by Starman » Thu Sep 01, 2005 3:51 am
What the FUGG is the GD story with the so-called 'renegade' bus -- somebody apparently had the plain common-sense and took the initiative to load up a buncha people, including a lot of kids, on a vacant bus and drive the 350 miles to the Houston Astrodome which is where people who have been blasted by Katrina are being TOLD they could recieve emergency services????<br><br>Just earlier today, a FEMA or other officials said 'we're going to have to think outside the box on this -- everything is on the table.' Seems to me, that's exactly what the people who arranged the bus-ride did -- Some basic do-what-ya-gotta-do, see-a-need-and-fill-it. The bus driver should get a damn medal -- How many hours have I seen busses in NO just parked while people were waiting, while the situation keeps getting more dire? <br><br>What a STOOOPID 'issue'. I just don't see the big deal.<br><br>Some miscellaneous DKOS comments on accountability and 'looting' from:<br><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://cindysheehan.dailykos.com/story/2005/8/31/15223/8460">cindysheehan.dailykos.com...15223/8460</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--><br><br>The Republicans were right<br>They said if Al Gore won the election we'd be paying more than three dollars a gallon for gas. He did win the election. We are paying more than three dollars a gallon for gas.<br>LOL And they said if Kerry won, the stock market would tank. Kerry won, and the stock market has been steadily going down.<br>"The people of this country, not special interest big money, should be the source of all political power." Paul Wellstone<br><br>You Gotta Love The Priorities Of Fox News... <br>With New Orleans under water, what does Brit Hume have on his show tonight? A University of Virginia Professor, who's with the CATO Institute, on the show to say that in NO WAY could increased occurences of Hurricanes be related to Global Warming...<br>by Rimjob<br><br>Sign of Bush's agenda <br>Everyone in America should know about the Bush priorities:<br>From the 6/6/05 New Orleans CityBusiness:<br>In fiscal year 2006, the New Orleans district of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is bracing for a record $71.2 million reduction in federal funding...The cuts mean major hurricane and flood protection projects will not be awarded to local engineering firms. Also, a study to determine ways to protect the region from a Category 5 hurricane has been shelved for now.<br>But, this made it into the Bush budget: <br>- $200 million for a one-mile span linking Ketchikan, Alaska, with Gravina Island. (Currently, fifty people live on Gravina Island -- "they reach Ketchikan by taking a seven-minute ferry ride.") Certainly republican senator Ted Stevens had a hand in this also...<br>by jgaleza <br><br>Ben Blake on CNN at 3:20 PST -- reporting critical situation in NO, lack of communication, National Guard has lost control, no evident evacuation plan or coordiantion -- people wandering around through flooded streets with NO information about where to go or what to do -- stories of bodies and rampant looting, gunfire heard. utterly appalling.<br><br>Another picture to check out...<br>... is this one. <<!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://www.dailykos.com/story/2005/8/31/141724/708>">www.dailykos.com/story/20...41724/708></a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--><br>Excuse the diary pimping... but it's kind of a stark illustration of the relative priorities of our two political parties. by Malacandra<br><br>Lets' all address the nation too! <br>ACTION ALERT!<br>As weathercoins mentions below, Bush will necessarily address the nation with his own bias. So it's only fait game to try and balance it with ours.<br>We all have an angle to attack Bush on his handling of our environment, national guard, preparedness, etc. Let's flood the media with these converging points of view!<br>Check these tips to Write Letters to the Editors <<!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://spaces.msn.com/members/whatcanwedo/Blog/cns!1pv3BxJLDNJM3zaEKMKu3ujA!158.entry>">spaces.msn.com/members/wh...158.entry></a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--> that have more chances of getting published (the tips include a link to the Media Database to find local papers to target), and fire away!<br>And feel free to bookmark these tips and pass the link around, too; they'll be useful again.<br>Don't just complain, Take Action <<!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://spaces.msn.com/members/whatcanwedo/>.">spaces.msn.com/members/whatcanwedo/>.</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--><br>by cyrilb <br><br>Bush's Talking Points:<br>Unified in this tragedy/grief/crisis<br>Most destructive/Biggest tragedy/superlatives galore!<br>Give minor props to the local officials/little people.<br>Gloss over why the immediate federal/FEMA/Homeland Security response was lacking.<br>Make huge fuss over the speed and size of the federal response.(days late)<br>Resist urge to mention freedom, democracy, 9/11 and why nature hates us.<br>Fail to mention the enormous amount of money siphoned off to fight in Iraq.<br>Make promises that are comfortably ambiguous.<br>Make promises that will be underfunded.<br>my personal favorite<br>Make this predictable event something that has taken us by surprise.<br>Peace with Honor<br>by Fabian<br><br>You forgot... <br>Link it to congressional Democrats.<br>Link it to Saddam.<br>By Bulldawg<br><br>WTF? <br><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://www.wonkette.com/politics/ap/index.php#finding-versus-looting-123124">www.wonkette.com/politics...ing-123124</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--><br><br>****<br>(Me again -- Starman)<br>Another so-called 'news reporter' asshole -- O'Reilly on The Dactor -- trying to pump-up a 'them' and 'criminal element' aspect, also 'urban menace' -- I'd like to see O'Reilly's 'civilized' manners after living hand-to-mouth with no water, food, shelter, or job or ANYTHING, loss of hope and self-respect. I'd bet O'Reilly would be driven to a ruthless self-serving opportunist much sooner than he'd ever think possible, IF he even thought he is even capable of losing his inherant dignity. Many of the people looting are probably so overcome by the sheer scale of this disaster that their sense of futile hopelessness and desperation becomes profound -- what might begin as a search for something edible and something to drink and a blanket or a dry shirt, turns into something different, when they find themselves in a situation where everythingis 'free' for the grabbing -- Many, probably MOST of the people now refugees are chronically poor and so they have NO sense of being equity stake-holders in society, they are surplus-negative debtors; The looters in NO aren't even thinking clearly, they apparently have NO access to critical information and so don't realize the utter seriousness of their situation, they're gonna have to evacuate, and so they aren't gonna be able to take more than a small bag at MOST with them anyway -- and too, a LOT of people are probably gonna have to be forcefully evacuated.<br><br>O'Reilly (the Idjit) even suggested some 'criminal element' had deliberately planned to stay in order to exploit the collapse of law and order -- presumably so they could rob and steal, while having no means to go anywhere with their new-found riches.<br><br>Good GAWD I can scarcely believe the FUBAR idiocy and unpreparednessand lack of coordination and downright lack of common-sense; I STILL can't understand why a couple (at LEAST) heavy-lift helicopters haven't been directed on-scene, or directed by FEMA authority from offshore suppliers or logging/construction companies, to drop a couple dozen flatbed railroad cars into the breeched-dike holes to STOP THE FLOODING! That has ALWAYS been a priority -- Instead, the engineers have been frustrated by lack of roads and ship-access to get construction equipment onsite.<br><br>Stories about small-towns with NO communication about supply distribution, police aren't in contact with anyone and so can't pass on messages -- Incredible lack of communication, simply unconscionable. Large Portable pumps brought and placed in position -- surely the drilling industry has suitable equipment FEMA could commandeer. Ya know, they wouldn't hesitate to commandeer your pickup or tractor or shotgun or camping gear --<br><br>Stories of people queing for hours on rumours of fuel sales, which they desperately need for generators and for their trucks and cars, for transport and rescue -- only to be stumped by lack of electricity for the pumps -- well, what about rigging some mechanical pumps? Like, DuH??? Or isn't there anybody smart-enough to rig the pumps to be bicycle-chain driven? Or are they too concerned with accurate metering? That just shows how technologically-addled we are -- having lost all sense of how to get by, or how to improvise and manage without the convenience of electricity we've become so dependant on. In many ways, we've become the servant to the thing we mastered.<br><br>Price-gouging by gas-stations -- I've seen (on news stations) $6 gas in Atlanta -- That's just criminal, what's the difference between the 'looting' that Blitzer and O'Reilly are so enflamed about, while they deny the far-greater crime of criminal negligence and misfeasance of the unprepared, inefficient 'officials', esp. the whole Bush Cabal.<br><br>Chronic lack of effective resupply and information for stranded NO refugees crawling out of flooded poor neighborhoods, with no water or medical aid or food for people in desperate circumstances.<br><br>NO didn't use their fleet of school busses for forced evacuations all day Sunday, when they KNEW the storm was baring-down -- and the busses were all parked where they were SURE to be flooded if the levee breached -- talk about a DOUBLE fuckin' stupidity! ALL of the major people-transport vehicles should have been used to bus folks out, even tractor-trailor vans. Instread, look how many vehicles are now disabled and many trashed.<br><br>WHY couldn't FEMA have distributed fuel-coupons to allow folks who didn't have money to be able to fuel-up and evacuate? Now, all those personal vehicles are severely damaged if not junked. <br><br>And WHY didn't the city send-out fleets of police and military with bullhorns, warning people of rising water when they KNEW the levee had broached Monday afternoon, since the people had NO idea of how serioius or how long it would last -- untold thousands of people probably drowned when thewaters kept rising and they kept climbing to upstairs rooms and finally their attics, where they then had NO exit. What a horrible, heartbreaking tragedy.<br><br>And what's this about boiling water? With NO fuel, and God knows WHAT poisons that NO amount of boiling is going to make safe?<br><br>And NO flood-free command center for communication and inter-agency cooperation?<br><br>Especially the sheer misplaced inanity of being 'outraged' by looting -- since most of the property is already ruined, and it's just stuff. But armed robbers -- now that's a whole 'nother thing. As Jeff Goldblatt on FOX said, 'desperate people do desperate things' -- the sheer terror and anxiety the people must be feeling is impossible to fully understand, but I get a sense of it.<br><br>And on Van Susterin's On the Record, she interviews an officials who clearly stated everyone KNEW the levees were only designed for a slow-moving Category 2 or fast-moving category 3 Hurricane, yet everyone also knew a Cat 4 or even 5, one of the biggest storms ever recorded, was bearing-down and likely to hit almost two-days in advance -- EVERY effort to pre-position sufficient emergency levee-repair equipment and materials should have been mobilized and put on immediate standby in case they were needed. <br><br>Same with getting emergency freezer-vans ready to repack with frozen-foods from major food-warehouses and stores, rather than have it all spoil -- which happened when the electricity failed. And at the earliest instance when the long-term unviability of the Superdome's support-system became apparant, immediate contingency evacuation-plans should have been started. What in FUCK have FEMA and Homeland security been preparing FOR, anyway? The eventual catastrophic failure of the NO levee was NOT an unknown -- there's simply no excuse. This should have been looked-at hard and prepared-for. I simply can't believe that there weren't any officials who were assessing needs in the more obscure sectins of the city -- like abandoning them entirely. Unbelieveable. And on the bridge-scene -- cop cars just rolling-by, with NO communication or organization at all, while people are just wandering, shell-shocked, filthy, exhausted, no-doubt dehydrated and hungry. <br><br>THIS is the 'best' that we can do to look after each other? If anything shows the utter unconcern of the elites and officialdom with the 'masses', the disaster which is the Drowning of New Orleans shows it plain and simple. Can you imagine if all the refugees were desperate, suffering anglo middle-and-upper class, would all the officials just blithely have driven-on by?<br><br>And couldn't FEMA have used their authority to organize urgent food-and-water/liquids and equipment/clothing retrieval from area stores rather than allow, or tolerate, unregulated (and wasteful) theft, OR depend on incoming shipments? I mean, there's just so much inefficiency here and lack of common-sense. Hadn't anyone planned and considered what happens when social-support breaks down, how to provide necessary structure and order? Clearly, the people are in over their heads and need to know how to cooperate in aiding their survival and best-interests. <br><br>With all the many people wandering around not knowing what to do, couldn't they have been organized into some constructive service-providing activity, even scrounging necessary medical and relief supplies or aiding rescue services? I mean, people HAVE to pitch-in collectively, and many people were doing that on their own, but for many others ... there's evidently something about our mercenary system that fosters a helpless dependency and inability for many folks to help themselves and others. Its a helluva characteristic of our exploitive capitalistic system that has been conditioning people to be consumers and employees in a larger system, where their roles are given to them.<br><br>I just heard -- relief officials are saying they need clean underwear and socks - there must be TONS of such clothes in the local stores.<br><br>Some more KOS comments: An excellant thread:<br><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://cindysheehan.dailykos.com/story/2005/8/31/15223/8460">cindysheehan.dailykos.com...15223/8460</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--><br><br>New Orleans has sunk <br>It's hard to believe the scope of the disaster in New Orleans. I'm watching CNN and the commentator is moaning about looting? What the hell thousands could be dying who gives a crap about things. Save the people forget about the CRAP!!<br>"It's better to die on your feet then live on your knees"<br>by Blutodog <br>*<br>You're forgetting <br>the basic underlying fear of white peoples: lawless minorities running amok. Particularly african-americans looting, that really gets attention on the idiot box. Not stranded seniors.<br>Now if those seniors where to be accosted by (minority) looters...then we'll have a different story.<br>by jsavimbi <br>* <br>Talk about 'looting' meant to villanize victims <br>The more they talk up the looting, the more it becomes about what bad people these are anyway, and how they deserve less sympathy.<br>If you ask me, saving stuff from becoming uselessly waterlogged is called salvage.<br>by NYFM <br>*<br>i agree <br>these people have nothing. they were unable to get out. they know that they need something to barter with in the very near future.<br>but are they mentioning federal and local officials "looting" the local office supply stores for routers and other equipment? the law gives them the power to do that in order to help in rescue efforts. or how about the looting by N.O.P.D. officers?<br>i say the other looters are trying to rescue themselves by any means necessary, seeing as how the local, state and federal gov't can't get a handle on the issues going on down there.<br>i for one can't say that i wouldn't loot, too.<br>relativism. it's a bitch.<br>BiblioSquirrel: I'm a librarian. I find things. This is where I bury them.<br>by sanantonerose <br>*<br>Food, clothes, blankets, sure, but cd players, tvs and other non-survival stuff is looting and it isn't right and we ought not defend it.<br>When all else fails...panic<br>by David <br>*<br>I want you to get stressed out... (none / 0)<br>and then go without everything but food, water and shelter and tell me how you fare.<br>by Bensch <br>*<br>survival -- you don't seem to understand.<br>i don't think these people are intent on keeping it for themselves.<br>instead, they will use these goods to trade for other necessities -- necessities that the quicker, faster, and more able "looters" got to first.<br>they see anything within grabbing distance as "survival" stuff.<br>there are plenty of things that we ought not do in a situation such as this. and again, i wish that this sort of looting was not occuring. but the situation is dire and people are in a panic.<br>i saw one report where one couple were staying in their flooded out houses and refusing help. why? why would people choose to stay even as rescue boats pass them up? they don't trust that they'll be any better off. they don't trust the authorities. why?<br>now that's a big ought not to. years of instilling fear of the system.<br>BiblioSquirrel<br>*<br>are you joking. i hope you're joking. do you really think their stealing tv sets so the can trade them for foodstuffs? by NolaSaint <br>*<br>maybe, maybe not. why do think people are taking stuff? disagree with me, that's fine. but i'm requesting a larger conversation about why people are "looting" and refusing help from the authorities. BiblioSquirrel: I'm a librarian. I find things. This is where I bury them. <<!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://bibliosquirrel.blogspot.com>">bibliosquirrel.blogspot.com></a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--> by sanantonerose <br>*<br>I'm guessing it reflects the emails they get .You know Americans are probably swamping CNN offices with emails about "the looting" because of the sad fixation with seeing their worst fears about poor blacks confirmed for their own superiority complex. That's just one theory of course, but I am sure many of us have thought it. I voted for John Kerry and don't regret it. SHED THE UNREALITY! by diplomatic <br>*<br>Yes, and the looting sucks. Looting for water and food and supplies makes a hello of a lot of sense, that's for sure... But, c'mon, folks, looting jewlery and other such items is quite sickening given the circumstances. Not, it's not the most important issue, but it sure in hell ain't helping things right now... I did not receive $ from Ketchum, U.S. Department of Ed or HHS to write this---though I wish I had. by Volvo Liberal <br>*<br>And, worse, The looting is causing the re-allocation of security forces... It ain't good... None of thisis good... I did not receive $ from Ketchum, U.S. Department of Ed or HHS to write this---though I wish I had. by Volvo Liberal <br>*<br>Looting!! When Baghdad was being looted Bu$hco didn't give a shit!! Now it's a BIG deal? I can't even believe the coverage? Lotting who gives a shit?? Thousands maybe tens of thousands of PEOPLE are at of risk of dying and all these MSM bastards can whine about is looters?? What a bunch of assholes! "It's better to die on your feet then live on your knees" by Blutodog <br>*<br>Now that's a great point. Looting in Baghdad = ok Looting in New Orleans = bad That deserves its own diary... Brilliant point. I knew I loved this place for some reason... I did not receive $ from Ketchum, U.S. Department of Ed or HHS to write this---though I wish I had. by Volvo Liberal <br>I hear from Don Rumsfeld that freedom's messy. by elmo <br>*<br>And it's hard. ...It's hard. 9/11 was the Neocons' Reichstag fire. "Patriot Act" = Enabling Act. by Bulldawg <br>*<br>Looting or Finding? Interesting in the photos when it's deemed looting or 'finding' <<!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne?id=38725768&size=o>">flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne...68&size=o></a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--> by MarcusWoollen <br>*<br>exactly, or "commandeering" BiblioSquirrel: I'm a librarian. I find things. This is where I bury them. <<!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://bibliosquirrel.blogspot.com>">bibliosquirrel.blogspot.com></a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--> by sanantonerose <br>Yes what folks are you talking to? I don't really see anyone at Daily Kos defending the looting of jewelry or sneakers, etc. I only saw some excuse it for food and water. The question above was more about why the media was covering it and one reason could just be that for SOME in America the sight of rampaging groups of black people stealing stuff is actually more scary than a Hurricane itself. I voted for John Kerry and don't regret it. SHED THE UNREALITY! by diplomatic <br>*<br>Looting is important. It shows that law and order have completely broken down in New Orleans (and that civilized behavior has completely broken down in some people.) If armed National Guard troops are need to keep people from ransacking hospitals and interfering with the rescue/recovery, that's news. by ArkPanda <br>*<br>Yes. Are you trying to convince me? Because I don't see where I personally said it wasn't important to cover looting. I voted for John Kerry and don't regret it. SHED THE UNREALITY! by diplomatic <br>*<br>Jewelry and TV's can always be used to barter for water and food. It's trickle-down economics at a different level. Same goes for booze, diapers, clothing and guns. Especially guns. With a gun you can barter for almost everything. The looting is irrelevant at this point. The city is done for and all those bsinesses will file for a total loss anyways. Might as well let those people have at it. by jsavimbi <br>*<br>Yes yes yes. The people you see looting have nothing left to hold on to, their lives and houses and everything they had is gone. Can we fault people for trying to grab something, anything, of value as some sort of possession? The stores are going to be fully covered by insurance anyway. I say: give it all away, and let the security be used to save lives. Worrying about somebody taking a TV when it's about to be underwater is just the epitome of missing the forest for the trees. by dnamj <br>*<br>If you have a gun you're not going to be doing much bartering. by Gpack3 <br>*<br>think about this -- you're dirt poor. you have nothing. you are not able to travel out of the area. you have no money. yes, food and water are a priority. but so are items that may be worth $$$ for trade. do i wish this type of looting was happening? of course not. but i'm not gonna sit in judgement of these people while i navel gaze in front of my $2000 computer at my nice job in a dry area. BiblioSquirrel: I'm a librarian. I find things. This is where I bury them. <<!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://bibliosquirrel.blogspot.com>">bibliosquirrel.blogspot.com></a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--> by sanantonerose <br>*<br>armed gangs looting -- Gives the word 'looting' a whole new spin. Some people looking for food and water is one thing. But armed gangs ransacking houses and businesses is rancid anarchy. Peace with Honor by Fabian <br>*<br>The Looting is Going to Be Nothing Compared... to the $$$$ that will be removed from our pockets by the gas/oil barons. "We're all working for the Pharoh" - Richard Thompson by mayan <br>*<br>And both are wrong by Volvo Liberal <br>*<br><br>***<br> Idiocy on top of idiocy on top of idiocy, interspersed by some remarkable feats of great heroism and selfless sacrifice, uncounted thousands of people driven to extremes of desperation and fear, incredible suffering and tragedy, and remarkable stoic endurance marred by reported incidents of thuggish violance --<br><br>CNN's Paula Zahn just interviewed an official who commented on the many astonishing instances of ineptitude and innapropriate response -- esp. with little to no coordinated rescue of people stranded in the poorer section of town, with people forced to slog their way, from toddlers up to oldsters in walkers, through incredibly foul, reeking, pestilential chest-high water, then spending a day or more waiting for something on the overpass bridges -- we're getting up to 72 hours since Katrina hit fer Chrissakes! And the levee STILL isn't repaired, and who knows HOW many thousands of people are still stranded in their homes, god only knows WHAT they're doing for water. The disease potential is simply huge, and to not be aggressively helping people avoid these serious known dangers is just unacceptable.<br><br>This is sounding a LOT like the horror-stories in the alternative press about the worst part of the Hurricane Andrew area of devastation entirely roped-off and the people made to fend for themselves -- I never knew what to make of that report, it sounded TOO cruel to be true, but now, I dunno ... Seems there's a similiar kinda story occurring, not just in NO but how many other poor gulfcoast communities?<br><br>I can't, don't EVEN wanna go there, to seriously think this might have been a deliberately-caused HAARP-created storm-disaster for a hidden, sinister agenda.<br><br>The tragedy is too great already.<br><br>PS: More CNN complaining of lawlessness and 'rampant crime', 'shocking' etc. Can't they see that extreme poverty and desperation is driving this, and the perception that people are on their own, they've been simply left to fend for themselves? It's like a free-fire anything-goes zone. Isn't gas price-gouging just another form of looting?<br><br>And recall Rumsfeld saying the looting in Baghdad is because 'freedom is messy'. Why was it acceptable in Baghdad, but not New Orleans? The 'law and order' meme is being pushed by the same PTB that violate international laws and Geneva and Nuremburg codes and humanitarian principles at-will, exploiting and killing and committing genocide around the world, betraying and enslaving American citizens, committing torture and other unconscionable atrocities. The hypocrisy is thick enough to cut with a knife.<br><br>Bush's guitar 'moment' -- what a fitting image, 'Nero fiddled while Rome burned'; Bush strummed while New Orleans drowned ...<br>There was a good DKOS comment re: getting a photo of that incident and paying for full-scale ads.<br>Too much.<br>Starman <p></p><i></i>