Not sure what Cuba has to offer U.S. with hurricane response

By Will Chapman / publisher
Published/Last Modified on Friday, October 23, 2009 2:04 PM CDT

I’m not going to suggest that I’d hold up the U.S. government as a model of efficiency nor suggest it always knows how to do things right, but I have to admit I did a double-take after seeing in the news an article about New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin and other public officials visiting Cuba for ideas on how to better respond to hurricanes.

Nagin told the Associated Press how after Katrina there wasn’t a clear line of authority, how the president and governor were going back and forth. “In Cuba, you don’t have that problem ... The government says ‘This is what we’re doing’ ... and it pretty much happens,” Nagin said.

Nagin and 15 U.S. city and state officials met with Cuban civil defense authorities on how Cuba’s military mobilizes during a disaster.

Advertisement
“I think they do a much better job than we do on knowing their citizens at a very, very detailed level, block by block,” Nagin said.

Sure they do, because as the AP noted, in Cuba the Revolutionary Defense Committees on nearly every block keep tabs on the neighbors. The committee members help out in disasters but between disasters report behavior they consider subversive.

It’s amazing how cooperative people become at the end of a rifle or tip of a bayonet. Is there any doubt the Cuban government would not have had the same problems with looting and vandalism we saw in New Orleans, after Katrina?

The reported poverty of the people in Cuba is alarming. They live under a very strict dictatorship. Political disputes are settled by jail time or by the sudden, permanent, disappearance of one side of the dispute.

Nagin’s list of outrageous things he’s said is lengthy, but it’s still hard to believe he’d hold up Cuba’s government as an example of how we need to do things here, even during the threat of a hurricane.

n

Writing for a newspaper is like having 20,000-plus proofreaders and fact-checkers. There are few facts that can get into the paper about which at least a few locals won’t be knowledgeable.

I am reminded of that after writing in Sweet Talk Tuesday about my efforts to write a story, while at LSU, about equine infectious anemia and how miniature horses were used in a research project related to the disease.

My memory suggested the disease was carried by mosquitoes but Glenn Stokes of Mosquito Control Contractors Inc., who certainly knows mosquitoes and other insects and such, called to say he thinks it is actually horseflies that are the carriers of this disease.

I wondered later if there were miniature horseflies that pestered miniature horses?

n

New warning labels for booze bottles:

• Warning: Consumption of alcohol may lead you to thay shings like thish.

• Warning: Consumption of alcohol may cause you to tell the boss what you REALLY think while photocopying your butt at the office Christmas party.

• Warning: Consumption of alcohol may create the illusion that you are tougher, handsomer and smarter than some really, really, big guy named Psycho.

Will Chapman is publisher of The Daily Iberian.

Comments

    Cajun Smokehouse wrote on Oct 24, 2009 1:07 PM:

    " It seems The Congressional Black Caucus has the same views as Ray Nagin!
    Not that long ago members of the House of Representatives went to Cuba and were praising Fidel's Health Care System!At the same time they were ridiculing George Bush!
    You would think that black people with a past history of slavery would look to someone else to admire than a brutal dictator who has enslaved his whole nation!
    That's what you call LEADERS! "

WRITE A COMMENT

Use the form below to post a brief comment related to this story. Use the word count tool to assist you in keeping your remarks to 100 words or fewer.

•Comments must be approved by an editor or the publisher before appearing on the Web site but are not verified for accuracy nor have we verified the identity of any person supposedly posting an comment. Please consider this as you consider any statement made. A thoughtful contribution to the online discussion is appreciated.

• Please note your comments must attempt to follow basic rules of grammar and punctuation or they will not be posted. Do not use unfamiliar abbreviations or text-like short cuts, like ur for your. Please keep your tone civil. You can say someone's idea is stupid but you cannot say someone is stupid.

• Comments should deal with matters of public concern. Problems with private individuals or private companies are not likely to get posted.

• Questions or comments about items posted should be e-mailed to dailyiberian@bellsouth.net.

(optional)
Current Word Count:
   

Classifieds


Contact Us

Subscribe
Vacation Hold
General Email

Mailing Address:
The Daily Iberian
P.O. Box 9290
New Iberia, LA
70562-9290

Street Address:
926 East Main St.
New Iberia, LA 70560

Phone:
(337) 365-6773

Fax:
(337)-367-9640

Inside Louisiana:
800-365-6773

Local Weather