Archive for September 3rd, 2005

Dave Stueber Is Alive and Safe!

September 3rd, 2005

I just got an e-mail message from Dave Stueber’s mom in Jasper, Alabama, saying he is safe and on his way out of New Orleans. Here is the message in its entirety:

Glynn,

I just spoke with Dave. By some miracle he got through to me on his cell phone.

Greg and Keith (his brothers) were with him at his house. He said they came floating down Dupree Street on a Tom Sawyer type boat.

Water did not get in the living area of his home but the basement is full. He told me to tell you he had some good pictures of the rescues from roof tops in his neighborhood, but they are made from his front porch only.

They have food and water. Now if they can just get out I’ll be a happy mom.

Thanks for your interest and help.

Dot Wilson

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The Problem With Bush and the GOP

September 3rd, 2005

After trying to articulate to some good folks in Alabama of late who consider themselves conservatives why it is obvious George W. Bush is a terrible president, it has just come to my attention, thanks to the totally inadequate response to Hurricane Katrina, why this is the case.

The problem with these Christian Conservative Cowboys now running our government is that they are great at bashing government, but not worth a damn at running it.

The lack of a single Red Cross vehicle or worker in New Orleans STILL should also shut up anyone who would say the problem should be handled by the private sector, which is what all the yeehaw Alabama dumbasses have been saying on news talk radio all week long.

In the event of any kind of disaster it is the role of government to respond.

In fact, in the case of a natural disaster such as Katrina, it is the job of the Federal Emergency Management Agency to lead the charge. But under the Bush administration, FEMA was moved over to a giant new bureaucracy called the Department of Homeland Security.

You would think even Alabama dumbasses would rail against all this bureaucracy, which is clearly part of the problem in getting any food or water to the poor people of New Orleans for four full days after the hurricane and the flood.

But apparently many of these otherwise good people are either (a) so enamored of Bush’s George Wallace-like appeal to their faith and meaningless issues such as prayer in the schools, or (b) so pro-business and anti-taxes, that they cannot understand that government is necessary to run any civilized society.

Who now heads FEMA and what did he do in the face of this crisis?

Michael D. Brown, under secretary of homeland security for emergency preparedness and response, is supposed to be in charge.

Where was he for the first four days?

In a Washington, D.C., television studio doing interviews with CNN, Fox, MSNBC, etc.

In short, he was doing public relations for the Bush administration while the people of New Orleans drowned and starved.

If this administration had any sense of responsibility at all, Mr. Brown should be fired on the spot.

If I had anything to say about it, he would be banished to the infamous Orleans Parish Prison, now totally flooded, and forced to sit there in the heat and humidity with all the inmates seen two days ago on CNN as the water poured through the vents on the roof.

Do you really expect Exxon-Mobile to do anything or give a damn as they sit in their cushy offices in Houston, Texas, and watch the billions and billions of dollars in profits roll in?

Even the conservative Bill O’Reilly on Fox News two nights ago suggested that the big oil companies should sacrifice 20 percent of their “profit” at this time “for the good of the country.”

Right. The big oil companies, and the Bush administration, do not give a damn about the country or its government. Apparently they want to cripple government so the corporations and the churches can take over.

Well, the American people, at least the one’s not totally in partisan denial, should now see why electing these anti-government Republicans to run the government can only lead to disaster.

The Times-Picayune newspaper in New Orleans endorsed Mr. Bush for president in 2000. But the editorial board broke from the other Newhouse papers in the country in 2004 and endorsed Sen. John Kerry, the Democratic Party nominee, in a somewhat unenthusiastic editorial. It came down to “anyone but Bush.”

As the editorial board said a couple of days ago in an editorial reprinted below:

“The president’s admission of his administration’s mistakes will mean nothing unless the promised help is deployed immediately. Each life is precious, and there isn’t a second chance to save a single one of them. No more talk of what’s going to happen. We only want to hear what is being done. The lives of our people depend on it.”

Let’s just hope when the next election rolls around, other newspapers and TV news stations will remember – and remind the people. We must hold our elected officials accountable if we are to remain a viable democracy.

Otherwise, we may as well have remained a part of the British Empire and never fought The Revolution.

And in an ultimate bit of irony, you may recall that the most decisive and definitive battle in that war was won in The Battle of New Orleans. People of all races turned out to fight the British with all manner of primitive weapons and garden tools.

I had the privilege a couple of years ago of researching and writing about this on the 200th Anniversary of the Louisiana Purchase.

The Deal That Made an Empire

As I write this today, The Cabildo in the French Quarter, where the treaty was signed, is at risk of being lost to history.

Does anyone really think this arrogant, privileged, Ivy League frat boy in the White House really gives a damn? He has never, ever had to pay any price for his own failures, including a number of DUI arrests in his college days or business debacles before he was elected governor of Texas.

He was a C-student in History at Yale, but I doubt if he knows a single fact about the Battle of New Orleans or the Louisiana Purchase. He only knows what Karl Rove tells him. And that, my friends and enemies, ain’t saying much.

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WWL New Orleans On The Air, Times-Picayune Online

September 3rd, 2005

The Big 870 WWL AM is the only radio station that managed to stay on the air in New Orleans. The station now has a message board for finding friends and family.

Also, I managed to get a few e-mails through Saturday morning to and from Mark Schleifstein, the environment writer for the Times-Picayune newspaper in New Orleans.

He said the gondola idea in the previous post from yesterday “doesn’t make much sense” after all.

“Venice doesn’t have hurricanes and if they did, their canals would cause worse flooding much more often than what we’ve got now, though the water would leave more quickly,” he said.

He also indicated that the Times-Picayune has continued to publish continuously since the storm, Tuesday through Thursday with Web newspaper editions in PDF format and beginning Friday in print.

Since from here it looks like it would be impossible and fruitless to try to print and distribute a newspaper in a flooded city that is being evacuated, I asked him where they were printing and distributing the paper.

He said the paper was published at the Houma Courier and thrown on lawns to subscribers in river parishes, parts of the West Bank and Tammany Parish, and in Baton Rouge.

He said the folks in Houma, “just threw open their arms to us and said have at it. They’re amazing people.”

I asked a few more questions, but no word back yet. I’m sure everyone is busy surviving and trying to continue reporting on the continuing disaster.

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Hurricane Katrina “I’m OK” Registry

September 3rd, 2005

Hurricane Katrina “I’m OK” Registry

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Times-Picayune Editorial: Federal Response ‘Unacceptable’

September 3rd, 2005

Editorial: Not Acceptable
The Times-Picayune Editorial Board

A day after a normally easy-going Mayor Ray Nagin blasted federal officials’ seeming indifference to the plight of New Orleanians who are stranded and dying, President Bush stood on the lawn of the White House and conceded the point: The federal government did not move quickly enough or forcefully enough to help those people hit hardest by Hurricane Katrina. “The results are not acceptable,” the president said before boarding a helicopter to go survey the storm’s damage.

It’s good to hear the president admit his administration’s shortcomings, and it’s even better to hear his promise to help all of us who are in need. But the sad truth remains that the federal government’s slow start has already proved fatal to some of the most vulnerable people in the New Orleans area. Water has killed hundreds, if not thousands, of people. A lack of water to drink is exacting its toll on others.

“I don’t want to see anybody do anymore goddamn press conferences,” the mayor said during a WWL radio interview Thursday. “Put a moratorium on press conferences. Don’t do another press conference until the resources are in this city.”

The mayor had obviously become fed up with federal bureaucrats’ use of future tense verbs. “Don’t tell me 40,000 people are coming here,” he said. “They’re not here. It’s too doggone late. Now get off your asses and do something, and let’s fix the biggest goddamn crisis in the history of this country.”

We applaud the mayor for giving voice to an entire city’s frustration. How could the most powerful and technologically advanced nation in the history of the world have responded so feebly to this crisis?

The president’s admission of his administration’s mistakes will mean nothing unless the promised help is deployed immediately. Each life is precious, and there isn’t a second chance to save a single one of them. No more talk of what’s going to happen. We only want to hear what is being done. The lives of our people depend on it.

Follow the latest Times-Picayune blog posts from this link (the link is also now down the right side of this page):

Times-Picayune Weblog

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