Bush & 3rd world USA

mrmom2

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Mar 8, 2005
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September 5, 2005 -- Urgent International Appeal. U.S. troops in New Orleans are treating hurricane victims as members of "Al Qaeda." Reports coming to WMR report that the greater New Orleans area has been turned into a virtual military zone where troops threaten bewildered and hungry survivors who approach them for help. One resident of the unflooded Algiers section of New Orleans on the west bank of the Mississippi River reports that the 65,000 population of the neighborhood has been reduced by forced evacuations to 2000 even though there are relatively undamaged schools, parks, and churches available to house the homeless. The remaining population of Algiers is in urgent need of medical supplies. The same situation exists in Jefferson Parish and other areas in the greater New Orleans area. U.S. troops are treating the remaining people in New Orleans and its suburbs as "suicide bombers," according to the Algiers resident. FEMA's operations are nothing more than a ruse to depopulate the poor African-American and whites from the metropolitan area. A natural disaster has now turned into a human rights catastrophe in the making. Our corporate news media is totally controlled by the Bush administration with an information embargo now in force from the Gulf coasts of Louisiana and Mississippi. Thecable news channels are now praising the White House's response. This is a blatant lie from a dictatorship that controls the media through financial control and intimidation. The web is our only way to get the news out to the rest of the world.

As a U.S. human rights activist who has reported on genocide in Rwanda, Sudan, West Papua and other parts of the world, I am appealing to my human rights and civil liberties contacts around the world -- Africa, Europe, Latin America, Australia, Canada, Asia and the Pacific -- to immediately bring this humanitarian crisis to the attention of your elected representatives, your governments, and international organizations. They must make immediate demarches to the American diplomatic embassies and offices in your countries. The United States is under the control of a despotic regime that is permitting American citizens and legal residents to die from starvation and disease. This is why the Bush regime refused offers of international assistance -- they are depopulating an entire city that before the storm was 70 percent African American, with the remaining 30 percent largely comprised of those of Creole, French Acadian, and American Indian descent. The United Nations must take this up as an urgent unfolding crisis that has an international impact. Please help our people.

Meanwhile, the communications jamming in the New Orleans area continues. it is now being reported by truck drivers on Interstate-10 as affecting the Citizens' Band (CB) frequencies.
 

Jo Canadian

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Mar 15, 2005
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PEI...for now
:lol: I know I posted this earlier, but I believe this cartoon belongs under this topic.


 

Ocean Breeze

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Urgent International Appeal. U.S. troops in New Orleans are treating hurricane victims as members of "Al Qaeda." Reports coming to WMR report that the greater New Orleans area has been turned into a virtual military zone where troops threaten bewildered and hungry survivors who approach them for help.


no surprise, is it??? :evil: :twisted: :cry:
 

Ocean Breeze

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September 6, 2005

You can't fool the precious few Americans who really know their country's history. They know that America's big talk (dating from Puritan times) about God's plan for America to redeem the world is largely the product of religiously inspired self-delusion or outright propaganda. They also know that, far too often, the big talk has been belied by extremely low-class performance. Now it's happening once again in the events surrounding hurricane-ravaged New Orleans.

"Third world" TV images beamed from the Crescent City—where the rich and white escaped Hurricane Katrina, while the poor and black suffered and died in apartheid—have exposed years of banana republic-like neglect by America's political elite, from President George W. Bush on down. Thus, those images mock America's incessant bragging about its mandate from God to redeem the rest of the world for democracy.

As the whole world now sees in New Orleans, America has miserably failed even to account for its poor and minorities, let alone "form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility…promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity"—as its much ballyhooed democratic Constitution promised.

One can credit the low-class, "enrichez vous" greed of corporate leaders and their political action committees, as well as the Presidents and Congressmen executing and legislating for their bribes, for bringing America to this shameful state.

But, let's try removing the God-tinted glasses, which severely distort our views about America's behavior, both at home and abroad. Ask yourself; did God support America's genocide of Native Americans? Did God support slavery, the Civil War, Jim Crow, Hiroshima, or Vietnam? Did God support 9/11? How about the devastation of the great city of New Orleans?

When one asks such questions, the mixed results of these disasters suggest that God does not care any more or less about the fate of the United States than He does about the fate of Israel, Russia, India, China, Iran or Cuba. Thus, God doesn't even care whether America wins or loses the "global war on terror," let alone our immoral, illegal invasion of Iraq.

Consequently, we must not only heap scorn upon the idiocy spoken by Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell, when they interpreted al Qaeda's terrorist attacks on 9/11 as God's retribution for America's evil ways. We also must decry the idiocy of Nation of Islam leader, Louis Farrakhan, who "suggested that the devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina was divine punishment for the violence America had inflicted on Iraq."

We should be equally outraged by the statements of Repent America's leader, Michael Marcavage, who claimed that Katrina was "an act of God" because it "destroyed a wicked city" on the eve of a large gay festival. Finally, we must equally repudiate all those mentally challenged folks who believe: (1) that Hurricane Katrina was God's retribution for Bush's highly dubious electoral victory in 2000 or (2) that God had a hand in Bush's victory. Please, all of you. Get real!

Unfortunately, this isn't new to America. If one were to read chapter two of Robert H. Wiebe's book Self-Rule: A Cultural History of American Democracy, he or she would learn that America's exceptional democratic and Christian mission was repeatedly tainted by low-class performance as white male rule spread across the frontier.

Titled, "The Barbarians," Wiebe's chapter two is filled with hilarious accounts by horrified nineteenth century Western European travelers to America. Prominent European writers noted America's "uncouth mosaic of expectoration and nutshells," [p. 45] dishonesty in commerce, bad manners, lack of imagination, "insensate gobbling of whatever food was laid before them," [p. 49] cheap value placed on human life, slavery and, most ominously, a violence that places "society at the borders of jungle terror." [p.51]

As Wiebe notes, "Cheap lives and violent ways came with the origins of white culture in America, moving through the starving times and the slaughtering of natives in the 17th century into the paramilitary settlement of farm lands in the 18th." [p. 53]

Indeed, the huge gap that separates America's braggadocio about its God-inspired exceptionalism from its actual low-class performance originated in Puritan Massachusetts. But a singularly important, precedent-setting example of that gap can be found in the all-too-common greed for land, wealth, and stature by an ambitious surveyor named George Washington.

As historians Fred Anderson and Andrew Clayton explain in their book, The Dominion of War, Washington and his fellow Virginians sought to expand their colonial possessions to the West, in order to enrich themselves further on the backs of yet more Negro slaves.

Thus, Governor Dinwiddie gave Washington the task of carrying a message to the French containing the demand that they immediately leave British territory. As Anderson and Clayton note: That this aspiring gentleman emissary "spoke neither French nor any Indian language, had little formal education, knew nothing of native cultures, and utterly lacked diplomatic experience were not obstacles." [p. 116]

Instead, possessing "the self-confidence of the truly ignorant," [p. 117] Washington pressed on until May 28, 1754, when forty men under his command blundered into attacking "a detachment of Canadian militiamen" that was escorting a French officer on a diplomatic mission to Virginia. "The actions of the young Washington, eager to prove himself and bold to the point of foolhardiness, sparked a cataclysm long in the making" [p. 118]—the French and Indian War.

The new war between France and England sucked new troops and resources into North America. But when the victorious British sought to impose new taxes upon its colonies, in order to defray the cost of that war, the Americans famously refused.

Less known today, however, but equally disturbing then to both Indian-hating backwoodsmen and land speculators like Washington, was Britain's Proclamation of 1763, which prohibited further western settlements in America. Not only did Washington violate the prohibition, his decision to support the break with England was influenced by his personal land-speculator self-interest in America's imperial expansion.

Little was said about such petty self-interests during the American Revolution or in the immediate aftermath of victory. Instead, New England clergymen characterized the ongoing struggle as a conflict between "God's elect" and the "Antichrist." And victory moved the president of Yale College, Ezra Stiles, to proclaim America to be "God's New Israel" and to compare George Washington to "Joshua commanding the armies of the Children of Israel and leading them into the Promised Land." [Richard M. Gamble, The War for Righteousness: Progressive Christianity, the Great War, and the Rise of the Messianic Nation, pp. 10–11]

But American messianic propaganda never sunk so low as it did when Southern clergymen, during the Civil War, had the audacity to suggest, "God ordained the war, just as he had ordained slavery, and the Confederacy consequently represented the will of the Almighty." [Ann Sarah Rubin, A Shattered Nation: The Rise and Fall of the Confederacy, 1861–1868, p. 17]

Minister James Henley Thornwell assured the faithful that "the cause it not ours, but God's," [Rubin, p 37] and Reverend Joseph Atkinson "argued that the Confederate revolution was even more deserving of God's favor because its leaders—particularly Stonewall Jackson—were so pious." [Rubin, p 39.] No doubt the South was full of pious racists. Probably still is.

Finally, we have the example of Reverend Stephen Elliott who assured his fellow Southerners that their independence would not be won until "England and the North were 'convinced that slavery, as we hold it here, is essential to the welfare of the world… a sacred trust from God.'" [Rubin, p.40]

Thus, many in the South actually invoked God's will to justify their evil ways. And thus, we shouldn't be surprised to find that many Americans today support President George W. Bush's evil war against Iraq.

After all, Bush told Mahmoud Abbas, "God told me to strike at al Qaida and I struck them, and then he instructed me to strike at Saddam, which I did." But, did God also tell Bush and company to exaggerate and lie about Saddam's weapons of mass destruction and ties to al Qaida? Was it God who rendered so many Americans stupid enough to believe such lies and exaggerations? And why did God, who supposedly told Bush to invade Iraq, then trap American troops in a quagmire that exposed Bush and company for the rank amateurs they are?

Iraq is the early 21st century's object lesson exposing the chasm separating America's messianic rhetoric and belief from the reality of its illegal, immoral and low-class performance.

George W. Bush talks big. Remember, "Bring 'em on!" How many Americans and Iraqis have died since then? And at what personal risk to himself? But, America's worst president and biggest phony wraps himself in God. And by doing so in this country, he's able to get away with murder.

Moreover, at this very moment, he and his political advisers (including the ignoble Karl Rove) are crafting and acting upon the propaganda designed to disguise the Bush administration's shamefully incompetent response to the disaster caused by Hurricane Katrina. Can it be that Americans are the only people unable to see through their bullshit?



Walter C. Uhler is an independent scholar and freelance writer whose work has been published in numerous publications, including The Nation, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, the Journal of Military History, the Moscow Times and the San Francisco Chronicle. He also is President of the Russian-American International Studies Association (RAISA).
 

Ocean Breeze

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THE STORY OF THE HURRICANE COWBOY WHO FIDDLED WHILE NEW ORLEANS DROWNED

How Bush Spent His Summer Vacation

by Amanda Lang, PhD




Why did Bush vacation – cut wood, clear brush, bike, and read -- for days while the world watched Katrina develop then slam as a category 4 hurricane into the Gulf Coast? Just as he did on September 11, 2001, he froze. They don’t have cable or telephones in Crawford? The unfolding catastrophe has Bush leadership skills, or lack thereof, written all over it. He treats his own citizens with the same contempt and callousness as he does the Iraqi civilians – as “collateral damage.” If a category 4 hurricane is not a “bomb” dropping on American soil, what is? Bush remained on vacation one whole day after Katrina hit, WAITING FOR WHAT? The federal government was ‘missing in action’ and has failed its citizens abysmally. And Congress... where the hell are they? They rushed back to Washington over night for one woman’s feeding tube, but can’t seem to find the way back for a destructive hurricane that most likely killed thousands. Are these citizens too poor or not expounding the right religion to garner the attention the Trade Tower victims received? They all sat and watched this train wreck, now they are screwing up the rescue and salvage, probably busy searching for the ‘scapegoat’ du jour. Do the Bush administration and Congress want to create a situation where they could declare martial law? Looks like it.


New Orleans has become a war zone. Martial law declared. Since when is a policy of "you loot, we shoot" appropriate for people just trying to survive until help arrives? THEY ARE DYING. So are they ‘looters’ or ‘survivors’ (like the TV show “Survivor” Americans loves to love)? So what if in addition to food, water, diapers, and medical supplies, they take some jeans? They’ve been wearing oil, chemical and sewer-soaked clothes for days. They’re wading through floating, decaying dead bodies. New Orleans is and will be uninhabitable for three to six months at least, so the merchandise is already a write-off. Think about it? Would you want this merchandise? Let good come from it while it can.


The ‘survivors’ have obtained weapons and are using them. Escaped prisoners riot and hold hostages. People go ‘feral’ displaying ‘pack’ and/or ‘mob’ behaviors when threatened and their lives are in 'great peril.' Unfortunately, in America you can find a gun anywhere in virtually any caliber, so chaos reigns. A "loot-shoot" policy only exacerbates the problem. Relief workers received orders to divert efforts from ‘saving people’ to ‘crime fighting’. Why choose ‘property’ over ‘life’? The policy lacks common sense, compassion, or understanding of the survival instinct. CNN has images of people dead and dying on camera. Their reporters are watching people – children and elderly – die before their eyes. The sick, injured, dehydrated, starving, and scared feel abandoned. In the hot, stinking Superdome, where 25,000 refugees await evacuation, fires and fighting are breaking out. Fear, anger, and hopelessness will push conditions to a boil, and more people than necessary will die – mostly the innocent victims of this horrible disaster.


Do we need to request U.N Aid and Peace Keeping Forces? It appears we lack the expertise and leadership to prevent or deal with a major national crisis. Why aren't these convoys and helicopters dropping in water, food, and medicine to these trapped individuals? Yes, conditions are deteriorating, but our National Guard soldiers fly helicopters through Iraq every day taking gunfire for a far less legitimate cause. Is the relief necessary beyond the Bush administration's capabilities? We do not posses the numbers of National Guard soldiers and relief workers necessary to get this situation under control. Just like Iraq – not enough bodies on the ground to do the job. Bush cut funding to New Orleans hurricane preparations by $72.1 million and gave eight jets to Pakistan – FREE – valued at $36 million each = $288 million. Get the picture. ‘Survivors’ of this crisis sure could use that $288 million and the $5.6 billion per month [this breaks down to almost $186 million a day] or $67.2 BILLION PER YEAR the Neocons are throwing at Iraq, plus the billions in pork given to corporations this year alone.


Even worse, image you’re a National Guard soldier in Iraq that has family, friends, and property in ‘harm’s way, but are stuck policing the streets of Iraq. The irony of the situation is macabre. You were sent to fight an urban guerilla war based on a 'buffet' of evolving lies and rationales -- perhaps on your second or third tour -- and your family is back home dealing with this mess alone -- homeless, injured, starving, drowning, or dying -- and you are not there and you don't have a clue what their condition is because no one else does. Tragic irony. They face an uncertain future and still may die themselves on a street or road in Iraq. In the news, they hear of over-the-top CEO salaries, while Florida hotels evict refugee families so fans can attend a football game. How would you feel to discover your loved ones where not evacuated, even though it was known a category 4 or 5 hurricane was approaching? Or even worse, they still stuck in the disaster area because at your pay scale, they just couldn’t afford to leave.


A reckoning time is here. The ‘Hurricane Cowboy’ has a lot to answer for, as do the ‘knuckled-headed’ Neocons and the ‘do-nothing’ Congress. This tragedy should have been prevented. Hundreds of thousands of Americans lives completely destroyed and while Bush fiddled with a guitar, went on a two-day speaking jaunt/fund-raiser to California and Arizona, and ‘read’ a speech, ironically to a group of sailors and WWII veterans:


"This morning, our hearts and prayers are with our fellow citizens along the Gulf Coast," Bush said. "We know that many are anxious to return to their homes. It's not possible at this moment."


His heart and prayers may have been there, but his ass sure wasn’t.
 

Ocean Breeze

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Culture of GREED :evil:


http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article10168.htm


excerpt and "Lake George"

WHAT THE WORLD has witnessed this past week is an image of poverty and social disarray that tears away the affluent mask of the United States.

Instead of the much-celebrated American can-do machine that promises to bring freedom and prosperity to less fortunate people abroad, we have seen a callous official incompetence that puts even Third World rulers to shame. The well-reported litany of mistakes by the Bush administration in failing to prevent and respond to Katrina's destruction grew longer with each hour's grim revelation from the streets of an apocalyptic New Orleans.

Yet the problem is much deeper. For half a century, free-market purists have to great effect denigrated the essential role that modern government performs as some terrible liberal plot. Thus, the symbolism of New Orleans' flooding is tragically apt: Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal and Louisiana Gov. Huey Long's ambitious populist reforms in the 1930s eased Louisiana out of feudalism and toward modernity; the Reagan Revolution and the callousness of both Bush administrations have sent them back toward the abyss.

Now we have a president who wastes tax revenues in Iraq instead of protecting us at home. Levee improvements were deferred in recent years even after congressional approval, reportedly prompting EPA staffers to dub flooded New Orleans "Lake George."

None of this is an oversight, or simple incompetence. It is the result of a campaign by most Republicans and too many Democrats to systematically vilify the role of government in American life. Manipulative politicians have convinced lower- and middle-class whites that their own economic pains were caused by "quasi-socialist" government policies that aid only poor brown and black people — even as corporate profits and CEO salaries soared.
 

Ocean Breeze

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Could this tragedy have been avoided? The U.S. Congress, at Bush’s request slashed $70 million from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers budget for strengthening the levees that protect New Orleans. For years, engineers have warned that a breach in the levees is a “disaster waiting to happen.” Bush and Congress turned a deaf ear. They needed that money to pay for the occupation of Iraq. They needed that money to pay for Bush’s tax cuts for the rich.


hmmm.
 

Ocean Breeze

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Macabre Reminder: The Corpse on Union Street

By DAN BARRY
Published: September 8, 2005
NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 7 - In the downtown business district here, on a dry stretch of Union Street, past the Omni Bank automated teller machine, across from a parking garage offering "early bird" rates: a corpse. Its feet jut from a damp blue tarp. Its knees rise in rigor mortis.

The sight of corpses has become almost common on the mostly abandoned streets of New Orleans, as rescue and evacuation operations have taken priority over removing the dead.
Six National Guardsmen walked up to it on Tuesday afternoon and two blessed themselves with the sign of the cross. One soldier took a parting snapshot like some visiting conventioneer, and they walked away. New Orleans, September 2005.

Hours passed, the dusk of curfew crept, the body remained. A Louisiana state trooper around the corner knew all about it: murder victim, bludgeoned, one of several in that area. The police marked it with traffic cones maybe four days ago, he said, and then he joked that if you wanted to kill someone here, this was a good time.

Night came, then this morning, then noon, and another sun beat down on a dead son of the Crescent City.

That a corpse lies on Union Street may not shock; in the wake of last week's hurricane, there are surely hundreds, probably thousands. What is remarkable is that on a downtown street in a major American city, a corpse can decompose for days, like carrion, and that is acceptable.

Welcome to New Orleans in the post-apocalypse, half baked and half deluged: pestilent, eerie, unnaturally quiet.

Scraggly residents emerge from waterlogged wood to say strange things, and then return into the rot. Cars drive the wrong way on the Interstate and no one cares. Fires burn, dogs scavenge, and old signs from les bons temps have been replaced with hand-scrawled threats that looters will be shot dead.

The incomprehensible has become so routine here that it tends to lull you into acceptance. On Sunday, for example, several soldiers on Jefferson Highway had guns aimed at the heads of several prostrate men suspected of breaking into an electronics store.

A car pulled right up to this tense scene and the driver leaned out his window to ask a soldier a question: "Hey, how do you get to the interstate?"

Maybe the slow acquiescence to the ghastly here - not in Baghdad, not in Rwanda, here - is rooted in the intensive news coverage of the hurricane's aftermath: floating bodies and obliterated towns equal old news. Maybe the concerns of the living far outweigh the dignity of a corpse on Union Street. Or maybe the nation is numb with post-traumatic shock.

Wandering New Orleans this week, away from news conferences and search-and-rescue squads, has granted haunting glimpses of the past, present and future, with the rare comfort found in, say, the white sheet that flaps, not in surrender but as a vow, at the corner of Poydras Street and St. Charles Avenue.

"We Shall Survive," it says, as though wishing past the battalions of bulldozers that will one day come to knock down water-corrupted neighborhoods and rearrange the Louisiana mud for the infrastructure of an altogether different New Orleans.

Here, then, the New Orleans of today, where open fire hydrants gush the last thing needed on these streets; where one of the many gag-inducing smells - that of rancid meat - is better than MapQuest in pinpointing the presence of a market; and where images of irony beg to be noticed.

The Mardi Gras beads imbedded in mud by a soldier's boot print. The "take-away" signs outside restaurants taken away. The corner kiosk shouting the Aug. 28 headline of New Orleans's Times-Picayune: "Katrina Takes Aim."

Rush hour in downtown now means pickups carrying gun-carrying men in sunglasses, S.U.V.'s loaded with out-of-town reporters hungry for action, and the occasional tank. About the only ones commuting by bus are dull-eyed suspects shuffling two-by-two from the bus-and-train terminal, which is now a makeshift jail.

Maybe some of them had helped to kick in the portal to the Williams Super Market in the once-desirable Garden District. And who could blame them if all they wanted was food in those first desperate days? The interlopers took the water, beer, cigarettes and snack food. They did not take the wine or the New Orleans postcards.

On the other side of downtown across Canal Street in the French Quarter, the most raucous and most unreal of American avenues is now little more than an empty alley with balconies.

The absence of sweetly blown jazz, of someone cooing "ma chère," of men sporting convention nametags and emitting forced guffaws - the absence of us - assaults the senses more than any smell.

source: NYTimes.
 

Ocean Breeze

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the horror of things to come??

removing 30 bodies found in nursing home
Thousands of people remain in New Orleans

Thursday, September 8, 2005; Posted: 12:28 p.m. EDT (16:28 GMT)

St. Rita's Nursing Home in St. Bernard Parish is surrounded by water. More than 30 bodies were found there.



NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (CNN) -- In a grim indicator of what may lie ahead, authorities were removing the remains of more than 30 people from a flooded nursing home in a suburban New Orleans parish.

The discovery at St. Rita's Nursing Home in lower St. Bernard Parish came as 25,000 body bags arrived at the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals.

Early Thursday, the official death toll along from Hurricane Katrina stood at 294, but that number is expected to rise dramatically.

Mortuary teams with refrigerated trucks began arriving Wednesday at the nursing home, where St. Bernard Parish Sheriff Jack Stevens said "30-plus" bodies were found. Between 40 and 50 other people were rescued from the facility, Stevens said. (See video on the gruesome discovery -- 2:02)

The parish is east of New Orleans, where between 10,000 and 15,000 people are believed to remain in the flooded city, and thousands are feared dead.

Deputies reported that floodwaters had reached a height of eight feet in some parts of St. Bernard. The nursing home was still surrounded by about three feet of water on Wednesday, as authorities began removing bodies.

Throughout New Orleans and its surrounding parishes, National Guard troops were going house to house to search for survivors and recover the dead -- marking the houses they searched with an "X" to avoid duplication, said Brig. Gen. Michael Fleming, commander of a Florida unit dispatched to New Orleans. (See video of soldiers aiding recovery -- 3:16)

FEMA set up a temporary morgue in the town of St. Gabriel, about 70 miles west of New Orleans. (Watch video on St. Gabriel's "warehouse morgue" -- 2:56)

Another temporary morgue is set up at the intersection of Interstates 10 and 610 inside the city, FEMA spokesman Bill Lehman said.

Underwater communities
Outside New Orleans, many residents have expressed concern and frustration at the slow pace of the relief effort and the lack of attention to their plight. (Full story)

Many Louisiana parishes were still largely under water on Wednesday, virtually inaccessible except by air. St. Bernard Parish President Henry Rodriguez said most of the structures there will have to be rebuilt.

Rodriguez said state and federal aid was slow in coming, and that his parish made it through the early days with the help of sheriffs from other states, a contingent of 50 Royal Canadian Mounted Police and other first responders.

Dan Hitchings, a spokesman for the Army Corps of Engineers, said Wednesday that water was being drained from St. Bernard Parish, where engineers intentionally breached levees earlier this week to help the effort.

Dikes were also breached in a few places in Plaquemines Parish, which was heavily flooded. No pumps are operational in that parish, according to Hitchings. (See video on the largely submerged parish -- 2:35)

Pumping stations were operating in the towns of Meraux and Violet, but the water was still high. (Full story)

Jefferson Parish residents were still surveying the damage from the storm and trying to salvage what belongings they could find.

Many residents were already making plans to rebuild. (Full story)

Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour told NBC's Today show on Thursday that power will be restored by Saturday.

Authorities have confirmed 196 deaths in the state.

Not safe to stay
New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin has ordered a mandatory evacuation of New Orleans, warning that it's not safe to stay in the city.

The floodwaters are contaminated with sewage, chemicals and decaying corpses. Nagin said those who remained faced the risk of water- and mosquito-borne disease and blazes caused by natural gas leaks.

Police Superintendent Eddie Compass said police would not start the forced evacuations until everyone who wants to leave is out.

"We're going to be respectful, talk to people, get counselors in to talk to people," he said. "A lot of people have been traumatized. We're going to do this with sensitivity. They have to understand, this water is polluted, it's dangerous, they could die."

The U.S. Coast Guard will help with those evacuations if needed, Vice Adm. Thad Allen told CNN on Thursday.

Active duty U.S. troops will not participate in forcible evacuations, said Lt. Gen. Russel Honore, commander of the military relief effort.

After last week's rampant looting, some holdouts fear authorities "cannot protect their property," City Council President Oliver Thomas told CNN.

Others were concerned about conditions in shelters or worried about their pets.

A blind and elderly woman who identified herself as Ms. Connie rejected authorities' efforts to coax her from her rundown rental home until they agreed to take her dog.

"My dog goes where I go," she said.

In the French Quarter, Deidre White said she felt "pretty safe" working at Johnny White's, a bar that even Hurricane Katrina did not shut down.

"We're here to help people out and feed them," she said. "I'm going to try and hold my ground and stay in my home as long as I can, because I love living here."

Other developments

Vice President Dick Cheney, his wife, Lynne, and Attorney General Alberto Gonzales arrived Thursday in Mississippi to meet with local and state officials to view the damage. They were scheduled to visit New Orleans later in the day.


A bipartisan, joint congressional committee will review the response at all levels of government to Katrina and report its findings to Congress no later than February 15, the leaders of the House and Senate said Wednesday. (Full story)


The U.S. Postal Service has delivered 15,000 Social Security checks to people otherwise unable to receive mail in regions devastated by Hurricane Katrina. (Full story)


Public schools in St. Bernard Parish will be closed at least until January, St Bernard Parish President Rodriguez said, and the Rev. Torin Sanders, president of the Orleans Parish school board, said he hoped to open two schools not badly affected by January. (Full story)
 

Ocean Breeze

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Just when one thinks one has heard it all.

Photos being shown on the NEWS of the horrors in the dome. ......where so many desperate weathered the storm......

4 bodies located. One mutilated .....with deliberate intent . Two in wheel chairs too horrific to show on the tv. Rape and violence was rampid. Can anyone imagine the tensions when so many are packed into such close quarters.....without adequate fascilities../ food/ water / hygiene facilities for a prolonged stay. ??

Anger , despair and reverting to animal like behavior is simply not unusual. And THIS in the "Mighty" 'RICHEST " nation on this planet. The only thing "mighty" in the US is their love of wealth and war. :evil: (and extremism)
 

GL Schmitt

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Some Blanco requests for federal help still unmet

The Associated Press
9/8/2005


BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — Nearly a week after they were requested and with emergency systems taxed, the radio equipment and portable generators that Gov. Kathleen Blanco asked federal officials to supply have yet to arrive.

Those items were among several that Blanco requested Friday in a letter to President Bush to help out with Hurricane Katrina recovery efforts.

The governor asked for portable radios, equipment and tower crews to work on beefing up the communications grid that failed and kept rescue personnel, police and emergency workers from being able to talk to each other easily.

"The radio system that is currently operational in the greater New Orleans area was designed to support 800 users; there are currently 2,500 users. To address the radio communications requirements, we need additional frequencies," Blanco said in her letter.

She also requested 175 generators to help local parishes and emergency staff who are struggling without power or with flooded generators and the diesel fuel supplies to run them.

Federal officials haven't filled either request, according to state officials.

Those items would be helpful, said Lt. Col. Pete Schneider, with the Louisiana National Guard, but he added, "The mission's getting done without all this."

FEMA officials on Thursday said they were tracking down the status of those items requested but not received.

"If the governor asked for it, we're going to get it for her," said FEMA Director Mike Brown.

Gosh, I hope those poor overworked bureaucrats don’t injure themselves in the rush to do their fecking jobs.
 

Martin Le Acadien

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Province perdue du Canada, Louisian
DATELINE 7 SEPTEMBER, 2005

I have been able to return home to Southern Lafourche Parish since our water system has been energized and electricity (Hydro for the Possum Lodge types). My family and myself on Friday Morning (AUG 26) jumped into the truck and hooked up the Travel Trailer and went to Rayne, LA where the Civic Center has RV hookups. The Civic Center started filling up on Saturday Morning when it was announced that the beeline was for the New Orleans area! The Good People of Rayne opened their Civic center up and it filled with over 1000 people very quickly along with 7000 people in the Cajun Dome In Lafayetyte, LA!

I was called upon to operate my Amateur Radio Station (HAM) at the Civic center since the phone lines were jammed in Southern Louisiana! The few stations left on the3 air in SouthEast Louisiana and especially the New Orleans area had put out frantic calls for help and by Sunday Night, we knew the situation was desparate in New Orleans. With the break in the Seventeenth Street Canal, Gentilly and Uptown neighbourhoods were quickly filling with water, some places only a foot or so, other places over 10 feet (3 Meters) so people were trapped like rats on roofs or in houses. Several evacuees in our shelter had lost everything and when the news of the flooding aftermath of the hurricane reached the Center, several people lost it, breaking down and crying. It was all my family could do to help and comfort these helpless folks who had lost it all. My wife had emptied our freezer before leaving our house and we donated all our food to the shelter since the local community was doing the same! No USA or Louisiana officials in sight, the response was initially on our own and the reports coming off my ham radio did not offer encouragement.

By Tuesday morning, the news of the looting and lawlessness was even in the mainstream news and the failure of the Response of the Government in Baton Rouge to coordinate relief was evident in the radio transmissions I monitored. Different agencies were giving orders and a fuel truck with diesel meant for New Orleans was diverted to another place, the New Orleans Police Dept was trying to hold their own, 2 officers committed suicide when the stress got to them, but with armed thugs, high water and destruction all around, they did respond gallantly! The order came on Wednesday that the Nation Guard was coming since rescuers who trying to get people out were taking gunfire. It was broadcast on all police, fire, ham and finally broadcast stations that Governor of Louisiana had authorized the use of any and all FORCE necessary to secure the City of New Orleans. Several "thugs" fired upon disaster workers at the Danziger Bridge and the Police and National Guard returned fire killing five, wounding 3. 175 looters as of this morning are being held at the New Orleans Bus and Train Station for shipment to Federal Jails since New Orleans is under Martial Law. Looting earns you 10 yrs in Jail, with a firearm 25 yrs, firing upon any official-DEATH PENALTY!

Gasoline and Diesel are in Short supply here, food is limited to what can be shipped in without spoilage, I am only located about 45 miles or 70 Kilometers SouthWest of New Orleans and the local radio transmissions don't tell the whole stroy of this tragedy. As I listen to the Radio and sometimes asked to relay messages, I can not tell you all on the board how hard this Hurricane Katrina has hit our community. We had wind damage and I lost shingles, 3 trees and clutered yard, our neighbours in Orleans and Jefferson Parishes have really suffered. I went to Jefferson Parish to lend my generator to a Ham helping out in a Sheriff's Substation and I brought 10 kilos of coffee which was more welcomed than even the Generator!

Our phones switch through new Orleans and our electricity comes from Jefferson Parish, but our lines are being jumped around and the outlying areas are getting supplied from the West, we still have to limit our use!

DATELINE SEPT 8

Our food stores are out of anything fresh here in Southeastern Louisiana at Galliano, Louisiana (70 KMS SW of New Orleans), the National Guard arrived today to find our little bourg up and running and using our heliport for a staging area. Amateur Radio Operators remaing about the only thing able to get a message in and out of the area since the Cell Towers are not functioning correctly, (I can call Nova Scotia, Ontario & Tennessee easier than I can call my nieghbour). forced Evacuations have not started yet but I see that is where they want to go. I really would not want to stay in a flooded area (Been flooded before, the sewage and stink) so most will probably leave while they drain the city, however, Algiers Point on the Westbank is not in the Mandatory evac zone but with no utilities, it is rough over there with 80F (25c) nights and mosquitos with west Nile Virus and god knows what you can get!

THE ACADIENS WERE DERANGED IN 1755 BY AN ACT OF MAN, IN 2005 IT WAS AN ACT OF NATURE.

WILL REBUILD NEW ORLEANS AND LOUISIANA1