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How to Destroy an African-American City in Thirty Three Steps
Lessons from Katrina
By
Bill Quigley
Bill Quigley is a human rights lawyer and law professor at Loyola
University New Orleans. You can reach Bill at
Quigley@loyno.edu
Reprinted with permission of the New Orleans Agenda by Vincent Sylvain
Dear Readers, What you are about to read is fact. Every single item
on this list did, and continues to happen in post-Katrina New Orleans.
Step One. Delay. If there is one word that sums up the way to
destroy an African-American city after a disaster, that word is DELAY.
If you are in doubt about any of the following steps - just remember to
delay and you will probably be doing the right thing.
Step Two. When a disaster is coming, do not arrange a public
evacuation. Rely only on individual resources. People with cars and
money for hotels will leave. The elderly, the disabled and the poor will
not be able to leave. Most of those without cars - 25% of households of
New Orleans, overwhelmingly African-Americans - will not be able to
leave. Most of the working poor, overwhelmingly African-American, will
not be able to leave. Many will then permanently accuse the victims who
were left behind of creating their own human disaster because of their
own poor planning. It is critical to start by having people blame the
victims for their own problems.
Step Three. When the disaster hits make certain the national
response is overseen by someone who has no experience at all handling
anything on a large scale, particularly disasters. In fact, you can even
inject some humor into the response - have the disaster coordinator be
someone whose last job was the head of a dancing horse association.
Step Four. Make sure that the President and national leaders
remain aloof and only slightly concerned. This sends an important
message to the rest of the country.
Step Five. Make certain the local, state, and national
governments do not respond in a coordinated effective way. This will
create more chaos on the ground.
Step Six. Do not bring in food or water or communications
right away. This will make everyone left behind more frantic and create
incredible scenes for the media.
Step Seven. Make certain that the media focus of the disaster
is not on the heroic community work of thousands of women, men and young
people helping the elderly, the sick and the trapped survive, but mainly
on acts of people looting. Also spread and repeat the rumors that people
trapped on rooftops are shooting guns not to attract attention and get
help, but AT the helicopters. This will reinforce the message that
"those people" left behind are different from the rest of us and are
beyond help.
Step Eight. Refuse help from other countries. If we accept
help, it looks like we cannot or choose not to handle this problem
ourselves. This cannot be the message. The message we want to put out
over and over is that we have plenty of resources and there is plenty of
help. Then if people are not receiving help, it is their own fault. This
should be done quietly.
Step Nine. Once the evacuation of those left behind actually
starts, make sure people do not know where they are going or have any
way to know where the rest of their family has gone. In fact, make sure
that African-Americans end up much farther away from home than others.
Step Ten. Make sure that when government assistance finally
has to be given out, it is given out in a totally arbitrary way. People
will have lost their homes, jobs, churches, doctors, schools, neighbors
and friends. Give them a little bit of money, but not too much. Make
people dependent. Then cut off the money. Then give it to some and not
others. Refuse to assist more than one person in every household. This
will create conflicts where more than one generation lived together.
Make it impossible for people to get consistent answers to their
questions. Long lines and busy phones will discourage people from
looking for help.
Step Eleven. Insist the President suspend federal laws
requiring living wages and affirmative action for contractors working on
the disaster. While local workers are still displaced, import White
workers from outside the city for the high-paying jobs like crane
operators and bulldozers. Import Latino workers from outside the city
for the low-paying dangerous jobs. Make sure to have elected officials,
Black and White, blame job problems on the lowest wage immigrant
workers. This will create divisions between Black and brown workers that
can be exploited by those at the top. Because many of the brown workers
do not have legal papers, those at the top will not have to worry about
paying decent wages, providing health insurance, following safety laws,
unemployment compensation, workers compensation, or union organizing.
They become essentially disposable workers - use them, then lose them.
Step Twelve. Whatever you do, keep people away from their city
for as long as possible. This is the key to long-term success in
destroying the African- American city. Do not permit people to come
home. Keep people guessing about what is going to happen and when it is
going to happen. Set numerous deadlines and then break them. This will
discourage people and make it increasingly difficult for people to
return.
Step Thirteen. When you finally have to reopen the city, make
sure to reopen the African-American sections last. This will aggravate
racial tensions in the city and create conflicts between those who are
able to make it home and those who are not.
Step Fourteen. When the big money is given out, make sure it
is all directed to homeowners and not to renters. This is particularly
helpful in a town like New Orleans that was majority African-American
and majority renter. Then, after you have excluded renters, mess the
program for the homeowners up so that they must wait for years to get
money to fix their homes.
Step Fifteen. Close down all the public schools for months.
This will prevent families in the public school system, overwhelmingly
African- Americans, from coming home.
Step Sixteen. Fire all the public school teachers, teacher
aides, cafeteria workers and bus drivers and de-certify the teachers
union - the largest in the state. This will primarily hurt middle class
African Americans and make them look for jobs elsewhere.
Step Seventeen. Even better, take this opportunity to flip the
public school system into a charter system and push foundations and the
government to extra money to the new charter schools. Give the schools
with the best test scores away first. Then give the least flooded
schools away next. Turn 70% of schools into charters so that the kids
with good test scores or solid parental involvement will go to the
charters. That way the kids with average scores, or learning
disabilities, or single parent families who are still displaced are kept
segregated away from the "good" kids. You will have to set up a few
schools for those other kids, but make sure those schools do not get any
extra money, do not have libraries, nor doors on the toilets, nor enough
teachers. In fact, because of this, you better make certain there are
more security guards than teachers.
Step Eighteen. Let the market do what it does best. When rent
goes up 70%, say there is nothing we can do about it. This will have two
great results. It will keep many former residents away from the city and
it will make landlords happy. If wages go up, immediately import more
outside workers and wages will settle down.
Step Nineteen. Make sure all the predominately White suburbs
surrounding the African-American city make it very difficult for the
people displaced from the city to return to the metro area. Have one
suburb refuse to allow any new subsidized housing at all. Have the
Sheriff of another threaten to stop and investigate anyone wearing
dreadlocks. Throw in a little humor and have one nearly all-White suburb
pass a law which makes it illegal for homeowners to rent to people other
than their blood relatives! The courts may strike these down, but it
will take time and the message will be clear - do not think about
returning to the suburbs.
Step Twenty. Reduce public transportation by more than 80%.
The people without cars will understand the message.
Step Twenty One. Keep affordable housing to a minimum. Use
money instead to reopen the Superdome and create tourism campaigns.
Refuse to boldly create massive homeownership opportunities for former
renters. Delay re-opening apartment complexes in African American
neighborhoods. As long as less than half the renters can return to
affordable housing, they will not return.
Step Twenty Two. Keep all public housing closed. Since it is
100% African American, this is a no-brainer. Make sure to have African
Americans be the people who deliver the message. This step will also
help by putting more pressure on the rental market as 5000 more families
will then have to compete for rental housing with low-income workers.
This will provide another opportunity for hundreds of millions of
government funds to be funneled to corporations when these buildings are
torn down and developers can build up other less-secure buildings in
their place. Make sure to tell the 5000 families evicted from public
housing that you are not letting them back for their own good. Tell them
you are trying to save them from living in a segregated neighborhood.
This will also send a good signal - if the government can refuse to
allow people back, private concerns are free to do the same or worse.
Step Twenty Three. Shut down as much public health as
possible. Sick and elderly people and moms with little kids need access
to public healthcare. Keep the public hospital, which hosted about
350,000 visits a year before the disaster, closed. Keep the neighborhood
clinics closed. Put all the pressure on the private healthcare
facilities and provoke economic and racial tensions there between the
insured and uninsured.
Step Twenty Four. Close as many public mental healthcare
providers as possible. The trauma of the disaster will seriously
increase stress on everyone. Left untreated, medical experts tell us
this will dramatically increase domestic violence, self- medication and
drug and alcohol abuse, and of course crime.
Step Twenty Five. Keep the city environment unfriendly to
women. Women were already widely discriminated against before the storm.
Make sure that you do not reopen day care centers. This, combined with
the lack of healthcare, lack of affordable housing, and lack of
transportation, will keep moms with kids away. If you can keep women
with kids away, the city will destroy itself.
Step Twenty Six. Create and maintain an environment where
Black on Black crime will flourish. As long as you can keep parents out
of town, keep the schools hostile to kids without parents, keep public
healthcare closed, make only low-paying jobs available, not fund social
workers or prosecutors or public defenders or police, and keep chaos the
norm, young Black men will certainly kill other young Black men. To
increase the visibility of the crime problem, bring in the National
Guard in fatigues to patrol the streets in their camouflage hummers.
Step Twenty Seven. Strip the local elected predominately
African-American government of its powers. Make certain the money that
is coming in to fix up the region is not under their control. Privatize
as much as you can as quickly as you can - housing, healthcare, and
education for starters. When in doubt, privatize. Create an appointed
commission of people who have no experience in government to make all
the decisions. In fact, it is better to create several such commissions,
that way no one will really be sure who is in charge and there will be
much more delay and conflict. Treat the local people like they are
stupid, you know what is best for them much better than they do.
Step Twenty Eight. Create lots of planning processes but give
them no authority. Overlap them where possible. Give people conflicting
signals whether their neighborhood will be allowed to rebuild or be
turned into green space. This will create confusion, conflict and
aggravation. People will blame the officials closest to them - the local
African- American officials, even though they do not have any authority
to do anything about these plans since they do not control the
rebuilding money.
Step Twenty Nine. Hold an election but make it very difficult
for displaced voters to participate. In fact, do not allow any voting in
any place outside the state even we do it for other countries and even
though hundreds of thousands of people are still displaced. This is very
important because when people are not able to vote, those who have been
able to return can say, "Well, they didn't even vote, so I guess they
are not interested in returning."
Step Thirty. Get the elected officials out of the way and make
room for corporations to make a profit. There are billions to be made in
this process for well- connected national and international
corporations. There is so much chaos that no one will be able to figure
out exactly where the money went for a long time. There is no real
attempt to make sure that local businesses, especially African-American
businesses, get contracts - at best they get modest subcontracts from
the corporations which got the big money. Make sure the authorities
prosecute a couple of little people who ripped off $2000 - that will
temporarily satisfy people who know they are being ripped off and divert
attention from the big money rip- offs. This will also provide another
opportunity to blame the victims - as critics can say, "Well, we gave
them lots of money, they must have wasted it, how much more can they
expect from us?"
Step Thirty One. Keep people's attention diverted from the
African-American city. Pour money into Iraq instead of the Gulf Coast.
Corporations have figured out how to make big bucks whether we are
winning or losing the war. It is easier to convince the country to
support war - support for cities is much, much tougher. When the war
goes badly, you can change the focus of the message to supporting the
troops. Everyone loves the troops. No one can say we all love African
Americans. Focus on terrorists - that always seems to work.
Step Thirty Two. Refuse to talk about or look seriously at
race. Condemn anyone who dares to challenge the racism of what is going
on - accuse them of "playing the race card" or say they are paranoid.
Criticize people who challenge the exclusion of African Americans as
people who "just want to go back to the bad old days." Repeat the
message that you want something better for everyone. Use
African-American spokespersons where possible.
Step Thirty-Three. Repeat these steps.
Reprinted
with permission of the New Orleans Agenda by Vincent Sylvain
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