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Fear factors: a communication breakdown, not a breakdown of civilization.


IN the last month or so, we've heard a lot of self-congratulation from the press about what a great job they've been doing. At the high-water mark of their rain-soaked Katrina coverage, they started to sound like Stuart Smalley telling the mirror, "I'm good enough, I'm smart enough and, doggone dog·gone   Informal
tr. & intr.v. dog·goned, dog·gon·ing, dog·gones
To damn.

interj. & n.
Damn.

adv. & adj. also dog·goned
Damned.
 it, people like me."

We now know, thanks to valuable post-mortems by the Los Angeles Times Los Angeles Times

Morning daily newspaper. Established in 1881, it was purchased and incorporated in 1884 by Harrison Gray Otis (1837–1917) under The Times-Mirror Co. (the hyphen was later dropped from the name).
 and the New Orleans Times-Picayune, that a great deal of the "great reporting" was in fact great rumor mongering. The stories of rape and murder in the Superdome were all unfounded. Six people died in there, tragically. But nobody was murdered.

All of the major newspapers contributed to the hysterical environment, passing on one unconfirmed rumor after another. The "blogosphere The total universe of blogs. See blog. " bought the hyperventilation hyperventilation /hy·per·ven·ti·la·tion/ (-ven?ti-la´shun)
1. abnormally increased pulmonary ventilation, resulting in reduction of carbon dioxide tension, which, if prolonged, may lead to alkalosis.

2.
 hook, line and sinker Sinker

A bond whose payments are provided by the issuer's sinking fund.

Notes:
A portion of these bonds are retired by the issuer each year.
See also: Sinking Fund, Super Sinker



Sinker
. The low point was almost certainly when Randall Robinson ominously disclosed on The Huffington Post blog that African-Americans in New Orleans had resorted to eating the flesh of corpses to stay alive.

What accounts for this journalistic fiasco?

Clearly, the breakdown in communications is a major factor. Word of mouth during a chaotic, horrifying disaster is worse than useless. Journalists stuck in isolated areas felt they had no choice but to buy the scuttlebutt scut·tle·butt  
n.
1. Slang Gossip; rumor.

2. Nautical
a. A drinking fountain on a ship.

b. A cask on a ship used to hold the day's supply of drinking water.
 coming out of the Superdome. And pundits, like yours truly, simply bought what they were selling--to our discredit.

We weren't helped by the scandalously irresponsible actions of New Orleans' leadership. Mayor Ray Nagin and Chief of Police Eddie Compass circulated rumors to a pliant national media machine uncritically. Compass told Oprah Winfrey of "little babies getting raped" at the Superdome. Ray Nagin complained of the horrors faced by those "in that frickin' Superdome for five days watching dead bodies, watching hooligans killing people, raping people." Compass told the press that his officers were involved in shootouts inside the stadium, with hundreds of armed gang members. The Times-Picayune found evidence for none of this.

Public safety officials and elected leaders have a responsibility to provide factual information during disasters. And even when they give bad news to the public, it's common sense that they do it in a way that doesn't cause panic. They went a different way, and journalists who normally assume such sources will behave responsibly were burned in the process.

Race is obviously part of the equation, too. "If the dome and Convention Center had harbored large numbers of middle-class white people," Times Picayune editor Jim Amoss said, "it would not have been a fertile ground for this kind of rumor mongering." As with the cannibalism cannibalism (kăn`ĭbəlĭzəm) [Span. caníbal, referring to the Carib], eating of human flesh by other humans.  canard ca·nard  
n.
1. An unfounded or false, deliberately misleading story.

2.
a. A short winglike control surface projecting from the fuselage of an aircraft, such as a space shuttle, mounted forward of the main wing and
, there seemed to be an eagerness on the part of many to believe the very worst stories possible about poor African-Americans.

Then there's politics. Setting aside the no doubt authentic concerns and outrage of the press, who can deny that there wasn't a certain amount of Schadenfreude at work here? Almost instantly, Katrina was declared George W. Bush's debacle and proof of myriad long-simmering gripes against the president.

The foreign press was even more unconstrained, asserting every pseudo-scientific global warming theory imaginable and declaring the moral bankruptcy of the United States. Some couldn't even restrict themselves to the inaccurate rumors actually reported. Writing in the British tabloid The Sun, Jeremy Clarkson penned a column, titled "Flood that released America's demons Demons
See also devil; evil; ghosts; hell; spirits and spiritualism.

ademonist

one who denies the existence of the devil or demons.

bogyism, bogeyism

recognition of the existence of demons and goblins.
," in which he flatly declared that desperate New Orleans residents were "finding themselves being blown to pieces by a helicopter gunship gun·ship  
n.
An armed aircraft, such as a helicopter, that is used to support troops and provide fire cover.
."

The president isn't blameless blame·less  
adj.
Free of blame or guilt; innocent.



blameless·ly adv.

blame
 either. The initial response to Katrina was a mess. We'll have plenty of time to debate how much of a mess and who was responsible. But it's a political fact that when the media was hysterical and local leadership behaving abysmally, Bush did not successfully impose order. That's something he'd have to do in the wake of terrorist attack, and it's something he should have done with Katrina.

Let's hope lessons were learned all around.

Jonah Goldberg is editor-at-large of National Review Online.
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:COMMENTARY
Author:Goldberg, Jonah
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Geographic Code:1U9CA
Date:Oct 10, 2005
Words:654
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