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Water disgrace, Jackson, Mississippi
#1
"Mississippi, God damn!" -- Nina Simone.


Quote:JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Years before people in Jackson were recently left without running water for several days, Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves claimed to have helped block money to fund water system repairs in the capital city.

Reeves, a Republican, blames Jackson’s water crisis on mismanagement at the city level. The city’s latest water troubles are far from its first, and they have stemmed from decaying infrastructure beyond one water treatment plant. The EPA said 300 boil water notices have been issued over the past two years in the city.

As Reeves climbed Mississippi’s political ladder, he cited his opposition to financially helping the capital as evidence of his fiscal conservatism. Jackson-area lawmakers say the troubled water system is one example of Jackson’s status as a political punching bag for Republican officials, who control the Legislature and the state Bond Commission.


“We operate under the golden rule here,” said Democratic Sen. John Horhn of Jackson. “And the golden rule is: He who has the gold makes the rules.”

In Jackson, 80% of residents are Black, and 25% live in poverty. Repeated breakdowns made it unsafe for people to drink from their tap, brush their teeth and wash their dishes without boiling the water first. At a September news conference, Reeves said water service was restored to most of the city only after the state “stepped in” to provide emergency repairs. He also said that he didn’t anticipate a need for the Legislature to approve more debt for Jackson’s water system.


The specter of another weather-induced water stoppage looms large for some Jackson residents. “Winter is coming,” said Brooke Floyd, a local activist. “He’s saying it’s fixed. But it’s not fixed.”
Water service was also cut off in parts of the city due to a winter storm in 2010. By June 2011, Reeves was locked in a Republican primary campaign for lieutenant governor. As the tea party movement thrust government spending to the center of political debate, his opponent lambasted him for signing off on bond debt increases.

With election day just weeks away, Reeves — who was the state treasurer — appeared on a conservative talk radio show to push his track record as a tightfisted “watchdog” over state legislators eager to borrow. The host, Paul Gallo, wanted to know why Reeves had voted to approve most bond projects as a member of the state Bond Commission. His voting record didn’t tell the whole story, Reeves said. For instance, take the millions in bonds the city had requested to repair its crumbling water and sewer infrastructure.

“I’ve never voted against that because it’s never gotten to the Bond Commission. We are talking to the city of Jackson,” Reeves said. “If we are not comfortable, we never bring it up for a vote.”

The Bond Commission decided not to consider issuing bonds for Jackson water projects that had been authorized by the Legislature, Reeves said.

“Let’s just say there is an economic development in a town that doesn’t have a lot of political power,” Gallo responded. “The Bond Commission can just refuse to take it up? ... Isn’t that the same thing as a negative vote?”

https://apnews.com/article/2022-midterm-elections-mississippi-tate-reeves-jackson-ae2460ffcbbd96a3cff1ab3ab5c44e4f?utm_source=homepage&utm_medium=TopNews&utm_campaign=position_09
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist  but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.


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#2
Mississippi has tribal politics based largely on "white" and "black". The partisan divide is the racial divide, and people seem to excuse anything so long as the harm goes to the other. Ideally service, competence, and integrity overpower all else in politics, so I can make it very simple.

To blacks in Mississippi: if you have a choice between a corrupt, demagogic, and incompetent black Democrat and a white Republican who proves honest, non-polarizing, competent, and intent on serving Mississippi residents, then vote for the white pol.

To whites in Mississippi: if you have a choice between a corrupt, demagogic, and incompetent white Republican and a black Democrat who proves honest, non-polarizing, competent, and intent on serving Mississippi residents, then vote for the white pol.

The trick is to find or develop those pols who put public service above identity and canned ideology. After that, politics is easy. Solutions might not be, but ideally we elect our politicians to solve problems or facilitate solutions.

There is no excuse for bad water in the state's capitol. Plenty of large American cities with largely African-American populations have perfectly-good drinking water. For example, Detroit water was the solution to the water problems of Flint, Michigan.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist  but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.


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