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Monday, September 26, 2005

US News & World Report Says It Out Loud: "Ray Nagin, American Moron"

Mayor Ray Nagin of New Orleans, perhaps one of the most incompetent leaders in this country since Jimmy Peanutbrain Carter, has been hailed by liberals (it figures) for his "independence" and his "ability to fight George W. Bush," although his allowing hundreds of thousands of poor black people to face death in the face of Hurricane Katrina while he was looking for new digs in Dallas, Texas, seems to have escaped their notice.

Now, US News & World Report takes notice, and slams Nagin for the utter bonehead that he is.

Ray Nagin, the error-prone mayor

Which politician emerged from the mess of Katrina as the biggest bonehead involved? No, it's not Michael Brown, George W. Bush, or even the bumbling Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Babineaux Blanco.

The clear winner is New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin, who made every conceivable mistake during the crisis. With plenty of warning, he delayed the evacuation order, had no drivers ready to operate the school buses that stood idle, failed to stock the Superdome with food and water, and let the looters rampage without any interference from police. The excuse given for the failure to get buses moving was that the mayor wasn't able to round up enough drivers. One report said most drivers were women and afraid to make the trip. But a competent mayor would have ordered the drivers to report and provided an armed on-board protector for each bus.

Nagin didn't bother. He did, however, record a message on DVD last July announcing, with other civic leaders, that New Orleans couldn't afford to evacuate the 134,000-odd mostly poor and black people known to lack transportation out of the city in case of a hurricane. When the hurricane struck, the DVD, with its hopeless message, "You're on your own," still hadn't been released.

Nagin also managed to inflame the rage over Katrina, particularly racial rage, by estimating 10,000 hurricane deaths in the city, a figure that now appears to be 10 times too high. Since then, he left the city to visit his evacuated family in Dallas, issued a good deal of blame-shifting rhetoric, and came down for–and then against–inviting New Orleans residents to return quickly to the city. A near-perfect record for incompetence.

So today the New York Times has a news profile of the mayor. How does it treat Nagin? You guessed it–he's a hero. The lead of the story is "Hurricane Katrina has given the nation a new political celebrity, the mayor of beleaguered New Orleans." (Nation to city: Can we please give this alleged celebrity back?) The headline is worse, a classic in intentional inaccuracy: "A Storm Survivor, Political Reputation Intact." If Nagin's reputation is intact, so are Bush's, Brown's, and Blanco's. Many of Nagin's antics during Katrina are mentioned briefly, well down in the story.

But the article, posing as a news report, is a heavy-handed editorial and a foolish one at that. "Mr. Nagin has emerged as something of a folk hero." The Times is still having credibility problems and seems determined not to do much about them.


Perhaps the truth of Nagin's utter inability to handle any problem in his city without his screaming about race is finally coming out - with no help from The New York Times, whose circulation continues to slide as their owners wonder why.

The New York Times has become America's Diarrhea Newsrag: slime in, slime out. Their mistruths are many, and their crack reporting squad of Paul Slugman and Maureen Dowdy make even The National Enquirer seem to be an important news source by comparison.

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