Home
Wake Up Call From Houston: Executive Intelligence Review; Volume 44, Issue 35
Barnes and Noble
Wake Up Call From Houston: Executive Intelligence Review; Volume 44, Issue 35
Current price: $10.00
Barnes and Noble
Wake Up Call From Houston: Executive Intelligence Review; Volume 44, Issue 35
Current price: $10.00
Size: OS
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
Speaking via telephone from Houston, Texas on Tuesday morning, August 29, LaRouche PAC Policy Committee member Kesha Rogers reported the following:
"I'm standing right here in a grocery store. You look at the conditions. . . Now they're talking about how the water supply in the Houston area might be compromised; we don't know how far that goes or how serious it is going to get, but you have lines in the grocery store that are back out the door and wrapped around the grocery store building, with hundreds of people waiting to buy groceries, to buy food, because they have been out of food supplies for a very long time. I was standing in line, talking to people who have lost their homes, lost everything-they had water in their houses coming all the way up to their chests-and these were people who were able to get out with family members, who were rescued and taken to other locations. "In talking to some of these people on the ground here about this situation, what is obvious is that this is not going to be a 'quick fix' here-this is not just about infrastructure breakdown, but you've got tens of thousands of people who have just lost everything. It makes the point very clear how important it is that our solution, including Glass-Steagall-the economic recovery program that Lyndon LaRouche has put on the table-cannot be just a piece of legislation that people get to when they get to it. I don't think you can simply say 'It's going to cost $300 billion or $200 billion,' or whatever number they're putting out. It really has to be a federal credit program, to do everything that has to be done to put people back into living conditions, such that they can have homes and have a life again. This is not about how much insurance policy was lost. . . The main thing is that this is a wake-up call. We're going to have a lot of leadership to provide, a lot of work to do, not just to build up this state, but to use this as an opportunity to build up the nation." The world is watching the devastation in Houston, and the American people are watching. Some are responding with volunteer labor, with donations, and with other charitable actions. But what have the American people done to prevent such disasters? Houston is notoriously unprepared to deal with flooding even during annual storms, let alone hurricanes or the current 1,000-year flood. Already in 2012,- five years ago-the American Society of Civil Engineers gave the city a C-minus on its "report card" regarding flood control. The two primary flood control dams for Houston, both on the verge of overflow or even collapse in the current storm, were built in the 1940s, and are twenty years past their life expectancy. Houston is no different from essentially every part of these United States. Our greatest city, New York, is undergoing a general breakdown in transportation, sanitation, water, and more-a reality addressed on Aug. 26 at a LaRouche PAC forum in Manhattan. The infrastructure deficit has created powder-kegs across the nation, only needing a spark to set them off, as we saw with Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, with super-storm Sandy in New York City, and with the drought in the Southwest. American infrastructure is collapsing, and has been for years. As emphasized by Kesha Rogers, the issue is not about dollars and cents, but about human lives, and the futures of millions of families who are now suffering or at risk. We, as a nation, have sat by and let this disastrous situation come to this point.