Skip to main content

My friends David and Sandra have decided to remain in the Garden District tonight on the Eve of Hurricane Katrina...

They just recently relocated there from NYC - Both are in their 70s and 80s (though dont dare tell them I told you so!) and stubborn as hell!

Join me tonight in sending a glowing green protective bubble to protect New Orleans from harm as Katrina makes landfall tomorrow AM...

blessed be...
Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Seems either our beams, St. Jude or Lasher, or all of the above, helped spare NOLA the worst. I was on tenterhooks last night as familiar places were mentioned in the reports...

"On Jackson Square, two massive oak trees outside the 278-year-old St. Louis Cathedral came out by the roots, ripping out a 30-foot section of ornamental iron fence and straddling a marble statue of Jesus Christ, snapping off only the thumb and forefinger of his outstretched hand.

Hotel guests also were treated to some unplanned ventilation, as scores of windows were blown out.

At the hotel Le Richelieu, the winds blew open sets of balcony French doors shortly after dawn. Seventy-three-year-old Josephine Elow of New Orleans pressed her weight against the broken doors as a hotel employee tried to secure them.

"It's not life-threatening," Elow said as rain water dripped from her face. "God's got our back."

Elow's daughter, Darcel Elow, was awakened before dawn by a high-pitched howling that sounded like a trumpeting elephant.

"I thought it was the horn to tell everybody to leave out the hotel," she said as she walked the hall in her nightgown."

Attachments

Images (1)
  • 20hurri_slide1
Last edited by hatches
Hurricane Katrina personal update, news

Thanks to everyone for their wishes, calls and email concerning Johnny and I, our family, friends and house in New Orleans. Thankfully, we were not in our beloved adopted city for this nightmare.

My brother, who we originally thought was in the Superdome, made it to Shreveport with a last-minute ride and called Monday night after a 14 hour drive in the storm. Thanks for your beams and good wishes for him!

We have no news on his house in the Marigny, other dear friends in the neighborhood and city, places we love, nor the apartment we were in the process of buying when the storm came in and changed everything.

We are still in a state of shock, feeling very helpless, the way some of you did when 9/11 was occuring and you were watching it from a distance.

Any NOLA Mboarders who are able to post, please do so when you can or email and let us know if we can do anything from here.
Chi, I am so glad to know your brother is safe.
I hope Diego got out too. And Otter swimming away with the chihauhaus on her head!!

Today's beautiful article in the Times about the New Orleans spirit:

August 31, 2005
Where Living at Nature's Mercy Had Always Seemed Worth the Risk
By PETER APPLEBOME

After Hurricane Andrew huffed and puffed and then somehow veered away in 1992, the way the storms always seemed to do, the manager of a praline shop in the French Quarter mused on the mixture of fatalism and bravado that has always been at the heart of New Orleans.

"You do live with the belief that some day the big one's going to get you," said Patricia McDonald Gomez, general manager of Aunt Sally's Original Creole Pralines said as the party resumed, as it always did on Bourbon Street. "You're almost fatalistic, which is part of the reason New Orleans has that mixture of frivolity and fatalism. Living in a soup bowl will do it to you, like Romans dancing while Nero fiddled and the city burned."

Now it seems, after countless close calls, the big one has hit, leaving New Orleanians terrified, stunned, gasping, speechless.

With whitecaps on Canal Street, water coursing through breeched levees and 80 percent of the city under water, surviving, not rebuilding, is now the order of the day. But in the back of their minds people who love New Orleans are wondering what will remain physically and psychologically of perhaps America's most distinctive city when the water recedes and - days, weeks or months from now - some semblance of everyday life struggles to resume.

So former Mayor Marc Morial, now the head of the Urban League and living in New York, kept interrupting a telephone conversation to gasp in disbelief at the watery images on his television and then did his best to conjure up the task ahead.

"We'll rebuild, of course," Mr. Morial said. "But what made New Orleans is the polyglot, the tapestry, the mosaic, the gumbo. So the French Quarter gets most of the attention, but the Quarter feeds from the arteries of the neighborhoods."

He paused and gasped again as the screen showed the flooded images from the low-income Ninth Ward: "Oh my God, oh my God. We're looking at the worst natural disaster in American history."

Left unspoken was the question not of how to rebuild the French Quarter, but how to rebuild the city of Stella, Blanche and Stanley, the city that to William Faulkner was "the labyrinthine mass of oleander and jasmine, lantana and mimosa," a place one admirer said "could wreck your liver and poison your blood," the city of the Italianate mansions of the Garden District and forlorn housing projects like the one named Desire - a place that gave America most of its music, much of its literature, a cracked mirror glimpse of American exotica and a fair piece of its soul.

"Great Babylon is come up before me," shuddered Andrew Jackson's wife, Rachel, upon encountering New Orleans more than a century and a half ago. "Oh, the wickedness, the idolatry of this place."

In truth, the wickedness has long since become fairly tame, pre-fab voodoo, L.S.U. and Ole Miss sorority girls flashing their breasts from French Quarter balconies and sad-eyed strippers being ogled by drunk conventioneers at seedy Bourbon Street bars. And people have been predicting the slow de-Babylonization of New Orleans for decades, pondering its inexorable transformation into a place like anyplace else.

But it never really happened. Mr. Morial said that was partly a function of its identity as a city of natives, who make up 70 percent to 80 percent of the population. It is partly a function of its in-bred business climate, suspicious of newcomers, in which the go-go gene that defined cities like Dallas or Atlanta, petty trifles when New Orleans was at its peak, never took hold. And partly it is a function of geography, the proudly insular culture that results from what one scholar, Pierce Lewis, described as being an "inevitable city on an impossible site."

So, as much as the oysters at Felix's or the street performers in Jackson Square, what has defined New Orleans has been nature - the smothering blanket of humid air, the rains so thunderous, the humorist Roy Blount Jr. once wrote, "that you expect to see alligators bouncing off the pavement." And most of all, the oceanic expanse of water surrounding the city from the Mississippi River and Lake Pontchartrain, which covers 600 square miles. That location made it a natural settlement point, a place that drew settlers from every culture that passed by and left it in a place so precarious that this week's disaster has always seemed almost inevitable.

Mr. Morial said city planners had been as attentive to hurricane planning as possible and cited the city's shift in focus from shelters to evacuation planning as something that could play an incalculable role in minimizing the casualties from the storm.

As for any psychological denial, he noted that other places face earthquakes or floods, and people in New Orleans have always looked at the odds and figured living at nature's mercy in such an alluring hothouse was worth the risk.

"People have always thought, there's a chance for the big one, but is it one in 100? One in 1,000? One in 10,000? One in 100,000?" he said. "People have sort of learned to deal with this and live with it, and now we're all having to deal with it."

Even those who survived the storm with minimal damage were wondering what would happen next in a city whose other dominant thread is entrenched urban poverty.

Henry Armand Austan, a 61-year-old photographer, said he picked out his home in the city's Carrollton section uptown because it stood on some of the highest ground around.

Yesterday afternoon Mr. Austan had no electricity, but he did have gas and water. He had a clutter of downed banana trees in his backyard, a posse of hungry cats looking for food, a view of looters foraging through shops nearby, and a fiancée whose cellphone had died stranded at the Louisiana Superdome. The foot of water that was in front of his house a day earlier had drained down to the flooded sections below.

"We had a good tourist thing going, but if this place is closed down for six months you can forget that," he said by telephone. "If they don't come back, you wonder what will happen. This is a poor city with a bad education system. Corporate America isn't going to want to put its business in a place that might flood every so often. We might not have a lot to recommend us."

Some fear that the city that emerges from the floodwaters will finally be turned into a theme park - the glitter of Bourbon Street without the grit that now surrounds it.

But there is also a sense that, like the river, there remains something immutable in New Orleans. As the jazz patriarch Ellis Marsalis once said: "You know, I don't think New Orleans is ever going to change, because I don't think in the scheme of things, it's supposed to change."

That sentiment will be tested now as never before, but Mr. Morial said he was confident the city could rebuild and recover.

"I've heard from so many people and everyone says the same thing," he said. "First they say, 'How's your mom? Is she O.K.?' Then they say, 'We've got to do something to help.' A lot of people have lost everything they own, but there's a great spirit, a zeal, to clean up and to rebuild."
Glad, too, to hear about your brother's scramble to safety, Chi.
And, S'tan, Otter was in NYC for Wigstock. It's possible she is still here...

Since it's very difficult to get any first hand info from NOLA, because there is no power or telephone service, the information is very piecemeal.

CNN, of course, is there, but seems to have gone out of its way to use reporters with absolutely no knowlege of the City's geography. And I will scream if they run that harrowing and heartless footage of the man who lost his wife when their house split in two one more time!

The Times-Picayune and WWL TV have relocated to Baton Rouge (as has the mayor!) but seem to be doing an admirable job with reporters on the spot. Their links, for those who haven't discovered them yet, are below.

It seems that, aside from the original places that were settled in the swamp-- the French Quarter and The Garden District-- that the whole city is seriously flooded. The Lower Ninth and St. Bernard's Parish are gone. And I would suspect The Bywater us not faring well either.

Toni C. BTW is here in NYC and her GF evacuated to Georgia with their menagerie. And when last I heard, they thought their house was definitely submerged. But who can say?

Meanwhile, I continue to pray to St. Jude...

Times-Picayune link

WWL Television
Last edited by hatches
MILLER BEER SENDING WATER

http://www.nola.com/newslogs/breakingtp/index.ssf?/mtlo.../2005_08.html#075426

I talked to Diego and he is here in NYC. Has no one to go check on his house... last he heard there was three feet of water around it. Collection of art books valued at $1M ... and all that other art! We hope ALL the art, all the history, all the ghosts can be saved.

Meanwhile, in the bank, on CNN: looters broke into the local Walmart gun store and got all the goodies... Total mayhem is breaking out there. They are calling them "professional criminals" I imagine to justify shooting the po'folk down.

As per the CNN crew, they have evacuated.

All the Superdome folk are being put on buses and being trucked to the Super-somethingorother Stadium in Houston.
EGADS!
Last edited by S'tan
Hey all:

My boyfriend Tadd and I are in Arkansas at his family's home after fleeing NO late Saturday night. We are lucky we had someplace to go to! Not quite sure what will be there when we go back but we are almost positive our place is under water... But we managed to escape with our Cat and my Apple Cube and external HD!

We are actually trying to enjoy ourselves and not worry ourselves to death over the awful news. I'll try to send some pix after they let us back into the city. Glad to hear Chi Chi's brother is fine, too!

luv,
Brian Damage
Dear Byron,
So glad you got out! What an epic ride it must have been. I hope the pink paint isn't totally washed away when you get back.

btw I am moving from NY in late Sept. If you are
worn out at the parents', and you still need somewhere else to go, let me know.
I have room in my house in New Mex. There are seven acres too for putting in a trailer or whatever.

ter@terencesellers.com
email me for the phone number,
I will get back to you soon.

You can come for October after Garrett goes to the Faerie Farm to pick. I certainly hope you all can get back home,
but they are saying it does not look hopeful.
I am glad to do something for the peoples of New Orleans, esp. those tinted New-yorkais.
Best wishes.
Last edited by S'tan
Forgot to mention this before, but if you want to do something for the stranded animals of NOLA, this organization (who landed in NOLA this afternoon) has been fantastic with two people I know who called them about pets they had to leave behind in houses they now knew were flooded. We just gave a donation online and I urge you to do the same.

Before the storm they were refusing pets at the superdome and shelters, so many people without means or cars faced a terrible choice and left pets behind.

http://www.noahswish.com
Did New Orleans Catastrophe Have to Happen? 'Times-Picayune' Had Repeatedly Raised Federal Spending Issues

By Will Bunch

Published: August 30, 2005 9:00 PM ET

PHILADELPHIA Even though Hurricane Katrina has moved well north of the city, the waters may still keep rising in New Orleans late on Tuesday. That's because Lake Pontchartrain continues to pour through a two-block-long break in the main levee, near the city's 17th Street Canal. With much of the Crescent City some 10 feet below sea level, the rising tide may not stop until it's level with the massive lake.

New Orleans had long known it was highly vulnerable to flooding and a direct hit from a hurricane. In fact, the federal government has been working with state and local officials in the region since the late 1960s on major hurricane and flood relief efforts. When flooding from a massive rainstorm in May 1995 killed six people, Congress authorized the Southeast Louisiana Urban Flood Control Project, or SELA.

Over the next 10 years, the Army Corps of Engineers, tasked with carrying out SELA, spent $430 million on shoring up levees and building pumping stations, with $50 million in local aid. But at least $250 million in crucial projects remained, even as hurricane activity in the Atlantic Basin increased dramatically and the levees surrounding New Orleans continued to subside.

Yet after 2003, the flow of federal dollars toward SELA dropped to a trickle. The Corps never tried to hide the fact that the spending pressures of the war in Iraq, as well as homeland security -- coming at the same time as federal tax cuts -- was the reason for the strain. At least nine articles in the Times-Picayune from 2004 and 2005 specifically cite the cost of Iraq as a reason for the lack of hurricane- and flood-control dollars.

Newhouse News Service, in an article posted late Tuesday night at The Times-Picayune Web site, reported: "No one can say they didn't see it coming. ... Now in the wake of one of the worst storms ever, serious questions are being asked about the lack of preparation."

In early 2004, as the cost of the conflict in Iraq soared, President Bush proposed spending less than 20 percent of what the Corps said was needed for Lake Pontchartrain, according to a Feb. 16, 2004, article, in New Orleans CityBusiness.

On June 8, 2004, Walter Maestri, emergency management chief for Jefferson Parish, Louisiana; told the Times-Picayune: "It appears that the money has been moved in the president's budget to handle homeland security and the war in Iraq, and I suppose that's the price we pay. Nobody locally is happy that the levees can't be finished, and we are doing everything we can to make the case that this is a security issue for us."

Also that June, with the 2004 hurricane season starting, the Corps' project manager Al Naomi went before a local agency, the East Jefferson Levee Authority, and essentially begged for $2 million for urgent work that Washington was now unable to pay for. From the June 18, 2004 Times-Picayune:

"The system is in great shape, but the levees are sinking. Everything is sinking, and if we don't get the money fast enough to raise them, then we can't stay ahead of the settlement," he said. "The problem that we have isn't that the levee is low, but that the federal funds have dried up so that we can't raise them."

The panel authorized that money, and on July 1, 2004, it had to pony up another $250,000 when it learned that stretches of the levee in Metairie had sunk by four feet. The agency had to pay for the work with higher property taxes. The levee board noted in October 2004 that the feds were also now not paying for a hoped-for $15 million project to better shore up the banks of Lake Pontchartrain.

The 2004 hurricane season was the worst in decades. In spite of that, the federal government came back this spring with the steepest reduction in hurricane and flood-control funding for New Orleans in history. Because of the proposed cuts, the Corps office there imposed a hiring freeze. Officials said that money targeted for the SELA project -- $10.4 million, down from $36.5 million -- was not enough to start any new jobs.

There was, at the same time, a growing recognition that more research was needed to see what New Orleans must do to protect itself from a Category 4 or 5 hurricane. But once again, the money was not there. As the Times-Picayune reported last Sept. 22:

"That second study would take about four years to complete and would cost about $4 million, said Army Corps of Engineers project manager Al Naomi. About $300,000 in federal money was proposed for the 2005 fiscal-year budget, and the state had agreed to match that amount. But the cost of the Iraq war forced the Bush administration to order the New Orleans district office not to begin any new studies, and the 2005 budget no longer includes the needed money, he said."

The Senate was seeking to restore some of the SELA funding cuts for 2006. But now it's too late.

One project that a contractor had been racing to finish this summer: a bridge and levee job right at the 17th Street Canal, site of the main breach on Monday.

The Newhouse News Service article published Tuesday night observed, "The Louisiana congressional delegation urged Congress earlier this year to dedicate a stream of federal money to Louisiana's coast, only to be opposed by the White House. ... In its budget, the Bush administration proposed a significant reduction in funding for southeast Louisiana's chief hurricane protection project. Bush proposed $10.4 million, a sixth of what local officials say they need."

Local officials are now saying, the article reported, that had Washington heeded their warnings about the dire need for hurricane protection, including building up levees and repairing barrier islands, "the damage might not have been nearly as bad as it turned out to be."



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Will Bunch (letters@editorandpublisher.com) is senior writer at the Philadelphia Daily News. Much of this article also appears on his blog at that newspaper, Attytood.


----- see you all'ins later I gotta get out of town with the Binky... to start the joys of paying a fortune for gasoline. --- S'tan
Your post, S'tan answers some of the questions raised in a Washington Post editorial today:

"* If the reason Bush returned to Washington is that he is more effective here, then why didn't he come back two days ago?

* If the White House considers the return from vacation largely symbolic, then what is the symbolism of his long vacation during a war?

* Could Bush and the federal government have done more to prepare for hurricane recovery? Unlike the Asian tsunami, this hurricane was forecast days ahead of time.

* Did any of his previous budget decisions allow the hurricane to cause more damage than it might have otherwise?

* Are National Guard troops and equipment required to restore order in this country many thousands of miles away.

* Will he and his administration meet this disaster quickly and effective with the appropriate civilian and military resources and manpower?

* Will the White House provide the bold leadership and vision that the nation requires?"

Certainly, attaching FEMA to Homeland Security, and having it now focus on aftermath, rather than prevention, is a huge mistake.
And this does make one wonder what will happen here during the next terrorist attack. Will we too be treated to a short-sighted, leave-it-till-tomorrow set of policies by our "elected" officials?
Last edited by hatches
I am so shocked by the devastation of that area... its terrible! I don't think anyone expected it to be THAT bad... and of course the folks who are most badly affected are the poor who can't leave so easily etc...terrible... Its amazing to me that Bush is so vacant and that people aren't rioting in the streets due to his apathy about everything... He is SO SHITE as "a President" just shite! Its times like this when I wish that americans weren't so fervent about answers from their President... if we were in another country folks would storm the walls and chop off his head! Ahh one can only dream...
I believe that the increased power of the Hurricane was the result of global warming and that this is only the beginning. I watch the BBC World news every night and they as well as the rest of the world are in complete aggreement about global warming. The USA is the only power (and the biggest contributor to GW) that questions or doubts it. They had shown on the BBC several weeks ago how the coral communities in the Florida Keys are all dying fast as a result of the average sea temperature having increased recently. It is also the increased sea temperature that affects and even develops hurricanes. Hence we have been seeing more of them lately and now they are getting stronger than ever.

Yesterday I read how Bolton, bushes latest stooge implanted into the UN is demanding that the UN delete all mention of "climate change" from its charter. I think that we may need radical change soon just for our survival.
I'm waiting to see exactly how much money Bush doles out to the state of Louisiana and NOLA. When he was running for re-election, he poured federal relief funds into Florida (a swing state where his brother is governor) after hurricanes lashed the state. Mind you, I'm happy that the people of Florida received emergency assistance where needed, however the tragedy of NOLA is 100 times worse, and now Bush has no election to worry about. I wouldn't be surprised to see the federal purse strings tighten quite suddenly, especially given that the Iraq war has decimated the budget, used up a large portion of the National Guard and driven oil/gas prices sky high. Not to mention the environmental protections he's worked tirelessly to undue behind the scenes which undoubtedly will hasten global climate change. Of course if he gets stingy with relief money now it will make him look really bad but since when have Republicans cared about how they look. I hope everyone who voted for him is satisfied.
This came today, so I'm pasting it in here:
news from the front- pass on if anyone finds this kind of first person
report interesting. thanks Clayton

When the threat of Katrina was realized, he sent
his wife and two young girls to Jackson, MS where his parents live.. but
he stayed behind.
He is a pathologist and had checked into the Ritz for a medical
convention -- which presumably would be safe. That's where he remains.
******************************************************

Thanks to all of you who have sent your notes of concern.
I am writing this note on Tuesday at 2PM . I wanted to update
all of you as to the situation here. I don't know how much information
you are getting but I am certain it is more than we are getting. Be
advised that almost everything I am telling you is from direct
observation or rumor from reasonable sources. They are allowing limited
internet access, so I hope to send this dispatch today.

Personally, my family and I are fine. My family is safe in Jackson, MS,
and I am now a temporary resident of the Ritz Carleton Hotel in New
Orleans. I figured if it was my time to go, I wanted to go in a place
with a good wine list. In addition, this hotel is in a very old
building on Canal Street that could and did sustain little damage. Many
of the other hotels sustained significant loss of windows, and we expect
that many of the guests may be evacuated here.

Things were obviously bad yesterday, but they are much worse today.
Overnight the water arrived. Now Canal Street (true to its origins) is
indeed a canal. The first floor of all downtown buildings is
underwater. I have heard that Charity Hospital and Tulane are limited
in their ability to care for patients because of water. Ochsner is the
only hospital that remains fully functional. However, I spoke with them
today and they too are on generator and losing food and water fast. The
city now has no clean water, no sewerage system, no electricity, and no
real communications. Bodies are still being recovered floating in the
floods. We are worried about a cholera epidemic. Even the police are
without effective communications. We have a group of armed police here
with us at the hotel that are admirably trying to exert some local law
enforcement. This is tough because looting is now rampant. Most of it
is not malicious looting. These are poor and desperate people with no
housing and no medical care and no food or water trying to take care of
themselves and their families. Unfortunately, the people are armed and
dangerous. We hear gunshots frequently. Most of Canal street is
occupied by armed looters who have a low threshold for discharging their
weapons. We hear gunshots frequently. The looters are using makeshift
boats made of pieces of styrofoam to access. We are still waiting for
a significant national guard presence.

The health care situation here has dramatically worsened overnight.
Many people in the hotel are elderly and small children. Many other
guests have
Have unusual diseases. They are unfortunately . 'We have better
medical letter. There are ID physicians in at this hotel attending an
HiV confection. We have commandered the world famous French Quarter
Bar to turn into an makeshift clinic. There is a team of about 7
doctors and PA and pharmacists. We anticipate that this will be the
major medical facility in the central business district and French
Quarter.

Our biggest adventure today was raiding the Walgreens on Canal under
police escort. The pharmacy was dark and fool of water. We basically
scooped the entire drug sets into gargace bags and removed them. All
uner police excort. The looters had to be held back at gun point.
After a dose of prophylactic Cipro I hope to be fine.

In all we are faring well. We have set up a hospital in the the French
Qarter bar in the hotel, and will start admitting patients today. Many
with be from the hotel, but many with not. We are anticipating to
dealing with multiple medical problems, medications and and acute
injuries. Infection and perhaps even cholera are anticipated major
problems. Food and water shortages are iminent.

The biggest question to all of us is where is the national guard. We
hear jet fignters and helicopters, but no real armed presence, and hence
the rampant looting. There is no Red Cross and no salvation army.

In a sort of cliche way, this is an edifying experience. Once is
rapidly focused away from the transient and material to the bare
necessities of life. It has been challenging to me to learn how to be a
primary care phyisican. We are under martial law so return to our homes
is impossible. I don't know how long it will be and this is my
greatest fear. Despite it all, this is a soul edify experience. The
greatest pain is to think about the loss. And how long the rebuid will.
And the horror of so many dead people .

PLEASE SEND THIS DISPATCH TO ALL YOU THING MAY BE INTERSTED IN A
DISPATCH From the front. I will send more according to your interest.
Hopefully their collective prayers will be answered. By the way suture
packs, sterile gloves and stethoscopes will be needed as the Ritz turns
into a MASH

Greg Henderson
This has been a nightmare on so many different levels. First the incompetence of the local government, no evacuation plan and NO plan for the levee's breaking which has been predicted for years Second the callous disregard from Bush and company, too involved in Iraq to save their own USA citizens, (mostly black, if I need to remind). Third, our beautiful city...gone. FUCK IRAQ, REBUILD NEW ORLEANS!
Ankou says exactly what I wanted to say this morning... am totally outraged at the devestation and the fact that Bush hasn't even been there yet!! Can u imagine if this happened in Palm Beach? Or even Texas. Bottom line is clearly obvious these are mainly poor black folks so really in his minds (an sadly most of the apathetic mass heartland of america) these folks are 'disposable'. Its shocking. People should me marching against the handling of this, people really should! Its insane the way the folks left there are being treated. Most of these elderly folks have worked all their lives and paid US taxes to be left like cattle. Around the world (read some online newspapers or tv reports) the world is astounded by the way Bush is handling this, and so they should be.
This to me just reads like a movie its so unreal!

BBC NEWS COVERAGE ------

Victims' desperation
The New Orleans riverfront has been hit by a series of massive blasts, and fires are raging in the area.
Details are sketchy, but the blast is believed to have involved a chemical factory. A large cloud of acrid, black smoke is drifting over New Orleans.

The news came as extra troops were sent to quell lawlessness in the city, where thousands are stranded without food or water in Hurricane Katrina's aftermath.

President Bush is to visit areas hit amid anger at the federal response.

The Senate approved $10.5bn (£5.7bn) emergency aid, which the House of Representatives is expected to back within the next 24 hours.


Map of central New Orleans
But the head of the New Orleans emergency operations described the relief effort as a national disgrace.

The federal authorities were too slow to respond, Mayor Ray Nagin said.

'Urban warfare'

Louisiana's governor said 300 "battle-tested" National Guardsmen were being sent to the crippled city.


People were raped in the Superdome. People were killed in there. We had multiple riots

New Orleans police officer


Accounts of flood chaos

"They have M-16s and are locked and loaded. These troops know how to shoot and kill and I expect they will," Kathleen Blanco said.

Washington pledged a further 4,200 guardsmen in coming days, and said that 3,000 army soldiers may also be sent to the city where violence has disrupted relief efforts.

The deployment came as thousands were finally taken from the Louisiana Superdome, where up to 20,000 have been corralled amid heat and squalor since Katrina struck.

Hundreds or even thousands are feared to have drowned in the city - and up to 60,000 could still be stranded, the US coastguard says.

People made homeless by the flooding have grown increasingly desperate, as looting swept the city.

There have been outbreaks of shootings and carjackings and reports of rapes.

The federal emergency agency was trying to work "under conditions of urban warfare", director Michael Brown said.


Lawlessness in New Orleans


In pictures


The situation at the city's convention centre, where up to 20,000 other residents sought refuge, was also said to be desperate.

Families slept amid the filth and the dead.

The muddy floodwaters are now toxic with fuel, battery acid, rubbish and raw sewage.

"Call it biblical. Call it apocalyptic. Whatever you want to call it, take your pick," one survivor said.

"There were bodies floating past my front door. I've never seen anything like that," Robert Lewis said, near tears.

'Blame game'

Residents have expressed growing anger and frustration with the disorder on the streets and timeliness of relief efforts.

There are rescue workers risking their lives to save people trapped in their homes, and now these heroes and the survivors are in danger from armed looters

Jessica Marrero
New Orleans


Your Katrina experiences

Governor Blanco told ABC she had "no idea" how many people had died because of the inadequacy of the response.

"We're not into the blame game... I've been trying to save lives," she said.

The Houston Astrodome in Texas had to temporarily close its doors because of lack of space, after receiving 11,000 evacuees.

But the federal emergency management association has asked for patience.

The agency says it has aid to deliver, but it takes time to reach them, given the magnitude of the disaster.

According to the White House, about 90,000 sq miles (234,000 sq km) has been affected by the hurricane.

The mayor of New Orleans has ordered a total evacuation and warned it will be months before people can return to their homes.
And from the Daily News, Condosleeza goes to Ferragamo and Spamalot while south drowns:

As South drowns, Rice soaks in N.Y.

Did New Yorkers chase Condoleezza Rice back to Washington yesterday?

Like President Bush, the Secretary of State has been on vacation during the Hurricane Katrina crisis, with Rice enjoying her downtime in New York Wednesday and yesterday. The cabinet member's responsibilities are usually international, but her timing contributed to the "fiddling while Rome burns" impression given by her boss during the disaster, which may have claimed thousands of lives.

On Wednesday night, Secretary Rice was booed by some audience members at "Spamalot!," the Monty Python musical at the Shubert, when the lights went up after the performance.

Yesterday, Rice went shopping at Ferragamo on Fifth Ave. According to the Web site http://www.Gawker.com, the 50-year-old bought "several thousand dollars' worth of shoes" at the pricey leather-goods boutique.

A fellow shopper shouted, "How dare you shop for shoes while thousands are dying and homeless!" - presumably referring to Louisiana and Mississippi.

The woman expressing her First Amendment rights was promptly removed from the store. A Ferragamo store manager confirmed to us that Rice did shop there yesterday, but refused to answer questions about whether the protester was removed, and whether by his own security or the Secret Service.

At the State Department's daily briefing yesterday morning, before the New York incident, spokesman Sean McCormack responded to a journalist who asked whether Rice was involved with hurricane relief efforts by saying, "She's in contact with the department as appropriate." He made no mention that his boss had any plans to leave New York.

But yesterday afternoon, Rice had done just that. Department spokeswoman Joanne Moore told us: "The secretary is back in Washington, and she is being briefed on the situation." Moore did not know whether Condi had planned a longer stay here.
quote:
It takes a spectacular kind of asshole to set a fire in this environment.


The Interdictor, 9/2/05

The Interdictor blog (Jade also links to it above) refers to above is genius, far better than cable news for REAL information live from Pydras St. It is the very best use that the Internet can have married with the stubborn spirit of true New Orleanians. These people haven't abandoned their city yet, and I won't either.

The Mayor's radio interview last night was GORGEOUS -

CNN, "Mayor to Feds - Get Off Your Asses"
http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/09/02/nagin.transcript/index.html
Yesterday on NPR they mentioned two photos run simultaneously by the AP, one showing a black man walking in water with "looted" goods, and the other showing a white couple walking with "food and water they had found at a local store." It's sickening. I actually feel sick to my stomach, it's so awful, what it shows about this administration...and, worse, of course, how there will be the media spin and a lot of people still won't SEE it, even right there in their faces.

Here are suggestions for donations that could go directly to shelters, etc:
http://neworleans.craigslist.org/zip/94803916.html

And Move On is trying to organize a housing drive, if anyone knows people, especially within a few hundred miles of the site, who would willing to help put up displaced folk:

http://www.hurricanehousing.org?id=5945-1529297-YAHwLTVLSwb9HqgwEBQeEg
There actually were plans for strengthening the levees by the Army Corps of Engineers and they were ready to do it, but bush cut funds to the project and diverted them to Iraq, where significant numbers of Louisanna National Guradsman were also diverted.

Everybody is criticizing the administration, the MSNBC crowd, the conservatives on CNN, even the FOX Cable News. Today I read that even Newt Gingrich was yelling about how if this is an example of how the Homeland Security reacts to homeland disasters then we are in big trouble.

Still there were some angry defenders of the administration calling into the Brian Leher show this morning on WNYC (Local NPR). In their minds defending those asshole rich white men in Washington comes first before feeling any anger for the poor people dying in New Orleans while waiting to be rescued for five days and counting. But the vast majority of people, Dem or Repubs or angry about this.
One has to watch the BBC or any non-US news agency to get news like this, but I just saw on the BBC World that Fidel Castro has offered to send 120 Cuban doctors to the disaster site. The US is not responding to his offer (no big surprise).

Loved the headline on todays New York Daily News: "SHAME ON U.S."

Bush went to Biloxi today and Alabama, but never set foot in New Orleans. He is a VERY lame duck. What was that all about? THat was the main hellish scene. He went to friendlier, safer sites with the destriction in Biloxi as a backdrop so that the nation saw him down there, but he never actually went to New ORleans at all. If he was a genuine leader of this nation he would have went right to that convention center. THEN I might even believe a little. But there was no way that was going to happen. Lincoln would have gone there, CLinton would have, Jimmy Carter would have. This administration is a big hoax.
THE NAKED DEPRAVITY AND CRIMINAL NEGLECT OF THE LITTLE BUSH REGIME.

Here it is in all its monumental agony. For the entire human world to observe. The demoralized, craven indifference of the current presidency.

The jim crow relief policies of the old south.

Tell 200,000 poor people they are required to evacuate their city and provide zero means to assist them. Not only that, but provide absolutely no where to evacuate to. A monstrous exercise in political nihilism. An entire city's population subjugated to an atrocity produced by official policies of abandonment.

Now no one can deny the America of the Little Bush regime is a sick nation.

It is time for national outrage and the practice of the nation's real compassion.

It is time for a calamitous change.

People are now going to want to leave this dispicable era as fast as possible, marshalling thier own human dignity and respect, determined to seek real leadership.

The entire population of America has been abandoned.

Don't you feel it?

Refuse to die inside yourself as the false leaders would want.

"We invite you to come out and spend one night with us, the president." Anonymous woman survivor.

"This is the hull of a slave ship." Jesse Jackson.
It Took Bush Five Days To Make It To New Orleans. Finally.

On CNN's Larry King Show tonight, someone (whose name I unfortunately did not catch) said via telephone, "It's obvious, President Bush does not care about Black people."

The Rev Jesse Jackson, when queried by Larry King as to whether he thought if he felt that Bush really doesn't care about Blacks, said, "Well he sure isn't showing it."

How true.

These leaders must be held accountable for what is happening there.
And all Gov. Kathleen Bianco can come up with is "a day of prayer!"
Last edited by hatches
Additional Aid For NOLA Residents With Stranded Pets... Spread The Word:

---

Friday, 9:50 p.m.

The Louisiana SPCA, New Orleans' animal control agency, has begun rescuing pets from owners houses.

Louisiana SPCA director Laura Maloney said shelter workers follow other agencies and crews through neighborhoods and rescue pets, some that are locked in houses. At the owners' request, "we break in," she said.

Owners have to call or email the operation and give their name and address and information about where the pet is confined.

The hotline number is: 1-225-578-6111. E-mail should be sent to Katrinaanimalrescue@yahoo.com.
Last edited by hatches
and the accompanying article:

BUSH GIVES 'CANE VICTIMS BIG HUG AND A VOW: 'WE WILL MAKE IT RIGHT'

By DEBORAH ORIN

September 3, 2005 -- President Bush yesterday hugged refugees from Hurricane Katrina as he got a firsthand look at the human tragedy left by the storm and vowed that New Orleans and other stricken Gulf Coast cities "will rise again."

Bush, who rarely admits mistakes and has come under sharp attack for the government's handling of the crisis, said the first federal response in lawless, chaotic New Orleans was "not acceptable." He vowed: "Where it's not working right, we're going to make it right."

He sought to mix hope with candid recognition of how bad things are right now and predicted that the whole Gulf Coast will come back better than ever "” "and I believe that the great city of New Orleans will rise again and be a greater city of New Orleans."

Bush also joked that he has a special feeling for New Orleans because as a young man in Texas he would often go there "to enjoy myself "” occasionally too much."

The president's tour from Mobile, Ala., to Biloxi, Miss., and on to New Orleans came at a time when critics "” mostly Democrats but some Republicans as well "” charge that his team didn't do enough, fast enough to stop the suffering.

"If we can't respond faster than this to an event we saw coming across the Gulf for days, then why do we think we're prepared to respond to a nuclear or biological attack?" asked former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, a Republican.

The challenge for the president was to restore confidence and hope, the way he did by going to Ground Zero three days after 9/11.

There was devastation everywhere that Bush went.

Two sisters wept as they came up to the president as he walked along a Biloxi street, which looked as if it had been flattened by bombs with a house in rubble and huge trees stripped of their branches.

"These are the only clothes that I have . . . My son needs clothes. I don't have anything," said Bronwynne Bassier, 23, clutching plastic trash bags in hopes that she and her sister Kim, 21, could salvage something, anything, from the remnants of her home.

The president put his arms around both women, hugged them close and gently kissed their foreheads.

"I understand. We're going to get you some help. Hang in there. Help is on the way," he said.

Bush sat with Patrick Wright on the doorstep of what used to be his parents' home with all the timbers collapsed around them like a pile of sticks. The president listened intently as Wright told him how his parents survived "” even though they were in the house as it was destroyed.

"It's worse than imaginable," Bush said. "I don't think anybody can be prepared for the vastness of this destruction. You can look at a picture, but until you sit on that doorstep of a house that used to be, or stand by the rubble, you just can't imagine it."

He vowed to end lawlessness in New Orleans, saying: "The people of this country expect there to be law and order, and we're going to work hard to get it. In order to make sure there's less violence, we've got to get food to people . . . We'll get on top of this situation."

Bush rejected suggestions that America can't cope with Katrina because too many resources were sent to Iraq, saying: "I just completely disagree."

"We've got a job to defend this country and the war on terror, and we've got a job to bring aid and comfort to the people of the Gulf Coast, and we'll do both," he said. "We've got plenty of resources to do both."

Bush gave a strong endorsement to Federal Emergency Management Agency chief Michael Brown "” who's been taking a lot of flak over the federal response "” saying: "Browner, you're doing a heck of a job."

Bush said the results of the relief effort are "acceptable" in Mississippi, as opposed to New Orleans. He went out of his way to praise Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour for strong leadership and toughness on law and order.

Bush didn't offer the same kind of praise for the New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin "” who erupted in a tirade blaming federal officials Thursday "” or for Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco when he toured their area.

But he pledged to work with them and stressed that the first $10.5 billion appropriated by Congress for the relief effort is just "a small down payment for the cost of this effort."

Bush also hailed the spirit of the people, recalling how he'd talked to a Mississippi man sitting in the rubble of the house, asked how he was doing. The man replied: "I'm doing fine. I'm alive and my mother is alive."

Also yesterday, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said she would fly to her native Alabama tomorrow to view the destruction there.

"I just hope I can be a little bit of an extension for a president who cares deeply about what's going on in the Gulf region but can't be everywhere," she said.

CONSOLER-IN-CHIEF: President Bush yesterday embraces victims Bronwynne (center) and Kim Bassier in Biloxi.

Attachments

Images (1)
  • bushit
I haven't heard much about the Frech Quarter, if it is totally destroyed or can be savaged in the news. I know Canal street was really flooded and Jackson Square Park has alot of damage but hopefully it won't have to be all torn down. Haven't heard anything about Bourbon street. You don't see many buildings left in the US like the french quarter. I know it sounds selfish because of all the loss of life, but I would really really miss that part of town! Anyone know?
Le Vieux Carré, or French Quarter if you prefer, is still relatively unscathed, though locked down and mostly evacuated. It is actually above sea level, unlike most of NOLA. Some of the borderline streets were flooded like Canal Street (which indeed lived up to its name,) and Saks--not in the FQ at all,. but on Canal also-- is on fire.
The FQ stores were heavily looted though, and some bars and restaurants incredibly remained open and serving through yesterday. Now it seems all or most are shuttered, and some of its population relocated.

There's also a Times article:

here
Last edited by hatches
I love Jimmy Breslin for his piece today in Newsday:

NY Newsday OpEd

I also love Louisiana Senator Mary Landrieu and NOLA Mayor Ray Nagin for their firey speeches in DC and NOLA, respectively.

Never before has the disparity between rich and poor, and black and white been so plainly and painfully illustrated in this country as in the Katrina aftermath. And the rest of the world has been observing this fiercely. In today's Times comes this bit about this inequity right here in Manhattan

In Manhattan the Poor Make 2¢ For Each Dollar To the Rich

I also just heard that The Ursuline Convent, a very old and ghost-ridden building on Chartres Street in The Quarter, which some of you may be familiar with, sustained very serious roof and water damage. Very sad.
Last edited by hatches
My blood is boiling today. the incompetence. the ass-covering and the lying in a never-ending steam of interviews. Get out there and fix this! Bill Clinton once said "There is nothing wrong with America that can't be fixed by what's right with America". I hope that's true. The best we can do right now is make our voices heard - We will not stand for such gross negligence from our elected officials. They work for us!!! They must be held accountable -then preferably horsewhipped, tarred, feathered and then "Domed" to death themselves!
Last edited by Jade
The Anne Rice piece is gorgeous!

The Ursuline news came from the T-P feed this morning, Chi, quoting the Archbishop who is bunkered down in Baton Rouge:

"Ursuline Convent Damaged

The historic Ursuline Convent, built in 1725 and one of the oldest buildings in the French Quarter, sustained "serious damage" from Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans Archbishop Alfred Hughes said Saturday.

"Part of the roof was destroyed," he said. "They experienced the full brunt of the storm."

I trust he was not confusing this facility with the Ursuline academy which is somewhere else, I think out near Tulane and therefore closer to Pontchartrain. The bit is located somewhere near the end of this mess:

T-P Breaking News
Last edited by hatches
Don't you love how Bush said, "I hope people won't play partisan politics at this time" while posing for photo-ops in Biloxi, as if that wasn't playing politics to the hilt.

Now comes word that Karl Rove and his communications team are hard at work trying to shift the blame to local politicians, who are of course Democrats. No reacting to media criticism, just turn the discussion to what is being done now. Neatly side-stepping Condolezza's shoe shopping while Rome burns and the fact that the Homeland Security department was created to handle national emergencies of this very nature. If this week's poor showing was the best U.S. forces could do for a storm they had days of advance warning about, how can anyone believe we are ready for a biological terrorist attack? And meanwhile the head of FEMA (a department gutted of its financing by our president in favor of $300 tax cuts) is a college cronie of Bush's, a former horse breeder with virtually NO experience in emergency planning!
Last edited by Luxury Lex
This is the first time I've felt compelled to write to my representatives:

"Dear Senator Clinton(Senator Schumer),

I urge you to lead the way in calling for a congressional hearing on the
present disaster in New Orleans and the gulf region and to call for an
investigation into the incompetence of the Federal Emergency Management
Agency. I urge you to call for the resignation of FEMA Director Mike
Brown and Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff . I urge you to
support impeachment proceedings against President George W. Bush.

The negligence, lack of preparation, under funding of valuable resources,
and countless gross oversights which have led to the escalation of the
natural disaster of Hurricane Katrina and to the death of hundreds if not
thousands of impoverished victims will not be overlooked by the American
people. The methods used by our representatives to confront these problems
will be carefully scrutinized. Please do the right thing."

I feel pretty helpless to do anything right now to help(except donate,) so I may as well put my big mouth to use. Every little bit helps. Here is the link: Congress.org
From the San Antonio Express-News:

Katrina doesn't cancel Southern Decadence parade
Web Posted: 09/05/2005 12:00 AM CDT

Rod Davis
Express-News Staff Writer

NEW ORLEANS "” You know a city has legs when three or four dozen of them are parading down Bourbon Street "” some clad in tutus and grass skirts "” six days after the most damaging hurricane in American history.

Revelers take part in the Southern Decadence parade in New Orleans' French Quarter. The parade celebrates the quirky side of the city.

But the annual Southern Decadence parade through the heart of the French Quarter stops for nothing "” not even Katrina.

"Hey, we've got to keep our morale up, too," said Jill Sandars, aka "Jelly Sandwich," her "Quarter" name.

Resplendent in a fluffy red skirt, dark hat and small black umbrella, she strutted and sang with 15 to 20 other storm survivors who'd hunkered down in battered but not beaten streets normally associated with bead-throwing at Mardi Gras.

The event always manages to be held the Sunday before Labor Day. This time, of course, the circumstances were different.

Water covered the upper northwest quadrant of the Quarter, roughly from Conti to Canal streets, between Bourbon and North Rampart.

There was no power or water, and only hints of the kinds of food made legendary at venues such as Brennan's or Galatoire's. Both of those restaurants seemed relatively unscathed, as did many of the structures on the riverside end of the district, its highest elevation.

But the Quarter was far from its famously lively and carefree self. National Guard and police were everywhere to keep the peace and stop looting. Helicopters buzzed overhead as the evacuation of the city proceeded.

But as the parade assembled at Orleans and Bourbon, outside Johnny White's Sports Bar & Grill, where the motto, "We never close," is strictly enforced, the mood was old-school Vieux Carré at its finest.

"I survived Hurricane Katrina and all I got was this lousy T-shirt," was handwritten on the shirt of a young woman who was wearing a tutu and pulling a bead-laden wagon. Alongside her, marched "” ambled actually "” a shirtless young man in cut-off shorts, boots and hardhat. The sign he carried read, "Life goes on?"

As the parade moved along, people came out on balconies and threw down beads. On at least one balcony, birthday suits were the uniform of the day.

For Marvin Allen, bartender at the famous revolving Carousel Bar in the Hotel Monteleone, even the lack of meals could be turned into celebration. He and a group of survivors who live near the Ursulines Convent on Chartres combine provisions each evening for dishes such as "Wienie Jambalaya."

"In some ways, it sounds strange, but we're actually doing better than we normally are," Allen said.

It's a brave face, but it's working. Still, Allen hopes to evacuate to Dallas later this week.

The future of New Orleans may be problematic, and time lines for recovery mostly are educated guesses. But the same forces of fate "” or the mercy of the African voodoo goddess of the winds, Oya "” that deflected Katrina's destructive winds at the 11th hour seem to have spared this legendary part of the American cultural experience.

The northwestern quadrant, as well as outlying landmarks such as the historic Our Lady of Guadalupe Church on North Rampart at Conti, where plague victims were taken in the 1830s, were underwater anywhere from a few inches to several feet.

But most of the landmarks in the Quarter theoretically could reopen whenever power and water are restored "” by November, optimistically. There's no talk of canceling Mardi Gras.

As the Southern Decadence parade meandered past the corner of Orleans and Royal, it passed the fenced garden behind St. Louis Cathedral. A giant oak and magnolia both lay uprooted. It was the largest single scene of devastation in the Quarter.

In the center of the tangle of limbs and broken trunks stood the garden's statue of Jesus, the one with outstretched arms affectionately known to locals as "Touchdown Jesus."

The statue was completely unscathed, except for a broken finger and two broken thumbs. "J'ai confiance en vouz," says the inscription, "I have confidence in you."

At that intersection, a New Orleans cop appeared, held up his own arms and stopped the parade.

"I didn't know Decadence was still on," he said. Parade-goers politely assured him it was.

"Keep your spirits up," he said, and drove away.

His lack of knowledge could easily be forgiven. It's not like phones, TVs or much of anything facilitates conversation. As one habitué of the sports bar said, drinking a warm beer on the sidewalk, "We just can't get any information."

"Yeah," said Ride Hamilton, a longhaired screenwriter who keeps water and medical supplies for the stranded. "And we can't get any strippers, either."
What does it take for Americans to wake up and SEE who this President really is and see how the US media is sooo biased and spin doctored ... i feel like Peter Finch in Network! I'm mad an am not gonna take it anymore!!!! It's just SHOCKIN to me how the real horror of all of this devestation just translates to most of the rest of the States as "gas prices are going up". The world media (yes! watch the BBC) are just horrified at the slow response which led to fast death for so many American... but then again I have always said America is THE most racist country I have ever visited. It's so so sad for those people who have suffered there - can u just imagine how terrible it must have been! While Condie goes shoppin an Bush plays guitar! I don't get though how the rest of America for the most part aren't in the streets protesting!
Shocking and really really makes my blood boil..

I am in love with Ray Nagin the NO mayor... thank god he actually got angry I don't think help would have come had he not! Props to Kanya West, he's correct! Love that Anderson Cooper is on CNN venting too... But am astounded at Bush ... an more shocked that he seems to be getting away with murder.
I concur with that report about Venezuealas kind offer Anna, here's a link to a list of other offers including Irans offer to donate much needed oil towards the relief effort
http://edition.cnn.com/2005/US/09/05/katrina.world.aid/index.html

The criminally slow response to this disaster on the part of the federal government may be partially symptomatic of the efforts of the bush administration to make the federal government smaller and less involved.

bush has today named himself to be in charge of the federal investigation into the failure of the relief effort to act in a swift and effective manner. Yep! he's going to get to the bottom of it alright, and in the process deflect attention from himself. Can this really be true? This is almost unbelieveable to me.
Perhaps it is due to the endless History Channel series on the Roman Empire, but all day yesterday I couldn't help thinking of Nero fiddling while Rome burned (actually it was a lute.)
I notice that everyone is avoiding providing an actual death count so far. I suspect we will be even more heartsick and angry when that comes to light.
The European press has published some incredible stuff about the disaster. Many are even saying that this has brought our entire system of government into question. I agree.
Bush heading the investigation? How much more of a clueless joker can he be?
Thanks, Anna Nicole, yes, please feel free to use any and all of that letter and do the same,(and the same for anyone else so inclined...)

Everyday it seems there is some new development from The Bush family that causes outrage. Here is a quote from Old Lady Bush posted on Atrios blog (crooksandliars.com has the link,Crooks and Liars)


NEW YORK Accompanying her husband, former President George H.W.Bush, on a tour of hurricane relief centers in Houston, Barbara Bush said today, referring to the poor who had lost everything back home and evacuated, "This is working very well for them."

...
In a segment at the top of the show [NPR Marketplace] on the surge of evacuees to the Texas city, Barbara Bush said: "Almost everyone I've talked to wants to move to Houston."

Then she added: "What I'm hearing is they all want to stay in Texas, [which is really scary] Everyone is so overwhelmed with the hospitality.

"And so many of the people in the arena here, you know, were underprivileged anyway so this (she chuckled)--this is working very well for them."


Yet again the Jackie Factory shows its presentient ability with the choice of its performance themes. Old Lady Bush may as well have said "Let them eat cake." And lord knows with that hair she wouldn't even need a wig to look like an aged Marie Antoinette.
This has been such a nightmare. My love goes out to you Chi Chi & Daddy.
xo,
V=d/t
The devastation is mind boggleing and the feelings of powerlessness are too much to bare.
We know it might not be much, but we figured
every lil bit counts right now, and wanted to
offer another avenue, or possibly incentive -

All proceeds for our new release
Year of the Whore at 'CD Baby'
are going to the American Red Cross disaster relief fund.
Our hearts go out to all of the victims
and survivors of this tremendous tragedy.

If you would like to make a donation in this manner
you can go to - http://cdbaby.com/cd/vulgaras2

Blessed Bees,
Vulgaras
This from John Kass from The Chicago Tribune:

Mother's remark puts silver foot in Bush's mouth

Published September 7, 2005

I was all set to defend President Bush as a guy who really doesn't want poor black people in Louisiana and Mississippi to die of starvation and disease, no matter what the Democrats say.

But then Barbara Bush, the president's mom, went and dusted off the Bush family silver foot Monday. And she used it.

While touring the Houston Astrodome, where thousands of Hurricane Katrina refugees have been huddling, Barbara Bush said they didn't have it so bad because, heck, they were poor to begin with.

"What I'm hearing, which is sort of scary, is they all want to stay in Texas," she was quoted as saying in an interview on National Public Radio.

Thousands of hurricane refugees were sitting on or near their green army cots, perhaps thinking of lunch, presumably waiting to be fed something hearty.

Anything but cake.

"Everyone is so overwhelmed by the hospitality," Barbara Bush said. And here comes the fastball over the middle of the Democratic plate:

"And so many of the people in the arena here, you know, were underprivileged anyway, so this is working very well for them."

At least she didn't ask them to sing and dance. But I'm sure it's working out very well for them. How often does something nice like a hurricane come by and change your life so you can hang out with thousands of others in the Astrodome and have Barbara Bush say it wasn't so bad, because you were poor anyway?
It is so out in the open.

As Africans I know say about the governments in their supposed 'democracies' "we live in a vampire State."

The government is taken over by what amounts to ordinary criminals and crooks who set up their cronies -as per Little Bush's FEMA director- so they all can just rob the citizens blind.

Now we get to live the Little Bush regime's neglect holocaust.

Senator Clinton and a few others have begun calling for independent investigative committees.

Carl Rove's Big Lie machine will leave him second only to Joseph Goebbles.

How can it be possible to provide all the dead peace?

The one overarching result for the US internationally is going to be that the whole rest of the world will not now refrain in the least from attacking the nation's credibility on all fronts, since its leadership is now openly exposed as being morally bankrupt.

The entire population of the world must be wondering why we are not throwing the Little Bush regime out a window.
Yes the Fema Director had only one qualification and that was that he was one of the fratboys old college roomies.

I can't think of a better person from history than Goebbles to liken Karl Rove to.

Yes, Please everyone sign all and any email petitions or snail mail pettions to roast bush over the coals. My Goddess he deserves it! What a slime he is.
The below is an update from the head of the New Orleans Convention and Visitors Bureau. It is a city government agency, (virtually all US cities have a CVB) in charge of all tourism and business-tourism matters pertaining to the city. As such it coordinates and acts as a central clearing house for information and arrangements in an in-depth network of all hotel, convention, public transportation, restaurant, nightlife, cultural, religious and civic organizations, in both the for profit and not for profit sectors. So this is a take on the situation from the inside of the city bureaucracy that you aren't normally going to hear in the media.

I think you will find the tone and some of the details very enheartening.
_______________________________________________



New Orleans Metropolitan Convention and Visitors Bureau Update
As of 9 A.M. Tuesday, September 6, 2005

J. Stephen Perry - President/CEO
We offer the deepest and most profound thank you to governments, individuals, trade organizations, and especially our clients, customers and long-time tourist visitors for the overwhelming show of support and affection for our city and people. You have touched our hearts. Your offers of assistance and your heartfelt expressions of eagerness to return to our city when we are on our feet has moved us beyond words. We love our city and your communication of your love for our New Orleans has buoyed our spirits.

America 's most romantic, walkable, historic city is no longer herself. We hope it will only be for a matter of months. Only time will tell the duration. The birthplace of jazz, home of unique French and Spanish architecture and the originator of the most renowned cuisine on the planet has taken a terrible hit. But, its government, business and tourism industry leaders are pledging that beginning over the next few months, the city will begin its efforts to be reborn better than ever.

Right now, however, we are in a mode of rescuing our citizens who are still trapped and without food, water, and healthcare. They are our first priority.

Among the scores of heroic stories are those of hoteliers who have remained on site protecting guests, tourists and locals in their properties, with no regard for their own safety.

Some of the officers of the Convention Center bravely stayed behind to be of assistance to the property and those in need when the situation at the Center was unstable. They made it through the very difficult circumstances and are assisting the National Guard units in clearing and reclaiming the damaged building. The Center may serve as a key location for FEMA operations in the near future. Those decisions, however, have not yet been made by authorities. The Center has power partially restored and is free of evacuees and those small numbers who posed danger to the Center and the evacuees.

Thousands more National Guard troops are entering the city to provide stability.

The Governor and Mayor now believe that the death total will rise into the thousands. Some have estimated deaths will reach between 10,000 to 20,000 by the time the city is drained and all bodies are recovered.

Amtrak trains carrying 1,500 passengers a day out of New Orleans are now running.

Three Carnival Cruise Line Ships have been marshaled by the federal government to move to New Orleans to serve as housing.

The Mayor estimates that 40,000-50,000 people remain of the 450,000 residents. Many of those remaining refuse to leave their homes, believing the waters will recede shortly. Authorities are attempting to dissuade them.

The historic French Quarter and nearly the entire hospitality infrastructure survived, though battered. The amazing historic texture and fabric of this unique city...all of those things that draw millions of visitors from around the world resiliently remain.

Several bars have now opened in the Quarter as a gathering spot for locals to visit and share stories, though they have nothing to sell. A lone artist living on Pirates Alley, next to the St. Louis Cathedral, hung his paintings on the Jackson Square fence just like normal, in a symbolic gesture for others that the New Orleans French Quarter culture would absolutely rebound.

Though we will be down for a period, there is a sense already forming among our leaders and the people that we will successfully be able to preserve all of those things which have made us world famous and that we will be able to rebuild an even more welcoming, vibrant city in which to live, work and do business. It will require all of us to unite. The work will be hard but gratifying. The challenges are immense. We are up to the task.

The tourism leadership is committed to helping lead the greatest urban rebuilding project in our nation's history. We have a historic opportunity to be a living laboratory for taking disaster, infrastructure degradation and social ills and rebuilding a new city that remains historic and unique, but is a model for rebirth socially and structurally.

It may be quite a while...but one day the riffs of jazz trumpets, the indescribable tempting smells wafting from the kitchens of our great chefs, the aroma of cafe-au-lait and beignets, the buzz of great conventions, that foot-wide magnetic smile of the front bellman, and the romantic strolls through the Quarter will be commonplace again. The spirit of the multicultural people of New Orleans is indefatigable, and though we may be bowed and emotionally stretched, we cannot be defeated and cannot wait to rebuild the world's most authentic city.
Seven, that was an uplifting piece, thanks for posting.

Anna, to answer your question about the apartment we were buying there:

Due to one paper we needed, we were not able to close on the place on our original date three days before the hurricane. The apartment in the Fauborg Marigny fared well, as did that whole neighborhood. But we and the seller, who is probably now a lifelong friend, called off the sale yesterday.

Besides the obvious reasons, with the immediate housing shortage when the city reopens, we all felt it was better for him to be able to rent the place out or sell it to someone who had lost their primary dwelling.

To make this even more difficult, our realtor, who we are all very fond of, has been missing since the storm and we are all very worried as every day goes by.

So, our New Orleans dream isnt over, just deferred for a while. It seems obscene to mourn the postponement of buying a second home, but it is something we had worked towards for years, so naturally it was sad to call it off.

Some of you have written asking also about the fate of my brother's house in the Marigny, where we used to stay winters and Mardi Gras till recently. His block is also dry, but we fear more storm damage as the roof was in bad shape..just waiting for him to be able to return and see for himself. He is currently in Houston with my cousins there.

Thanks to everyone for their calls, mail, etc. at this difficult time.
This is a friend of mines way of contributing to he relief effort, pretty cool.....take a look:


"I hope this message finds you safe and well. Like many of you, my sister Nadine and I watched with shock, awe, and overwhelming sadness as the great city of New Orleans and the gulf coast was rendered helpless last week. We wanted to contribute in a meaningful way- one that would keep momentum going, long after the media spotlight fades and pay tribute the city we love.

We have established "nola love" for this purpose. "NOLA" (New Orleans, LA) is home to many of our friends and has an incredible energy, from the historic architecture to a thriving community of artists. We have designed a t-shirt, available through cafepress.com, and will be donating all proceeds to both the immediate relief effort as well as the community at large- those organizations and artists who embody the richness that is New Orleans. With your help, we hope to RECOVER, REBUILD, and once again RELISH all that the city has to offer.

http://www.nolalove.org
Save a Queen

I ran into this online. It looks like a nice alternative place to donate. There's a Paypal link on the site.

Dear Miss Gay America Family:

As you are aware, Hurricane Katrina was devastating to many in the Louisiana and Gulfport Mississippi areas. Many of us feel helpless and think that our prayers and positive thoughts are not enough, therefore we have established a way to help.... While many are choosing to send donations to national relief efforts, there are many in the Miss Gay America family who desire to help those in our family who need us. This may be a competition, but it is also a close family, and family should take care of each other in a time of need.

Those affected that have suffered loss include:

Raquel Chevallier a.k.a Scott Peters (and Chris Wilderman)-Miss Gay America 2005

Brandi Alexander a.k.a Randy Finoli - Miss Gay America 1990

Aysa Alexander a.k.a. Kenneth White - Miss Gay Louisiana America 2002

Tiffany Alexander a.k.a. Mitch Kinchen - Miss Gay Louisiana America 1991 and 1993

Monica Storm a.k.a. Delbert Fares - Miss Gay Louisiana America 2003

Jessica Daniels a.k.a. Billy Hunt - Miss Gay Louisiana America 1999

Jayda Alexander a.k.a. Michael Phillips - Miss Gay Louisiana America 2004

Zhane' Kennedy - 1st alternate to Miss Louisiana America 2005-2006

Nicole DuBois a.k.a. Tommie Davis - Miss Gay Mid-America 2005

We are still investigating others and will mention as their conditions are known.

You may send your contribution to:
L & T Entertainment
c/o Larry Tyger and Terry Eason
5372 Sportsman Drive
Nesbit, MS 38651

Unless otherwise specified (in the "memo/for" section of your check, 100% of the proceeds received will be distributed among those mentioned.

You may direct any questions to larryandterry@missgayamerica.com

www.missgayamerica.com
Last edited by Miss Understood
And now Barbara Bush with her "Aren't they lucky now" crapola. Sneering at the poor folk... don;t you love the "born with a silver foot in her mouth" commentary.

As far as how "lucky" they are, here is a link
I found concerning what the displaced are going through from a psychologst... whether they have hot meals or not!

http://archivesdestan.blogspot.com/2005/09/cri-du-coeur...r-psychologists.html

(Archives de Stan!)
I just read that hatches, and not only are hurricanes FUN and that living on a public cot is like "being at camp"... they make you FAMOUS!

So now "stiff penalties" if you don't evacuate...? they can bring suit against you for being too damned poor to go. Not to mention "Here's your invoice for us saving your life..." If they bother.
Last edited by S'tan
from the article,
"Experts say it has been common practice in both Republican and Democratic administrations for policy makers to take lobbying jobs once they leave office, and many of the same companies seeking contracts in the wake of Hurricane Katrina have already received billions of dollars for work in Iraq.

"Halliburton alone has earned more than $9 billion. Pentagon audits released by Democrats in June showed $1.03 billion in "questioned" costs and $422 million in "unsupported" costs for Halliburton's work in Iraq.

"But the web of Bush administration connections is attracting renewed attention from watchdog groups in the post-Katrina reconstruction rush. Congress has already appropriated more than $60 billion in emergency funding as a down payment on recovery efforts projected to cost well over $100 billion.

"The government has got to stop stacking senior positions with people who are repeatedly cashing in on the public trust in order to further private commercial interests," said Danielle Brian, executive director of the Project on Government Oversight.
Halliburton Gets Contract To Pry Gold Fillings From New Orleans Corpses' Teeth

September 14, 2005

HOUSTON"”On Tuesday, Halliburton received a $110 million no-bid government contract to pry the gold fillings from the mouths of deceased disaster victims in the New Orleans-Gulf Coast area. "We are proud to serve the government in this time of crisis by recovering valuable resources from the wreckage of this deadly storm," said David J. Lesar, Halliburton's president. "The gold we recover from the human rubble of Katrina can be used to make fighter-jet electronics, supercomputer chips, inflation-proof A-grade investments, and luxury yachting watches."

Taken from The Onion
Last edited by Stacy Amber
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/14/opinion/14friedman.html

"Speaking of Katrina, Sumiko Tan, a columnist for the Sunday edition of The Straits Times in Singapore, wrote: "We were shocked at what we saw. Death and destruction from natural disaster is par for the course. But the pictures of dead people left uncollected on the streets, armed looters ransacking shops, survivors desperate to be rescued, racial divisions - these were truly out of sync with what we'd imagined the land of the free to be, even if we had encountered homelessness and violence on visits there. ... If America becomes so unglued when bad things happen in its own backyard, how can it fulfill its role as leader of the world?"

Janadas Devan, a Straits Times columnist, tried to explain to his Asian readers how the U.S. is changing. "Today's conservatives," he wrote, "differ in one crucial aspect from yesterday's conservatives: the latter believed in small government, but believed, too, that a country ought to pay for all the government that it needed.

"The former believe in no government, and therefore conclude that there is no need for a country to pay for even the government that it does have. ... [But] it is not only government that doesn't show up when government is starved of resources and leached of all its meaning. Community doesn't show up either, sacrifice doesn't show up, pulling together doesn't show up, 'we're all in this together' doesn't show up."
Wow! Those article pieces have it right on the nose. The other night I caught just a piece (that was all I could stand) of Wall Street Week on PBS, which is one of the most arch Right Wing Conservative Talking Heads program going. They were still speaking in Malthusian terms of economic and social survival of the fittest, and laughed while saying how "the liberals are going to use this (Katrina) to try to bring back the New Deal." Yes! How funny!!! HA! HA! HA! Imagine that! I also just finished reading Charles Dickens "Hard Times" and see how little has changed in these kind of attitudes in a century and a half.
Had to post this!



This first hand report from New Orleans last week was received today from a friend; it is so powerful and honest I think the members of this listserv will want to know this. Phil Olson

Sept 5, 2005

Fwd by Phil Gasper:

Two friends of mine--paramedics attending a conference--were trapped in New Orleans by Hurricane Katrina. This is their eyewitness report. PG

Hurricane Katrina-Our Experiences by Larry Bradshaw, Lorrie Beth Slonsky

Two days after Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans, the Walgreen's store at the corner of Royal and Iberville streets remained locked. The dairy display case was clearly visible through the widows. It was now 48 hours without electricity, running water, plumbing. The milk, yogurt, and cheeses were beginning to spoil in the 90-degree heat. The owners and managers had locked up the food, water, pampers, and prescriptions and fled the City. Outside Walgreen's windows, residents and tourists grew increasingly thirsty and hungry.

The much-promised federal, state and local aid never materialized and the windows at Walgreen's gave way to the looters. There was an alternative. The cops could have broken one small window and distributed the nuts, fruit juices, and bottle water in an organized and systematic manner. But they did not. Instead they spent hours playing cat and mouse, temporarily chasing away the looters.

We were finally airlifted out of New Orleans two days ago and arrived home yesterday (Saturday). We have yet to see any of the TV coverage or look at a newspaper. We are willing to guess that there were no video images or front-page pictures of European or affluent white tourists looting the Walgreen's in the French Quarter.

We also suspect the media will have been inundated with "hero" images of the National Guard, the troops and the police struggling to help the "victims" of the Hurricane. What you will not see, but what we witnessed, were the real heroes and sheroes of the hurricane relief effort: the working class of New Orleans. The maintenance workers who used a fork lift to carry the sick and disabled. The engineers, who rigged, nurtured and kept the generators running. The electricians who improvised thick extension cords stretching over blocks to share the little electricity we had in order to free cars stuck on rooftop parking lots. Nurses who took over for mechanical ventilators and spent many hours on end manually forcing air into the lungs of unconscious patients to keep them alive. Doormen who rescued folks stuck in elevators.

Refinery workers who broke into boat yards, "stealing" boats to rescue their neighbors clinging to their roofs in flood waters. Mechanics who helped hot-wire any car that could be found to ferry people out of the City. And the food service workers who scoured the commercial kitchens improvising communal meals for hundreds of those stranded. Most of these workers had lost their homes, and had not heard from members of their families, yet they stayed and provided the only infrastructure for the 20% of New Orleans that was not under water.

On Day 2, there were approximately 500 of us left in the hotels in the French Quarter. We were a mix of foreign tourists, conference attendees like ourselves, and locals who had checked into hotels for safety and shelter from Katrina. Some of us had cell phone contact with family and friends outside of New Orleans. We were repeatedly told that all sorts of resources including the National Guard and scores of buses were pouring in to the City. The buses and the other resources must have been invisible because none of us had seen them.

We decided we had to save ourselves. So we pooled our money and came up with $25,000 to have ten buses come and take us out of the City. Those who did not have the requisite $45.00 for a ticket were subsidized by those who did have extra money. We waited for 48 hours for the buses, spending the last 12 hours standing outside, sharing the limited water, food, and clothes we had. We created a priority boarding area for the sick, elderly and new born babies. We waited late into the night for the "imminent" arrival of the buses. The buses never arrived. We later learned that the minute the arrived at the City limits, they were commandeered by the military.

By day 4 our hotels had run out of fuel and water. Sanitation was dangerously abysmal. As the desperation and despair increased, street crime as well as water levels began to rise. The hotels turned us out and locked their doors, telling us that the "officials" told us to report to the convention center to wait for more buses. As we entered the center of the City, we finally encountered the National Guard. The Guards told us we would not be allowed into the Superdome as the City's primary shelter had descended into a humanitarian and health hellhole. The guards further told us that the City's only other shelter, the Convention Center, was also descending into chaos and squalor and that the police were not allowing anyone else in. Quite naturally, we asked, "If we can't go to the only 2 shelters in the City, what was our alternative?" The guards told us that that was our problem, and no they did not have extra water to give to us. This would be the start of our numerous encounters with callous and hostile "law enforcement".

We walked to the police command center at Harrah's on Canal Street and were told the same thing, that we were on our own, and no they did not have water to give us. We now numbered several hundred. We held a mass meeting to decide a course of action. We agreed to camp outside the police command post. We would be plainly visible to the media and would constitute a highly visible embarrassment to the City officials. The police told us that we could not stay. Regardless, we began to settle in and set up camp. In short order, the police commander came across the street to address our group. He told us he had a solution: we should walk to the Pontchartrain Expressway and cross the greater New Orleans Bridge where the police had buses lined up to take us out of the City. The crowd cheered and began to move. We called everyone back and explained to the commander that there had been lots of misinformation and wrong information and was he sure that there were buses waiting for us. The commander turned to the crowd and stated emphatically, "I swear to you that the buses are there."

We organized ourselves and the 200 of us set off for the bridge with great excitement and hope. As we marched past the convention center, many locals saw our determined and optimistic group and asked where we were headed. We told them about the great news. Families immediately grabbed their few belongings and quickly our numbers doubled and then doubled again. Babies in strollers now joined us, people using crutches, elderly clasping walkers and others people in wheelchairs. We marched the 2-3 miles to the freeway and up the steep incline to the Bridge. It now began to pour down rain, but it did not dampen our enthusiasm.

As we approached the bridge, armed Gretna sheriffs formed a line across the foot of the bridge. Before we were close enough to speak, they began firing their weapons over our heads. This sent the crowd fleeing in various directions. As the crowd scattered and dissipated, a few of us inched forward and managed to engage some of the sheriffs in conversation. We told them of our conversation with the police commander and of the commander's assurances. The sheriffs informed us there were no buses waiting. The commander had lied to us to get us to move.

We questioned why we couldn't cross the bridge anyway, especially as there was little traffic on the 6-lane highway. They responded that the West Bank was not going to become New Orleans and there would be no Superdomes in their City. These were code words for if you are poor and black, you are not crossing the Mississippi River and you were not getting out of New Orleans.

Our small group retreated back down Highway 90 to seek shelter from the rain under an overpass. We debated our options and in the end decided to build an encampment in the middle of the Ponchartrain Expressway on the center divide, between the O'Keefe and Tchoupitoulas exits. We reasoned we would be visible to everyone, we would have some security being on an elevated freeway and we could wait and watch for the arrival of the yet to be seen buses.

All day long, we saw other families, individuals and groups make the same trip up the incline in an attempt to cross the bridge, only to be turned away. Some chased away with gunfire, others simply told no, others to be verbally berated and humiliated. Thousands of New Orleaners were prevented and prohibited from self-evacuating the City on foot.

Meanwhile, the only two City shelters sank further into squalor and disrepair. The only way across the bridge was by vehicle. We saw workers stealing trucks, buses, moving vans, semi-trucks and any car that could be hotwired. All were packed with people trying to escape the misery New Orleans had become.

Our little encampment began to blossom. Someone stole a water delivery truck and brought it up to us. Let's hear it for looting! A mile or so down the freeway, an army truck lost a couple of pallets of C-rations on a tight turn. We ferried the food back to our camp in shopping carts. Now secure with the two necessities, food and water; cooperation, community, and creativity flowered. We organized a clean up and hung garbage bags from the rebar poles. We made beds from wood pallets and cardboard. We designated a storm drain as the bathroom and the kids built an elaborate enclosure for privacy out of plastic, broken umbrellas, and other scraps. We even organized a food recycling system where individuals could swap out parts of C-rations (applesauce for babies and candies for kids!).

This was a process we saw repeatedly in the aftermath of Katrina. When individuals had to fight to find food or water, it meant looking out for yourself only. You had to do whatever it took to find water for your kids or food for your parents. When these basic needs were met, people began to look out for each other, working together and constructing a community.

If the relief organizations had saturated the City with food and water in the first 2 or 3 days, the desperation, the frustration and the ugliness would not have set in. Flush with the necessities, we offered food and water to passing families and individuals. Many decided to stay and join us. Our encampment grew to 80 or 90 people. From a woman with a battery powered radio we learned that the media was talking about us. Up in full view on the freeway, every relief and news organizations saw us on their way into the City. Officials were being asked what they were going to do about all those families living up on the freeway? The officials responded they were going to take care of us. Some of us got a sinking feeling. "Taking care of us" had an ominous tone to it.

Unfortunately, our sinking feeling (along with the sinking City) was correct. Just as dusk set in, a Gretna Sheriff showed up, jumped out of his patrol vehicle, aimed his gun at our faces, screaming, "Get off the fucking freeway". A helicopter arrived and used the wind from its blades to blow away our flimsy structures. As we retreated, the sheriff loaded up his truck with our food and water. Once again, at gunpoint, we were forced off the freeway. All the law enforcement agencies appeared threatened when we congregated or congealed into groups of 20 or more. In every congregation of "victims" they saw "mob" or "riot". We felt safety in numbers. Our "we must stay together" was impossible because the agencies would force us into small atomized groups.

In the pandemonium of having our camp raided and destroyed, we scattered once again. Reduced to a small group of 8 people, in the dark, we sought refuge in an abandoned school bus, under the freeway on Cilo Street. We were hiding from possible criminal elements but equally and definitely, we were hiding from the police and sheriffs with their martial law, curfew and shoot-to-kill policies.

The next days, our group of 8 walked most of the day, made contact with New Orleans Fire Department and were eventually airlifted out by an urban search and rescue team. We were dropped off near the airport and managed to catch a ride with the National Guard. The two young guardsmen apologized for the limited response of the Louisiana guards. They explained that a large section of their unit was in Iraq and that meant they were shorthanded and were unable to complete all the tasks they were assigned.

We arrived at the airport on the day a massive airlift had begun. The airport had become another Superdome. We 8 were caught in a press of humanity as flights were delayed for several hours while George Bush landed briefly at the airport for a photo op. After being evacuated on a coast guard cargo plane, we arrived in San Antonio, Texas.

There the humiliation and dehumanization of the official relief effort continued. We were placed on buses and driven to a large field where we were forced to sit for hours and hours. Some of the buses did not have air-conditioners. In the dark, hundreds if us were forced to share two filthy overflowing porta-potties. Those who managed to make it out with any possessions (often a few belongings in tattered plastic bags) we were subjected to two different dog-sniffing searches.

Most of us had not eaten all day because our C-rations had been confiscated at the airport because the rations set off the metal detectors. Yet, no food had been provided to the men, women, children, elderly, disabled as they sat for hours waiting to be "medically screened" to make sure we were not carrying any communicable diseases.

This official treatment was in sharp contrast to the warm, heart-felt reception given to us by the ordinary Texans. We saw one airline worker give her shoes to someone who was barefoot. Strangers on the street offered us money and toiletries with words of welcome. Throughout, the official relief effort was callous, inept, and racist. There was more suffering than need be. Lives were lost that did not need to be lost.
Unbelievable. Imagine being fired upon as you are trying to walk out. I have one question: were these health workers black?

It reminds me of Daniel DeFoe's "A Journal of the Plague Year 1666" when the people trying to escape the plague were murdered by the outlying villagers who feared the disease.

-------

Update a day later: 3 laboratory rats with the bubonic plague have escaped from their cage in Newark, New Jersey.
Last edited by S'tan
Published on Thursday, September 8, 2005 by the Wall Street Journal
Old-Line Families Escape Worst of Flood And Plot the Future
by Christopher Cooper

NEW ORLEANS - On a sultry morning earlier this week, Ashton O'Dwyer stepped out of his home on this city's grandest street and made a beeline for his neighbor's pool. Wearing nothing but a pair of blue swim trunks and carrying two milk jugs, he drew enough pool water to flush the toilet in his home.

The mostly African-American neighborhoods of New Orleans are largely underwater, and the people who lived there have scattered across the country. But in many of the predominantly white and more affluent areas, streets are dry and passable. Gracious homes are mostly intact and powered by generators. Yesterday, officials reiterated that all residents must leave New Orleans, but it's still unclear how far they will go to enforce the order.

The green expanse of Audubon Park, in the city's Uptown area, has doubled in recent days as a heliport for the city's rich -- and a terminus for the small armies of private security guards who have been dispatched to keep the homes there safe and habitable. Mr. O'Dwyer has cellphone service and ice cubes to cool off his highballs in the evening. By yesterday, the city water service even sprang to life, making the daily trips to his neighbor's pool unnecessary. A pair of oil-company engineers, dispatched by his son-in-law, delivered four cases of water, a box of delicacies including herring with mustard sauce and 15 gallons of generator gasoline.

Despite the disaster that has overwhelmed New Orleans, the city's monied, mostly white elite is hanging on and maneuvering to play a role in the recovery when the floodwaters of Katrina are gone. "New Orleans is ready to be rebuilt. Let's start right here," says Mr. O'Dwyer, standing in his expansive kitchen, next to a counter covered with a jumble of weaponry and electric wires.

More than a few people in Uptown, the fashionable district surrounding St. Charles Ave., have ancestors who arrived here in the 1700s. High society is still dominated by these old-line families, represented today by prominent figures such as former New Orleans Board of Trade President Thomas Westfeldt; Richard Freeman, scion of the family that long owned the city's Coca-Cola bottling plant; and William Boatner Reily, owner of a Louisiana coffee company. Their social pecking order is dictated by the mysterious hierarchy of "krewes," groups with hereditary membership that participate in the annual carnival leading up to Mardi Gras. In recent years, the city's most powerful business circles have expanded to include some newcomers and non-whites, such as Mayor Ray Nagin, the former Cox Communications executive elected in 2002.

A few blocks from Mr. O'Dwyer, in an exclusive gated community known as Audubon Place, is the home of James Reiss, descendent of an old-line Uptown family. He fled Hurricane Katrina just before the storm and returned soon afterward by private helicopter. Mr. Reiss became wealthy as a supplier of electronic systems to shipbuilders, and he serves in Mayor Nagin's administration as chairman of the city's Regional Transit Authority. When New Orleans descended into a spiral of looting and anarchy, Mr. Reiss helicoptered in an Israeli security company to guard his Audubon Place house and those of his neighbors.

He says he has been in contact with about 40 other New Orleans business leaders since the storm. Tomorrow, he says, he and some of those leaders plan to be in Dallas, meeting with Mr. Nagin to begin mapping out a future for the city.

The power elite of New Orleans -- whether they are still in the city or have moved temporarily to enclaves such as Destin, Fla., and Vail, Colo. -- insist the remade city won't simply restore the old order. New Orleans before the flood was burdened by a teeming underclass, substandard schools and a high crime rate. The city has few corporate headquarters.

The new city must be something very different, Mr. Reiss says, with better services and fewer poor people. "Those who want to see this city rebuilt want to see it done in a completely different way: demographically, geographically and politically," he says. "I'm not just speaking for myself here. The way we've been living is not going to happen again, or we're out."

Not every white business leader or prominent family supports that view. Some black leaders and their allies in New Orleans fear that it boils down to preventing large numbers of blacks from returning to the city and eliminating the African-American voting majority. Rep. William Jefferson, a sharecropper's son who was educated at Harvard and is currently serving his eighth term in Congress, points out that the evacuees from New Orleans already have been spread out across many states far from their old home and won't be able to afford to return. "This is an example of poor people forced to make choices because they don't have the money to do otherwise," Mr. Jefferson says.

Calvin Fayard, a wealthy white plaintiffs' lawyer who lives near Mr. O'Dwyer, says the mass evacuation could turn a Democratic stronghold into a Republican one. Mr. Fayard, a prominent Democratic fund-raiser, says tampering with the city's demographics means tampering with its unique culture and shouldn't be done. "People can't survive a year temporarily -- they'll go somewhere, get a job and never come back," he says.

Mr. Reiss acknowledges that shrinking parts of the city occupied by hardscrabble neighborhoods would inevitably result in fewer poor and African-American residents. But he says the electoral balance of the city wouldn't change significantly and that the business elite isn't trying to reverse the last 30 years of black political control. "We understand that African Americans have had a great deal of influence on the history of New Orleans," he says.

A key question will be the position of Mr. Nagin, who was elected with the support of the city's business leadership. He couldn't be reached yesterday. Mr. Reiss says the mayor suggested the Dallas meeting and will likely attend when he goes there to visit his evacuated family

Black politicians have controlled City Hall here since the late 1970s, but the wealthy white families of New Orleans have never been fully eclipsed. Stuffing campaign coffers with donations, these families dominate the city's professional and executive classes, including the white-shoe law firms, engineering offices, and local shipping companies. White voters often act as a swing bloc, propelling blacks or Creoles into the city's top political jobs. That was the case with Mr. Nagin, who defeated another African American to win the mayoral election in 2002.

Creoles, as many mixed-race residents of New Orleans call themselves, dominate the city's white-collar and government ranks and tend to ally themselves with white voters on issues such as crime and education, while sharing many of the same social concerns as African-American voters. Though the flooding took a toll on many Creole neighborhoods, it's likely that Creoles will return to the city in fairly large numbers, since many of them have the means to do so.
We need to pool funds, charter some trasnportation and take a whole contingent.

The hurrican was just the beginning. There will now be years of human degradation, unchecked corporate profiteering, a massive struggle to keep the underclass out of the 'new' New Orleans on the part of the overclass, a free-for-all of curruption -a kind of Wild West of depredations.
Oh my apologies first, dear friends and Mboarders - I have not been so absent here in any month since we went live over four years ago.

This topic has just MOVED from the VERSAILLES ROOM forum to GOT ISSUES forum, as the many issues raised by the hurricane and its continuing dramas will probably keep us posting for months if not years to come.

Here are a few updates:

MY BROTHER

My brother Dave returned home to the Marigny Saturday after 5 weeks of exile in Shreveport, Houston and then Dallas (re-evacuated for Rita). And somehow, with Leo luck (and/or the collective spirits of "the ancestors" that a Voodoo priest noted to inhabit the back of his house), his ramshackle yet gorgeous dwelling at Frankin and Royal was untouched - not a window broken, nothing. Even his collection of Haitian art, gathered over 30 years, was bone-dry.

Thanks to all who have sent beams on his behalf, written or called.

His best friend Ron, who he evacuated with, did not have such a happy homecoming. He already knew that his mother's house in the old Desire neighborhood had flooded and was not salvageable, but went back to see if any of her memntos had survived upstairs. He opened the door to her house and found the bodies of two dead looters in the living room, some of his mom's meager possessions nearby. They had been dead for a long time.

The story of Ron and his family was chronicled recently, here:

http://www.al.com/weather/hurricane/mobileregister/inde...321114680.xml&coll=3

Worth reading to remember how many of the elderly and working poor had NO options - how many other Lenora's didn't have a son to come pick them up from outside the 'hood?

POPPY Z. BRITE

One of my happiest NOLA memories was sharing a funny cigarette with Poppy and her husband (who was in full draggage) and various local vamps backstage at the first ENDLESS NIGHT VAMPYRE BALL back in 1998. Poppy's blog has been one of my must-reads for this whole ordeal, and it been's comforting to keep in touch vicariously this way. (Scroll back before her recent travels..)

http://www.livejournal.com/users/docbrite/

BEER LOOTER DUDE

The first site to really make me laugh since katrina..

http://www.weightlessdog.com/bld.nsf

MARDI GRAS

Got our ressies... see you there!
New Orleans Reborn: Theme Park vs. Cookie Cutter
By NICOLAI OUROUSSOFF

NEW ORLEANS - Optimism is in short supply here. And as people begin to sift through the wreckage left by Hurricane Katrina, there is a creeping sense that the final blow has yet to be struck - one that will irrevocably blot out the city's past.

The first premonition arose when Mayor C. Ray Nagin announced that the model for rebirth would be a pseudo-suburban development in the Lower Garden District called River Garden. The very suggestion alarmed preservationists, who pictured the remaking of historic neighborhoods into soulless subdivisions served by big-box stores.

More recently, Mr. Nagin contemplated suspending the city's historic preservation laws to make New Orleans more inviting to developers - evoking the possibility of architectural havoc and untrammeled greed.

Read the article:

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/10/18/arts/design/18futu.html?8hpib
i just went back to read some open letters from a friend of mine who has gone to help in the re-creation of new orleans. he's an amazing activist... passionate, energetic, true. just wanted to share his experiences with this community. they're very real.
**************************************

hello all-

I feel a pressing need to communicate something of the experience I am having here, even as I know I can only capture a glimpse of what it is to be here. I want to say something you have not heard, to offer some deep insight into the complexity of the situation here, but I don't even know where to begin.

I am in a surreal and deeply inspiring hell- New Orleans is a post apocalyptic wonderland where utter devastation is everywhere and all relationships of culture, race, society and politics are richly counter-intuitive, nuanced and have gone from backward before to upsidedown now. I am floored. No account of what is occurring here can be given without a brief review of the stunning reality on the ground. The scale and scope of the destruction is really not possible to grasp if you have not driven the streets here. There are over a hundred thousand cars that will never drive again that have yet to be moved- they are in all manner of disarray- on curbs, upside down, in front lawns and perhaps most eerily- parked right where they were left when their drivers suddenly fled more than 3 months ago. There are currently 1.3 million households from the Gulf Coast still residing elsewhere. Bodies are still found every day. Vast areas sit festering, powerlines strewn across streets, trees sliced right through houses, two story homes crushed to the height of their front door. Tens of thousands of homes are filled with rotting furniture, warped floors and swollen drywall.

Our bus and van arrived with 22 people at the brand new Common Ground Community Center just opened in the Upper 9th Ward district of New Orleans. We parked the bus behind a locked gate and set to helping establish this church complex as a housing, feeding and staging center for the growing network of CG volunteers arriving and leaving daily from all over the country. The organizing phenomenon that is the Common Ground Collective is an incredible sight to see. Common Ground was born the week following the hurricane, by a group of courageous locals and their regional activist allies who initially armed themselves to defend black neighborhoods from roving white vigilantes who were shooting at young black men. Out of that warzone atmosphere has grown an organic crisis response team that has diversified and grown extremely quickly into a sophisticated organization with over a half dozen semi-permanent locations and 30-some programs ranging from health care clinics, distribution centers, a pirate radio station, legal advocacy teams, and now house gutting crews.

I have spent the last two days working with one of these crews on a house in the Lower 9th Ward. We've been working on the home of a 77 year old woman named Mable who has lived in her neighborhood all of her life, and in this house for 25 years. We are working in a crew of a half dozen folks, outfitted in Tyvek suits, industrial respirators, boot covers, work gloves etc- removing furniture and appliances, pulling down drywall, and piling it all in a trash heap in the street out front. Yesterday we finished gutting her entire house, and today we returned to spray a bleach solution on everything that remains and scrub it with brushes to kill the ubiquitous black mold. Black mold and bleach. Nasty and toxic. But the satisfaction comes in realizing that the house is structurally sound, and she will be able to return, if the government allows her. She is healthy, articulate and a prominent community figure. She has begun to give speeches to the community praising Common Ground and has offered us the use of her house for a year.

The overt and entrenched racism of local, state and federal government is outrageous, maddening and impossible to overstate. There are literally neighborhoods side by side with the same level of damage and the white ones are being cleaned, power is back and they are being given trailers to live in on their lot while they rebuild. Next door, literally, in the black areas it looks like it did the day the water receded- no lights, no clean up, no people. There is a systematic effort to rid this city of its majority black residents- and the extraordinarily blatant manner the government is able to get away with it on a daily basis is bitterly heinous. They are working to pass a law to make it illegal to gut houses or help residents repair their homes in areas the city deems condemned and will use imminent domain to give pennies on the dollar to homeowners and forcibly give title of their property to developers. Everything is in upheaval and in addition to the weight of futility in the face of the massive scale of damage is the nervous uncertainty that hangs over the future of this city. Competing models of recovery are articulating themselves as they accelerate towards a possible head on collision that could be very, very ugly. Is it a national model of neighbor helping neighbor, local groups funded and empowered to respond to the needs and wishes of residents? Or is it a top-down, corporate profit driven decree imposed on an already suffering and oppressed people through economic apartheid and brutal state violence? Both visions are actively evolving and I choose not to be a pessimist even if the signs are not good.

Adding absurdity to insanity is the juxtaposition of areas like the French Quarter and Downtown to the outlying areas. Businesses and restaurants in these areas are largely open and a crew of us have been partying in smoky bars in the french quarters each night since we've been here. I am sleep deprived, contaminated inside and out and a little strung out- but there is a real way in which it is all quite normal feeling. There is an electricity in the air- like we have been waiting for this, like it is just the beginning. Bill McKibben said of the situation, in the context of global warming, that "New Orleans does not look like the America we know- but it looks very much like the world we will inhabit for the rest of our lives". . . I am afraid he is spot-on. As 9-11 was a watershed moment in global history, signaling a permanent change in our relationship to our government and the direction of our collective future, so too is this the end and the start of an era of historical proportions. What happens here relates to our national identity, to the possibility of healing the deep wounds of racism and class inequality in our lives, and to the role of the federal government in empowering or oppressing its citizens.

I have seen countless convoys of military police, police officers from LA, New York and else where, corporate mercenaries on contract from Blackwater and on and on and on, but I have yet to see a single FEMA official in the city of New Orleans. Halliburton is being paid $3000 a house on a no bid contract to put tarps on leaky roofs, while the homeless and destitute owners and residents of those homes are shunned. . . I could go on like that for a long while, telling tales that outrage and frustrate, but depression and anger are not what I want to convey- because truly that is not the way it feels to be here. This city is vibrant, and its people are amazing. Our daily interactions are poignant and intimate- there is a raw humanity on display here that is heartening and affirming. I am tearing up right now just thinking of the passionate people I have met since I've been here- it inspires the desire to drop everything else and stay indefinitely- which many have done.

This is only the beginning- I am just barely starting to wrap my comprehension around the dynamics of this strange and unique place- a place that feels viscerally familiar and completely foreign all at once, all the time. It is oddly comfortable and intensely challenging to be here. Stay tuned and i will try to write more soon. Tomorrow is a rally and march for the Right to Return movement and then I think we will go south to Houma for a day or two. . . .huge love to y'all. . . . . .solidarity,,,,,Laurel
letter #2, dec. 14
*************************

hello all-

I feel a pressing need to communicate something of the experience I am having here, even as I know I can only capture a glimpse of what it is to be here. I want to say something you have not heard, to offer some deep insight into the complexity of the situation here, but I don't even know where to begin.

I am in a surreal and deeply inspiring hell- New Orleans is a post apocalyptic wonderland where utter devastation is everywhere and all relationships of culture, race, society and politics are richly counter-intuitive, nuanced and have gone from backward before to upsidedown now. I am floored. No account of what is occurring here can be given without a brief review of the stunning reality on the ground. The scale and scope of the destruction is really not possible to grasp if you have not driven the streets here. There are over a hundred thousand cars that will never drive again that have yet to be moved- they are in all manner of disarray- on curbs, upside down, in front lawns and perhaps most eerily- parked right where they were left when their drivers suddenly fled more than 3 months ago. There are currently 1.3 million households from the Gulf Coast still residing elsewhere. Bodies are still found every day. Vast areas sit festering, powerlines strewn across streets, trees sliced right through houses, two story homes crushed to the height of their front door. Tens of thousands of homes are filled with rotting furniture, warped floors and swollen drywall.

Our bus and van arrived with 22 people at the brand new Common Ground Community Center just opened in the Upper 9th Ward district of New Orleans. We parked the bus behind a locked gate and set to helping establish this church complex as a housing, feeding and staging center for the growing network of CG volunteers arriving and leaving daily from all over the country. The organizing phenomenon that is the Common Ground Collective is an incredible sight to see. Common Ground was born the week following the hurricane, by a group of courageous locals and their regional activist allies who initially armed themselves to defend black neighborhoods from roving white vigilantes who were shooting at young black men. Out of that warzone atmosphere has grown an organic crisis response team that has diversified and grown extremely quickly into a sophisticated organization with over a half dozen semi-permanent locations and 30-some programs ranging from health care clinics, distribution centers, a pirate radio station, legal advocacy teams, and now house gutting crews.

I have spent the last two days working with one of these crews on a house in the Lower 9th Ward. We've been working on the home of a 77 year old woman named Mable who has lived in her neighborhood all of her life, and in this house for 25 years. We are working in a crew of a half dozen folks, outfitted in Tyvek suits, industrial respirators, boot covers, work gloves etc- removing furniture and appliances, pulling down drywall, and piling it all in a trash heap in the street out front. Yesterday we finished gutting her entire house, and today we returned to spray a bleach solution on everything that remains and scrub it with brushes to kill the ubiquitous black mold. Black mold and bleach. Nasty and toxic. But the satisfaction comes in realizing that the house is structurally sound, and she will be able to return, if the government allows her. She is healthy, articulate and a prominent community figure. She has begun to give speeches to the community praising Common Ground and has offered us the use of her house for a year.

The overt and entrenched racism of local, state and federal government is outrageous, maddening and impossible to overstate. There are literally neighborhoods side by side with the same level of damage and the white ones are being cleaned, power is back and they are being given trailers to live in on their lot while they rebuild. Next door, literally, in the black areas it looks like it did the day the water receded- no lights, no clean up, no people. There is a systematic effort to rid this city of its majority black residents- and the extraordinarily blatant manner the government is able to get away with it on a daily basis is bitterly heinous. They are working to pass a law to make it illegal to gut houses or help residents repair their homes in areas the city deems condemned and will use imminent domain to give pennies on the dollar to homeowners and forcibly give title of their property to developers. Everything is in upheaval and in addition to the weight of futility in the face of the massive scale of damage is the nervous uncertainty that hangs over the future of this city. Competing models of recovery are articulating themselves as they accelerate towards a possible head on collision that could be very, very ugly. Is it a national model of neighbor helping neighbor, local groups funded and empowered to respond to the needs and wishes of residents? Or is it a top-down, corporate profit driven decree imposed on an already suffering and oppressed people through economic apartheid and brutal state violence? Both visions are actively evolving and I choose not to be a pessimist even if the signs are not good.

Adding absurdity to insanity is the juxtaposition of areas like the French Quarter and Downtown to the outlying areas. Businesses and restaurants in these areas are largely open and a crew of us have been partying in smoky bars in the french quarters each night since we've been here. I am sleep deprived, contaminated inside and out and a little strung out- but there is a real way in which it is all quite normal feeling. There is an electricity in the air- like we have been waiting for this, like it is just the beginning. Bill McKibben said of the situation, in the context of global warming, that "New Orleans does not look like the America we know- but it looks very much like the world we will inhabit for the rest of our lives". . . I am afraid he is spot-on. As 9-11 was a watershed moment in global history, signaling a permanent change in our relationship to our government and the direction of our collective future, so too is this the end and the start of an era of historical proportions. What happens here relates to our national identity, to the possibility of healing the deep wounds of racism and class inequality in our lives, and to the role of the federal government in empowering or oppressing its citizens.

I have seen countless convoys of military police, police officers from LA, New York and else where, corporate mercenaries on contract from Blackwater and on and on and on, but I have yet to see a single FEMA official in the city of New Orleans. Halliburton is being paid $3000 a house on a no bid contract to put tarps on leaky roofs, while the homeless and destitute owners and residents of those homes are shunned. . . I could go on like that for a long while, telling tales that outrage and frustrate, but depression and anger are not what I want to convey- because truly that is not the way it feels to be here. This city is vibrant, and its people are amazing. Our daily interactions are poignant and intimate- there is a raw humanity on display here that is heartening and affirming. I am tearing up right now just thinking of the passionate people I have met since I've been here- it inspires the desire to drop everything else and stay indefinitely- which many have done.

This is only the beginning- I am just barely starting to wrap my comprehension around the dynamics of this strange and unique place- a place that feels viscerally familiar and completely foreign all at once, all the time. It is oddly comfortable and intensely challenging to be here. Stay tuned and i will try to write more soon. Tomorrow is a rally and march for the Right to Return movement and then I think we will go south to Houma for a day or two. . . .huge love to y'all. . . . . .solidarity,,,,,Laurel
I will be closing this topic a few days after today's Katrina anniversary, as well as the pre-Katrina "Postcards from New Orleans" topic in Elsewhere.

Your thoughts on this anniversary are welcome, I myself am quite numb.

Our last trip to New orleans was a month ago.
It was a special trip because we got to deliver the last costume for the theater project we've been doing in St. Bernard Parish in person. Johnny and I went to meet the entire SHINE PRESENTS troupe for happy hour at Molly's on the Market.

Like so many people who have "adopted" people, families, groups and neighborhoods across the Gulf, we had never met this troupe face to face, only corresponded via email. I had always heard how warm and wonderful St. Bernard people were, but had never met a whole group together - they were BIG in both stature and personality! Despite their incredible losses, they had been entertaining people in "The Parish" since December, when they did a Christmas show for the relief workers/first responders on a ship docked in Violet, La.

One of the two directors of SHINE is 60 year old Rose Marie, who lost her home and production place, and a few months after the storm, her husband of forty years. She sent me this letter last night - I thought I'd share parts of it here, just one story among hundreds of thousands:

quote:

Dear Chi Chi

I'm wearing my beautiful new red dress! Okay, I"m really just trying it on in my apartment and typing to you while wearing it, then I will change into shorts for my busy day, but I just wanted to tell you thank you and how much I appreciate your thoughtfullness...

And Will wore the red cape for the show last night, and also slept under it in the RV that night as well. We did a show in Lacombe, La., and tonight we have a show in our hometown of Chalmette, in fact it's in Chalmette High School. This is the place we've been rehearsing, and its also the evacuation shelter where I met my husband in 1965 (when we both evacuated for Betsey), and where in Katrina many lives were saved.

We have our beautiful RV, tried it out this weekend in a park near Lacombe, and after the show tonight we'll start packing up and getting ready to move out this weekend... Saturday night, we had a band named the Pettibones sit in for us, and they did a song "Thank you for being a friend" and we all sang the chorus, at the end of the show. It was one of those moments, ya know?

My husband's sister was there, along with several friends I haven't seen since Katrina... It was almost too intense for me. I don't think, Chi Chi, that most widows would find telling their story 6 months into widowhood to be a good thing. I cry every night when I get offstage from my monologue, but by the end of the show I'm smiling again. Theatre....it's real and it's affording me a chance to save lots of money on therapy.

Anyway, I love the dress and scarf and thank you for thinking of me.

Love ya, Rose

Add Reply

Post
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×