the secretary (would they have believed the President) won’t say exactly what he said, but they are stunned. The next day buried in a sea of press about this event is an almost innocuous paragraph in a NYT piece that talks about a flight to safety from the US Treasury money market. OMG. A point made by the secretary to the Congresspeople, a lot of your constituents have their savings in money markets. The Senators think to themselves, Fuck the constituents, that’s where my retirement savings are! (And by the way, mine.)

An aside, I never realized this until recently, but Congress was very easily whipped by fear of terrorism. The fourth plane on Sept 11 was likely headed for them. We were all so busy thinking about ourselves we forgot to notice that they had a huge conflict of interest, they were targets on Sept 11, and probably many of them suffering from post-traumatic stress from it.

Anyway, back to our story…

Having been fooled once, sure there are some among us who will be fooled again, but we will not all be fooled again, as evidenced by the posts on all kinds of blogs. This is one of those amazing days that except for stylistic elements the extreme right and the extreme left are in agreement. We can’t trust Paulson the way he’s asking to be trusted. It wouldn’t be prudent.

On the other hand, what if they’re right, and don’t want to speak the unspeakable for fear of provoking a run on the credit markets that would wipe out your savings and mine? If you’ve been conservative, as I have and many other have, do you want to be poor? Want to lose your house? Want to live on the street? No health care. No job. How long do you think you’d last? Think it might be worth $1 trillion to prevent that? I do. I bet you do too. But we can’t do it on the terms that Paulson asks for. There has to be some pain and there has to be oversight and checks and balances. There’s no such thing as a law passed by Congress that can’t be judged by the courts. Not in the USA, not under our form of government. And no way is Bush going to get that by us.

So here’s what I propose. The Republican slogan today is Country First. So let’s see the Republicans do a little of that famous Country First stuff.

Bush and Cheney must resign immediately. No immunity, no pardons. Nancy Pelosi will become President, promising not to run for re-election on November 4. Her term will be one of the shortest in US history, just long enough to enact the provisions of the bill being proposed by the Republican administration. If it really is the best thing for the country and not a trick, then the Republicans, being impressed by the seriousness of it, would have to insist that Bush step aside and let the Democrats execute the plan. The entire Bush cabinet stays in office through January 20, but reports, of course to Pelosi. And that includes Paulson.

It’s pretty simple. If they won’t do it, we know they’re bluffing.

If they will, I will give my support to the plan, even though I still don’t know what will happen if I don’t.

Updated: An abbreviated to-the-point version of this piece on Huff.

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FEMA erected tents serving as it’s operations headquarters in Galveston (ID: 38876)


Galveston, TX, September 25, 2008 — The stars and stripes flying over newly constructed office tents at the FEMA Galveston airfield base camp. These safe and secure temporary housing areas can be erected and ready for use in a matter of hours. Mike Moore/FEMA

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Galveston airport temporary base camp sets up after Hurricane Ike (ID: 38878)


Galveston, TX, September 25, 2008 — Cots lined up in a men’s bunkhouse and waiting for occupants at the Galveston Airport Base Camp. FEMA can provide safe and secure temporary housing that can be built and ready for use in a matter of hours. Mike Moore/FEMA

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Workers assemble temporary sleeping quarters at the Galveston ai (ID: 38877)


Galveston, TX, September 25, 2008 — A crew setting up dozens of cots in a men’s dormitory tent in Galveston. After a disaster, FEMA can provide safe and secure temporary quarters in a matter of hours. Mike Moore/FEMA

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FEMA Grant of $3.2 Million Funds Construction of Special-Needs Safe Room in Baldwin County, Ala.


ATLANTA, Ga. — A grant from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security?s Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) will fund the construction of a safe room in Baldwin County that is specifically designed with special-needs citizens in mind. The Association for Retarded Citizens of Baldwin County (ARC-BC) is the recipient of the grant.

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Former Plant Protection and Quarantine Officer to Head CBP Agriculture Inspection Program


Washington - Vernon Foret, a 19-year veteran in the effort to safeguard American agricultural resources from harmful pests and diseases, is the new executive director for agriculture inspection programs at U.S. Customs and Border Protection. As executive director, Foret is responsible for making sure that CBP succeeds in its efforts to meet the agriculture mission at the national level. (more)

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CBP Continues Support for Texas Hurricane Ike Recovery Missions


Rio Grande Valley, Texas - U.S. Customs and Border Protection is conducting FEMA-assigned safety, security and aerial assessment missions, and reconstituting business operations at CBP ports of entry as it helps Texas recover from Hurricane Ike.Over 100 CBP personnel from the offices of field operations, Border Patrol, and air and marine operations have completed nine of the 13 FEMA-assigned missions. (more)

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U.S. Customs and Border Protection Braces for Hurricane Ike


Rio Grande Valley, Texas - U.S Customs and Border Protection has taken steps to brace for Hurricane Ike’s landfall and is urging all coastal community residents to heed evacuation orders and seek safe shelter, regardless of their immigration status.CBP also has ordered the evacuation of employees and their families along the affected Texas coastal region to safe shelter inland. (more)

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Ike Response


Houston, Texas, September 17, 2008 -- Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff (left) being briefed by Eric Smith (right) FEMA Assistant Administrator for Logistics at the Reliance Center Commodity Staging Site (RSA) in Houston. The RSA is dispatching trucks of ice, bottled water, and Meals Ready to Eat (MRE) to Points of Distribution (POD) in the Houston area in the aftermath of Hurricane Ike. Mike Moore/FEMA

I’ve spent the past two days in Texas meeting with state and local leaders and visiting evacuees and distribution centers in Houston and surrounding areas. From what I’ve seen during my two visits, there’s no question that Ike was an extremely strong storm that has left much of Galveston temporarily uninhabitable and affected millions of residents along the Texas coast.

While I can understand people’s desire to return to their homes, this environment provides a stark reminder that it’s often the after-effects of a hurricane that pose the greatest danger to health and safety. With limited electrical power, healthcare, and basic services, it’s imperative that evacuees remain patient until officials get things such as water, sewage, and electricity up and running.

Despite the widespread destruction, however, I can tell you that emergency managers and relief workers – including FEMA employees, faith-based organizations, and hundreds of volunteers – are working feverishly to provide supplies as quickly as possible to those in need. The resilience of Texas residents affected by this storm was evident in a Houston shelter I visited yesterday, where I met with several evacuees while their children played with one another in a local church (which had also been used to house Katrina and Rita evacuees three years ago).

As we work collaboratively to get these services up and running, it’s important to keep in mind an old saying, “they don’t call it a disaster for nothing.” In other words, emergency management is never an exact science and responders at every level must be prepared to adapt to unforeseen challenges. For example, earlier this week electrical workers from Ohio and other Midwestern states who were restoring power in Texas were called back to their home states following widespread power outages caused by Ike’s remnants. This reinforces the need to remain flexible, nimble, and adapt to changing circumstances.

Michael Chertoff

Published by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security
Washington, D.C.

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Yes We Are Safer


Close up photo of man in dark sunglasses.

Last week, the nation marked the seventh anniversary of the 9/11 attacks in solemn fashion, focusing on memorials and reflection, rather than on point scoring. Too bad Richard Clarke couldn’t manage to do the same.

Clarke, the official in charge of antiterrorism efforts before 9/11, commemorated the anniversary of the attacks by publishing a finger-pointing screed in U.S. News and World Report.

Clarke’s argument went something like the following: Here we are, seven years after 9/11. We haven’t been attacked. But we could be. Al Qaeda still exists, Bin Laden remains at large, and terrorists still commit terrorism. We’re backsliding, and no safer now then we were then. On the home front, our borders are still porous, we’re still not screening people, and security grants are too much about pork and not enough about real risk.

Clarke is mostly wrong.

In fact, we are safer today than we were seven years ago. We haven’t been attacked since 9/11 in part because we have destroyed al Qaeda’s headquarters, enhanced our intelligence assets across the globe, captured and killed terrorists on nearly every continent, and partnered with our allies on information sharing and other security-related efforts.

Today, al Qaeda no longer has a state sponsor. Contrary to Clarke’s claims, most of its original leadership has been captured or killed. It is losing in Iraq — thanks to the surge and to the Awakening movement among the Sunni tribes–and its savage attacks on innocents have reduced its popularity there and across the Muslim world. Muslim scholars and clerics are increasingly condemning its beliefs and behavior as a desecration of Islam.

This progress has come because we abandoned the practice of treating terrorism solely as a criminal matter – exactly the kind of September 10 policy that Clarke celebrates in his article.

Closer to home, the Department of Homeland Security has made clear progress that belies Clarke’s claims.

At the border that Clarke thinks is so porous, DHS has built hundreds of miles of fence and will double the size of the Border Patrol. We’ve also deployed fingerprint-based screening and radiation portal monitors at all of our border entry points.

To protect against a repeat attack, DHS has built nearly two dozen layers of security into our aviation system, and it has developed comprehensive security plans for other critical infrastructure.

Clarke claims that the executive branch has proved incapable of managing new terrorism programs to success. Tell that to US-VISIT – a massive government IT project that compares fingerprints of travelers to a database of millions and does it in 30 seconds for officials all across the country and the world. We got it up and running from scratch, despite the doubters. And it’s so successful that we’re expanding it to collect all ten prints and to compare them to prints found in terrorist safe houses around the world. We’ve done all that since Dick Clarke left government – and without a word of support from him.

Despite his claims of backsliding, it’s DHS that has been battling complacency, and Clarke who seems to have been sitting on the sidelines.

We’re the ones who’ve been fighting for the carefully targeted, risk-based homeland security grants he favors. It’s Congress that has added billions and made them less risk-based. Has Clarke criticized Congress or praised DHS for our risk based approach? If so, I missed it.

On our southern border, DHS’s fence-building and increased border enforcement have been hampered by local NIMBY (“not-in-my-backyard”) forces and advocates for illegal immigration. Did Dick Clarke speak out against them? Not so I’ve noticed.

To secure our northern border, we’re implementing tougher document standards, and we were ready to require all travelers to produce a passport or passport-equivalent by the end of this year. Where was Dick Clarke when Congress decided to push back that deadline to mid-2009? I don’t remember an op-ed then complaining about how porous this would make our Canadian border.

Clarke says that terrorists who look European have been trained by al Qaeda and may have European Union passports and clean identities unknown to intelligence agencies. He thinks such people could enter the United States almost as easily as did the 9/11 hijackers. It’s indeed true that during Dick Clarke’s tenure, Europeans could come to the US without any opportunity to screen them before they were in the air. As of this January, though, no foreign travelers other than Canadians will be able to come to the US without supplying — in advance — the information we need to screen them. At last, we’ll have the time and information we need to investigate risky travelers (and to prepare a rude surprise for terrorists who try this route). That’s all happened since Dick Clarke left government, and without any support from him.

There’s no question that Dick Clarke contributed to strengthening our national security, but his recent assertions are not only incorrect, they disrespect the work of many national security professionals he once called colleagues. That is indeed unfortunate.

Stewart Baker
Assistant Secretary for Policy

Published by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security
Washington, D.C.

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