The Jackson
Progressive
Government
Integrity Page
The Unrepentant Consultant
by Walter Brasch
November 28, 2005
Clutching a bag of nails in one hand and
wielding a hammer in the other, Marshbaum broke out of semi-retirement
and into my office. It could mean only one thing.
“I’m going to be
rich!!
In the three decades I have known my
faux friend, he always had a scheme for how to live the affluent life
of a no-talent pop celebrity. He did extremely well on the first part
of it. Now and then, he came up with a scheme that brought him a
comfortable living—until his next scheme drained him of his
savings. But, at least he was persistent.
“What’s it this
time?” I yawned, knowing that for the next 20 minutes I
wasn’t going to get any work done.
“The Gulf Coast!” he
declared. “I’m headed South. Gonna take care of
houses. Planning to become rich from the government! Halliburton/KBR
got up to a half billion. Bechtel, Fluor, Dewbury, and something named
CH2M each got $100 million. Their profits are bigger than the oil
companies.” Without missing a beat, he added, “This
will guarantee me a home in Pacific Palisades.”
“Marshbaum,” I
carefully explained, “there are two reasons why that
won’t happen.”
“Only two?! Heck,
I’m gold already!”
“First reason. You
aren’t politically or economically tied to the President or
Vice-President. Not only did you campaign against them, you tried to
get everyone named Bush or Cheney deported.”
“It was a good
idea,” he said.
“Second reason. You
don’t know anything about home repairs. Your first wife got
an annulment because she said you were useless around the house. Your
second wife divorced you after you fell through the roof you were
fixing and later burned down the house while trying to screw plate
covers onto electrical outlets. Even the insurance company got a
restraining order against you to keep you from doing any more home
repairs.”
“I know I’m
incompetent,” said Marshabaum. “That’s
why I’m going to be a consultant. Media companies and schools
hire the bunglers all the time. I figure the government needs my
incompetence in the Gulf. I’m going to advise people how to
fix their houses.”
“You’ve had more
than a thousand get-rich-quick schemes,” I said,
“but this one has jet-packs to put it at the top of the list
as the worst idea you ever had.”
“Michael Brown is now a
consultant for emergency preparedness,” said a smug Marshbaum.
“Michael Brown?” I
said unbelieving. “You sure we’re talking about the
same Michael Brown? The incompetent that Bush appointed to run FEMA?
The guy who was more worried about what he looked like than what a
catastrophic storm was doing to New Orleans? The one who disregarded
every advance notice and blankly told us a couple of days after Katrina
hit that the storm was bigger than anyone anticipated? The guy who hid
out from the storm just as his boss had once hid out from the Vietnam
War? That Michael Brown?”
“Same one. All suited up and
ready for action.”
“Who’d hire that
idiot?!”
“Bunch of companies already
have. Hadn’t been off the government payroll more than a
month when he started lining up clients. Told the Rocky Mountain News,
‘If I can help people focus on preparedness, how to be better
prepared in their homes and better prepared in their
businesses—because that goes straight to the bottom
line—then I hope I can help the country in some
way.’ Now, that’s altruism. He’s a real
patriot. Will probably make more from consulting than he ever did on
the federal payroll. Even has a fancy office in Washington,
D.C.”
That fancy office, I learned, was in the
high-rent posh office suite of Joseph Allbaugh, who ran George W.
Bush’s first presidential campaign. For his loyalty, but
certainly with almost no knowledge of emergency management, Allbaugh
became Bush’s first FEMA director before he resigned to
become a consultant and lobbyist, bestowing the nation’s
disaster response to his college buddy Michael Brown. One of
Allbaugh’s clients, the Shaw Group, received two $100 million
contracts, much of it for nailing FEMA blue tarpaulins on houses and
buildings at a cost about ten times the normal rate.
“So, you see, it’s
all so simple. If you can’t do anything right, just be a
consultant,” said Marshbaum.
For once, I had to agree with him.
Published in the Jackson
Progressive, http://www.jacksonprogressive.com
by the kind permission of the author, who retains all rights. Walter
Brasch’s latest book is America’s Unpatriotic Acts;
The Federal Government’s Violation of Constitutional and
Civil Rights, available through most major on-line bookstores.
Forthcoming is ‘Unacceptable’: The Federal
Government’s Response to Hurricane Katrina. You may contact
Dr. Brasch through his website, www.walterbrasch.com