Author Topic: Bush Cut NO Flood Control 44% to Pay for Iraq  (Read 3681 times)

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Offline Cynthia

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Bush Cut NO Flood Control 44% to Pay for Iraq
« Reply #15 on: September 03, 2005, 02:45:00 PM »
You both have an excellent point. It hadn't occured to me that it was the end of the month. Same goes for Social Security and pention payments.
Too bad people like you aren't advisors for the government, so they would have had the foresight to release these funds as soon as the threats became real. I still find it hard to believe that that magnitune of people, didn't have any food to pack. Mabe I am just out of touch.
On another note, I have a girl, single mom who gets child support when the bum feels like working. She got her assistance cut when she got a raise.(Punishment for being a hard reliable employee. It kind of takes the incitive away.) We offered a pay cut(in any amount to help her out) but it would have been, six of one, or half dozen of another. She is such a nice girl, but has no understanding of how to save for a rainy day. I try my best to help her understand but I cannot force my ideas on her without fear of pushing her away.
Example, the other day:"Michelle, how much did you get soaked for school supplies?" "Ronnie cost me about $55." "What the hell did you have to buy, I only spent $23 on Marshall?" "Well Ronnie wanted all the best pens, Five Star & Nike notebooks ect." "Michelle, don't you know how to say NO?" Marshall wanted those things too, but I explained to him , as I often do, that if we always get the best items, and spend so much extra on things that are going to do the same job as the store brand, it is wasting money that we could use for fun things. Sure, he is disappointed, but that is how we learn. I am also sure to remind him when we go on vacation, how we can afford this because we didn't waste our money on less important things. He is 11 and he gets it!
I think the government fails our low income citizens by not educating them on how to shop, spend and save. It makes me sad to see a family shoping with four kids, buying Lunchables, indivually packed things like cookies and chips. Hi-C and Kool-aid instead if Juciy Juice, OJ and other healthy choices. I often say "you could save a fortune if you bought a package of sandwich bags and a large package of those cookies instead. Some are thankful and go switch their items, others say "well this is easier, I don't have time for that.
That is why I think our GOV should have classes for this program. I think most people that are poor, would like to get ahead. Who doesn't?
Fact is, it is unfortunate that we cannot all be intellegent( which IS genetic). We have no control over the genes we get from our parents. Unfortunatly, we cannot learn at the same rate or level. Speaking from experience, I dropped out of college. Physics and Algerbra gave me nightmares! My husband, a civil engineer, cannot grasp why I don't get it! I have ADD, which I didn't know back then and hyper focus on what might be unimportant factors.(My point is; I could be poor too, and I am in no way putting these families down.) I just can't believe that that number of people were FLAT BROKE at that time. Some yes, but not that many.

 By the way, does anyone know who to contact to provide shelter for the victims? We have a large extra bedroom, and a good sized yard. We could handle 3 people (preferally with a child my sons age, and even a dog. We are far away, but it beats what they have now![ This Message was edited by: Cynthia on 2005-09-03 11:51 ]
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Offline Cynthia

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Bush Cut NO Flood Control 44% to Pay for Iraq
« Reply #16 on: September 03, 2005, 02:48:00 PM »
Webcrawler, What is NCL anyway?
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Offline webcrawler

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Bush Cut NO Flood Control 44% to Pay for Iraq
« Reply #17 on: September 03, 2005, 03:34:00 PM »
Quote
On 2005-09-03 11:45:00, Cynthia wrote:

"You both have an excellent point. It hadn't occured to me that it was the end of the month. Same goes for Social Security and pention payments.

Too bad people like you aren't advisors for the government, so they would have had the foresight to release these funds as soon as the threats became real. I still find it hard to believe that that magnitune of people, didn't have any food to pack. Mabe I am just out of touch.

On another note, I have a girl, single mom who gets child support when the bum feels like working. She got her assistance cut when she got a raise.(Punishment for being a hard reliable employee. It kind of takes the incitive away.) We offered a pay cut(in any amount to help her out) but it would have been, six of one, or half dozen of another. She is such a nice girl, but has no understanding of how to save for a rainy day. I try my best to help her understand but I cannot force my ideas on her without fear of pushing her away.

Example, the other day:"Michelle, how much did you get soaked for school supplies?" "Ronnie cost me about $55." "What the hell did you have to buy, I only spent $23 on Marshall?" "Well Ronnie wanted all the best pens, Five Star & Nike notebooks ect." "Michelle, don't you know how to say NO?" Marshall wanted those things too, but I explained to him , as I often do, that if we always get the best items, and spend so much extra on things that are going to do the same job as the store brand, it is wasting money that we could use for fun things. Sure, he is disappointed, but that is how we learn. I am also sure to remind him when we go on vacation, how we can afford this because we didn't waste our money on less important things. He is 11 and he gets it!

I think the government fails our low income citizens by not educating them on how to shop, spend and save. It makes me sad to see a family shoping with four kids, buying Lunchables, indivually packed things like cookies and chips. Hi-C and Kool-aid instead if Juciy Juice, OJ and other healthy choices. I often say "you could save a fortune if you bought a package of sandwich bags and a large package of those cookies instead. Some are thankful and go switch their items, others say "well this is easier, I don't have time for that.

That is why I think our GOV should have classes for this program. I think most people that are poor, would like to get ahead. Who doesn't?

Fact is, it is unfortunate that we cannot all be intellegent( which IS genetic). We have no control over the genes we get from our parents. Unfortunatly, we cannot learn at the same rate or level. Speaking from experience, I dropped out of college. Physics and Algerbra gave me nightmares! My husband, a civil engineer, cannot grasp why I don't get it! I have ADD, which I didn't know back then and hyper focus on what might be unimportant factors.(My point is; I could be poor too, and I am in no way putting these families down.) I just can't believe that that number of people were FLAT BROKE at that time. Some yes, but not that many.



 By the way, does anyone know who to contact to provide shelter for the victims? We have a large extra bedroom, and a good sized yard. We could handle 3 people (preferally with a child my sons age, and even a dog. We are far away, but it beats what they have now![ This Message was edited by: Cynthia on 2005-09-03 11:51 ]"


I understand it can be frustrating to see people that are struggling and think "if only they would do XYZ and they would get out of this". However, each person has so many things factoring into why they make the choices they do. It is my belief that people are generally doing the best they can with what knowledge and resources they have. I have to see things from their perspective not my own.

I can empathize with the mom buying expensive things for her child that she really can't afford. We all want the best for our kids and we don't want them to be shunned for having less.

Besides the many things I do at work I also have a nutrionist do a series of nutrition and cooking classes for persons that are low income. It sounds pretty simplistic, but what I have noticed is that many people just do not have cooking skills anymore and that is why they purchase expensive processed foods. We teach people how to make good food that doesn't cost a lot of money. We also cook with many basic things you would get from a food pantry such as rice, beans, and pasta. Still, it is a person's choice what they choose to eat and we don't lecture them or belittle them for it.

A lot of well meaning people do want to regulate the lives of poor persons when they deserve just as much autonomy a middle class person has. There have been dark periods in my life where I have had to receive Food Stamps and I felt humilated when people were glaring at me in line once I pulled them out. The EBT card is somewhat better, but even still you have no privacy with it. The cashier will loudly announce once you press the EBT button "foodstamps or cash". God forbid you go to the self checkout and the monitor says "slide your card through and push the EBT foodstamp button on the card reader".

My family was on welfare for many years when I was a kid and it was hard at the end of the month. It's really depressing to come home from school hungry and there not be a single thing to snack on. Yes, I think my parents were irresponsible in many ways while being on welfare, but as kids we were innocent.

Also I've been guilty of buying Lunchables and other things that are wasteful. I'm tired from working all the time and sometimes it's just easier to buy stuff like that to save time. Plus the food companies manipulate our kids so much into wanting that stuff. One time I refused to buy those Ritz crackers w/ peanut butter and my daughter just couldn't get it that we had those same crackers at home and she could put peanut butter on it herself. It's the marketing and packaging that is luring them in.

Here is a link from another thread to list your housing
 http://fornits.com/wwf/viewtopic.php?to ... &forum=7&0
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am looking for people who survived Straight in Plymouth, Michigan. I miss a lot of people there and wonder what happened and would like to stay in touch.

Offline webcrawler

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Bush Cut NO Flood Control 44% to Pay for Iraq
« Reply #18 on: September 03, 2005, 03:38:00 PM »
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On 2005-09-03 11:48:00, Cynthia wrote:

"Webcrawler, What is NCL anyway?"


The user name Non Comformist Law
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am looking for people who survived Straight in Plymouth, Michigan. I miss a lot of people there and wonder what happened and would like to stay in touch.

Offline Antigen

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Bush Cut NO Flood Control 44% to Pay for Iraq
« Reply #19 on: September 03, 2005, 07:42:00 PM »
Quote
On 2005-09-03 08:41:00, Anonymous wrote:

"Our only salvation is that there is no such thing as a third term. Bush CANNOT ruin our country after 2008."


No, but Jeb can. And he's an awful lot more smooth than W!

I am not looking to collect money or punish anyone for their involvement with straight. I'm looking to change this mutherfucking world.
http://fornits.com/wwf/viewtopic.php?topic=9014&forum=7&Sort=D#93452' target='_new'>Reagan Youth

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Offline Antigen

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Bush Cut NO Flood Control 44% to Pay for Iraq
« Reply #20 on: September 03, 2005, 07:50:00 PM »
Quote
On 2005-09-03 11:45:00, Cynthia wrote:

Too bad people like you aren't advisors for the government, so they would have had the foresight to release these funds as soon as the threats became real.


Wouldn't have made a difference. Ever watch C-Span? I love that channel and watch it just as much as the kids and dh will permit me. Today they rebroadcast, of all things, the hurricane preparedness hearings held in DC and chaired by a LA Senator back in June of this year. Here's the real deal. Anyone who was paying attention to our hired experts, scientists, advisors and politicians already knew that, in the event of a big storm headed for NOLA, we would need, at a minimum, transport for 150k souls, housing, food and shelter for all of them and National Guard on the ground before the storm hit.

The question is why in the hell didn't they listen? I think the answer is that they think they're far too busy doing God's work to triffle w/ the mundane details of domestic security and natural disasters.

I heard from a friend that they're making the gesture of shipping home 30k NG troups from Iraq to help w/ the cleanup (read riot control and morgue detail) God bless and keep those men and women in body and soul. They've done more already than any one had any right to expect and they're not done.

The government of the United States is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion.
--John Adams, U.S. President

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Offline Deborah

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Bush Cut NO Flood Control 44% to Pay for Iraq
« Reply #21 on: September 04, 2005, 02:56:00 PM »
Kucinich speaks

Floor Statement of  Congressman Dennis J. Kucinich:
The Supplemental for  Hurricane Katrina
WASHINGTON  - September 2 - Congressman Dennis J.
Kucinich (D-OH) gave the following  speech today on the House floor during a special session to provide relief  money for the victims of Hurricane Katrina:

"This amount of money is only a fraction of what is needed and everyone  here knows it. Let it go
forward quickly with heart-felt thanks to those  who are helping to save lives with necessary food,
water, shelter, medical  care and security. Congress must also demand accountability with the
appropriations. Because until there are basic
changes in the direction of  this government, this
tragedy will multiply to apocalyptic proportions.
 
"The Administration yesterday said that no one
anticipated the breach  of the levees. Did the
Administration not see or care about the 2001 FEMA warning about the risk of a devastating hurricane hitting the people of  New Orleans? Did it not know or care that civil and army engineers were  warning for years about the consequences of failure to strengthen the  flood control system? Was it aware or did it care that the very same  Administration which decries the plight of the people today, cut from the  budget tens of millions needed for Gulf-area flood control projects?

"Countless lives have been lost throughout the South with a cost of  hundreds of billions in ruined homes, businesses, and the destruction of  an entire physical and social infrastructure.  "The President said an hour ago that the Gulf Coast looks like it has  been obliterated by a weapon. It has. Indifference is a weapon of mass  destruction.

"Our indifferent government is in a crisis of
legitimacy. If it  continues to ignore its basic
responsibility for the health and welfare of  the
American people, will there ever be enough money to clean up after  their indifference?  As our
government continues to squander human and monetary resources  of this country on the war, people are beginning to ask, "Isn't it time we  began to take care of our own people here at home? Isn't it time we  rescued our own citizens? Isn't it time we fed our own people? Isn't it  time we sheltered our own people? Isn't it time we provided physical and economic security for our own people?" And isn't it time we stopped the  oil companies from profiting from this tragedy?

"We have plenty of work to do here at home. It is
time for America to  come home and take care of its own people who are drowning in the streets,
suffocating in attics, dying from exposure to the
elements, oppressed by  poverty and illness, wracked with despair and hunger and thirst.

"The time is NOW to bring back to the United States the 78,000 National  Guard troops currently deployed overseas into the Gulf Coast region.  The time is NOW to bring back to the US the equipment which will be  needed for search and rescue, for clean up and reclamation.  The time is NOW for federal resources, including closed Army bases, to  be used for temporary shelter for those who have been displaced by the  hurricane.

"The time is NOW to plan massive public works, with jobs going to the  people of the Gulf Coast states, to build new levees, new roads, bridges,  libraries, schools, colleges and universities and to rebuild all public  institutions, including hospitals. Medicare ought to be extended to  everyone, so every person can get the physical and mental health care they  might need as a result of the disaster.
>
The time is NOW for the federal government to take
seriously the  research of scientists who have
warned for years about the dangers of  changes in
the global climate, and to prepare other regions of the country  for other possible weather disasters until we change our disastrous energy  policies.

The time is NOW for changes in our energy policy, to end the  domination of oil and fossil fuel and to invest heavily in alternative  energy, including wind and solar, geothermal and biofuels.

As bad as this catastrophe will prove to be, it is
in fact only a  warning. Our government must change its direction, it must become involved  in making America a better place to live, a place where all may survive  and thrive. It must get off the path of war and seek the path of peace,  peace with the natural environment, peace with other nations, peace with a  just economic system."
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gt;>>>>>>>>>>>>>><<<<<<<<<<<<<<
Hidden Lake Academy, after operating 12 years unlicensed will now be monitored by the state. Access information on the Federal Class Action lawsuit against HLA here: http://www.fornits.com/wwf/viewtopic.php?t=17700

Offline Nonconformistlaw

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Bush Cut NO Flood Control 44% to Pay for Iraq
« Reply #22 on: September 04, 2005, 02:58:00 PM »
Tim Russert's Meet the Press, Sunday Sept 4, 2005 http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9179790/ Its long but well worth reading....

MR. RUSSERT:  Now, let's turn to Hurricane Katrina.  Joining us is the man in charge of the federal response to the disaster, the director of Homeland Security, Michael Chertoff. Mr. Secretary, this is yesterday's Daily News: "Shame Of A Nation."  And I want to read it to you and our viewers very carefully. It says, "As for Chertoff, if this is the best his department can do, the homeland is not very secure at all. It is absolutely outrageous that the United States of America could not send help to tens of thousands of forlorn, frightened, sick and hungry human beings at least 24 hours before it did, arguably longer than that. Who is specifically at fault for what is nothing less than a national scandal  It will never be known exactly what a day could have meant to so many unfortunates whose lives came to an end in those hopelessly tortured hours--on scorching roadsides, for lack of a swallow of water, in sweltering hospital beds, for lack of insulin.  But what is already more than clear is that the nation's disaster-preparedness mechanisms do not appear to be in the hands of officials who know how to run them." Mr. Secretary, are you or anyone who reports to you contemplating resignation?
SEC'Y MICHAEL CHERTOFF: You know, Tim, what we're contemplating now is the fact that we are very, very much in the middle of a crisis. There's a bit of a sense that you get that some people think it's now time to draw a sigh of relief and go back and do the after-action analysis, and there'll be plenty of time for that. We obviously need to look very closely at things that worked well, and many things did work well, and some things that didn't work well, and some things did not work well. But we have to remember that we have an enormous challenge ahead of us, and there's not a lot of time to get ahead of it.  We have basically moved the population of New Orleans to other parts of the country, or we're in the process of doing so. We've got to feed them. We've got to shelter the people. We've got to get them housing. We've got to educate their children. We have to dewater the city.  We have to clean up the environment. We're going to have to rebuild. Those are enormous, enormous tasks, and we can't afford to get those messed up. So what I'm focused on now and what I want my department--in fact, what the president has ordered all of us to be focused on now--is:  What do we need to do in the next hours, in the next days, in the next weeks and the next months to make sure we are doing everything possible to give these people succor and to make their lives easier?
MR. RUSSERT:  Mr....
SEC'Y CHERTOFF:  We will have time to go back and do an after-action report, but the time right now is to look at what the enormous tasks ahead are.
MR. RUSSERT:  Well, many Americans believe now is the time for accountability. The Republican governor of Massachusetts said, "We are an embarrassment to the world."  The Republican senator from Louisiana, David Vitter, said that you deserve a grade of F, flunk.  How would you grade yourself?
SEC'Y CHERTOFF:  You know, Tim, again I'm going to--the process of grading myself and grading everybody else is one that we will examine over time.  I will tell you that my focus now is on what is going to go forward.  What would really be--require a grade of F would be to stop thinking about the crisis we have now so that we can start to go back and do the after-action analysis. There are some things that actually worked very well.  There are some things that didn't.  We may have to break the model that we have used for dealing with catastrophes, at least in the case of ultra-catastrophes.
And let me tell you, Tim, there is nobody who has ever seen or dealt with a catastrophe on this scale in this country.  It has never happened before.  So no matter what the planning was in advance, we were presented with an unprecedented situation.  Obviously, we're going to want to learn about that. I'll tell you something I said when I--a month ago before this happened.  I said that I thought that we need to build a preparedness capacity going forward that we have not yet succeeded in doing.  That clearly remains the case, and we will in due course look at what we've done here and incorporate it into the planning.  But first we are going to make sure we are attending to the crisis at hand.
MR. RUSSERT:  So no heads will roll?
SEC'Y CHERTOFF:  Tim, in due course, if people want to go and chop heads off, there'll be an opportunity to do it.  The question I would put to people is what do you want to have us spend our time on now?  Do we want to make sure we are feeding, sheltering, housing and educating those who are distressed, or do we want to begin the process of finger-pointing?  I know that as far as I'm concerned I have got to be focused on, and everybody else in this government, and the president has made this very clear, we have got to focus on moving forward to deal with some very real emergencies which are going to be happening in the next days and weeks because of the fact that we have to deal with an unprecedented movement of evacuees.
MR. RUSSERT:  Senator Vitter, the Republican from Louisiana, said the death toll could reach 10,000 because of the lack of response.  Do you agree with that number?
SEC'Y CHERTOFF:  You know, I understand first of all, Tim, that--and I'm clearly including myself among this group--many, many people are frustrated and very distressed by what happened here.  Obviously, every minute matters in a situation like this.  I think I said that we are racing the clock.  But even with that sense of frustration and being upset, I don't think that I'm in a position to start to speculate and guess about what the numbers will be. I will tell you one thing I know, that when we come to the point that we've completed the evacuation, we're going to start dewatering the city--in fact, it's under way now--we're going to confront some very, very ugly pictures. Many people may have been trapped when that levee broke, and the lake basically became, you know, part of the city of New Orleans. People were trapped in their houses and couldn't get out.  Some of those people fortunately apparently were able to be safe and are coming out now. We rescued 10,000 people, the Coast Guard did.  That's three times as many as in any prior year.  Think about that.  That's an--that is compressing in three days the rescue efforts of--three times the rescue efforts of any prior year. There were some extraordinary actions that were taken by people at all levels, including people at the Department of Homeland Security where the Coast Guard is.  So we have worked very aggressively, but we got to tell you, we have to prepare the country for what may be some very, very difficult pictures in the weeks to come.
MR. RUSSERT:  People were stunned by a comment the president of the United States made on Wednesday, Mr. Secretary.  He said, "I don't think anyone anticipated the breach of the levees."  How could the president be so wrong, be so misinformed?
SEC'Y CHERTOFF:  Well, I think if you look at what actually happened, I remember on Tuesday morning picking up newspapers and I saw headlines, "New Orleans Dodged The Bullet," because if you recall the storm moved to the east and then continued on and appeared to pass with considerable damage but nothing worse.  It was on Tuesday that the levee--may have been overnight Monday to Tuesday--that the levee started to break.  And it was midday Tuesday that I became aware of the fact that there was no possibility of plugging the gap and that essentially the lake was going to start to drain into the city.  I think that second catastrophe really caught everybody by surprise.  In fact, I think that's one of the reasons people didn't continue to leave after the hurricane had passed initially.  So this was clearly an unprecedented catastrophe.  And I think it caused a tremendous dislocation in the response effort and, in fact, in our ability to get materials to people.
And one last point I'd make is this, Tim.  We had actually prestaged a tremendous number of supplies, meals, shelter, water.  We had prestaged, even before the hurricane, dozens of Coast Guard helicopters, which were obviously nearby but not in the area.  So the difficulty wasn't lack of supplies. The difficulty was that when the levee broke, it was very, very hard to get the supplies to the people.  I-10 was submerged.  There was only one significant road going all the way the way around.  Much of the city was flooded.  The only way to get to people and to get supplies was to have airdrops and helicopters.  And frankly, it is very--and their first priority was rescuing people from rooftops.  So we really had a tremendous strain on the capacity of--to be able to both rescue people and also to be able to get them supplies.
MR. RUSSERT:  Mr. Secretary, you say prestaged.  People were sent to the Convention Center.  There was no water, no food, no beds, no authorities there. There was no planning.
SEC'Y CHERTOFF:  My understanding is, and again this is something that's going to go back--we're going to go back over after the fact is--the plan that the New Orleans officials and the state officials put together called for the Superdome to be the refuge of last resort.  We became aware of the fact at some point that people began to go to the Convention Center on their own, spontaneously, in order to shelter there.  And I think it's for that reason that people found themselves without food and water and supplies.  The challenge then became...
MR. RUSSERT:  Well, Mr. Secretary, you said--hold on.  Mr. Secretary, there was no food or water at the Superdome, either. And I want to stay on this because...
SEC'Y CHERTOFF:  Well, my understanding--well...
MR. RUSSERT:  I want to stay on this because this is very important.  You said you were surprised by the levee being broken.  In 2002, The Times-Picayune did story after story--and this is eerie; this is what they wrote and how they predicted what was going to happen.  It said, and I'll read it very carefully:  "...A major hurricane could decimate the region, but flooding from even a moderate storm could kill thousands.  It's just a matter of time. ... The scene's been played out for years in computer models or emergency operations simulations...  New Orleans has hurricane levees that create a bowl with the bottom dipping lower than the bottom of Lake Pontchartrain.  ...the levees would trap any water that gets inside-- by breach, overtopping or torrential downpour--catastrophic storm. ... The estimated 200,000 or more people left behind in an evacuation will be struggling to survive.  Some will be housed at the Superdome, the designated shelter for people too sick or inform to leave the city.  ...But many will simply be on their own, in homes or looking for high ground.  Thousands will drown while trapped in homes or cars by rising water. Other will be washed away or crushed by debris. Survivors will end up trapped on roofs, in buildings or on high ground surrounded by water, with no means of escape and little food or fresh water, perhaps for several days." That was four years ago.  And last summer FEMA, who reports to you, and the LSU Hurricane Center, and local and state officials did a simulated Hurricane Pam in which the levees broke.  The levees broke, Mr. Secretary, and people--thousands...
SEC'Y CHERTOFF:  Actually, Tim, that...
MR. RUSSERT:  Thousands drowned.
SEC'Y CHERTOFF:  Tim, I had...
MR. RUSSERT:  There's a CD which is in your department and the White House has it and the president, and you are saying, "We were surprised that the levees may not hold."  How could this be?
SEC'Y CHERTOFF:  No, Tim, I have to tell you, that's not what I said.  You have to listen to what I said.  What I said was not that we didn't anticipate that there's a possibility the levees will break.  What I said is in this storm, what happened is the storm passed and passed without the levees breaking on Monday.  Tuesday morning, I opened newspapers and saw headlines that said "New Orleans Dodged The Bullet," which surprised people.  What surprised them was that the levee broke overnight and the next day and, in fact, collapsed.  That was a surprise.
As to the larger point, there's no question that people have known for probably decades that New Orleans sits in a bowl surrounded by levees.  This is a city built on the coast in an area that has hurricanes in it that is built below sea levels and that is a soup bowl.  People have talked for years about, you know, whether it makes sense to have a city like that, how to build the levees.  So, of course, that's not a surprise.  What caught people by surprise in this instance was the fact that there was a second wave, and that, as The Times-Picayune article makes very clear, creates an almost apocalyptic challenge for rescuers. The fact of the matter is, there's only really one way to deal with that issue, and that is to get people out first.  Once that bowl breaks and that soup bowl fills with water, it is unquestionably the case, as we saw vividly demonstrated, that it's going to be almost impossible to get people out.  So there is really only one way to deal with it, and that is to evacuate people in advance. Michael Brown got on TV in Saturday and he said to people in New Orleans, "Take this seriously.  There is a storm coming." On Friday there was discussion about the fact that even though this storm could fall anywhere along the Gulf, people had to be carefully monitoring it.  We were watching it on Saturday and Sunday.  The president was on a videoconference on Sunday telling us we've got to do everything possible to be prepared.  But you know, Tim, at the end of the day, this is the ground truth:The only way to avoid a catastrophic problem in that soup bowl is to have people leave before the hurricane hits.  Those who got out are fine. Those who stayed in faced one of the most horrible experiences in their life.
MR. RUSSERT:  But that's the point.  Those who got out were people with SUVs and automobiles and air fares who could get out.  Those who could not get out were the poor who rely on public buses to get out.  Your Web site says that your department assumes primary responsibility for a national disaster.  If you knew a hurricane 3 storm was coming, why weren't buses, trains, planes, cruise ships, trucks provided on Friday, Saturday, Sunday to evacuate people before the storm?
SEC'Y CHERTOFF: Tim, the way that emergency operations act under the law is the responsibility and the power, the authority, to order an evacuation rests with state and local officials. The federal government comes in and supports those officials.  That's why Mike Brown got on TV on Saturday and he told people to start to get out of there. Now, ultimately the resources that will get people who don't have cars and don't have the ability to remove themselves has to rest with the kinds of assets a city has--the city's buses, the city's transportation. You know, there will be plenty of time to go back over what the preparation has been with respect to infrastructure in New Orleans, with respect to transportation, with respect to evacuation. To confront a situation that, as you point out, people have been aware of for decades--this is not something that just came on the horizon recently. But I want to leave you with a very, very important marker which I'm going to put down now.  At this particular moment, this is not over.  There is a tremendous challenge. Whatever the criticisms and the after-action report may be about what was right and what was wrong looking back, what would be a horrible tragedy would be to distract ourselves from avoiding further problems because we're spending time talking about problems that have already occurred.
MR. RUSSERT:  The...
SEC'Y CHERTOFF: We are going to have to feed--wait a second. We're going to have to feed, clothe, house and educate a city of people scattered across the country.  We're going to have to do it in a way that doesn't disrupt the rest of the country.  We're going to have to continue the work to restore our infrastructure.  We're going to have to clean probably the greatest environmental mess we've ever seen in this country. And we're going to have to make important decisions about this in the next days and weeks and months. And I've got to tell you that for my money what I'm going to spend my time on is focusing on making sure we are getting on top of emergencies that are still under way.
MR. RUSSERT: This is hurricane season. Are you prepared for another hurricane in that region or, God forbid, a nuclear or biological attack, which we're told could happen at any time?
SEC'Y CHERTOFF: I'm going to tell you, Tim, you've put your finger on something which I said the day after this hurricane hit. As catastrophic as this is, we are still in hurricane season.  And as much as we are working on desperately getting people out now, we've got to make sure we are holding in reserve and we are preparing for what could come next, whether it be a hurricane, whether it be a disease. I mean, we are challenged to make sure that at a moment when we have a current catastrophe and we have to be vigilant about other catastrophes that we do not lose focus and spend time dwelling on the past.  I promise you we will go back and review the lessons that we have to learn, what went right and what went wrong. But I will tell you now we will be making a huge mistake if we spend the time in the immediate future looking back instead of dealing with, as you point out, what's going on now and what may yet come.
MR. RUSSERT:  Mr. Secretary, as always, we thank you for joining us and sharing your views.
MR. RUSSERT: Jefferson Parish President Broussard, let me start with you.  You just heard the director of Homeland Security's explanation of what has happened this last week.  What is your reaction?
MR. AARON BROUSSARD: We have been abandoned by our own country. Hurricane Katrina will go down in history as one of the worst storms ever to hit an American coast, but the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina will go down as one of the worst abandonments of Americans on American soil ever in U.S. history. I am personally asking our bipartisan congressional delegation here in Louisiana to immediately begin congressional hearings to find out just what happened here.  Why did it happen? Who needs to be fired? And believe me, they need to be fired right away, because we still have weeks to go in this tragedy. We have months to go. We have years to go. And whoever is at the top of this totem pole, that totem pole needs to be chain-sawed off and we've got to start with some new leadership.
It's not just Katrina that caused all these deaths in New Orleans here. Bureaucracy has committed murder here in the greater New Orleans area, and bureaucracy has to stand trial before Congress now. It's so obvious. FEMA needs more congressional funding. It needs more presidential support. It needs to be a Cabinet-level director. It needs to be an independent agency that will be able to fulfill its mission to work in partnership with state and local governments around America. FEMA needs to be empowered to do the things it was created to do. It needs to come somewhere, like New Orleans, with all of its force immediately, without red tape, without bureaucracy, act immediately with common sense and leadership, and save lives. Forget about the property. We can rebuild the property. It's got to be able to come in and save lives. We need strong leadership at the top of America right now in order to accomplish this and to reconstructing FEMA.
MR. RUSSERT:  Mr. Broussard, let me ask--I want to ask--should...
MR. BROUSSARD:  You know, just some quick examples...
MR. RUSSERT: Hold on. Hold on, sir. Shouldn't the mayor of New Orleans and the governor of New Orleans bear some responsibility? Couldn't they have been much more forceful, much more effective and much more organized in evacuating the area?
MR. BROUSSARD: Sir, they were told like me, every single day, "The cavalry's coming," on a federal level, "The cavalry's coming, the cavalry's coming, the cavalry's coming." I have just begun to hear the hoofs of the cavalry. The cavalry's still not here yet, but I've begun to hear the hoofs, and we're almost a week out. Let me give you just three quick examples. We had Wal-Mart deliver three trucks of water, trailer trucks of water. FEMA turned them back. They said we didn't need them. This was a week ago. FEMA--we had 1,000 gallons of diesel fuel on a Coast Guard vessel docked in my parish.  The Coast Guard said, "Come get the fuel right away."  When we got there with our trucks, they got a word. "FEMA says don't give you the fuel." Yesterday--yesterday--FEMA comes in and cuts all of our emergency communication lines. They cut them without notice. Our sheriff, Harry Lee, goes back in, he reconnects the line. He posts armed guards on our line and says, "No one is getting near these lines."  Sheriff Harry Lee said that if America--American government would have responded like Wal-Mart has responded, we wouldn't be in this crisis. But I want to thank Governor Blanco for all she's done and all her leadership. She sent in the National Guard. I just repaired a breach on my side of the 17th Street canal that the secretary didn't foresee, a 300-foot breach.  I just completed it yesterday with convoys of National Guard and local parish workers and levee board people. It took us two and a half days working 24/7. I just closed it.
MR. RUSSERT:  All right.
MR. BROUSSARD: I'm telling you most importantly I want to thank my public employees...
MR. RUSSERT: All right.
MR. BROUSSARD: ...that have worked 24/7. They're burned out, the doctors, the nurses. And I want to give you one last story and I'll shut up and let you tell me whatever you want to tell me. The guy who runs this building I'm in, emergency management, he's responsible for everything. His mother was trapped in St. Bernard nursing home and every day she called him and said, "Are you coming, son? Is somebody coming?" And he said,
"Yeah, Mama, somebody's coming to get you. Somebody's coming to get you on Tuesday. Somebody's coming to get you on Wednesday.  Somebody's coming to get you on Thursday.  Somebody's coming to get you on Friday." And she drowned Friday night. She drowned Friday night.
MR. RUSSERT: Mr. President...
MR. BROUSSARD: Nobody's coming to get us.  Nobody's coming to get us. The secretary has promised. Everybody's promised. They've had press conferences. I'm sick of the press conferences.  For God sakes, shut up and send us somebody.
MR. RUSSERT: Just take a pause, Mr. President.  While you gather yourself in your very emotional times, I understand, let me go to Governor Haley Barbour of Mississippi. Governor Barbour, can you bring our audience up to date on what is happening in your state, how many deaths have you experienced and what do you see playing out over the next couple days?
GOV. HALEY BARBOUR, (R-MS): Well, we were ground zero of the worst natural disaster ever to hit the United States. And it's not just a calamity on our Gulf Coast, which is decimated, I mean, destroyed, all the infrastructure overwhelmed.  We have damage 150 miles inland.  We have 100 miles inland, 12 deaths from winds over 110 miles an hour. Saturday night before this storm hit, the head of the National Hurricane Center called me and said, "Governor, this is going to be like Camille."  I said, "Well, start telling people it's going to be like Camille," because Camille is the benchmark for how bad--it's the worst hurricane that ever hit America, it happened to hit Pass Christian, Mississippi. Well, Tim, Katrina was worse than Camille. It was worse than Camille in size. It was worse than Camille in damage. And so we've had a terrible, grievous blow struck us. But my experience is very different from Louisiana, apparently. I don't know anything about Louisiana. Over here, we had the Coast Guard in Monday night. They took 1,700 people off the roofs of houses with guys hanging off of helicopters to get them. They sent us a million meals last night because we'd eaten everything through. Everything hasn't been perfect here, by any stretch of the imagination, Tim. But the federal government has been good partners to us. They've tried hard.  Our people have tried hard. Firemen and policemen and emergency medical people, National Guard, highway patrolmen working virtually around the clock, sleeping in their cars when they could sleep.  And we've made progress every day. But should I--we haven't made as much progress as I want any day. And to be honest, we won't make as much progress as I want any day because the devastation
we're dealing with is unimaginable, not just unprecedented.  It's unimaginable.
MR. RUSSERT: Governor, will you rebuild casinos along the Gulfport, exactly the same locations they were?  And is that inviting another disaster if you do?
GOV. BARBOUR: Just this spring, our Legislature voted to no longer require the casinos to float, which had been the law that was initially passed when we legalized Las Vegas-style casinos in 1991. Our Legislature is going to have to look at whether or not we want to allow the casinos to be built on the land like the hotels that they're attached to. Nobody is going to talk about bringing them inland or anything. But the question
is, should the bottoms, should the floors actually
sit on land or pilings instead of out in the water. And because every one, or virtually every one of the casino barges, the casino floors were blown inland and did a lot of damage, the Legislature, I think, will do that. That's going to be my recommendation.
MR. RUSSERT: All right, gentlemen.
GOV. BARBOUR: But that's just one issue. It's one of a lot of terrible issues. That's just one issue.
MR. RUSSERT: Governor, how many people do you think have died in the state of Mississippi?
GOV. BARBOUR: Well, the official death toll is 160-something. And with the debris, Tim, that we have on the coast, which in many areas is six, eight, 10 feet tall, and because some people didn't evacuate, I think that toll will go up. I can't tell you how much, but we have so many people on the coast, they boarded up for Ivan, evacuated, nothing happened. Boarded up for Dennis, evacuated, nothing happened. Then they said, you know, "Where I am was OK for Camille."  Nobody ever imagined something worse than Camille. And we have a lot of people...
MR. RUSSERT: Right.
GOV. BARBOUR:...who may have died because they didn't believe anything could be worse than Camille.
MR. RUSSERT: Governor Haley Barbour of Mississippi, Jefferson Parish President Aaron Broussard, we thank you very much for your own personal testimony this morning and sharing it with the American viewers.                            
MR. RUSSERT:
By now this animation by NBC News has become very familiar. It shows exactly how New Orleans is that so-called bathtub, a city in between the Mississippi River and Lake Pontchartrain.  And when those levees break, the city can be flooded and disaster can occur. Mark Fischetti, you wrote an article for Scientific American 2001...
MR. MARK FISCHETTI: Right.
MR. RUSSERT: ...and you basically predicted this very thing happening.
MR. FISCHETTI: Right. The article came out in 2001. It was based on computer models that Louisiana State University had been running for several years. A plan had been put together in 1998 already by scientists and engineers what could be done to protect New Orleans if a Category 4 or 5 hurricane came from the south as it did.
MR. RUSSERT: So when the president and Secretary Chertoff say, "We were surprised that the levees were breached," were you surprised?
MR. FISCHETTI: I wasn't surprised. I felt sick Sunday night myself having written this piece and seen the computer models about what could happen in this very instance. I wasn't the only one to write about it. Others have written about it.  The models have been out there.
MR. RUSSERT: Mike Tidwell, you've written about it as well, and you say that in order to rebuild, there's going to have to be some serious undertakings in recognition of the environmental realities of what exists in the New Orleans area.
MR. MIKE TIDWELL: Well, the question and the answer is: Why in the world is New Orleans below sea level to begin with? I think the media has sort of accepted it uncritically that this city is below sea level which is why we have this problem.  Miami is not below sea level. New York's
not below sea level. It's below sea level because of the levees. The levees stop the river from flooding and the river's what built the whole coast of Louisiana through 7,000 years of alluvial
soil deposits. And if you stop that flooding, the other second natural phenomena in any delta region
in the world is subsidence. That alluvial soil is fine, it compacts, it shrinks.  That's why New Orleans is below sea level.  That's why the whole coast of Louisiana is--the whole land platform is sinking. An area of land the size of Manhattan turns to water in south Louisiana every year even without hurricanes. You can't just fix the levees in New Orleans. We now have to have a massive coastal restoration project where we get the water out of the Mississippi River in a controlled
fashion toward the Barrier islands, restore the wetlands. If you don't commit to this plan which is this $14 billion, costs of the Big Dig in Boston, or two weeks of spending Iraq, you shouldn't fix a single window in New Orleans. You
shouldn't pick up a single piece of debris because to do one without the other is to set the table for another nightmare.
MR. RUSSERT: So if you keep status quo, rebuild the levee and not do the other environmental corrections that you're talking about, this will happen again?
MR. TIDWELL: I don't think we should fix a single window in New Orleans unless as a nation we commit
to this $14 billion plan called Coast 2050. You can Google it under the Coalition to Restore Coastal Louisiana. It's been on the table since the mid-'90s. The Bush administration has had all kinds of folks in New Orleans and in Louisiana begging for funding for this--the cost of the Big Dig--to restore the Barrier islands, to fix the wetlands because without that, New Orleans is an endangered city forever.
MR. RUSSERT: Marc Morial, you were the mayor of New Orleans.
MR. MARC MORIAL: Yeah.
MR. RUSSERT: Your dad was the mayor. In fact, ironically, the very faces of those poor souls we saw in the Convention Center, it's the Dutch Morial Convention Center named after your dad.
MR. MORIAL: Yeah.
MR. RUSSERT: I want to raise a subject that was written by The Washington Post and I've seen you on television speaking about it. "The Racial Dimension: To Me, It Just seems Like Black People Are Marked"--was the headline of The Washington Post story. "While hundreds of thousands of people
have been dislocated by Hurricane Katrina, the images that have filled the television screens have been mainly of black Americans--grieving, suffering, in some cases looting and desperately trying to leave New Orleans. Along with the intimate tales of family drama and survival being played out Thursday, there was no escaping that race had become a subtext to the unfolding drama of the hurricane's aftermath."
MR. MORIAL: One has to ask themselves a question: Were this Washington, D.C., New York, an earthquake in Los Angeles, would the response have been so inadequate, been so lacking? Tim, what--where my emotions are and watching Aaron Broussard, it just struck me another time. Where my emotions are is there was Hurricane Katrina, and then there was the first 72 to 96 hours of response. It was wholly and completely inadequate. Not only am I upset, shocked, angry, I hope that as I talk on this show today that this
nation will recognize that this is a wake-up call and an opportunity for black and white people to come together to try to do something for the now almost one million people who've been displaced from their homes, unprecedented in American history, a humanitarian crisis of untold proportions. And we've got to focus on that. I'm
on my way to Houston today to visit the residents of my former city just to try to give hope and try to give healing and to try to say we care. There's going to need to be a retrospective and an examination of all that went wrong, but there needs to be a continuation of rescue efforts in New Orleans and also energy, money and resources, not just from the private sector, but from the government of the United States to do something about all of the people who have now evacuated and must be resettled.
MR. RUSSERT: There was a poll taken before the hurricane, and about 60 percent of the residents of New Orleans said they probably wouldn't leave if they were asked to evacuate. Many of them said they couldn't leave. They live check to check.  They don't have an automobile. Should the mayor, should the governor, should the president, should everyone have been more insistent and provided the resources-- trains, planes, buses,automobiles,
boats--to evacuate the city before the hurricane?
MR. MORIAL: When I was mayor in '98, we orchestrated the first evacuation of the city during Hurricane Georges. After the evacuation, we did a public opinion poll, or a poll of the citizens of the city, which demonstrated that 50 percent, approximately, evacuated. About 20 to 25 percent found themselves in shelters of last resort, which were the dome, the Convention Center, and then another 25 percent refused to go. It was always foreseeable that there would be those that would not leave. There was a marker here, Hurricane Georges going forward, that led, I must admit to, for example, changes in the city's hurricane evacuation plan which contraflowed the interstate, which, if that had not occurred, the tragedy may have even been greater. So under these circumstances, faced with what we're faced, it was foreseeable that people would not be able to evacuate. Many of the people you saw at the Convention Center or the dome didn't have cars, didn't have means, didn't have money. And also, let's not forget, there were many who have now evacuated to hotels whose money is short, their jobs are gone. This requires a massive undertaking by our government on behalf of our own citizens. These are not, Tim, refugees.
Let's not refer to them as refugees. They're citizens. They're survivors.
MR. RUSSERT: Yeah. They're Americans.
MR. MORIAL: They're us.
MR. RUSSERT: David Wessel, let me ask you about the economic impact of all this. You work for The Wall Street Journal and have written about it. Louisiana's coast produces one-third of the country's seafood, one-fifth of the oil, one quarter of our natural gas, and the strip between Baton Rouge and New Orleans is the nation's largest port. What is going to be the fallout for the rest of the nation from this crisis?
MR. DAVID WESSEL: It's going to be big, Tim. Of course, at first--the first blush is it's a horrible tragedy for the people there and the economy. Rebuilding there is going to be just a massive undertaking, as the mayor said. But this is like having a heart attack and then having problems with your circulatory system. The United States' economy depends on oil and gas and refineries that are in this region. They've been damaged, and it's going to be a shock to the economy if those things don't come back soon.
MR. RUSSERT: Do you believe they will come back soon?
MR. WESSEL: I don't think we know yet. It's pretty
clear that some of them are coming back as power is restored. We know that the pressure in the pipelines...
MR. RUSSERT: Yeah.
MR. WESSEL:...for instance, that carry the fuel from the coast to the rest of the country, is being restored. But a number of these refineries and also oil drilling platforms have been damaged so severely that it'll probably be months before they come back. And that's why the rest of us are going to be feeling the impact of this, not only in our hearts but in our economic lives.
MR. RUSSERT: Gasoline prices will be very high for some time to come?
MR. WESSEL: That's right. The early signs are, since the end of last week, that the financial markets, which guess, which bet on future gasoline prices, are that the price is coming down a little bit; that is, that we'll have a spike for a few weeks and then it'll start to come down. But that could turn around quickly when the oil companies--if the oil companies tell us that the refineries are going to be out of commission for a long time.
MR. RUSSERT: Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert started a debate by saying, "Well, we have to think about whether or not New Orleans should be rebuilt in the way it is and where it is." He then put out several other statements saying,
"What I meant to say is that it will be rebuilt, but it has to be rebuilt correctly." It follows up on what you've been saying, Mark and Mike, in terms of just what is there and what should be there. Do you believe that we have the wherewithal, the money, $14 billion, to rebuild New Orleans? And how long will it take to do that?
MR. FISCHETTI: I don't think it's a question of money. It's a question of will. Florida in 2000 started this--Congress approved, essentially, a $7 billion plan to refresh the Everglades, which is a very similar kind of project. It's freshwater; it's marsh lands. $7 billion in 2000. I don't think the dollar figure is the obstacle.  It's the desire to do it.
MR. TIDWELL: I think there are a number of stories here. I mean, first of all, we need to, of course, address the humanitarian crisis. And beyond that, we got to start thinking about how--what we need to do to rebuild New Orleans. And that's going to take just restoration now for--to get the water of the Mississippi back toward the Barrier islands and the wetlands. But the really final big story here is that the Bush administration is failing on another level to hear warning signs and take credible evidence that there's dire problems. The Bush administration itself--its own studies say that we will in this century turn every coastal city in America into a New Orleans. Why? Because we got three feet of subsidence, sinking,in south Louisiana in the 20th century because of the levees. Right now, because of global climate change, the Bush administration's own studies say we will get between one and three feet of sea level rise worldwide because of our use of fossil fuels. The big, big, big take-away message here is: New Orleans is the future of Miami, New York, San Diego, every coastal city in the world, because whether the land sinks three feet and you get a bowl in a hurricane like this, or sea level rises worldwide, same problem. We have got to address this energy problem that David mentioned.
We have an irrational energy problem. The way most Americans are going to feel this hurricane is at the gas pump and the energy. That's because this infrastructure is irrationally exposed to hurricanes. That's a problem big enough itself and shows how vulnerable we are to fossil fuels.  Then you have the consequences of fossil fuels and greenhouse gases turning every city, coastal city in the world into a New Orleans. We've got to start thinking about a new energy future.
MR. RUSSERT: I also think we feel it in our hearts
very, very deeply as we watch those pictures as well, as the gasoline pumps. And I can tell you
by the reaction I've gotten from people all across
the country. Mr. Mayor, do you believe that the people of New Orleans will come back to their city? With-- there are no housing. There are no jobs. Will they come back?
MR. MORIAL: New Orleans must be rebuilt. It must be rebuilt as the diverse cultural gumbo that it's
always been. It must be rebuilt the right way.Mary
Landrieu has had legislation for a coastal restorationinitiative now pending in Congress for three years and has not been able to get it passed. What we need here is a reconstruction and resettlement czar, someone like Colin Powell, someone like Andrew Young, someone with broad credibility to lead the efforts to resettle people
and provide the leadership for the reconstruction of New Orleans, Louisiana, and southern Mississippi.
MR. RUSSERT: With pending tax cuts, state tax cuts, record deficits, the war in Iraq, do you believe there will be money in the federal government to do all this?
MR. WESSEL: I believe there will be money in the federal government to do this. If there was ever an occasion to borrow money, this is it. The history of America is when cities get destroyed, they come back. The Chicago fire; Galveston, Texas, was raised afterwards. This city will come back, but it's going to be hard and it's going to challenge the institutional leadership of New Orleans and Louisiana, which is not distinguished by its efficiency or honesty.
MR. RUSSERT:  It's going to take our government.  It's going to also take all of you. And to all our viewers, you can give. You can help the victims of Katrina by calling the American Red Cross, 1-800- HELP-NOW, 1-800-HELP-NOW, or logging on to our Web site at mtp.msnbc.com; a list of all the other charities who are involved in this effort to help the poor souls of the Gulf region.                          
MR. RUSSERT: That's all for today. Our thoughts and prayers are with the victims of Hurricane Katrina and the people of Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana as they try to rebuild their lives and their homes.
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Offline Deborah

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Bush Cut NO Flood Control 44% to Pay for Iraq
« Reply #23 on: September 04, 2005, 03:27:00 PM »
Subject: FW: [ISM-NYC] Notes from Inside New
Orleans: Jordan Flaherty

Please Forward
 
Notes From Inside New Orleans
by Jordan Flaherty
Friday, September 2, 2005
I just left New Orleans a couple hours ago.  I
traveled from the apartment I was staying in by boat to a helicopter to a refugee camp.  If anyone
wants to examine the attitude of federal and state
officials towards the victims of hurricane Katrina, I advise you to visit one of the refugee
camps.
>
In the refugee camp I just left, on the I-10 freeway near Causeway, thousands of people (at least 90% black and poor) stood and squatted in mud and trash behind metal barricades, under an
unforgiving sun, with heavily armed soldiers standing guard over them.  When a bus would come through, it would stop at a random spot, state police would open a gap in one of the
barricades, and people would rush for the bus, with no information given about where the bus was going. Once inside (we were told) evacuees would be told where the bus was taking them - Baton Rouge, Houston, Arkansas, Dallas, or other locations.  I was told that if you boarded a bus bound for Arkansas (for example), even people with family and a place to stay in Baton Rouge would not be allowed to get out of the bus as it passed through Baton Rouge.  You had no choice but to go to the shelter in Arkansas.  If you had people willing to come to New Orleans to pick you up, they could not come within 17 miles of the camp.
>
I traveled throughout the camp and spoke to Red
Cross workers, Salvation Army workers, National Guard, and state police, and although they were
friendly, no one could give me any details on when
buses would arrive, how many, where they would go to, or any other information.  I spoke to the
several teams of journalists nearby, and asked if
any of them had been able to get any information from any federal or state officials on any of these questions, and all of them, from Australian tv to local Fox affiliates complained of an unorganized, non-communicative, mess.  One cameraman told me "as someone who's been here in this camp for two days, the only information I can give you is this: get out by nightfall.  You don't want to be here at night."
>
There was also no visible attempt by any of those
running the camp to set up any sort of transparent and consistent system, for instance a line to get on buses, a way to register contact information or find family members, special needs services for children and infirm, phone services, treatment for possible disease exposure, nor even a single trash can.
>
To understand this tragedy, its important to look at New Orleans itself.
>
For those who have not lived in New Orleans, you
have missed a incredible, glorious, vital, city.  A place with a culture and energy unlike anywhere
else in the world.  A 70% African-American city
where resistance to white supremecy has supported a generous, subversive and unique culture of vivid
beauty.  From jazz, blues and hiphop, to secondlines, Mardi Gras Indians, Parades, Beads, Jazz Funerals, and red beans and rice on Monday nights, New Orleans is a place of art and music and dance and sexuality and liberation unlike anywhere else in the world. [Think Pat Robertson is really excited to see a 'city of sin' rebuilt?]
>
It is a city of kindness and hospitality, where
walking down the block can take two hours because you stop and talk to someone on every porch, and
where a community pulls together when someone is in need.  It is a city of extended families and social networks filling the gaps left by city, state and federal goverments that have abdicated their responsibilty for the public welfare.  It is a city where someone you walk past on the street not only asks how you are, they wait for an answer.
>
It is also a city of exploitation and segregation
and fear.  The city of New Orleans has a population of just over 500,000 and was expecting 300 murders this year, most of them centered on just a few, overwhelmingly black, neighborhoods.  Police have been quoted as saying that they don't
need to search out the perpetrators, because usually a few days after a shooting, the attacker is shot in revenge.
>
There is an atmosphere of intense hostility and
distrust between much of Black New Orleans and the N.O. Police Department. In recent months,
officers have been accused of everything from drug
running to corruption to theft.  In seperate incidents, two New Orleans police officers were
recently charged with rape (while in uniform), and
there have been several high profile police killings of unarmed youth, including the murder of
Jenard Thomas, which has inspired ongoing weekly
protests for several months.
>
The city has a 40% illiteracy rate, and over 50% of black ninth graders will not graduate in four years.  Louisiana spends on average $4,724 per
child's education and ranks 48th in the country for lowest teacher salaries. The equivalent of more than two classrooms of young people drop
out of Louisiana schools every day and about 50,000 students are absent from school on any given day.  Far too many young black men from New
Orleans end up enslaved in Angola Prison, a former
slave plantation where inmates still do manual farm labor, and over 90% of inmates eventually die
in the prison.  It is a city where industry has
left, and most remaining jobs are are low-paying, transient, insecure jobs in the service economy.
>
Race has always been the undercurrent of Louisiana
politics.  This disaster is one that was constructed out of racism, neglect and incompetence. Hurricane Katrina was the inevitable spark igniting the gasoline of cruelty
and corruption.  From the neighborhoods left most at risk, to the treatment of the refugees to the the media portayal of the victims, this disaster is shaped by race.
>
Louisiana politics is famously corrupt, but with the tragedies of this week our political leaders have defined a new level of incompetence.  As
hurricane Katrina approached, our Governor urged us to "Pray the hurricane down" to a level two.  Trapped in a building two days after the hurricane, we tuned our battery-operated radio into local radio and tv stations, hoping for vital news, and were told that our governor had called for a day of prayer.  As rumors and panic began to rule, they was no source of solid
dependable information.  Tuesday night, politicians and reporters said the water level would rise another 12 feet - instead it stabilized.  Rumors spread like wildfire, and the politicians and media only made it worse.
>
While the rich escaped New Orleans, those with
nowhere to go and no way to get there were left behind.  Adding salt to the wound, the local and
national media have spent the last week demonizing
those left behind.  As someone that loves New Orleans and the people in it, this is the part of
this tragedy that hurts me the most, and it hurts me deeply.
>
No sane person should classify someone who takes
food from indefinitely closed stores in a desperate, starving city as a "looter," but thats just what the media did over and over again.  Sherrifs and politicians talked of having troops protect stores instead of perform rescue operations.
>
Images of New Orleans' hurricane-ravaged population were transformed into black, out-of-control, criminals.  As if taking a stereo from a store that will clearly be insured against loss is a greater crime than the governmental neglect and incompetence that did billions of dollars of
damage and destroyed a city.  This media focus is a tactic, just as the eighties focus on "welfare queens" and "super-predators" obscured the
simultaneous and much larger crimes of the Savings
and Loan scams and mass layoffs, the hyper-exploited people of New Orleans are being used as a scapegoat to cover up much larger crimes.
>
City, state and national politicians are the real
criminals here.  Since at least the mid-1800s, its been widely known the danger faced by flooding to New Orleans.  The flood of 1927, which, like this week's events, was more
about politics and racism than any kind of natural
disaster, illustrated exactly the danger faced.  Yet government officials have consistently
refused to spend the money to protect this poor,
overwhelmingly black, city.  While FEMA and others warned of the urgent impending danger to New Orleans and put forward proposals for funding to reinforce and protect the city, the Bush administration, in every year since 2001, has cut or refused to fund New Orleans flood control, and ignored scientists warnings of increased hurricanes as a result of global warming. And, as the dangers rose with the floodlines, the lack of coordinated response dramatized vividly the callous disregard of our elected leaders.
>
The aftermath from the 1927 flood helped shape the
elections of both a US President and a Governor, and ushered in the southern populist politics of
Huey Long.
>
In the coming months, billions of dollars will
likely flood into New Orleans.  This money can either be spent to usher in a "New Deal" for the
city, with public investment, creation of stable
union jobs, new schools, cultural programs and housing restoration, or the city can be "rebuilt and revitalized" to a shell of its former self, with newer hotels, more casinos, and with chain stores and theme parks replacing the former
neighborhoods, cultural centers and corner jazz
clubs.
>
Long before Katrina, New Orleans was hit by a
hurricane of poverty, racism, disinvestment, de-industrialization and corruption. Simply the damage from this pre-Katrina hurricane will take billions to repair.
>
Now that the money is flowing in, and the world's
eyes are focused on Katrina, its vital that progressive-minded people take this opportunity to
fight for a rebuilding with justice.  New Orleans is a special place, and we need to fight for its rebirth.
>
> -----------------------------------------------
Jordan Flaherty is an editor of Left Turn Magazine
(www.leftturn.org).
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
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Hidden Lake Academy, after operating 12 years unlicensed will now be monitored by the state. Access information on the Federal Class Action lawsuit against HLA here: http://www.fornits.com/wwf/viewtopic.php?t=17700

Offline Deborah

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Bush Cut NO Flood Control 44% to Pay for Iraq
« Reply #24 on: September 05, 2005, 02:07:00 AM »
Good piece by Michael Ruppert
"You Bet Your Life"

http://www.fromthewilderness.com/free/w ... life.shtml

Excerpt:
As many as twenty offshore rigs have now been confirmed as adrift, capsized, listing or sunk. Each rig may have as many as eight wells. Where?s the money coming from to replace them? How long will that take?

Bottom line: my assessment is that New Orleans is never going to be rebuilt and that US domestic oil production will never again reach pre-Katrina levels. The infrastructure is gone, the people are gone, and the US economy will be on life support very, very quickly. If people are griping at $5.00 gasoline what will they do when it?s $8.00? $10.00? Start shooting (the wrong people)? How difficult is it to rebuild in that kind of social climate? And if US oil production does not soon exceed pre-Katrina levels then the US economy is doomed anyway. It?s a catch-up game now. I think it?s quite likely that the Bush administration is responding so ineptly in part because it is in a complete crisis mode realizing that the entire United States is on the brink of collapse and there?s very little they can do about it. The Bush administration doesn?t know how to build things up, only blow them up. They aren?t worrying about New Orleans because they?re frantically triaging the rest of the nation and deciding what can be saved elsewhere.

What lingers for all of us is the inexplicably bovine behavior of the Bush administration. And how in the name of a loving God could Louisiana?s Attorney General Charles Foti say on national television that he will prosecute those who loot for survival with the same vigor as those who have looted for profit and greed? Even New Orleans police are smarter and better than this. They?re letting people go who have taken food, water, shoes that fit their feet and clothing that fits their bodies. Those who understand the situation condemn Mr. Foti?s callous and unreasoned position in the strongest possible terms.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
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Hidden Lake Academy, after operating 12 years unlicensed will now be monitored by the state. Access information on the Federal Class Action lawsuit against HLA here: http://www.fornits.com/wwf/viewtopic.php?t=17700

Offline Antigen

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« Reply #25 on: September 06, 2005, 12:32:00 PM »
Date: Tue, 06 Sep 2005 09:26:53 -0400
To: "ARO" http://www.cannabisculture.com/articles/4503.html
Cannabis Culture Magazine - http://www.cannabisculture.com
PO Box 15, 199 West Hastings, Vancouver BC,
Canada V6B 1H4
   
______________________________________________________
Click here to donate to the Hurricane Katrina relief effort.
http://store.yahoo.com/redcross-donate3/

You never see animals going through the absurd and often horrible fooleries of magic and religion. Only man behaves with such gratuitous folly. It is the price he has to pay for being intelligent but not, as yet, intelligent enough.
--Aldous Huxley, author

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"Don\'t let the past remind us of what we are not now."
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #26 on: September 06, 2005, 02:25:00 PM »
Bush To Lead Investigation On Response To Hurricane Katrina
Floodwaters Recede As Officials Brace For What Lurks Beneath

UPDATED: 1:36 pm EDT September 6, 2005

BATON ROUGE, La. -- President George W. Bush says he'll lead an investigation into what went wrong with the response to Hurricane Katrina.

Bush said Vice President Dick Cheney will go to the Gulf Coast region on Thursday, to help find out whether the government is doing all it can.

Bush said, "Bureaucracy is not going to stand in the way of getting the job done for the people."

Bush said there will be "ample time" to figure out what went right and what went wrong as the federal government responded. For now, he said, he wants to focus on saving lives and getting people the help they need.

Bush is trying to pump up what he calls a "tidal wave of compassion."

He has four sessions Tuesday related to the killer storm: He confers with his Cabinet, meets with lawmakers, sits down with charity groups and makes a Rose Garden pitch for schools to take young evacuees.

Critics are questioning his focus. Democratic Party Chairman Howard Dean said Bush is firing a barrage of photo opportunities and misinformation, while shifting blame for what went wrong.

Dean is not alone. At least one evacuee who saw Bush Monday in Baton Rouge said she's "not interested in hand-shaking" and "photo ops." Mildred Brown said, "I need answers."

Bush said people want the White House to "play the blame game," but he said it's not the time to point fingers.

Bush said the investigation will be partly aimed at making sure the country could withstand more storms, or an attack.

"We still live in an unsettled world," he said.

New Orleans Mayor: Body Count 'Going To Be Awful'
The mayor of New Orleans is hopeful the city's most powerful pump will be working within a couple of days.

Ray Nagin said two pumps already are working to get the water out of the city, now that a broken levee has been repaired.

But Nagin said many problems still exist. He said that a lot of gas is still leaking and some residents refuse to leave, despite the danger.

Then there's the challenge of recovering bodies. Nagin said firefighters have reported seeing them while making rescues. Nagin said earlier that 10,000 dead wouldn't be an unreasonable estimate.

Nagin said he was not sure how many died in the hurricane and flood, but added, "It's going to be awful and it's going to wake the nation up again."

As for the federal response, Nagin said he's "gone from anger to despair to seeing us turn the corner."

As the waters in New Orleans are pumped back into Lake Pontchartrain, authorities are bracing for another dose of tragedy to be revealed.

The Army Corps of Engineers is pumping water out, after closing a major gap in the levee that breached during Katrina, flooding 80 percent of the bowl-shaped city.

While pumping is likely going to take weeks, officials are expecting to find a layer of toxic sludge and bodies once the water is gone.

The breach was in the 17th Street canal levee. It was repaired with helicopters used to repeatedly drop giant sandbags into the gaping break.

Water in some low-lying areas has dropped by more than a foot.

Meanwhile, searchers -- including actor Sean Penn -- have been looking for survivors. They've encountered some residents who are refusing to leave their damaged homes. But a police official, calling the city destroyed, said there's no reason for them to stay.

Rescue crews from as far away as California are trolling the evacuated city for stragglers. But rescue workers said they can't force people to go. The mayor said water won't be handed out to the holdouts anymore.

Meanwhile, Louisiana's governor is trying to play down talk of a rift with Washington over the hurricane relief efforts.

Kathleen Blanco said "there is no divide" and that "every leader in this nation wants to see this problem solved."

Earlier Monday, Blanco and President George W. Bush kept their distance during a tour of a Baton Rouge relief center. But at their next stop, the Republican president kissed the Democratic governor on the cheek.

Behind the scenes, state and federal officials have each suggested the others are to blame for a slow response to the crisis.

New Orleans Police Chief Defends His Force

New Orleans Police Superintendent Eddie Compass is defending the work of his officers following reports some have abandoned their jobs.

Compass denied that officers have left in droves and said that many held their ground without food, water and even ammunition in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

Two police officers killed themselves. Another was shot in the head. And Compass said 150 had to be rescued. He said others had gunbattles in dark, flooded streets.

At a news conference, a police official said between 400 and 500 officers on the 1,600-member police force are unaccounted for. Compass said there are no firm numbers yet.

Officers still on the beat are being cycled off duty and given five-day vacations in Las Vegas and Atlanta, where they will be offered counseling.

Guard To Continue Handing Out Food
The National Guard figures people will keep taking food, water and ice as long as they keep giving it away.

Members of the Alabama National Guard will again form an assembly line of sorts in a Mississippi shopping mall parking lot Tuesday. They had a steady stream of cars and trucks lined up Monday, thankful for the cases of water and crates of MREs.

Meanwhile, residents who returned home to Point Port, Miss., Tuesday found their homes destroyed or unrecognizable. The town is in hard-hit Harrison County, home to Biloxi.

Those who stayed through the storm said nobody imagined Katrina would do so much damage to their homes, which were constructed under new guidelines passed after Hurricane Camille hit the area in 1969.

Doctor, EMTs Complain About Federal Response

Medical professionals in New Orleans said they were swamped after Katrina struck and they're highly critical of the way the federal government responded to the hurricane.

A doctor who spent the past week at squatters' camps on Interstate 10 said more than 40 people died waiting for help.

And an emergency medical technician who also spent the week treating people said some who were healthy got sick after being stranded for days in camps on the Interstate.

They say federal officials should have been more aggressive in bringing medical supplies.

But another EMT who arrived over the weekend from Ohio said he can't fault the federal effort. He said the situation is so overwhelming it would have been impossible to train for it.

Meanwhile, doctors prevented from using a state-of-the-art mobile hospital in Louisiana because of red tape, have set up shop in Bay St. Louis, Miss.

The delay in getting deployed in Louisiana was over what doctors would be allowed to do.

But Mississippi authorities had fewer reservations about treatments being offered to storm victims. In the hospital's first 16 hours of operations, doctors treated about 100 people. The patients had cuts and wounds and some were dehydrated.

The 113-bed hospital is based at Carolinas Medical Center, in Charlotte. It travels in a convoy that includes two 53-foot trailers. Equipment includes ultrasound, digital radiology, satellite Internet, and a full pharmacy, enabling doctors to do most types of surgery.

It's set up in a Kmart parking lot.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Deborah

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« Reply #27 on: March 31, 2006, 01:57:00 PM »
VIDEO SPECIAL | Katrina Plus Seven Months
A Film by Chris Hume
http://www.truthout.org/multimedia.htm
The  latest video in the Hurricane Katrina series by Chris Hume. It has been seven months since New Orleans was nearly wiped out by the storm, and  Chris Hume is revisiting some of the people he met the first time, when the city was still flooded and under martial law. Also, a coalition of Iraq war veterans and Katrina survivors march to New Orleans from Mobile, Alabama, to speak out against the occupation of Iraq and to help rebuild the Gulf Coast.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
gt;>>>>>>>>>>>>>><<<<<<<<<<<<<<
Hidden Lake Academy, after operating 12 years unlicensed will now be monitored by the state. Access information on the Federal Class Action lawsuit against HLA here: http://www.fornits.com/wwf/viewtopic.php?t=17700