The media is saturated with stories concerning security
breaks at the White House and on an elevator in Atlanta. I am not surprised or impressed
with the average response, the fury of the coverage, or with the superficial
nature of the investigation; it is business as usual. As expected, the
congressional hearing advertized as looking “in depth” into what happened, is
no more than a media circus giving congressional members camera time for their righteous
indignation. I listened to the hearings and heard nothing that was not already
in the media. The only solution I heard was fire the Secret Service Director. One
congressional representative mentions the broad sweep of the sequestration as a
cause but a fellow member severely castigated her for mentioning it. In the associated
coverage, one of the reporters mentions the uniformed secret service officers were
short staffed due to shortage of funds, was therefore overworked, and
consequently had low moral but that was the extent of the explaination. In addition
to the White House breech, several congressional members mention a person with
a gun who was on the elevator with the president in Atlanta was a “low level” contractor
security guard.
I wonder how many people see the connection of this near
disaster and our over all “government on the cheap” economic approach to government
and realize that what this approach is giving us is exactly the opposite of
what we want. I make this remark in reference to “small government” people like
Joe Scarborough on MSNBC, who constantly say they want smaller government but of
course, they are inevitably the first one to criticize the government when something
like this happens. Classically, they say we should have had an advance team
investigating everyone the president would be in contract with him. Do they
know how much this would cost? The interesting thing is that people like Joe
often embellish their remarks with something like, “we ought to have more
highly trained secret service agents” or “there ought to be a law” against this
or that. Being patriotic Americans, they demands our president and his family be
protected, wither it cost a lot of money or not. Surprisingly, even these penny-pinchers
and the radical Obama haters put all the blame for the Secret Service failure
on the director, and demanded the president fire her.
There was a contractor involved in the Atlanta episode because
there is a massive belief, especially among conservatives that private contractors
can do a better job than government. We never seem to learn that many, if not
most, private contractors are there to rip-off the taxpayers. For some odd
twist of reason, Republicans seem to think that if taxpayers pay contractors—privatization—it
doesn’t cost money. We have been experiencing that same swindle for centuries
but it is getting worse with time. A contractor, more than likely paid directly
by the government, hired the man with the gun who was on the elevator. Among
other things, he had a criminal history. I assume he had a gun permit, which should
mean someone, vetted him, as being mentally competent—perhaps a clerk in a gun
store acted as a psychologist. However, more that likely, in our gun crazy
culture, even that did not happen. If we examined the contractor’s books, I will
guarantee that the U. S. Treasury or some government treasury paid big money to
a company executive with an organization (big office and office staff, etc,) to
provide security—to do what Secret Service could do better. Look at what we got
for our money? U.S. congressional representatives, both Republicans and Democrats,
were adamant, during the hearings that the U.S. Secret Service be faulted for
not doing that same thing all over again because, and get this; because “the Secret Service could do it better”. Last
time I looked, the Secret Service (even if under funded), is the government. Do
I have to point out these Representatives are the same people who demand that private
contractors can do it better. Jeremy Scahill wrote his book, Blackwater (2007) as an exposé about the
privatization of the military including cooks and plumbers, Privatization made Dick
Cheney, among many, many others, made millions and millions of dollars for
doing a very, very poor job’ ever hear of private contractors being killed on
the front line? No but you did hear about soldiers being electrocuted while
showering. Ever hear of an ex criminal on an elevator with the president with a
gun that was vetted by a private contractor. Well, I have. It wasn't the director who was blaming someone else, it was Congress.
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