What's new

Life in Texas

HomeOp-ed

The Texas crisis has again shown how America is both unable and unprepared to protect its own people
Tom Fowdy
Tom Fowdy
is a British writer and analyst of politics and international relations with a primary focus on East Asia.
19 Feb, 2021 14:41
The Texas crisis has again shown how America is both unable and unprepared to protect its own people

Icicles hang off the State Highway 195 sign on February 18, 2021 in Killeen, Texas. © Getty Images / Joe Raedle

The US’ poor national infrastructure has been highlighted once more this week, with shocking blackouts in Texas – the inevitable consequence of Washington spending its money on bombs rather than on investing for the public good.
After an unexpected big freeze, Texas is facing an unprecedented crisis. Hit with sub-zero temperatures, parts of the Lone Star State had no power and water for several days, and food supply chains were placed under severe strain. Recent reports suggest there have been 24 deaths.
Footage of long lines and empty shelves in grocery stores resemble scenes from countries against which America has issued sanctions or long mocked for being socialist. Yet, as the state struggles to thaw out, that’s not the only thing that’s frozen – so is the response from Washington. What are the federal government and Congress doing about it? Nothing.

Amid the backdrop of the Covid-19 pandemic, which has claimed nearly half a million lives, the US seems almost incapable of adequately responding to natural and environmental disasters on its own territory.
For a nation that manages a global military and war machine, such failures are appalling. But the two factors are hardly coincidental. This kind of mismanagement in America isn’t a new thing at all; it is, in fact, an integral aspect of its political and social system, where the free market is religiously put before the public good, and the commitment to arms and bombs is greater than to ordinary people.
This ultimately means America’s own infrastructure is selective and poorly organised, and so it’s not surprising that, when confronted with events such as those we’ve seen in Texas, it lacks the will or capacity to cope.
“Big government is bad” has long been the motto of many American politicians. In the US, intervention from the government in the economy and all aspects of social services is often seen as a problem, given that it requires higher taxes to pay for it, creates perceived inefficiency, and infringes on “individual freedom”.
ALSO ON RT.COMTexas freeze exposes cold, dark heart of America in which EVERYTHING is now political
It’s almost religiously believed that the free market is the ultimate virtue, and will naturally account for all public demand in a better way than the state ever can. And it’s those who espouse this philosophy that have rallied hard against government-led improvements in public infrastructure, most particularly in areas such as healthcare, which is derided as “socialized medicine”. Simple health insurance schemes such as Obamacare have caused huge controversy.
As a result, the infrastructure that does exist in the US is usually administered on a “for profit” basis. The necessity to make money trumps the provision of the greater good, creating an imbalance. Making a profit is seen as more important than serving as many people as possible to the best and most accessible degree.
Hospitals are a good example – there may be an abundance of them, but they’re privately owned and the costs of effective healthcare often prove astronomical. Similarly, the US continues to have a poor high-speed railway infrastructure, because government spending in this field is again subject to heavy political constraints, with transport being dominated by the “for profit” incentives of the automobile and aviation industries.
This means that, although the US does have services or provisions, they’re often incomplete and shoddy in their application, unless you have money of course.
This is why the Texas crisis has happened. Besides the fact that it’s generally a warm location and the extreme weather was unexpected, it’s worth pointing out that America’s energy infrastructure is also a privately owned, “for profit” enterprise. Companies place the onus on making money, as opposed to installing high-quality infrastructure, and, instead, do the bare minimum to ensure profit is maximised. This is how a single episode of bad weather can be enough to derail an entire system.
And what are the political consequences of this? There aren’t any. This is not new; this is how it always has been in America. The system has no interest in providing a public good for its people. The outcome of the Hurricane Katrina disaster in New Orleans in 2005 demonstrated exactly the same.
ALSO ON RT.COMDear US media, we don't need Russia to attack our power grid, we're perfectly capable of tanking it ourselves...just look at Texas
And, yet, while America shows disinterest in building infrastructure on a grand scale – the days of the New Deal are long gone – it nevertheless, unquestionably and in full bipartisan consensus, touts a military budget exceeding trillions of dollars every single year. The National Defense Authorisation Act is the sacred cow of Washington politics, but healthcare or infrastructure? They’re dirty words. There are clear political priorities, and they’re not among them.
The situation represents a stark contrast to that in China, where the state aggressively invests in infrastructure at a constant pace, as a public good and a means to economic development. The result is that, despite being a developing country and in poverty 40 years ago, its transport network and public infrastructure are already beyond that of the US.
Joe Biden appears to recognize this, saying, “China will eat our lunch” on infrastructure spending. It is obvious that the new administration sees America is falling behind and wants to up the ante here.
But the question is, how? It’s easier said than done. Events in Texas and Covid-19 both stand as an obvious warning about how difficult it is to secure public investment within the constraints of the political system. Attempting to match a communist state that faces no such hurdles, in terms of regulation or private interests, will be nearly impossible.
Anyone who’s followed the heated discussions over stimulus cheques will recognize just how toxic and difficult funding debates can be. Ultimately, unless it’s about bullets, bombs or private pockets, Washington isn’t interested, and this is why the American state repeatedly shows a chronic inability to provide for and protect its own people – as we’ve seen in Texas.
 
You don't understand the problem. Griddy is not an electrical power company. It's a middleman.

This is like people who don't buy a ticket to see a football game. They go to the stadium just before the game hoping to find someone trying to unload a ticket at below the sales price. Most of the time they gamble and get lucky and get in at a lower price...but sometimes they may get burnt.

When the snow fell the prices went up and the gamblers got burnt. Everybody else (which is the vast majority of people) who buy electricity the normal way are fine.

..even so Griddy is working with ERCOT to reverse those charges. Plus, Griddy customers are free to leave at any time, many did ;as soon as the cost of electricity spiked last Monday. The ones that got burnt are the ones that ignored countless notices sent by the Griddy app of rising prices.

 
I think that you are pointing to this sir

And, Ted could escape storm but he can't escape Mexico vacation memes

Look up d-bag in the dictionary and you get this guy's pic.
 
HomeOp-ed

The Texas crisis has again shown how America is both unable and unprepared to protect its own people
Tom Fowdy
Tom Fowdy
is a British writer and analyst of politics and international relations with a primary focus on East Asia.
19 Feb, 2021 14:41
The Texas crisis has again shown how America is both unable and unprepared to protect its own people

Icicles hang off the State Highway 195 sign on February 18, 2021 in Killeen, Texas. © Getty Images / Joe Raedle

The US’ poor national infrastructure has been highlighted once more this week, with shocking blackouts in Texas – the inevitable consequence of Washington spending its money on bombs rather than on investing for the public good.
After an unexpected big freeze, Texas is facing an unprecedented crisis. Hit with sub-zero temperatures, parts of the Lone Star State had no power and water for several days, and food supply chains were placed under severe strain. Recent reports suggest there have been 24 deaths.
Footage of long lines and empty shelves in grocery stores resemble scenes from countries against which America has issued sanctions or long mocked for being socialist. Yet, as the state struggles to thaw out, that’s not the only thing that’s frozen – so is the response from Washington. What are the federal government and Congress doing about it? Nothing.

Amid the backdrop of the Covid-19 pandemic, which has claimed nearly half a million lives, the US seems almost incapable of adequately responding to natural and environmental disasters on its own territory.
For a nation that manages a global military and war machine, such failures are appalling. But the two factors are hardly coincidental. This kind of mismanagement in America isn’t a new thing at all; it is, in fact, an integral aspect of its political and social system, where the free market is religiously put before the public good, and the commitment to arms and bombs is greater than to ordinary people.
This ultimately means America’s own infrastructure is selective and poorly organised, and so it’s not surprising that, when confronted with events such as those we’ve seen in Texas, it lacks the will or capacity to cope.
“Big government is bad” has long been the motto of many American politicians. In the US, intervention from the government in the economy and all aspects of social services is often seen as a problem, given that it requires higher taxes to pay for it, creates perceived inefficiency, and infringes on “individual freedom”.
ALSO ON RT.COMTexas freeze exposes cold, dark heart of America in which EVERYTHING is now political
It’s almost religiously believed that the free market is the ultimate virtue, and will naturally account for all public demand in a better way than the state ever can. And it’s those who espouse this philosophy that have rallied hard against government-led improvements in public infrastructure, most particularly in areas such as healthcare, which is derided as “socialized medicine”. Simple health insurance schemes such as Obamacare have caused huge controversy.
As a result, the infrastructure that does exist in the US is usually administered on a “for profit” basis. The necessity to make money trumps the provision of the greater good, creating an imbalance. Making a profit is seen as more important than serving as many people as possible to the best and most accessible degree.
Hospitals are a good example – there may be an abundance of them, but they’re privately owned and the costs of effective healthcare often prove astronomical. Similarly, the US continues to have a poor high-speed railway infrastructure, because government spending in this field is again subject to heavy political constraints, with transport being dominated by the “for profit” incentives of the automobile and aviation industries.
This means that, although the US does have services or provisions, they’re often incomplete and shoddy in their application, unless you have money of course.
This is why the Texas crisis has happened. Besides the fact that it’s generally a warm location and the extreme weather was unexpected, it’s worth pointing out that America’s energy infrastructure is also a privately owned, “for profit” enterprise. Companies place the onus on making money, as opposed to installing high-quality infrastructure, and, instead, do the bare minimum to ensure profit is maximised. This is how a single episode of bad weather can be enough to derail an entire system.
And what are the political consequences of this? There aren’t any. This is not new; this is how it always has been in America. The system has no interest in providing a public good for its people. The outcome of the Hurricane Katrina disaster in New Orleans in 2005 demonstrated exactly the same.
ALSO ON RT.COMDear US media, we don't need Russia to attack our power grid, we're perfectly capable of tanking it ourselves...just look at Texas
And, yet, while America shows disinterest in building infrastructure on a grand scale – the days of the New Deal are long gone – it nevertheless, unquestionably and in full bipartisan consensus, touts a military budget exceeding trillions of dollars every single year. The National Defense Authorisation Act is the sacred cow of Washington politics, but healthcare or infrastructure? They’re dirty words. There are clear political priorities, and they’re not among them.
The situation represents a stark contrast to that in China, where the state aggressively invests in infrastructure at a constant pace, as a public good and a means to economic development. The result is that, despite being a developing country and in poverty 40 years ago, its transport network and public infrastructure are already beyond that of the US.
Joe Biden appears to recognize this, saying, “China will eat our lunch” on infrastructure spending. It is obvious that the new administration sees America is falling behind and wants to up the ante here.
But the question is, how? It’s easier said than done. Events in Texas and Covid-19 both stand as an obvious warning about how difficult it is to secure public investment within the constraints of the political system. Attempting to match a communist state that faces no such hurdles, in terms of regulation or private interests, will be nearly impossible.
Anyone who’s followed the heated discussions over stimulus cheques will recognize just how toxic and difficult funding debates can be. Ultimately, unless it’s about bullets, bombs or private pockets, Washington isn’t interested, and this is why the American state repeatedly shows a chronic inability to provide for and protect its own people – as we’ve seen in Texas.


Just don't say the same thing as a non-American or you will be an idiot, poor human from Pakistan with a low GDP or dispassionate.
 
Look up d-bag in the dictionary and you get this guy's pic.

What could Cruz do in that situation? Nothing better he got out of the way and didn't consume dwindling water and electrical resources.
People want jobs and to be paid (they didn't want to homestead that is why they are in a city). A Senator's paid job is to "debate over the creation or update of laws and regulations".
People working at the utilities companies, emergency services get paid money to do what they do. Senator shouldn't step on the toes of those people when they are doing their jobs.
 
Just don't say the same thing as a non-American or you will be an idiot, poor human from Pakistan with a low GDP or dispassionate.
And in the meantime they count on Pakistani help to not get screwed in Afghanistan. Arrogance is a part of their identity.
 
And in the meantime they count on Pakistani help to not get screwed in Afghanistan. Arrogance is a part of their identity.

That help is coming to a swift end.
I'm in Texas and most people are fine. its just poor people and elderly who are suffring the most

It is always the poor who suffer, but according to Americans there are no poor in America.
 
This was unacceptable.

I did not have power from Monday 2am to Thursday 6am.

The planned rotation of power was BS.

Also, I likely had a variable plan as my plan probably renewed into one after the contract expired.

If these MFs overcharge me I'm not gonna fookin pay.

If that happens, make some noise.
That help is coming to a swift end.


It is always the poor who suffer, but according to Americans there are no poor in America.

Who said that?
 
What could Cruz do in that situation? Nothing better he got out of the way and didn't consume dwindling water and electrical resources.
People want jobs and to be paid (they didn't want to homestead that is why they are in a city). A Senator's paid job is to "debate over the creation or update of laws and regulations".
People working at the utilities companies, emergency services get paid money to do what they do. Senator shouldn't step on the toes of those people when they are doing their jobs.

I'm sure he was thinking about the general population and conserving water and electrical resources as he was booking his ticket.

Given his history, the dude is a slimeball.
 
What could Cruz do in that situation? Nothing better he got out of the way and didn't consume dwindling water and electrical resources.
People want jobs and to be paid (they didn't want to homestead that is why they are in a city). A Senator's paid job is to "debate over the creation or update of laws and regulations".
People working at the utilities companies, emergency services get paid money to do what they do. Senator shouldn't step on the toes of those people when they are doing their jobs.

As a politician he should know better than trigger people by going on a vacation when the state he is representing got hit by a massive natural disaster. Even a high school student who took government 101 should know that even doing nothing and staying quiet is better than going on a vacation to sunny Mexico when 90% of Texas is covered by snow.
 
That help is coming to a swift end.


It is always the poor who suffer, but according to Americans there are no poor in America.
nobody said that. Their are many poor people in america just like their are many poor people in other countries?
 
Back
Top Bottom