What Harvey Wrought

Guest Post by Patrick J. Buchanan

Like 9/11, Hurricane Harvey brought us together.

In awe at the destruction 50 inches of rain did to East Texas and our fourth-largest city and in admiration as cable television showed countless hours of Texans humanely and heroically rescuing and aiding fellow Texans in the worst natural disaster in U.S. history.

On display this week was America at her best.

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Yet the destruction will not soon be repaired. Nearly a third of Harris County, home to 4.5 million people, was flooded. Beaumont and Port Arthur were swamped with 2 feet of rain and put underwater.

Estimates of the initial cost to the Treasury are north of $100 billion, with some saying the down payment alone will be closer to $200 billion. In inflation-adjusted dollars, the cost of Harvey will exceed that of the Marshall Plan, which rebuilt Europe after World War II.

Though the country has appeared united since the storm hit, it is not likely to remain so. Soon, the cameras and correspondents will go home, while the shelters remain full, as tens of thousands of people in those shelters have only destroyed homes to return to.

When the waters recede, the misery of the evacuees left behind will become less tolerable. Then will come the looters and gougers and angry arguments over who’s to blame and who should pay.

They have already begun. Republicans who balked at voting for the bailout billions for Chris Christie’s New Jersey after Hurricane Sandy ravaged the coast in 2012 are being called hypocrites for asking for swift and massive federal assistance to repair red state Texas.

And whereas George W. Bush soared to 90 percent approval after 9/11, no such surge in support for Donald Trump appears at hand.

Indeed, the sneering and sniping began on his first visit to Texas.

He failed to celebrate the first responders, they said. He failed to hug any of the victims. He failed to show empathy. First lady Melania Trump wore spiked heels boarding Marine One for Texas.

A prediction: The damage done by Harvey — as well as the physical, psychic and political costs — will cause many to echo the slogan of George McGovern in 1972, when he exhorted the country to “come home, America.”

The nation seems more receptive now, for even before Harvey, the media seemed consumed with what ails America.

The New York and D.C. subway systems are crumbling. Puerto Rico is bankrupt. Some states, such as Illinois, cannot balance their budgets. The murder rates are soaring in Baltimore and Chicago. Congress this month will have to raise the debt ceiling by hundreds of billions and pass a budget with a deficit bloated by the cost of Harvey.

And the foreign crises seem to be coming at us, one after another.

Russia is beginning military maneuvers in the Baltic and Belarus, bordering Poland, with a force estimated by some at 100,000 troops — Vladimir Putin’s response to NATO’s deployment of 4,000 troops to the Baltic States and Poland.

The U.S. is considering sending anti-tank missiles to Kiev. This could reignite the Donbass war and bring Russian intervention, the defeat of the Ukrainian army and calls for U.S. intervention.

In the teeth of Trump’s threat to pour “fire and fury” on North Korea, Kim Jong Un just launched an intermediate-range ballistic missile over Japan. Trump’s answer: U.S. B-1Bs make practice bombing runs near the demilitarized zone. Reports from South Korea indicate that Kim may soon conduct a sixth underground test of an atomic bomb.

War in Korea has never seemed so close since Dwight Eisenhower ended the Korean War with an armistice more than 60 years ago.

Despite the opposition of his national security team, Trump is said to be ready to repudiate the Iranian nuclear deal in October, freeing Congress to reimpose the sanctions lifted by the deal.

This would split us from our NATO allies and, if Iran ignored the new U.S. sanctions or began anew to enrich uranium, force Trump’s hand. Is he, are we as a country, ready for another trillion-dollar war, with Iran, which so many inside the Beltway seem so eager to fight?

The U.S. and Turkey have urged Iraq’s Kurds to put off their nonbinding referendum on independence Sept. 25. The vote seems certain to endorse a separate state. A Kurdistan, seceded from Baghdad, would be a magnet for secession-minded Kurds in Turkey, Syria and Iran, 30 million in all, and present a strategic crisis for the United States.

Along with the steady growth of entitlement spending, the new dollars demanded for defense, the prospect of new wars and the tax cuts the White House supports, Hurricane Harvey should concentrate the mind.

Great as America is, there are limits to our wealth and power, to how many global problems we can solve, to how many wars we can fight and to how many hostile powers we can confront.

The “indispensable nation” is going to have to begin making choices. Indeed, that is among the reasons Trump was elected.

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10 Comments
kokoda - AZEK (Deck Boards) doesn't stand behind its product
kokoda - AZEK (Deck Boards) doesn't stand behind its product
September 1, 2017 9:29 am

Like 9/11, Hurricane Harvey brought us Donation Cups; OK, at least the Firemen Nazi’s are not stopping traffic to shame you into the donation.

Just perspective (though many will not like it). Regardless, it is reality.

CCRider
CCRider
September 1, 2017 9:49 am

The empire is fraying at the ends. Around the world nations are trying to unwind the ties that bind them to the u s gov’t. You get the sense that once one of the many pressure points turns critical mass they’ll be a series of eruptions to follow around the world as contestant forces seize the opportunity to force a multi front situation the corrupt, overstretched and debt laden bully is unable to handle. It will be like old King Kong swatting away at the airplanes just before the inevitable fall. And I say bring it on. Personally, I’m tired of being so goddamn indispensable.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  CCRider
September 1, 2017 10:23 am

They don’t seem to be trying to unbind the ties to our money going in their direction.

In fact, they seem to be trying to increase them.

CCRider
CCRider
  Anonymous
September 1, 2017 10:38 am

You mean borrowed money, right?

Anonymous
Anonymous
  CCRider
September 1, 2017 10:52 am

More like granted money, and money from trade agreements that are biased against us to our free military support of their nations so they don’t have to spend their own money on it.

CCRider
CCRider
  Anonymous
September 1, 2017 10:56 am

Ok, granted, borrowed money. Its why someone coined the phrase ‘a fool and his money are soon parted’. It all comes to an abrupt end. Soon, I hope.

Big Dick
Big Dick
September 1, 2017 11:55 am

What it really brought is not the weather news, or the help stories, it brought the same looting by blacks as seen in any past problem situation. The difference now is the videos, outrage, and pictures are hidden, and not discussed by the “main news” media. The curfew and police/guardsmen required, says a lot about our wonderful society and the respect for others and their property. I will be labeled a racist, but I wonder why is it we never see any race, other than black lives matter people, breaking into stores and homes in times of weather difficulties? Isn’t the country full of other poor or downtrodden people of other kind? Maybe someone out there can answer those questions.

kokoda - AZEK (Deck Boards) doesn't stand behind its product
kokoda - AZEK (Deck Boards) doesn't stand behind its product
  Big Dick
September 1, 2017 12:38 pm

Big………………..Africa has been known as the ‘cradle of civilization’, thus that continent should be the most advanced or at least not the most backward continent.

Then you have Africa being a colony of Europe, which did bring advancement to that continent – something the black citizens seemed not to accomplish in tens of thousands of years.

Rhodesia (Zimbabwe) and S. Africa are poster children for Africa. The Europeans created advanced civilization for those countries, especially food production. The largest hospital in the world is in S. Africa – built by whites for black Africans.

Zimbabwe has kicked out all white farmers (or killed them) and S. Africa Gov’t is openly advocating for all lands to be owned by blacks and killing is OK. The blacks do not know how to farm nor do they care to learn once they have killed the white owners and taken over the property. It is just a matter of time until starvation hits and we will see the bleeding heart commercials to support them.

Want to bet whether or not the dictators of those countries aren’t drooling for some of the Climate Fund money. Do you think they give one good fuck about the people of their countries.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
September 1, 2017 1:52 pm

If Tejas is indeed serious about seceding they should pull up their big girl panties and refuse every federal dollar sent their way. If Tejas can’t rebuild Tejas then secession is just a pipe dream. They should start by digging a couple of big ass canals (with a few feeders) from Houston to the Gulf to aid in draining the place before the next big one hits. Get creative and use the canal bottoms as highways when not flooded.

Oh……..and can they please rebuild the chemical companies that absolutely cannot survive intact without power and refrigeration to the middle of Tejas………or just upwind of the capitol building in DC at the very least?

Stucky
Stucky
September 1, 2017 2:42 pm

I have a 10-step plan:

1. The US Gov should kick Houston out of America. Make it its own country. Houstonland.

2. Then force Houstonland to join NATO.

3. Then America gets some Dindu Kneegrows or Mooslimfuks to destroy what’s left of Houstonland.

4. Then Houstonland calls on all NATO countries for support, as required by the treaty.

5. Then Houstonland demands each NATO country contribute 2% of their GDP for rebuilding.

6. Houstonland becomes the most powerful nation on earth.

7. Then Houstonland bombs Washington DC, kills all of Congress, and takes over all the rest of the country, and renames the USA to Houstonland, INC.

8. This only lasts one day. Then the city of Houstonland renames itself back to Houston.

9. Houston renames Houstonland INC back to America.

10. Everything is back to normal. America is once again the most powerful nation on earth.