Bush Strafes New Orleans -
Where is our Huey
Long?
By Greg Palast
The National Public
Radio news anchor was so excited I thought she'd piss on herself: the
President of the United had flown his plane down to 1700 feet to get a
better look at the flood damage! And there was a photo of our
Commander-in-Chief taken looking out the window. He looked very serious
and concerned.

That was yesterday. Today he played golf. No kidding.
I'm sure the people of New Orleans would have liked to
show their appreciation for the official Presidential photo-strafing, but
their surface-to-air missiles were wet.
There is nothing new under
the sun. In 1927, a Republican President had his photo taken as the
Mississippi rolled over New Orleans. Calvin Coolidge, "a little fat
man with a notebook in his hand," promised to rebuild the state. He
didn't. Instead, he left to play golf with Ken Lay or the Ken Lay railroad
baron equivalent of his day.
In 1927, the Democratic Party had died and was awaiting burial. As depression approached, the coma-Dems, like Franklin Roosevelt, called for balancing the budget.
Then, as the waters rose, one politician finally said, roughly, "Screw this!
They're lying! The President's lying! The rich fat cats that are drowning
you will do it again and again and again. They lead you into imperialist
wars for profit, they take away your schools and your hope and when you
complain, they blame Blacks and Jews and immigrants. Then they push your
kids under. I say, Kick'm in the ass and take your rightful share!"
Huey Long laid out a plan: a progressive income tax,
real money for education, public works to rebuild Louisiana and America,
an end to wars for empire, and an end to financial oligarchy. The waters
receded, the anger did not, and Huey "Kingfish" Long was elected Governor
of Louisiana in 1928.
At the time, Louisiana schools were
free, but not the textbooks. Governor Long taxed Big Oil to pay for the
books. Rockefeller's oil companies refused pay the textbook tax, so Long
ordered the National Guard to seize Standard Oil's fields in the
Delta.
Huey Long was called a "demagogue" and a "dictator." Of
course. Because it was Huey Long who established the concept that a
government of the people must protect the people, school, house, and feed
them and give every man or woman a job who needs
one.
Government, he said, "We The People," not plutocrats nor
Halliburtons, must build bridges and levies to keep the waters from rising
over our heads. All we had to do was share the nation's wealth we created
as a nation. But that meant facing down what he called the "concentrations
of monopoly power" to finance the needs of the public.
In other
words, Huey Long founded the modern Democratic Party. Franklin Roosevelt
and the party establishment, scared senseless of Long's ineluctable march
to the White House, adopted his program, called it the New Deal, and later
The New Frontier and the Great Society.
America and the party
prospered.
America could use a Democratic Party again and there's a
rumor it's alive -- somewhere.
And now is the moment, as it
was in '27. As the bodies float in the streets of New Orleans, now is not
the time for the Democrats to shirk and slink away, bleating they can't
"politicize" this avoidable disaster.
Seventy-six years ago
this week, Huey Long was shot down, assassinated at the age of 43. But the
legacy of his combat remains, from Social Security to veterans' mortgage
loans.
There is no such thing as a "natural" disaster. Hurricanes
happen, but death comes from official neglect, from tax cuts for the rich
that cut the heart out of public protection. The corpses in the street are
victims of a class war in which only one side has a general.
Where
is our Huey Long? America needs just one Kingfish to stand up and say that
our nation must rid itself of the scarecrow with the idiot chuckle, who
has left America broken and in danger while he plays tinker-toy Napoleon
on other continents.
I realize that the middle of rising
flood is a hell of a bad time to give Democrats swimming lessons; but it's
act up now or we all go under.
A pedagogical note: As I travel around the
USA, I'm just horrified at America's stubborn historical amnesia.
Americans, as Sam Cooke said, don't know squat about history. We don't
learn the names of a nation's capitol until the 82d Airborne lands there.
And it doesn't count if you've watched a Ken Burns documentary on
PBS.
I suggest starting with this: read "Huey
Long" by the late historian Harry T. Williams. If you want to ease
into it, get the Randy Newman album based on it
(Good Old Boys) with the song, "Louisiana 1927." Listen to part of
the song here. Do NOT watch the crappy right-wing agit-prop film,
"Huey Long," by Ken Burns.
Greg Palast is the author of the New
York Times bestseller, The Best Democracy Money Can Buy. Subscribe to his
commentaries or view his investigative reports for BBC Television at
www.GregPalast.com.