Statement of the International Bureau for the Revolutionary
Party
September 6th 2005
With the clinical sharpness of a laser beam Hurricane Katrina has opened
up a whole series of issues about the nature of today’s class society, the
level of the economic crisis, the culpability of capitalism for ecological
disaster, and also the fact that capitalist rule is neither as powerful nor
as permanent as many believe.
An Increasingly Divided Class Society
Hurricane Katrina devastated an area the size of Great Britain stretching
through Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama. It was forecast at least ten
days before it made landfall just east of New Orleans on Monday 29 August.
It had already claimed nine lives over Florida the previous Thursday. Hurricanes
of category 4 or 5 have been forecast for years by meteorologists but nothing
had been done to upgrade the levées originally designed to withstand
a category 3 hurricane. Despite the time available, despite the huge
resources at the disposal of the US state, the plans for evacuation consisted
of nothing more than an order to people the day before to drive out of New
Orleans. This sort of brilliant capitalist planning did not care to take
into account the approximately 100,000 people in the city who did not own
their own automobile, who could not pay for a hotel room if they were to
leave and for whom there was no federal emergency scheme to provide food
or shelter. Approximately 20,000 of these were herded by police into the
Superdome and Convention Center, where they were supposed to wait for the
storm to blow over. But when the levée along the 17th St canal
burst about 80% of the city was flooded they were left stranded without food,
water, medication, sanitation and attacked, robbed, murdered and raped by
armed criminals and lunatics who had been thoughtfully released from institutions
to join them. Initial media reports made no mention of this. All they
focussed on was the billions of dollars of damage to property and when people
were obliged — at first with the sanction of the police — to get what they
could from shops and supermarkets in order to survive the media blanketed
it all as theft and gangsterism.
It took four days before the first official ‘aid’ arrived (mainly bottles
of water), closely followed by thousands of troops with a shoot to kill policy
against looters. The message was quite clear. The American Dream
means that only “rugged individualism” is rewarded (with tax breaks). If
you’re poor you’re probably a criminal and you’re not worth saving anyway.
Poverty is your own fault and is punished. (With welfare cuts). These
cuts, carried out by both Democratic and Republican regimes have increased
over the last thirty years to the point that that the number officially defined
as poor has risen by more than 10% in the last four years. At 28% New
Orleans has double the national average for the number of its population
living in poverty.
And when we say poor the pictures tell the story that this largely means
black. 140 years after the abolition of slavery Katrina has fully exposed
the deep level of segregation and discrimination in the USA. The scenes
in New Orleans were like a repeat of 1927 when the Mississippi flooded.
The levées then were deliberately broken near black areas to prevent
white plantations from being flooded. Black workers were forced into squalid
concentration camps to work on shoring up the levées near the plantations
as their owners departed on a steamer apparently singing “Bye Bye Blackbird”
to the inundated blacks. The defence of property and the pursuit of profit
always come first.
The Economic Crisis
The attempt to offset the fall in profit rates also explains the failure
to maintain the levées which protect this city below sea level for
the past thirty years. The apologists of the pathetic performance of
the US government since Katrina struck maintain that hurricanes are natural
disasters, “Acts of God” which cannot be countered. However, many have quite
correctly pointed out that the policies of the Bush regime have made New
Orleans more vulnerable to natural disaster. The Louisiana Corp of
Army Engineers last year proposed $18bn of work to widen drainage canals,
build pumping stations and improve the levée system to withstand a
hurricane like Katrina. Instead the 2006 government budget proposes to reduce
spending on this socially necessary infrastructure even further from the
current level of about $82 million dollars. This in turn is lower that the
2001 level of $147 million.
On top of this there has been deregulation. This has led to irresponsible
building of housing and shopping malls on the wetlands which once protected
New Orleans from the full force of the floods that follow hurricanes. Again
this began decades ago but has accelerated in the last few years as financial
speculation has become the latest method to raise capitalist profit rates.
However the neglect is not just that of the Bush regime. The cuts have been
going on ever since the dollar was devalued in 1971. This was the signal
that the global cycle of accumulation regulated by the law of the tendency
of the rate of profit to fall had brought the post-war boom to an end. The
USA could no longer support a Cold War rearmament programme and reinvest
in its basic infrastructure. In the Seventies the richest country in history
first tried to spend its way out of crisis but the consequence of this in
a stagnant economy was inflation and more unemployment. Thus began the neo-liberal
experiment of tax cuts for the already rich which since the 1980s to today
has seen massive cuts in all social areas by whichever party was in power.
To put these cuts in social spending into perspective, the Institute for
Policy Studies and another think-tank called Foreign Policy in Focus have
jointly issued a report recently that estimates the cost of the war in Iraq
to be about $5.6 billion every month!
By contrast with this spending on the US war machine, the chronically low
level of profit over recent decades has meant that private capital has failed
to invest in key economic infrastructure, notably in oil refineries and power
plants. Despite the US obsession with controlling as much as possible
of the world’s oil there hasn’t been a new oil refinery built for thirty
years. Katrina’s damage (much of it permanent) to the 10% of US refining
capacity that stands in the Gulf of Mexico has done more to undermine US
fuel supplies than any action of Saddam Hussein or Al Q’aeda. — and this
is without taking into account the knocking out of New Orleans port facilities
which, until 29 August, accounted for 60,000 jobs in the city.
Thus, Hurricane Katrina, a category four hurricane, easily wiped out the
levées that were meant originally to withstand category three hurricanes
at best. In doing so it has also wiped out the myth that capitalism is the
highest form of social organisation open to humanity.
An Unnatural Disaster
In December 2001 the Federal Emergency Management Agency [FEMA] warned
that a hurricane hitting New Orleans was one of the three likeliest disaster
scenarios for the USA with 25,000 deaths predicted. In 1965 Hurricane Betsy
left the city under 8 feet of water but, as we have seen, this did not stop
annual fiscal starvation budgets for the most basic infrastructure
improvement projects as well as building on the wetlands by property developers.
The FEMA was originally designed to deal with natural disasters but since
9/11 it has seen its role diminished and it has become another agency dominated
by the “war on terror”. The Louisiana FEMA conducted an exercise last
year to study how to deal with a hurricane hitting New Orleans. They concluded
that special buses would have to be laid on in advance for those without
cars, that centres of sanctuary such as the Superdome would have to be supplied
in advance with food water and extra sanitation. None of this happened.
Incompetence obviously plays a part, but the US state is also a victim of
its own complacent propaganda which dictates that there is no such thing
as global warming and even if there is this has nothing to do with the USA.
Every US Government represents US Big Business but in an era when US imperialism
feels itself more under threat than ever the Bush Administration does so
in a way that few of its predecessors have done. Not only did Bush
refuse to sign the Kyoto Agreement (feeble though that may be in preserving
the world’s sustainability) but he has (until recently at Gleneagles) even
refused to recognise that global warming is taking place at all. The
Republican Party in Congress is currently conducting a witch hunt of scientists
who have written papers demonstrating that green house gas emissions cause
global warming. And yet the number of hurricanes which are a product
of climate change continue to grow. This year three times as many hurricanes
are predicted for the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico as normal. Katrina
demonstrates that they are also increasing in intensity. The handling
of the aftermath of Katrina shows that the ruling class of the most powerful
capitalist country on earth puts profits before humanity’s future. They,
and the system which created them, are the greatest threat to human existence.
A Breach in the System?
To the discomfit of the capitalist press the debacle in the Deep South has
vividly demonstrated that capitalism itself is responsible for the greatest
part of the death, destruction and social breakdown that has accompanied
this ‘natural’ disaster. The richest state in the world, the self-styled
defender of democracy and human rights, could not reveal more clearly how
its defence of profit and private property does not square with the defence
of the majority of its citizens for whom it has a callous indifference. Katrina
and its horrendous aftermath have laid bare the myth that the unseen hand
of the capitalist market results in a rational form of social organisation.
Nothing is further from the truth. The chilling fact is that more and
worse ‘natural’ disasters lie ahead. The idea that rampant, crisis-torn
global capitalism can be reformed into a benign, socially responsible, environmentally
‘friendly’ system is a utopian dream. The best thing that could come
out of the disaster of Hurricane Katrina is the recognition by at least some
of those who are looking for a better world that capitalism is unsustainable
and has to be overthrown. There is only one alternative: the organisation
of a global community organised to produce directly for society’s needs.
Once again, capitalism is forcing the issue. Socialism or barbarism.
There is no third road.