Martial law in New Orleans

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keeping your head while all around you are...

Postby democratccapitalism » Fri Sep 02, 2005 11:47 pm

<!--EZCODE FONT START--><span style="color:blue;font-family:times new roman;font-size:medium;">i hope you wont resist me when i ask you to take a step back, a big, big step back - 'only those who see the big picture are awake' - you want to be awake, dont you? - to be able to help yourself and others? - can you see the mona lisa thru a straw, from one foot away? - can you see even any part of the mona lisa [for the meaning of each part of the picture is only in relationship to the whole picture] from one foot thru a straw or microscope? - so, can you see katrina from close-up? suffer this: to take a step back, for one moment... <br><br>katrina is one millionth part of the unnecessary suffering of humanity - step back, step back, just for a moment, please, for your sake, for their sake, and see...<br><br>'there are a thousand, a million, striking at the branches of the tree of problems for every one who is striking at the root' - attack the branches, they grow back, and you tire, and hope diminishes; attack the root and you really control the tree of evils, like jack with the beanstalk...<br><br>and what is the cause?...<br><br>i cannot see one reason to have unlimited wealth<br><br>i can see many reasons not to have unlimited wealth<br><br>1. money is power; unlimited money is unlimited power; unlimited power is absolute corruption, anarchic tyranny, madness within and without, disgustingness, bush<br><br>2. no one can contribute to the social pool of wealth by their work more than a few million dollars [more detail on this elsewhere], so one person having more than a few million gets into overpay, into getting more out of the social pool of wealth than they put in; which means that others must get out of the social pool of wealth less than they put in [eg, the poor in new orleans], which means injustice, which means theft, which means conflict, which must escalate vendetta-style where there is no arbitrator of fairness that all persons respect and are able to trust; which escalates, via bush/nero, to utter destruction, the decline and fall of the empire, nuclear winter, armageddon, a mega-ice-age, coming soon if we dont wake up and stop it - general misery screaming-accelerating to universal death <br><br>[a pity we discovered atomic power when we are still so immature...] <br><br>[the big picture, people, being awake, aware, alive to what is happening, so you can control it, fix it, change it, pursue happiness with success, have hope and confidence and calm]<br><br>3. the more overpaid, the more underpay; so the more disturbance, tension, social stress, insecurity, fear, worry for the overpaid - corporate infighting, hostile takeovers, betrayal, scheming, danger, spies, paranoia, crises, illegal immigrants, the wolf at bay in the penthouse, the overpaid dancing on the edge of a volcano of the underpaid, the guillotine after cake, ceausescu dead with the secret police of a nation to protect him, the high and endless cost of defense, vigilance that must weaken sooner or later, king richard the third alone on bosworth...<br><br>4. a fair share satisfies all needs, and millions of desires, so there is not much left that overpay can satisfy: marginal desires, law of diminishing returns: a car that costs 10 times as much does not give 10 times the pleasure; not even 2 times the pleasure...drat<br><br>in summary: a heap of people; the lower in the heap, the more oppression; the higher in the heap, the more attack from below...ALL ARE WORSE OFF, therefore all are better off standing on the ground of fairpay, a fair share, no fear of poverty because there is none anywhere - you cannot enjoy unless all enjoy - why? because people are vengeful: trust them to attack you if you are a thief, if it is obvious that you are paid very much more per unit of work - POOR bush, POOR ceausescu - dont give me a billion, for a billion unearned is a billion earned by others; is a billion of social tension, stress, danger, damage, waste, pollution of MY world by enemies - the utterly selfish person will take great care to make no enemies - because heshe doesnt want hisher world polluted by danger - be utterly selfish!!! and save the world, save your world - reason, think, perceive, ruminate, absorb, consider, weigh, see...<br><br>whisper to your heart: come, we must away, to a new...</span><!--EZCODE FONT END--> <p></p><i></i>
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Re: keeping your head while all around you are...

Postby Dreams End » Sat Sep 03, 2005 12:30 am

<!--EZCODE QUOTE START--><blockquote><strong><em>Quote:</em></strong><hr>Nagin said Bush was "very serious" and "very engaging" during his time in New Orleans.<br><br>"He was brutally honest. He wanted to know the truth," Nagin said. "... And we talked turkey. I think we're in a good spot now."<hr></blockquote><!--EZCODE QUOTE END--><br><br><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/09/02/katrina.impact/index.html">www.cnn.com/2005/US/09/02...index.html</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--><br><br>Oh, thanks Nagin. Here I was thinking Bush had fucked up. <p></p><i></i>
Dreams End
 

another eyewitness report.

Postby Dreams End » Sat Sep 03, 2005 1:18 am

<!--EZCODE QUOTE START--><blockquote><strong><em>Quote:</em></strong><hr>Don't You Know Me, I'm Your Native Son...<br>Notes from Inside New Orleans<br><br>By JORDAN FLAHERTY<br><br>I just left New Orleans a couple hours ago. I traveled from the apartment I was staying in by boat to a helicopter to a refugee camp. If anyone wants to examine the attitude of federal and state officials towards the victims of hurricane Katrina, I advise you to visit one of the refugee camps.<br><br>In the refugee camp I just left, on the I-10 freeway near Causeway, thousands of people (at least 90% black and poor) stood and squatted in mud and trash behind metal barricades, under an unforgiving sun, with heavily armed soldiers standing guard over them. When a bus would come through, it would stop at a random spot, state police would open a gap in one of the barricades, and people would rush for the bus, with no information given about where the bus was going. Once inside (we were told) evacuees would be told where the bus was taking them - Baton Rouge, Houston, Arkansas, Dallas, or other locations. I was told that if you boarded a bus bound for Arkansas (for example), even people with family and a place to stay in Baton Rouge would not be allowed to get out of the bus as it passed through Baton Rouge. You had no choice but to go to the shelter in Arkansas. If you had people willing to come to New Orleans to pick you up, they could not come within 17 miles of the camp.<br><br>I traveled throughout the camp and spoke to Red Cross workers, Salvation Army workers, National Guard, and state police, and although they were friendly, no one could give me any details on when buses would arrive, how many, where they would go to, or any other information. I spoke to the several teams of journalists nearby, and asked if any of them had been able to get any information from any federal or state officials on any of these questions, and all of them, from Australian tv to local Fox affiliates complained of an unorganized, non-communicative, mess. One cameraman told me "as someone who's been here in this camp for two days, the only information I can give you is this: get out by nightfall. You don't want to be here at night."<br><br>There was also no visible attempt by any of those running the camp to set up any sort of transparent and consistent system, for instance a line to get on buses, a way to register contact information or find family members, special needs services for children and infirm, phone services, treatment for possible disease exposure, nor even a single trash can.<br><br>To understand the dimensions of this tragedy, its important to look at New Orleans itself.<br><br>For those who have not lived in New Orleans, you have missed a incredible, glorious, vital, city. A place with a culture and energy unlike anywhere else in the world. A 70% African-American city where resistance to white supremacy has supported a generous, subversive and unique culture of vivid beauty. From jazz, blues and hiphop, to secondlines, Mardi Gras Indians, Parades, Beads, Jazz Funerals, and red beans and rice on Monday nights, New Orleans is a place of art and music and dance and sexuality and liberation unlike anywhere else in the world.<br><br>It is a city of kindness and hospitality, where walking down the block can take two hours because you stop and talk to someone on every porch, and where a community pulls together when someone is in need. It is a city of extended families and social networks filling the gaps left by city, state and federal governments that have abdicated their responsibility for the public welfare. It is a city where someone you walk past on the street not only asks how you are, they wait for an answer.<br><br>It is also a city of exploitation and segregation and fear. The city of New Orleans has a population of just over 500,000 and was expecting 300 murders this year, most of them centered on just a few, overwhelmingly black, neighborhoods. Police have been quoted as saying that they don't need to search out the perpetrators, because usually a few days after a shooting, the attacker is shot in revenge.<br><br>There is an atmosphere of intense hostility and distrust between much of Black New Orleans and the N.O. Police Department. In recent months, officers have been accused of everything from drug running to corruption to theft. In separate incidents, two New Orleans police officers were recently charged with rape (while in uniform), and there have been several high profile police killings of unarmed youth, including the murder of Jenard Thomas, which has inspired ongoing weekly protests for several months.<br><br>The city has a 40% illiteracy rate, and over 50% of black ninth graders will not graduate in four years. Louisiana spends on average $4,724 per child's education and ranks 48th in the country for lowest teacher salaries. The equivalent of more than two classrooms of young people drop out of Louisiana schools every day and about 50,000 students are absent from school on any given day. Far too many young black men from New Orleans end up enslaved in Angola Prison, a former slave plantation where inmates still do manual farm labor, and over 90% of inmates eventually die in the prison. It is a city where industry has left, and most remaining jobs are are low-paying, transient, insecure jobs in the service economy.<br><br>Race has always been the undercurrent of Louisiana politics. This disaster is one that was constructed out of racism, neglect and incompetence. Hurricane Katrina was the inevitable spark igniting the gasoline of cruelty and corruption. From the neighborhoods left most at risk, to the treatment of the refugees to the the media portrayal of the victims, this disaster is shaped by race.<br><br>Louisiana politics is famously corrupt, but with the tragedies of this week our political leaders have defined a new level of incompetence. As hurricane Katrina approached, our Governor urged us to "Pray the hurricane down" to a level two. Trapped in a building two days after the hurricane, we tuned our battery-operated radio into local radio and tv stations, hoping for vital news, and were told that our governor had called for a day of prayer. As rumors and panic began to rule, they was no source of solid dependable information. Tuesday night, politicians and reporters said the water level would rise another 12 feet - instead it stabilized. Rumors spread like wildfire, and the politicians and media only made it worse.<br><br>While the rich escaped New Orleans, those with nowhere to go and no way to get there were left behind. Adding salt to the wound, the local and national media have spent the last week demonizing those left behind. As someone that loves New Orleans and the people in it, this is the part of this tragedy that hurts me the most, and it hurts me deeply.<br><br>No sane person should classify someone who takes food from indefinitely closed stores in a desperate, starving city as a "looter," but that's just what the media did over and over again. Sheriffs and politicians talked of having troops protect stores instead of perform rescue operations.<br><br>Images of New Orleans' hurricane-ravaged population were transformed into black, out-of-control, criminals. As if taking a stereo from a store that will clearly be insured against loss is a greater crime than the governmental neglect and incompetence that did billions of dollars of damage and destroyed a city. This media focus is a tactic, just as the eighties focus on "welfare queens" and "super-predators" obscured the simultaneous and much larger crimes of the Savings and Loan scams and mass layoffs, the hyper-exploited people of New Orleans are being used as a scapegoat to cover up much larger crimes.<br><br>City, state and national politicians are the real criminals here. Since at least the mid-1800s, its been widely known the danger faced by flooding to New Orleans. The flood of 1927, which, like this week's events, was more about politics and racism than any kind of natural disaster, illustrated exactly the danger faced. Yet government officials have consistently refused to spend the money to protect this poor, overwhelmingly black, city. While FEMA and others warned of the urgent impending danger to New Orleans and put forward proposals for funding to reinforce and protect the city, the Bush administration, in every year since 2001, has cut or refused to fund New Orleans flood control, and ignored scientists warnings of increased hurricanes as a result of global warming. And, as the dangers rose with the floodlines, the lack of coordinated response dramatized vividly the callous disregard of our elected leaders.<br><br>The aftermath from the 1927 flood helped shape the elections of both a US President and a Governor, and ushered in the southern populist politics of Huey Long.<br><br>In the coming months, billions of dollars will likely flood into New Orleans. This money can either be spent to usher in a "New Deal" for the city, with public investment, creation of stable union jobs, new schools, cultural programs and housing restoration, or the city can be "rebuilt and revitalized" to a shell of its former self, with newer hotels, more casinos, and with chain stores and theme parks replacing the former neighborhoods, cultural centers and corner jazz clubs.<br><br>Long before Katrina, New Orleans was hit by a hurricane of poverty, racism, disinvestment, deindustrialization and corruption. Simply the damage from this pre-Katrina hurricane will take billions to repair.<br><br>Now that the money is flowing in, and the world's eyes are focused on Katrina, its vital that progressive-minded people take this opportunity to fight for a rebuilding with justice. New Orleans is a special place, and we need to fight for its rebirth.<br><br>Jordan Flaherty is a union organizer and an editor of Left Turn Magazine (www.leftturn.org). He is not planning on moving out of New Orleans. He can be reached at: anticapitalist@hotmail.com<br><br>Below are some small, grassroots and New Orleans-based resources, organizations and institutions that will need your support in the coming months.<br><br>Social Justice:<br>www.jjpl.org<br>www.iftheycanlearn.org<br>www.nolaps.org<br>www.thepeoplesinstitute.org/<br>www.criticalresistance.org/index.php?name=crno_home<br><br>Cultural Resources:<br>www.backstreetculturalmuseum.com<br>www.ashecac.org/<br><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://198.66.50.128/gallery/">198.66.50.128/gallery/</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--><br>www.nolahumanrights.org<br><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://www.freewebs.com/ironrail/">www.freewebs.com/ironrail/</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--><br><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://www.girlgangproductions.com/">www.girlgangproductions.com/</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--><br><br>Current Info and Resources:<br><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://neworleans.craigslist.org/about/help/katrina_cl.html">neworleans.craigslist.org...na_cl.html</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--><br><br><hr></blockquote><!--EZCODE QUOTE END--><br><br><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://www.counterpunch.org/">www.counterpunch.org/</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--> <p></p><i></i>
Dreams End
 

Oh, they never ASKED!

Postby Dreams End » Sat Sep 03, 2005 2:23 am

While FEMA was busy in other parts of New Orleans barring rescue workers from entering the city, they didn't get around to Jefferson Parrish because, well, gosh darn it...no one asked them to. Heck and golly jeepers...maybe that was because the phones were out.<br><br>Second place in the "we're not humanitarians, we just play them on TV" award goes to the Red Cross. Read the story below for more.<br><br>        <br><br><!--EZCODE QUOTE START--><blockquote><strong><em>Quote:</em></strong><hr>JP's Maestri said FEMA didn't keep its word<br>Mark Schleifstein<br>Staff writer<br><br>Jefferson Parish Emergency Preparedness Director Walter Maestri said Friday night that the Federal Emergency Management Agency reneged on a promise to begin relieving county emergency preparedness staffers 48 hours after Hurricane Katrina hit the New Orleans metropolitan area.<br><br>Maestri’s staff has been working almost around the clock since Katrina approached the Louisiana coastline on Sunday. Today, the staff is<br>expected to finally switch to a 12 hours on/12 hours off schedule, he said,<br>adding that they’re both tired and demoralized by the lack of assistance from federal officials.<br><br>“We had been told we would be on our own for 48 hours,” Maestri said.<br>“Prepare to survive and in 48 hours the cavalry would arrive.<br><br>“Well, where are they?” he said.<br>Maestri said the agreement was signed by officials with the Southeastern Louisiana Emergency Preparedness Officials Association, the state and<br>the Federal Emergency Management Agency as part of this year’s Hurricane Pam tabletop exercise. That exercise began the process of writing a series of manuals explaining how to respond to a catastrophic disaster. Financed by FEMA, it included a variety of federal, state and local officials.<br><br><br>A FEMA spokesman late Friday said they couldn’t confirm or deny that<br>the agency signed the agreement Maestri referred to.<br><br>FEMA Director Michael Brown also raised Maestri’s ire when he said in a television interview Friday that he waited so long to respond because he didn’t want to interfere with local aid attempts, and that local officials hadn’t asked FEMA to come in.<br><br>“My response is very simple,” Maestri said in an interview on a cell phone after repeated attempts to reach his office. “We didn’t have any communications. We still don’t have outside communications.”<br><br>He said FEMA officials have now informed him the first members of a liaison team might arrive at the Emergency Operations Center this morning or Sunday.<br><br>Staffers also are upset by Thursday comments by House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill. that suggested he felt the city shouldn’t be rebuilt. Asked in the interview whether it made sense to spend billions rebuilding a city that lies below sea level, he replied, ``I don't know. That doesn't make sense to me.''<br><br>He said several of Hastert’s comments are posted on the center’s wall, “like the comments of opposing coaches are pinned on the wall of the Saints locker room.”<br><br>Hastert's office later issued a statement insisting he was not calling for the city to be abandoned or relocated.<br><br>Maestri admitted he and his staff were tired and frustrated, and that that helped fuel his criticism. Also on his list for criticism was new Louisiana Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness Assistant Director Jeff Smith, who he talked to for the first time only on Thursday.<br><br>Maestri said the communications problem has occurred despite the funneling of millions of dollars of Homeland Security grant money into parishes and state coffers, much to upgrade communications equipment. Jefferson Parish used that money successfully for an internal radio system that worked well during the storm, he said. But the state assigned those dollars to the Louisiana State Police, which he said hadn’t completed connecting it to the parish communications system.<br><br>Maestri also was upset with American Red Cross officials for delaying the staffing of shelters in the parish. He said a Red Cross official said he should send a staffer to Mount Olive, La., with a request for personnel. When the staffer arrived, he was handed a note saying help would not be coming until it was safe for Red Cross workers.<br><br>“They can go to Iraq and Afghanistan and tell us it’s too dangerous to<br>New Orleans,” he said. “I’ve got that note and will frame it with a copy of my resignation letter for the board of directors” of the southeastern Louisiana Red Cross.<br><br>Maestri said some of his frustration is fueled by conversations with several parish business owners who donated goods to the parish for use in the recovery.<br><br>“They’re saying, ‘Come. Please get it because we’re relocating. We can no longer work here,’” Maestri said. Mark Schleifstein can be reached at mersmia@cox.net .<hr></blockquote><!--EZCODE QUOTE END--><br><br><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://www.nola.com/newslogs/breakingtp/index.ssf?/mtlogs/nola_Times-Picayune/archives/2005_09.html#076289">www.nola.com/newslogs/bre...tml#076289</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--> <p></p><i></i>
Dreams End
 

This is the big WHY

Postby Fearless » Sat Sep 03, 2005 2:44 am

I have been asking myself for 4 long days and nights why they will not allow help in or victims out. This just might be the answer.<br><br>Garry Labs at Tulane. They study Ebola, Marburg, TB, HIV, SARS, etc. Does anyone know how badly Tulane was hit?<br><br><!--EZCODE LINK START--><a href="http://www.virology.net/Big_Virology/BVHomePage.html">www.virology.net/Big_Virology/BVHomePage.html</a><!--EZCODE LINK END--> <p></p><i></i>
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dude

Postby RollickHooper » Sat Sep 03, 2005 3:15 am

see <!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://emergency.tulane.edu/">emergency.tulane.edu/</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--> <p></p><i>Edited by: <A HREF=http://p216.ezboard.com/brigorousintuition.showUserPublicProfile?gid=rollickhooper>RollickHooper</A> at: 9/3/05 1:15 am<br></i>
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Dreams End

Postby jenz » Sat Sep 03, 2005 4:55 am

please send your eye witness report to bbc world tonight.<br><br>I wanted to write something to show solidarity from europe with the Americans posting here. when there were no pictures of orderly evacuation, no police and fire service personnel helping the infirm and tiny and elderly onto buses, when the body count was supposed to be a hundred but the pictures showed vast areas of flooded residential areas with water up to the roof, when "looters" were depicted at gunpoint with armfuls of cheap clothes - enough to put dry things on a couple of people, when no-one was sending in water and food, when we got the same pictures 2 days running because they'd stopped letting the cameras in, when listeners to the beeb were complaining that there was no fund open for contributions like in the tsunami, but all was said in what wasn't said.<br><br>In the European country I live in, non assistance to a person in danger is a criminal offence. it should be the world over. God help you all.<br> <p></p><i></i>
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Re: Dreams End

Postby Qutb » Sat Sep 03, 2005 7:04 am

<!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://www.macon.com/mld/macon/news/politics/12549282.htm">www.macon.com/mld/macon/n...549282.htm</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--><br><br>Slow response bewilders former FEMA officials<br><br>WASHINGTON - (KRT) - Government disaster officials had an action plan if a major hurricane hit New Orleans. They simply didn't execute it when Hurricane Katrina struck.<br><br>Thirteen months before Katrina hit New Orleans, local, state and federal officials held a simulated hurricane drill that Ronald Castleman, then the regional director for the Federal Emergency Management Agency, called "a very good exercise."<br><br>More than a million residents were "evacuated" in the tabletop scenario as 120-mile-an-hour winds and 20 inches of rain caused widespread flooding that supposedly trapped 300,000 people in the city.<br><br>"It was very much an eye-opener," said Castleman, a Republican appointee of President Bush who left FEMA in December for the private sector. "A number of things were identified that we had to deal with, not all of them were solved."<br>"It's hard for everyone to understand why buttons weren't pushed earlier on," Castleman said of the federal response.<br><br><br> <p><!--EZCODE FONT START--><span style="color:black;font-family:century gothic;font-size:x-small;"><!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>Qutb means "axis," "pole," "the center," which contains the periphery or is present in it. The qutb is a spiritual being, or function, which can reside in a human being or several human beings or a moment. It is the elusive mystery of how the divine gets delegated into the manifest world and obviously cannot be defined.</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END--></span><!--EZCODE FONT END--><br><br></p><i></i>
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Europe reacts to US hurricane disaster

Postby DrDebugDU » Sat Sep 03, 2005 9:10 am

Shock, disbelief and anger<br><br>Europe reacts to US hurricane disaster<br><br>By Stefan Steinberg<br>3 September 2005<br><br>Extensive TV reports and news photos over the last three days have brought home to the European public the appalling extent of the flood catastrophe in the southern states of the US.<br><br>The scenes of destruction, desperation and poverty, as well as overwhelming evidence of official negligence, inevitably recalled the scenes of the tsunami disaster that devastated large parts of southern Asia last December, as well as a number of floods that have recently hit impoverished countries such as Bangladesh and India.<br><br>The television footage and commentary have shown ramshackle housing swept away by the hurricane surge and the plight of dishevelled, starving and bewildered Americans demanding that they receive some sort of assistance. Alongside images of devastation and misery usually associated with third-world countries, European media reports have drawn attention to the complete lack of organised aid for the victims.<br><br>Instead of temporary food and shelter, along with medical care, viewers have seen the martial intervention of American state forces and the National Guard, whose <!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>first concern is the preservation of property and the suppression of unrest</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END-->. Britain’s state-run BBC included an on-the- spot report Friday by a journalist who compared downtown New Orleans, patrolled by US armoured vehicles and National Guard troops, to war-torn Baghdad.<br><br>Interviews with starving survivors outside the New Orleans Superdome revealed that after arriving, they were forced to wait outside the locked gates. The <!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>only aid they received was military rations and water bottles dropped by helicopters, after which the copters rapidly quit the scene</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END-->. The anger of victims confronted with the complacency and hostility of local and federal authorities was writ large on their faces and made clear in their comments to reporters.<br><br>Press reactions in Europe to the disaster have ranged from complacent commentaries declaring that the disaster was unique and nothing could have been done to mitigate it (<!--EZCODE FONT START--><span style="color:red;">the Murdoch group</span><!--EZCODE FONT END-->; e.g., the Times of London) to highly critical columns in other newspapers. A number of European newspapers drew a direct connection between the tragedy and the overall state of American society.<br><br>Germany’s Die Welt was one of a number of papers that compared the events in Louisiana with social relations in third-world countries. It wrote, “<!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>America looks alarmingly like a third-world country within its own borders, divided and violent...20,000 people are vegetating in what looks like a camp for war refugees</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END-->.”<br><br>The Austrian Der Standard led with the headline, “Third-World USA,” and stated that hurricane Katrina had revealed the enormous gulf between the appearance of technological superiority and the third-world conditions that exist in the US heartland. It went on to comment on the “<!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>ideological climate of the Bush government, which looks upon the poor black population with a mixture of distress and disinterest</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END-->.”<br><br>Belgium’s Le Soir condemned the “richest country on the planet for deserting the deprived, the poor, the sick and the aged in the face of a cataclysm that had been predicted and could have been prevented.”<br><br>The Netherlands is a small country with its own experience in the construction of dams to ward off coastal waters, and the Dutch Het Laaste Nieuws argued against those who claimed that nothing could be done about the catastrophe:<br><br>“The American government seems to be light years away from being prepared for a catastrophe of such proportions. The pictures show just chaos. People plundering, police threatening to shoot them, <!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>not the slightest trace of any organised assistance</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END-->, a city of millions that is sinking further and further under water because no one is capable of filling the holes in the dams. The Netherlands, a country that largely lies below sea level, has not experienced a drop of water for the past 50 years. The flood in New Orleans is the reverse side of an American society which is <!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>aimed at earning as much money as possible in the quickest time</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END--> with a slimmed-down administration that costs as little as possible.”<br><br>The Spanish daily paper La Vanguardia drew attention to the lack of any sort of organised assistance for the victims of the hurricane and the “hands-off” approach of the American authorities: “Not even the richest world power was able to prevent the costly trail of death and destruction of the hurricane.... But as well as the many dead, the enormous damage, and the costs of rebuilding, the tragedy also raises a moral question: To what extent can a government force its own citizens to save their own lives?”<br><br>Remarking on the underlying social conditions exposed by the hurricane tragedy, other newspapers have predicted that the current crisis will have inevitable political repercussions and threaten the president himself. In a comment in the Süddeutsche Zeitung entitled “Bush in a Storm,” Stefan Cornelius began by drawing parallels between US president Bush’s initial paralysis on hearing of the September 11 terror attacks and his reluctance to leave his holiday ranch to address the hurricane crisis.<br><br>He then remarked: “The natural catastrophe in the US is also turning into a threat to the president. Alongside the dams of New Orleans, the carefully maintained barriers between social layers have also been breached. Because the south of the country was always the land of the poor and neglected, hopelessness and desperation have erupted into violence and anarchy. The scenes around the Superdome, the shots fired on helpers, the plundering and the call for a sort of martial law—all this serves to shock and reveal the sort of divisions with which the highly developed US has to contend.... The more the anarchy in the south spreads, the more likely political Washington will seek a victim for this demonstration of state weakness.”<br><br>This theme was also taken up by the British Independent newspaper, which entitled its September 2 editorial “A Disaster that Will Test Mr. Bush and All US Society” and speculated that the Republican Party as a whole could suffer from public anger over the social disintegration currently taking place in America’s south.<br><br>The editorial declared: “The aftermath of Hurricane Katrina also poses searching questions about the nature of US society and about the priorities the current administration has set. What happens to the many uninsured in a country where people rely on private insurance for medical treatment? And what happens to the bereaved families of breadwinners who have no life insurance, or to those with homes or businesses that were not insured.... Mr. Bush, for whom this 9/11 of a natural disaster has come just in time to distract attention from the growing mayhem in Iraq, does not have to face the electorate. The Republican party, to the extent that it espouses Bush, risks reaping the political whirlwind in his place.”<br><br>With many newspapers reflecting widespread shock and anger at the events in the US, official political circles in Europe have moved quickly to exploit widespread sympathy with the victims of the hurricane by <!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>expressing their solidarity with the Bush government</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END-->. In Germany, Chancellor Gerhard Schröder (Social Democratic Party) broke off federal election engagements to officially coordinate German proposals for assistance.<br><br>In recent months, Schröder has had a series of differences with Washington—most recently over German demands for a full seat on the UN Security Council—but in his comments on the hurricane catastrophe, he has refrained from any sort of criticism of the actions (or lack of action) by the US government. Instead, he announced that Germany would help in any way possible. For his part, Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer (Green Party) contacted his US counterpart Condoleezza Rice to offer his condolences and once again make clear Germany’s readiness to help. In Great Britain, the Labour government of Prime Minister Tony Blair has been so far reluctant to comment directly on the disaster.<br><br>There is palpable unease in political circles in Europe that the political and economic repercussions of the crisis in the US south could not only have an impact on the Bush government, but could endanger the stability of capitalism as a whole. For many years now, social democratic politicians such as Schröder and Blair have been preaching the advantages arising from the introduction of American-style social conditions in Europe. In the space of days, Hurricane Katrina has exposed the venal and predatory nature of US capitalist society, and what political leaders have in store for working people in Europe.<br><br><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://www.wsws.org/articles/2005/sep2005/euro-s03.shtml">www.wsws.org/articles/200...-s03.shtml</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--> <p></p><i></i>
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Re: Europe reacts to US hurricane disaster

Postby DrDebugDU » Sat Sep 03, 2005 9:23 am

Fictional story as reported in the National Geographic of 2004<br><br><!--EZCODE IMAGE START--><img src="http://www3.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0410/feature5/images/ft_hdr.5.jpg"/><!--EZCODE IMAGE END--><br>By Joel K. Bourne, Jr.<br>Photographs by Robert Caputo and Tyrone Turner<br><br>The Louisiana bayou, hardest working marsh in America, is in big trouble—with dire consequences for residents, the nearby city of New Orleans, and seafood lovers everywhere.<br><br>It was a broiling August afternoon in New Orleans, Louisiana, the Big Easy, the City That Care Forgot. Those who ventured outside moved as if they were swimming in tupelo honey. Those inside paid silent homage to the man who invented air-conditioning as they watched TV "storm teams" warn of a hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico. Nothing surprising there: Hurricanes in August are as much a part of life in this town as hangovers on Ash Wednesday.<br> <br>But the next day the storm gathered steam and drew a bead on the city. As the whirling maelstrom approached the coast, more than a million people evacuated to higher ground. Some 200,000 remained, however—the car-less, the homeless, the aged and infirm, and those die-hard New Orleanians who look for any excuse to throw a party.<br> <br>The storm hit Breton Sound with the fury of a nuclear warhead, pushing a deadly storm surge into Lake Pontchartrain. The water crept to the top of the massive berm that holds back the lake and then spilled over. Nearly 80 percent of New Orleans lies below sea level—more than eight feet below in places—so the water poured in. A liquid brown wall washed over the brick ranch homes of Gentilly, over the clapboard houses of the Ninth Ward, over the white- columned porches of the Garden District, until it raced through the bars and strip joints on Bourbon Street like the pale rider of the Apocalypse. As it reached 25 feet (eight meters) over parts of the city, people climbed onto roofs to escape it.<br> <br>Thousands drowned in the murky brew that was soon contaminated by sewage and industrial waste. Thousands more who survived the flood later perished from dehydration and disease as they waited to be rescued. It took two months to pump the city dry, and by then the Big Easy was buried under a blanket of putrid sediment, a million people were homeless, and 50,000 were dead. It was the worst natural disaster in the history of the United States.<br> <br>When did this calamity happen? It hasn't—yet. But the doomsday scenario is not far-fetched. The Federal Emergency Management Agency lists a hurricane strike on New Orleans as one of the most dire threats to the nation, up there with a large earthquake in California or a terrorist attack on New York City. Even the Red Cross no longer opens hurricane shelters in the city, claiming the risk to its workers is too great.<br> <br>"The killer for Louisiana is a Category Three storm at 72 hours before landfall that becomes a Category Four at 48 hours and a Category Five at 24 hours— coming from the worst direction," says Joe Suhayda, a retired coastal engineer at Louisiana State University who has spent 30 years studying the coast. Suhayda is sitting in a lakefront restaurant on an actual August afternoon sipping lemonade and talking about the chinks in the city's hurricane armor. "I don't think people realize how precarious we are,"<br>Suhayda says, watching sailboats glide by. "Our technology is great when it works. But when it fails, it's going to make things much worse."<br> <br>The chances of such a storm hitting New Orleans in any given year are slight, but the danger is growing. Climatologists predict that powerful storms may occur more frequently this century, while rising sea level from global warming is putting low-lying coasts at greater risk. "It's not if it will happen," says University of New Orleans geologist Shea Penland. "It's when."<br> <br>Yet just as the risks of a killer storm are rising, the city's natural defenses are quietly melting away. From the Mississippi border to the Texas state line, Louisiana is losing its protective fringe of marshes and barrier islands faster than any place in the U.S. Since the 1930s some 1,900 square miles (4,900 square kilometers) of coastal wetlands—a swath nearly the size of Delaware or almost twice that of Luxembourg—have vanished beneath the Gulf of Mexico. Despite nearly half a billion dollars spent over the past decade to stem the tide, the state continues to lose about 25 square miles (65 square kilometers) of land each year, roughly one acre every 33 minutes.<br> <br>A cocktail of natural and human factors is putting the coast under. Delta soils naturally compact and sink over time, eventually giving way to open water unless fresh layers of sediment offset the subsidence. The Mississippi's spring floods once maintained that balance, but the annual deluges were often disastrous. After a devastating flood in 1927, levees were raised along the river and lined with concrete, effectively funneling the marsh-building sediments to the deep waters of the Gulf. Since the 1950s engineers have also cut more than 8,000 miles (13,000 kilometers) of canals through the marsh for petroleum exploration and ship traffic. These new ditches sliced the wetlands into a giant jigsaw puzzle, increasing erosion and allowing lethal doses of salt water to infiltrate brackish and freshwater marshes.<br> <br>While such loss hits every bayou-loving Louisianan right in the heart, it also hits nearly every U.S. citizen right in the wallet. Louisiana has the hardest working wetlands in America, a watery world of bayous, marshes, and barrier islands that either produces or transports more than a third of the nation's oil and a quarter of its natural gas, and ranks second only to Alaska in commercial fish landings. As wildlife habitat, it makes Florida's Everglades look like a petting zoo by comparison.<br> <br>Such high stakes compelled a host of unlikely bedfellows—scientists, environmental groups, business leaders, and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers —to forge a radical plan to protect what's left. Drafted by the Corps a year ago, the Louisiana Coastal Area (LCA) project was initially estimated to cost up to 14 billion dollars over 30 years, almost twice as much as current efforts to save the Everglades. But the Bush Administration balked at the price tag, supporting instead a plan to spend up to two billion dollars over the next ten years to fund the most promising projects. Either way, Congress must authorize the money before work can begin.<br> <br>To glimpse the urgency of the problem afflicting Louisiana, one need only drive 40 minutes southeast of New Orleans to the tiny bayou village of Shell Beach. Here, for the past 70 years or so, a big, deeply tanned man with hands the size of baseball gloves has been catching fish, shooting ducks, and selling gas and bait to anyone who can find his end-of-the-road marina. Today Frank "Blackie" Campo's ramshackle place hangs off the end of new Shell Beach. The old Shell Beach, where Campo was born in 1918, sits a quarter mile away, five feet beneath the rippling waves. Once home to some 50 families and a naval air station during World War II, the little village is now "ga'an pecan," as Campo says in the local patois. Gone forever.<br> <br>Life in old Shell Beach had always been a tenuous existence. Hurricanes twice razed the community, sending houses floating through the marsh. But it wasn't until the Corps of Engineers dredged a 500-foot-wide (150-meter-wide) ship channel nearby in 1968 that its fate was sealed. The Mississippi River-Gulf Outlet, known as "Mr. Go," was supposed to provide a shortcut for freighters bound for New Orleans, but it never caught on. Maybe two ships use the channel on a given day, but wakes from even those few vessels have carved the shoreline a half mile wide in places, consuming old Shell Beach.<br> <br>Campo settles into a worn recliner, his pale blue eyes the color of a late autumn sky. Our conversation turns from Mr. Go to the bigger issue affecting the entire coast. "What really screwed up the marsh is when they put the levees on the river," Campo says, over the noise of a groaning air-conditioner. "They should take the levees out and let the water run; that's what built the land. But we know they not going to let the river run again, so there's no solution."<br> <br>Denise Reed, however, proposes doing just that—letting the river run. A coastal geomorphologist at the University of New Orleans, Reed is convinced that breaching the levees with a series of gated spillways would pump new life into the dying marshes. Only three such diversions currently operate in the state. I catch up with Reed at the most controversial of the lot—a 26-million- dollar culvert just south of New Orleans named Caernarvon.<br> <br>"Caernarvon is a prototype, a demonstration of a technique," says Reed as we motor down a muddy canal in a state boat. The diversion isn't filling the marsh with sediments on a grand scale, she says. But the effect of the added river water—loaded as it is with fertilizer from farm runoff—is plain to see. "It turns wetlands hanging on by the fingernails into something quite lush," says Reed.<br> <br>To prove her point, she points to banks crowded with slender willows, rafts of lily pads, and a wide shallow pond that is no longer land, no longer liquid. More like chocolate pudding. But impressive as the recovering marsh is, its scale seems dwarfed by the size of the problem. "Restoration is not trying to make the coast look like a map of 1956," explains Reed. "That's not even possible. The goal is to restore healthy natural processes, then live with what you get."<br> <br>Even that will be hard to do. Caernarvon, for instance, became a political land mine when releases of fresh water timed to mimic spring floods wiped out the beds of nearby oyster farmers. The oystermen sued, and last year a sympathetic judge awarded them a staggering 1.3 billion dollars. The case threw a major speed bump into restoration efforts.<br> <br>Other restoration methods—such as rebuilding marshes with dredge spoil and salt-tolerant plants or trying to stabilize a shoreline that's eroding 30 feet (10 meters) a year—have had limited success. Despite the challenges, the thought of doing nothing is hard for most southern Louisianans to swallow. Computer models that project land loss for the next 50 years show the coast and interior marsh dissolving as if splattered with acid, leaving only skeletal remnants. Outlying towns such as Shell Beach, Venice, Grand Isle, and Cocodrie vanish under a sea of blue pixels.<br> <br>Those who believe diversions are the key to saving Louisiana's coast often point to the granddaddy of them all: the Atchafalaya River. The major distributary of the Mississippi River, the Atchafalaya, if left alone, would soon be the Mississippi River, capturing most of its flow. But to prevent salt water from creeping farther up the Mississippi and spoiling the water supply of nearby towns and industries, the Corps of Engineers allows only a third of the Mississippi's water to flow down the Atchafalaya. Still, that water and sediment have produced the healthiest wetlands in Louisiana. The Atchafalaya Delta is one of the few places in the state that's actually gaining ground instead of losing it. And if you want to see the delta, you need to go crabbing with Peanut Michel.<br> <br>"Peanut," it turns out, is a bit of a misnomer. At six foot six and 340 pounds, the 35-year-old commercial fisherman from Morgan City wouldn't look out of place on the offensive line of the New Orleans Saints. We launch his aluminum skiff in the predawn light, and soon we're skimming down the broad, café au lait river toward the newest land in Louisiana. Dense thickets of needlegrass, flag grass, cut grass, and a big-leafed plant Michel calls elephant ear crowd the banks, followed closely by bushy wax myrtles and shaggy willows.<br> <br>Michel finds his string of crab pots a few miles out in the broad expanse of Atchafalaya Bay. Even this far from shore the water is barely five feet deep. As the sun ignites into a blowtorch on the horizon, Michel begins a well-oiled ritual: grab the bullet-shaped float, shake the wire cube of its clicking, mottled green inhabitants, bait it with a fish carcass, and toss. It's done in fluid motions as the boat circles lazily in the water.<br> <br>But it's a bad day for crabbing. The wind and water are hot, and only a few crabs dribble in. And yet Michel is happy. Deliriously happy. Because this is what he wants to do. "They call 'em watermen up in Maryland," he says with a slight Cajun accent. "They call us lunatics here. You got to be crazy to be in this business."<br> <br>Despite Michel's poor haul, Louisiana's wetlands are still a prolific seafood factory, sustaining a commercial fishery that most years lands more than 300 million dollars' worth of finfish, shrimp, oysters, crabs, and other delicacies. How long the stressed marshes can maintain that production is anybody's guess. In the meantime, Michel keeps at it. "My grandfather always told me, Don't live to be rich, live to be happy," he says. And so he does.<br> <br>After a few hours Michel calls it a day, and we head through the braided delta, where navigation markers that once stood at the edge of the boat channel now peek out of the brush 20 feet (six meters) from shore. At every turn we flush mottled ducks, ibis, and great blue herons. Michel, who works as a hunting guide during duck season, cracks an enormous grin at the sight. "When the ducks come down in the winter," he says, "they'll cover the sun."<br> <br>To folks like Peanut Michel, the birds, the fish, and the rich coastal culture are reason enough to save Louisiana's shore, whatever the cost. But there is another reason, one readily grasped by every American whose way of life is tethered not to a dock, but to a gas pump: These wetlands protect one of the most extensive petroleum infrastructures in the nation.<br> <br>The state's first oil well was punched in south Louisiana in 1901, and the world's first offshore rig went into operation in the Gulf of Mexico in 1947. During the boom years in the early 1970s, fully half of the state's budget was derived from petroleum revenues. Though much of the production has moved into deeper waters, oil and gas wells remain a fixture of the coast, as ubiquitous as shrimp boats and brown pelicans.<br> <br>The deep offshore wells now account for nearly a third of all domestic oil production, while Louisiana's Offshore Oil Port, a series of platforms anchored 18 miles (29 kilometers) offshore, unloads a nonstop line of supertankers that deliver up to 15 percent of the nation's foreign oil. Most of that black gold comes ashore via a maze of pipelines buried in the Louisiana muck. Numerous refineries, the nation's largest natural gas pipeline hub, even the Strategic Petroleum Reserve are all protected from hurricanes and storm surge by Louisiana's vanishing marsh.<br> <br>You can smell the petrodollars burning at Port Fourchon, the offshore oil industry's sprawling home port on the central Louisiana coast. Brawny helicopters shuttle 6,000 workers to the rigs from here each week, while hundreds of supply boats deliver everything from toilet paper to drinking water to drilling lube. A thousand trucks a day keep the port humming around the clock, yet Louisiana 1, the two-lane highway that connects it to the world, seems to flood every other high tide. During storms the port becomes an island, which is why port officials like Davie Breaux are clamoring for the state to build a 17-mile-long (27-kilometer-long) elevated highway to the port. It's also why Breaux thinks spending 14 billion dollars to save the coast would be a bargain.<br> <br>"We'll go to war and spend billions of dollars to protect oil and gas interests overseas,"<br>Breaux says as he drives his truck past platform anchors the size of two-story houses. "But here at home?" He shrugs. "Where else you gonna drill? Not California. Not Florida. Not in ANWR. In Louisiana. I'm third generation in the oil field. We're not afraid of the industry. We just want the infrastructure to handle it."<br> <br>The oil industry has been good to Louisiana, providing low taxes and high- paying jobs. But such largesse hasn't come without a cost, largely exacted from coastal wetlands. The most startling impact has only recently come to light— the effect of oil and gas withdrawal on subsidence rates. For decades geologists believed that the petroleum deposits were too deep and the geology of the coast too complex for drilling to have any impact on the surface. But two years ago former petroleum geologist Bob<br>Morton, now with the U.S. Geological Survey, noticed that the highest rates of wetland loss occurred during or just after the period of peak oil and gas production in the 1970s and early 1980s. After much study, Morton concluded that the removal of millions of barrels of oil, trillions of cubic feet of natural gas, and tens of millions of barrels of saline formation water lying with the petroleum deposits caused a drop in subsurface pressure—a theory known as regional depressurization. That led nearby underground faults to slip and the land above them to slump.<br> <br>"When you stick a straw in a soda and suck on it, everything goes down," Morton explains. "That's very simplified, but you get the idea." The phenomenon isn't new: It was first documented in Texas in 1926 and has been reported in other oil-producing areas such as the North Sea and Lake Maracaibo in Venezuela. Morton won't speculate on what percentage of wetland loss can be pinned on the oil industry. "What I can tell you is that much of the loss between Bayou Lafourche and Bayou Terrebonne was caused by induced subsidence from oil and gas withdrawal. The wetlands are still there, they're just underwater." The area Morton refers to, part of the Barataria-Terrebonne estuary, has one of the highest rates of wetland loss in the state.<br> <br>The oil industry and its consultants dispute Morton's theory, but they've been unable to disprove it. The implication for restoration is profound. If production continues to taper off in coastal wetlands, Morton expects subsidence to return to its natural geologic rate, making restoration feasible in places. Currently, however, the high price of natural gas has oil companies swarming over the marshes looking for deep gas reservoirs. If such fields are tapped, Morton expects regional depressurization to continue. The upshot for the coast, he explains, is that the state will have to focus whatever restoration dollars it can muster on areas that can be saved, not waste them on places that are going to sink no matter what.<br> <br>A few days after talking with Morton, I'm sitting on the levee in the French Quarter, enjoying the deep-fried powdery sweetness of a beignet from the Café du Monde. Joggers lumber by in the torpid heat, while tugs wrestle their barges up and down the big brown river. For all its enticing quirkiness, for all its licentious pleasures, for all its geologic challenges, New Orleans has been luckier than the wetlands that lined its pockets and stocked its renowned tables. The question is how long Lady Luck will shine. It brings back something Joe Suhayda, the LSU engineer, had said during our lunch by Lake Pontchartrain.<br> <br>"When you look at the broadest perspective, short-term advantages can be gained by exploiting the environment. But in the long term you're going to pay for it. Just like you can spend three days drinking in New Orleans and it'll be fun. But sooner or later you're going to pay."<br> <br>I finish my beignet and stroll down the levee, succumbing to the hazy, lazy feel of the city that care forgot, but that nature will not.<br><br>http://www3.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0410/feature5/ <p></p><i></i>
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Watch it and weep

Postby Qutb » Sat Sep 03, 2005 9:42 am

"it's the connection to the rest of the world and they've set up a checkpoint and they are <!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>turning back everybody</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END-->".<br><br>"I'm so glad they are not here because <!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>this is Hell on Earth</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END-->".<br><br><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://movies.crooksandliars.com/Hannity-Colmes-Smith-Rivera-freak-in-NO.mov">movies.crooksandliars.com...-in-NO.mov</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--><br><br><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://www.crooksandliars.com/">www.crooksandliars.com/</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--> <p><!--EZCODE FONT START--><span style="color:black;font-family:century gothic;font-size:x-small;"><!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>Qutb means "axis," "pole," "the center," which contains the periphery or is present in it. The qutb is a spiritual being, or function, which can reside in a human being or several human beings or a moment. It is the elusive mystery of how the divine gets delegated into the manifest world and obviously cannot be defined.</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END--></span><!--EZCODE FONT END--><br><br></p><i></i>
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Some sort of quarantine

Postby Qutb » Sat Sep 03, 2005 9:52 am

Hurricane Katrina: Why is the Red Cross not in New Orleans?<br><br>* Access to New Orleans is controlled by the National Guard and local authorities and while we are in constant contact with them, we simply cannot enter New Orleans against their orders.<br><br>* The state Homeland Security Department had requested--and continues to request--that the American Red Cross <!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>not come back into New Orleans following the hurricane.</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END--> Our presence would keep people from evacuating and encourage others to come into the city.<br><br><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://www.redcross.org/faq/0,1096,0_682_4524,00.html">www.redcross.org/faq/0,10...24,00.html</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--> <br><br>Add to that: <br><br>The people are not allowed to leave.<br>The military left.<br><br>Were the National Guardsmen just there for the president's photo opportunity, only to leave again?? <p><!--EZCODE FONT START--><span style="color:black;font-family:century gothic;font-size:x-small;"><!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>Qutb means "axis," "pole," "the center," which contains the periphery or is present in it. The qutb is a spiritual being, or function, which can reside in a human being or several human beings or a moment. It is the elusive mystery of how the divine gets delegated into the manifest world and obviously cannot be defined.</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END--></span><!--EZCODE FONT END--><br><br></p><i></i>
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Re: Some sort of quarantine

Postby DrDebugDU » Sat Sep 03, 2005 10:05 am

> Hurricane Katrina: Why is the Red Cross not in New Orleans?<br><br>Why is nobody getting in or out. The weirdest story was the one of the German state television. The reporter said that the most amazing thing was that they were told by the officials that the roads couldn't be used as a reason for not getting help in. But the camera crew had come in on a normal car and even though the road conditions were terrible they had no real problems getting there...<br> <p></p><i></i>
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Re: Some sort of quarantine

Postby Qutb » Sat Sep 03, 2005 10:12 am

A poster on the RI blog just wrote that New Orleans police are now saying reports of snipers were FALSE, reported by Fox News. And that the rumors of crime in the Superdome mostly weren't true. I'm going to try and find confirmation of that. <p><!--EZCODE FONT START--><span style="color:black;font-family:century gothic;font-size:x-small;"><!--EZCODE BOLD START--><strong>Qutb means "axis," "pole," "the center," which contains the periphery or is present in it. The qutb is a spiritual being, or function, which can reside in a human being or several human beings or a moment. It is the elusive mystery of how the divine gets delegated into the manifest world and obviously cannot be defined.</strong><!--EZCODE BOLD END--></span><!--EZCODE FONT END--><br><br></p><i></i>
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Hell's Kitchen

Postby rain » Sat Sep 03, 2005 10:28 am

"... the appearance of technological superiority and the third world conditions that exist...'<br><br>where have I heard that applied before?<br> <p></p><i></i>
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