Get Ready for
the First Shocks of Trump’s Disaster Capitalism
By Naomi Klein
January 25,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
The Intercept"
- We
already know that the Trump administration plans to
deregulate markets, wage all-out war on “radical Islamic
terrorism,” trash climate science and unleash a
fossil-fuel frenzy. It’s a vision that can be counted on
to generate a tsunami of crises and shocks: economic
shocks, as market bubbles burst; security shocks, as
blowback from foreign belligerence comes home; weather
shocks, as our climate is further destabilized; and
industrial shocks, as oil pipelines spill and rigs
collapse, which they tend to do, especially when
enjoying light-touch regulation.
All this is
dangerous enough. What’s even worse is the way the Trump
administration can be counted on to exploit these shocks
politically and economically.
Naomi Klein
explains how the Trump administration might take
advantage of coming crises to Jeremy Scahill at the
Women’s March, Jan. 21, 2017.
Speculation is
unnecessary. All that’s required is a little knowledge
of recent history. Ten years ago, I published “The Shock
Doctrine,” a history of the ways in which crises have
been systematically exploited over the last half century
to further a radical pro-corporate agenda. The book
begins and ends with the response to Hurricane Katrina,
because it stands as such a harrowing blueprint for
disaster capitalism.
That’s relevant
because of the central, if little-recalled role played
by the man who is now the U.S. vice president, Mike
Pence. At the time Katrina hit New Orleans, Pence was
chairman of the powerful and highly ideological
Republican Study Committee. On September 13, 2005 — just
14 days after the levees were breached and with parts of
New Orleans still underwater — the RSC convened a
fateful meeting at the offices of the Heritage
Foundation in Washington, D.C.
Under Pence’s
leadership, the group came up with a list of
“Pro-Free-Market Ideas for Responding to Hurricane
Katrina and High Gas Prices” — 32 policies in all, each
one straight out of the disaster capitalism playbook.
To get a sense
of how the Trump administration will respond to
its first crises, it’s worth reading the
list in full (and noting Pence’s name right at the
bottom).
What stands out
in the package of pseudo “relief” policies is the
commitment to wage all-out war on labor standards and on
the public sphere — which is ironic because the failure
of public infrastructure is what turned Katrina into a
human catastrophe. Also notable is the determination to
use any opportunity to strengthen the hand of the oil
and gas industry.
The first three
items on the RSC list are “automatically suspend
Davis-Bacon prevailing wage laws in disaster areas,” a
reference to the law that required federal contractors
to pay a living wage; “make the entire affected area a
flat-tax free-enterprise zone”; and “make the entire
region an economic competitiveness zone (comprehensive
tax incentives and waiving of regulations).”
Another demand
called for giving parents vouchers to use at charter
schools, a move perfectly in line with the vision held
by Trump’s pick for education secretary, Betsy DeVos.
All these
measures were announced by President George W. Bush
within the week. Under pressure, Bush was eventually
forced to reinstate the labor standards, though they
were largely ignored by contractors. There is every
reason to believe this will be the model for the
multibillion-dollar infrastructure investments Trump is
using to court the labor movement. Repealing Davis-Bacon
for those projects was reportedly already floated at
Monday’s
meeting with leaders of construction and building
trade unions.
Back in 2005,
the Republican Study Committee meeting produced more
ideas that gained presidential support. Climate
scientists have directly linked the increased intensity
of hurricanes to warming ocean temperatures. This
connection, however, didn’t stop Pence and the RSC from
calling on Congress to repeal environmental regulations
on the Gulf Coast, give permission for new oil
refineries in the United States, and to greenlight
“drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.”
All these
measures are a surefire way to drive up greenhouse gas
emissions, the major human contributor to climate
change, yet they were immediately championed by the
president under the guise of responding to a devastating
storm.
The oil
industry wasn’t the only one to profit from Hurricane
Katrina, of course. So did a slew of well-connected
contractors, who turned the Gulf Coast into a laboratory
for privatized disaster response.
The companies
that snatched up the biggest contracts were the familiar
gang from the invasion of Iraq: Halliburton’s KBR unit
won a $60 million gig to reconstruct military bases
along the coast. Blackwater was hired to protect FEMA
employees from looters. Parsons, infamous for its sloppy
Iraq work, was brought in for a major bridge
construction project in Mississippi. Fluor, Shaw,
Bechtel, CH2M Hill — all top contractors in Iraq — were
hired by the government to provide mobile homes to
evacuees just 10 days after the levees broke. Their
contracts ended up totaling $3.4 billion, no open
bidding required.
And no
opportunity for profit was left untapped. Kenyon, a
division of the mega funeral conglomerate Service
Corporation International (a major Bush campaign donor),
was hired to retrieve the dead from homes and streets.
The work was extraordinarily slow, and bodies were left
in the broiling sun for days. Emergency workers and
local volunteer morticians were forbidden to step in to
help because handling the bodies impinged on Kenyon’s
commercial territory.
And as with so
many of Trump’s decisions so far, relevant experience
often appeared to have nothing to do with how contracts
were allocated. AshBritt, a company paid half a billion
dollars to remove debris, reportedly didn’t own a single
dump truck and farmed out the entire job to contractors.
Even more
striking was the company that FEMA paid $5.2 million to
perform the crucial role of building a base camp for
emergency workers in St. Bernard Parish, a suburb of New
Orleans. The camp construction fell behind schedule and
was never completed. When the contractor was
investigated, it emerged that the company, Lighthouse
Disaster Relief, was actually a religious group. “About
the closest thing I have done to this is just organize a
youth camp with my church,” confessed Lighthouse’s
director, Pastor Gary Heldreth.
After all the
layers of subcontractors had taken their cut, there was
next to nothing left for the people doing the work. For
instance, the author Mike Davis tracked the way FEMA
paid Shaw $175 a square foot to install blue tarps on
damaged roofs, even though the tarps themselves were
provided by the government. Once all the subcontractors
took their share, the workers who actually hammered in
the tarps were paid as little as $2 a square foot.
“Every level of the contracting food chain, in other
words, is grotesquely overfed except the bottom rung,”
Davis wrote, “where the actual work is carried out.”
In Mississippi,
a class-action lawsuit forced several companies to pay
hundreds of thousands of dollars in back wages to
immigrant workers. Some were not paid at all. On one
Halliburton/KBR job site, undocumented immigrant workers
reported being wakened in the middle of the night by
their employer (a sub-subcontractor), who allegedly told
them that immigration agents were on their way. Most
workers fled to avoid arrest.
This corruption
and abuse is particularly relevant because of Trump’s
stated plan to contract out much of his infrastructure
spending to private players in so-called public-private
partnerships.
In the Katrina
aftermath, the attacks on vulnerable people, carried out
in the name of reconstruction and relief, did not stop
there. In order to offset the tens of billions going to
private companies in contracts and tax breaks, in
November 2005 the Republican-controlled Congress
announced that it needed to cut $40 billion from the
federal budget. Among the programs that were slashed
were student loans, Medicaid, and food stamps. In other
words, the poorest people in the United States
subsidized the contractor bonanza twice: first, when
Katrina relief morphed into unregulated corporate
handouts, providing neither decent jobs nor functional
public services; and, second, when the few programs that
directly assist the unemployed and working poor
nationwide were gutted to pay those bloated bills.
This is the
disaster capitalism blueprint, and it aligns with
Trump’s own track record as a businessman all too well.
Trump and Pence
come to power at a time when these kinds of disasters,
like the lethal tornadoes that just struck the
southeastern United States, are coming fast and furious.
Trump has already declared the U.S. a rolling disaster
zone. And the shocks will keep getting bigger, thanks to
the reckless policies that have already been promised.
What Katrina
tells us is that this administration will attempt to
exploit each disaster for maximum gain. We’d better get
ready.
Portions of
this article were adapted from “The Shock Doctrine: The
Rise of Disaster Capitalism.”
The views
expressed in this article are solely those of the author
and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of
Information Clearing House. |