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Posted

Does anyone know anything about Hammond? I have a friend I haven't heard from since Sunday. I'm sure (please) she is all right but does anyone know what is going on there? Was there extensive damage? I only found one article online. Thanks.

Posted

Guys, I hope we can keep this civil, I really do. It won't do any good to get made at each other, it won't change a thing.(Just trying to stop something before it starts)

People LOVE to point fingers, and since many hate the president here, it must ALL be his fault. Well, he did declare an emergency BEFORE the Hurricane hit, which is almost unprecedented. What did the State and local officials do to prepare for this event? This is what, the 3rd time folks had been brought to the Superdome? There could have been 70,000 there Sunday night, there were something like 10,000 at first. Why wasn't the center of the dome filled, just fucking filled with Food, water, medical supplies? Or if that wasn't possible, the upper regions of the stadium where they never did have people.

EVERY level of the government did not react quickly enough, can we all agree on that? The state and local governments are the first responders, and there are many reasons why they couldn't react faster(Flooding, trying to save those still trapped in an area of encompassing 200 square miles) but they didn't seem to know what the hell to do, except ask for help, which of course they should. They were overwhelmed, and so was FEMA I imagine. But there must have been something the locals could have done in conjunction the police, since they weren't locking people up...but they couldn't contact anyone, since the communication systems were all down...hell, I don't know for sure, who does?

I heard Biloxi was about to run out of medical supplies and that was a few hours ago, anyone hear anything more about this? This is such an amazingly widespread problem...

Perhaps we should all get away from the computer for awhile, and see what if anything we can do to help the soon to be former residents of N.O. Between Louisiana and Mississippi there are well over a million homeless Americans right now....

Posted

It looks to me that things are on track now. It took a while, but help seems to have arrived. Like one of the victims said about the arriving guard and aid, "I didn't feel like I lived in America anymore. But now I do."

And that's what we all wanted to see happen. I'm pretty happy with what I've seen has been done today. To my knowledge, the Superdome and Convention Center have both been evacuated. That's real progress.

There's a lot of people working themselves to exhaustion to help these people.

Posted

Finally got through to my sister in Baton Rouge, things there are pretty crazy there as well.  The population doubled essentially overnight.  Before influx somewhere around 350,000, Greater BR area around 500,000.

Schools are closed indefinitely and are trying to figure out how to make room for 40,000 new students, already bad traffic conditions just got a whole lot worse, gas shortages, grocery shortages (one of my sisters hasn't been able to find any bread for 3 days, the other took three trips to get milk and luckily got some meat because the delivery truck had just come.) increased crime with reports of hold ups, car jackings etc and general unrest both in and out of the shelters.

This is the next phase. If you draw a line from Houston to Jackson to Pensacola, you outline the area that has accepted probably 80-90% of the refugees and is very stressed. That's a diaspora of almost a million people. Baton Rouge has accepted more than other. The whole region is very stressed and these are the areas that will need help next. Food, water, gas,and medical personnel need to start flowing to those areas. Should we call FEMA and let them know or can we rely on them to think of it for themselves?

Posted

The thing that concerns me about all of this is just this: hypotheically, let's say that the levee breaks were terrorist actions, and there were no hurricane.

What would the aid response look like?  Would there have been the same level of confusion and delay?  If a couple of car bombs were set off next to the levees would things be different?  Would aid have been there sooner than five days?  The Office of Homeland Security has a classification for natural disaster; i don't recall what it is right now, but they have thought about it.

It would seem to me that the president, again, speaking hypothetically, should be taking a SERIOUS leadership role here.  Get in near to the trouble as safely as possible.  Pull all-nighters.  No one sleeps until the enormous resources we have put into the Office of Homeland Security are put in place to aid people as fast as is humanly possible.

If I can send a Fed-Ex across the country overnight, there is NO fucking reason this kind of thing should happen.  If this is the best and quickest response that the Office of Homeland Security has to offer, then I fear the day even more than ever should another terrorist attack happen in the US.

Do you think if armed gangs of Al Qaeda were roaming the streets it would take 3 days to restore security?

Posted

Did anyone see the NBC donation/benefit special? Caught part of the east coast feed on CNBC... and I'd guess that Kanye West went way off script. Not good at all (in this context). :(

Posted

The thing that concerns me about all of this is just this: hypotheically, let's say that the levee breaks were terrorist actions, and there were no hurricane.

What would the aid response look like?  Would there have been the same level of confusion and delay?  If a couple of car bombs were set off next to the levees would things be different?  Would aid have been there sooner than five days?  The Office of Homeland Security has a classification for natural disaster; i don't recall what it is right now, but they have thought about it.

It would seem to me that the president, again, speaking hypothetically, should be taking a SERIOUS leadership role here.  Get in near to the trouble as safely as possible.  Pull all-nighters.  No one sleeps until the enormous resources we have put into the Office of Homeland Security are put in place to aid people as fast as is humanly possible.

If I can send a Fed-Ex across the country overnight, there is NO fucking reason this kind of thing should happen.  If this is the best and quickest response that the Office of Homeland Security has to offer, then I fear the day even more than ever should another terrorist attack happen in the US.

Do you think if armed gangs of Al Qaeda were roaming the streets it would take 3 days to restore security?

My thoughts exactly.

Posted

Now that's just stupid - you want to compare distressed U.S. citizens who have suffered a natural disaster with enemy terrorists? You want the National Guard to just shoot first and ask questions later?

Mike

What I meant to say was would it take three days to have military on the streets.

And, though I didn't intend to compare them to terrorists, now that you bring it up, the gangs that are driving trucks full of armed men - the 7th Ward Soldiers and their ilk - shooting people and raping them in a time of crisis, actually do constitute a greater threat to me and my city than "enemy terrorists," whoever they are.

Posted (edited)

In either case, the people are / would be in need.  It makes no difference what the cause was; aid and security should be swift.

From a psychological standpoint, I think the two are quite different. More similar on substantive grounds.

Guy

Edited by Guy
Posted (edited)

After watching much coverage tonight, I think we a treading in very unsafe waters so to speak on one issue. That is race. Usually, I would be the first one to stand up and say NOLA was neglected because of race. But, let's be realistic here. Let's not confuse an ill conceived, under-planned and under-enacted government response with racism. I think this is heading in a dangerous direction on T.V. Not to say we don't have major racism problems in the country. I just don't think this was/is one of them.

Even Wynton is saying it's sheer racism on the government's part. That seems very out of character for someone in his position. And if he's saying such a thing in the media, that's not a good sign.

The last thing I want is survivors to think that white america didn't care. As far as I can tell that is just not the case.

Edited by Soul Stream
Posted

There is some back story to the violence that really hasn't been discussed except in local media. In the year or two before the storm, violence, especially gang/retributory violence, had been escalating sharply in New Orleans. Most people have attributed this to a redistribution of populations from razed housing developments into other neighborhoods. New Orleans gang culture is very much neighborhood or ward based. The federal (Hope Six, I think) program removed all residents from 'failed' housing developments and resettled them all over the city. That's when the wars over territory and drug markets started and it peaked this summer. We had at least several murders a day and some days with six or seven. (in a city of 500,000!) Almost all of it plagued the same communities that were most likely not to evacuate because of lack of means.

Now, some of these heavily armed gangs have the sense that they control parts of the city. A lot of the looting, raping, and sniping is an assertion of that control, in the face of authorities and rivals. After my concern about those who are suffering and dying now and my concern about our ability to reconstruct the city, I am concerned most about the aftershocks of this violence. Race relations in New Orleans were far from perfect or even decent. But it seemed like, slowly, over generations, we were working out mechanisms to deal with it. Moreover, black and white New Orleanians have always had to have ways of interacting with one another because we live amongst one another in ways that most other, esp. northern, cities don't. My fear is that the tension, fear, anger, and anxiety felt by both blacks and whites about this violence will change the racial 'dna' of the city for the worse and make it a less 'easy' place to live.

Posted

After watching much coverage tonight, I think we a treading in very unsafe waters so to speak on one issue.  That is race.  Usually, I would be the first one to stand up and say NOLA was neglected because of race.  But, let's be realistic here.  Let's not confuse an ill conceived, under-planned and under-enacted government response with racism.  I think this is heading in a dangerous direction on T.V.  Not to say we don't have major racism problems in the country.  I just don't think this was/is one of them.

While there's obviously a race angle to the tragedy unfolding in NO, I'm guessing that it has a lot more to do with income and class.

Guy

Posted

After watching much coverage tonight, I think we a treading in very unsafe waters so to speak on one issue.  That is race.  Usually, I would be the first one to stand up and say NOLA was neglected because of race.  But, let's be realistic here.  Let's not confuse an ill conceived, under-planned and under-enacted government response with racism.  I think this is heading in a dangerous direction on T.V.  Not to say we don't have major racism problems in the country.  I just don't think this was/is one of them.

While there's obviously a race angle to the tragedy unfolding in NO, I'm guessing that it has a lot more to do with income and class.

Guy

We expect that from an economist. You should get over to the Anthro. and Soc. departments more often. ;)

Posted

After watching much coverage tonight, I think we a treading in very unsafe waters so to speak on one issue.  That is race.  Usually, I would be the first one to stand up and say NOLA was neglected because of race.  But, let's be realistic here.  Let's not confuse an ill conceived, under-planned and under-enacted government response with racism.  I think this is heading in a dangerous direction on T.V.  Not to say we don't have major racism problems in the country.  I just don't think this was/is one of them.

While there's obviously a race angle to the tragedy unfolding in NO, I'm guessing that it has a lot more to do with income and class.

Guy

We expect that from an economist. You should get over to the Anthro. and Soc. departments more often. ;)

Actually, I was wearing my statistics hat this time around. :)

Guy

Posted

O.K. I guess I was wrong. From Nightline...The Convention Center is not evacuated. Also, nobody is being picked up along a huge stretch of I-10

excuse me while I yell....

CAN WE GET SOME FUCKING BUSES OVER ON I-GODDAMN-10 TO PICK UP THESE PEOPLE GODDAMN IT. THIS IS FUCKING RIDICULOUS. I'M ABOUT TO GET IN MY CAR AND GO DOWN I-10 AND PICKUP AT LEAST SOMEBODY!!!!!!!

I thought things were getting better. Help was on the way. Is there just not enough help to be had?????? I refuse to believe that. Is there really continuing to happen????

Another Photo-Op today with hollow promises it seems. Situation Normal All Fucked Up. :tdown:tdown:tdown

Posted

After watching much coverage tonight, I think we a treading in very unsafe waters so to speak on one issue.  That is race.  Usually, I would be the first one to stand up and say NOLA was neglected because of race.  But, let's be realistic here.  Let's not confuse an ill conceived, under-planned and under-enacted government response with racism.  I think this is heading in a dangerous direction on T.V.  Not to say we don't have major racism problems in the country.  I just don't think this was/is one of them.

While there's obviously a race angle to the tragedy unfolding in NO, I'm guessing that it has a lot more to do with income and class.

Guy

And of course, income and class never have anything to do with race... :rolleyes:

Posted

After watching much coverage tonight, I think we a treading in very unsafe waters so to speak on one issue.  That is race.  Usually, I would be the first one to stand up and say NOLA was neglected because of race.  But, let's be realistic here.  Let's not confuse an ill conceived, under-planned and under-enacted government response with racism.  I think this is heading in a dangerous direction on T.V.  Not to say we don't have major racism problems in the country.  I just don't think this was/is one of them.

While there's obviously a race angle to the tragedy unfolding in NO, I'm guessing that it has a lot more to do with income and class.

Guy

And of course, income and class never have anything to do with race... :rolleyes:

I didn't say that.

Guy

Posted

The more ass kicking the better as far as I'm concerned. This is what happens when you have incompetent liberal politicians in control. That Mayor should get his ass kicked out of office for good.

[/quote

OK Archie Bunker! :cool:

Posted

Man, I wish I had thought of it sooner...I showered and caught Shepard Smith just going off about the situation in N.O. Why were they not letting the people walk out, why do they turn people away at the end of the overpass. Let them walk west to were there was food, water, Electricty? So, I ran the DVR thingy back 10 minutes to catch all of it(great feature with Dish Network)Hannity just didn't know what to do....So...they go to Geraldo at the Convention center(These 3 are not my favs, but Shepard Smith really proved himself tonight) Geraldo is a bit of a, well you know what he is. But he is tag teaming with Shepard, Geraldo was saying let these people out, let them go!!! He held up a 5 week old baby, and started to cry! :( Amazing T.V. to see, to say the least. meanwhile, I had been watching CNN earlier, and it was sounding more like you would expect FOX to sound, things were getting better, blah, blah, blah(at least the part I caught)

Posted (edited)

A trival question what channel is everyone watching? Just CNN? I go between CNN, Fox and MSNBC, and the networks at 6:30. I think only on NBC did I see that there are/were folks still in many of the apartments there...white folks, :rolleyes: looking pretty damn terrible. Who knows how many people are still in N.O.? Without any communication, will people have to go door to door everywhere in N.O.????

Oh, right now at 3 am est they are re-running the Hannity/Colmes show, catch it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Edited by BERIGAN
Posted

A trival question what channel is everyone watching? Just CNN? I go between CNN, Fox and MSNBC, and the networks at 6:30.

Pretty much the same routine for me. I think there are a LOT of people left to evacuate (I think I might have heard a number of like 50,000, though I hope to hell I'm wrong). I have no idea how they'll do it.

I'm also wondering how they'll evacuate the "thugs" and how many more innocents will get killed in the process. I don't envy them this job, what a fucking nightmare!

After watching the whole 9/11 event unfold, I thought "now I've seen it all" but I now realize there's a whole lot more to process. Each day is another shock. What a world this is right now.

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