Tarzan wrote:If the response is incompetent, people need to speak up immediately and put pressure on those in power to fix the problem.
There are lots of ways to put pressure on the government without pointing fingers and race/income baiting. Pointing fingers in front of the media will filters into the shelters and causes more problems for people who have been through enough…That is what I mean about reckless, irresponsible, and inconsiderate of the situation.
Agreed. But getting up on national TV and saying "Where the hell are the resources we begged for a week ago" is different. That's what I meant.
Individuals and private organizations are being forced to pick up the slack, and shouldn't have to.
People are not being forced to do anything. People are volunteering to help out just as they do in all types of disasters such as this one. It is called being human…You do what you can for your fellow man in times like this. I think the perception that Government must be the answer to all our prayers is a fallacy, and a problem in today’s society. Government can’t and shouldn’t be everything for everyone. There are gaps in which individuals, churches and charities are there to fill in the gaps.
First off, I mean "forced" in that people feel obligated out of the kindness of their hearts because the job is not getting done -- not "forced" at gunpoint.
Protecting its citizens is the core function of government. Expecting your $300 billion dollar taxpayer-funded defense aparatus to do its job is not expecting an "answer to your prayers". That's why we don't hear politicians denouncing "socialized national defense".
There are some things that are too large in scale for private organizations to address. "Filling in the gaps" works great if you want to run a soup kitchen or an after-school program. Evacuating a city? Not so great.
It's pretty pathetic when the government of a third-world country like Indonesia can respond to a more severe natural disaster better than our own government.
What evidence do you have that this is true? Are the two disasters even comparable in scope and magnitude? Was it only the government that responded or did they have individuals, private companies....etc helping out as well?
No one said it was "only government". Of course the tsunami relief efforts were both private and public. However, I do know that thousands of local troops were deployed the same day to evacuate people. That's in a poor country, with lousy infrastructure, dealing with a much larger crisis, over a much larger physical area.
I will grant that some things in the tsunami were less complicated. The water receded, so you didn't have people stranded. You also had a population that was much less dependent on food supply lines or power and water infrastructure.
Anyway, I don't want to get too negative. I really admire the efforts of people on this board who are organizing and running their own relief efforts. I'm mostly pissed off at the back-slapping politicians and appointed cronies who keep holding press conferences to tell each other what a great job they're doing.