Rapture Rescue 911: Disaster Response
for the Chosen
by Naomi Klein
www.thenation.com, November 19,
2007
I used to worry that the United States
was in the grip of extremists who sincerely believed that the
Apocalypse was coming and that they and their friends would be
airlifted to heavenly safety. I have since reconsidered. The country
is indeed in the grip of extremists who are determined to act
out the biblical climax--the saving of the chosen and the burning
of the masses--but without any divine intervention. Heaven can
wait. Thanks to the booming business of privatized disaster services,
we're getting the Rapture right here on earth.
Just look at what is happening in Southern
California. Even as wildfires devoured whole swaths of the region,
some homes in the heart of the inferno were left intact, as if
saved by a higher power. But it wasn't the hand of God; in several
cases it was the handiwork of Firebreak Spray Systems. Firebreak
is a special service offered to customers of insurance giant American
International Group (AIG)--but only if they happen to live in
the wealthiest ZIP codes in the country. Members of the company's
Private Client Group pay an average of $19,000 to have their homes
sprayed with fire retardant. During the wildfires, the "mobile
units"--racing around in red firetrucks--even extinguished
fires for their clients.
One customer described a scene of modern-day
Revelation. "Just picture it. Here you are in that raging
wildfire. Smoke everywhere. Flames everywhere. Plumes of smoke
coming up over the hills," he told the Los Angeles Times.
"Here's a couple guys showing up in what looks like a firetruck
who are experts trained in fighting wildfire and they're there
specifically to protect your home."
And your home alone. "There were
a few instances," one of the private firefighters told Bloomberg
News, "where we were spraying and the neighbor's house went
up like a candle." With public fire departments cut to the
bone, gone are the days of Rapid Response, when everyone was entitled
to equal protection. Now, increasingly intense natural disasters
will be met with the new model: Rapture Response.
During last year's hurricane season, Florida
homeowners were offered similarly high-priced salvation by HelpJet,
a travel agency launched with promises to turn "a hurricane
evacuation into a jet-setter vacation." For an annual fee,
a company concierge takes care of everything: transport to the
air terminal, luxurious travel, bookings at five-star resorts.
Most of all, HelpJet is an escape hatch from the kind of government
failure on display during Katrina. "No standing in lines,
no hassle with crowds, just a first class experience."
HelpJet is about to get some serious competition
from some much larger players. In northern Michigan, during the
same week that the California fires raged, the rural community
of Pellston was in the grip of an intense public debate. The village
is about to become the headquarters for the first fully privatized
national disaster response center. The plan is the brainchild
of Sovereign Deed, a little-known start-up with links to the mercenary
firm Triple Canopy. Like HelpJet, Sovereign Deed works on a "country-club
type membership fee," according to the company's vice president,
retired Brig. Gen. Richard Mills. In exchange for a one-time fee
of $50,000 followed by annual dues of $15,000, members receive
"comprehensive catastrophe response services" should
their city be hit by a manmade disaster that can "cause severe
threats to public health and/or well-being" (read: a terrorist
attack), a disease outbreak or a natural disaster. Basic membership
includes access to medicine, water and food, while those who pay
for "premium tiered services" will be eligible for VIP
rescue missions.
Like so many private disaster companies,
Sovereign Deed is selling escape from climate change and the failed
state--by touting the security clearance and connections its executives
amassed while working for that same state. So Mills, speaking
recently in Pellston, explained, "The reality of FEMA is
that it has no infrastructure, and a lot of our National Guard
is elsewhere." Sovereign Deed, on the other hand, claims
to have "direct access and special arrangements with several
national and international information centers. These proprietary
arrangements allow our Emergency Operations Center to...give our
Members that critical head start in times of crisis." In
this secular version of the Rapture, God's hand is unnecessary.
Not when you have retired ex-CIA agents and ex-Special Forces
lifting the chosen to safety--no need to pray, just pay. And who
needs a celestial New Jerusalem when you can have Pellston, with
its flexible local politicians and its surprisingly modern regional
airport?
Sovereign Deed could soon find itself
competing with Blackwater USA, whose CEO, Erik Prince, wrote recently
of his plans to offer "full spectrum" services, including
humanitarian aid in disasters. When fires broke out in San Diego
County, near the proposed site of the controversial Blackwater
West base, the company immediately seized the opportunity to make
its case. Blackwater could have been the "tactical operation
center for East County fires," said company vice president
Brian Bonfiglio. "Can you imagine how much of a benefit it
would be if we were operational now?" To show off its capacity,
Blackwater has been distributing badly needed food and blankets
to people of Potrero, California. "This is something we've
always done," Bonfiglio said. "This is what we do."
Actually, what Blackwater does, as Iraqis have painfully learned,
is not protect entire communities or countries but "protect
the principal"--the principal being whoever has paid Blackwater
for its guns and gear.
The same pay-to-be-saved logic governs
this entire new sector of country club disaster management. There
is, of course, another principle that could guide our collective
responses in a disaster-prone world: the simple conviction that
every life is of equal value.
For anyone out there who still believes
in that wild idea, the time has urgently arrived to protect the
principle.
Naomi
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