cleolinda: (galadriel hood)
[personal profile] cleolinda

Entry 2: Everything else I've got at the moment. God, I need to go do some more designs, or watch Rome or something, for my own sanity. It's getting bad out there.

[livejournal.com profile] la_sonnambula: "I had a vague notion that the government can get commercial airlines to help and wondered why civilian airplanes couldn't airlift people out of New Orleans. The Civil Reserve Air Fleet, for reasons I don't know, is not deployed. Instead, late Thursday afternoon Homeland Security Deputy Secretary Michael Jackson asked James C. May, president of the trade group Air Transport Association whether the airlines could fly people out of NOLA. Operation Air Care was launched and the first mercy flight left for New Orleans at 8 A.M. Friday morning. Twelve airlines, including Air Canada are donating their planes and crew to the relief effort. FEMA will reimburse them for the jet fuel. Cargo airlines like FedEx and UPS are also helping."

[livejournal.com profile] carlanime: "Speaking of cronyism, have you linked to anything about FEMA director George Brown's qualifications yet?"

[livejournal.com profile] sigma7: "And more links, if you're so interested....

Journalists in Baton Rouge need places to crash. And some journos in the area are missing.

Wisconsin paper says don't use "looting" (third letter down).
N'awlins paper still printing. Damn.

AP weighs in on the "looting"/"taking" wank.

Coach of the U of N'awlins accuses other schools of trying to "loot" his players. Insert wank joke here...."

Quick links:

If you read nothing else, read this link. How "a shot was fired" turned into "Snipers are shooting at helicopters!" ("We're controlling every single aircraft in that airspace and none of them reported being fired on," she said, adding that the FAA was in contact with the military as well as civilian aircraft. )

Doors never closed at this Big Easy bar.

Mississippians' Suffering Overshadowed.

Help the Internet Archive archive blog coverage of Katrina.

White House Shifts Blame to State and Local Officials.

U.S. Asks EU, NATO for Hurricane Aid.

A Navy hospital ship has been sitting for a week off the coast of New Orleans, waiting for FEMA to allow them to help.

A list of links about offers of aid that have been or still are being delayed or turned down.

Chertoff: Feds in Control of New Orleans. Chertoff is the one, I might add, who said FEMA had no idea there was a major situation at the convention center, at which point Ted Koppel said, flabbergasted, "Do you not watch TV at all? Do you not listen to the radio?"

Ann Coulter in all her nonsensical glory: "And in the same way the rest of the country ran to support New York, I'm waiting to see if New Yorkers will run to support the suffering victims of Katrina. I just think New Yorkers think of themselves as their own country. Of course, New York firefighters, they're Americans."

"I don't care if I get blamed for it," Gibson said, "as long as I saved my people." 

Anne Rice: "Do You Know What It Means to Lose New Orleans?"

Another viewpoint from NO: now officially the site of America's greatest shame. "The Cavalry can't get past FEMA":
We had Wal-mart deliver three trucks of water. Trailer trucks of water. Fema turned them back, said we didn't need them. This was a week go. We had 1,000 gallons of diesel fuel on a coast guard vessel docked in my parish. The coast guard said come get the fuel right way. When we got there with our trucks, they got a word, FEMA says don't give you the fuel. Yesterday, yesterday, fema comes in and cuts all our emergency communications lines. They cut them without notice. Our sheriff, Harry Lee, goes back in. he reconnects the line. He posts armed guards said no one is getting near these lines.
[...]
The guy who runs this building I'm in. Emergency management. He's responsible for everything. His mother was trapped in St. Bernard nursing home and every day she called him and said. Are you coming. Son? Is somebody coming? And he said yeah. Mama. Somebody's coming to get you.. Somebody's coming to get you on Tuesday. Somebody's coming to get you on Wednesday. Somebody's coming to get you on Thursday. Somebody's coming to get you on Friday. And she drowned Friday night. And she drowned Friday night. Nobody's coming to get us. Nobody's coming to get us. The Secretary has promised. Everybody's promised. They've had press conferences. I'm sick of the press conferences. For god's sakes, just shut up and send us somebody.

[personal profile] krickets: The hurricane and the poor of New Orleans - a timeline 
This is a wordy, but thorough post on the failures of the government when it comes to aiding the poor, primarily black citizens of New Orleans.

Let's start at the beginning, before the hurricane. We had information from the Natural Hazards Institute showing the effects of a massive hurricane in New Orleans. It's a great read, because it's exactly right.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers also understood the threat, and were repeatedly denied any substantial funds to handle the problem. This year they requested $27 million to deal with the problem. Bush's budget proposed $4 million, and then Congress compromised to less than $6 million.

The Editor and Publisher tracks print media in a very objective way. They're well known for their factual coverage of American newspapers. They astutely point out that the Army Corps of Engineers never tried to hide the fact that the spending pressures of the war in Iraq, as well as homeland security -- coming at the same time as federal tax cuts -- was the reason for the strain. That's what happens when you are spending more than $50 million a day in Iraq and cutting taxes at the same time. (And I've seen higher estimates of our spending up to $200 million. Maybe our military friends can give a more precise estimate here?)

Louisiana is one of poorest states in the U.S.A. Some 134,000 could not leave because they lacked transportation. Did I forget to mention that the city only ordered an evacuation AFTER the city had closed the buses and trains that could lead people out to safety? Oh, well, yeah, that too. Still, the President didn't order the military in to help evacuate.

If you didn't have access to food and water, what would you go for? Probably guns, ammunition and commodities that can be traded for other more important goods later on. That's what they did.

The U.S. possesses military aircraft like the cargo ships. They can airdrop 45,000 pounds of food, medicine, and essential supplies per drop, without needing a landing space. Were any sent by our President? No. I think we have the cargo ships in Iraq. Are there ANY here in the United States? My military friends might be able to explain this to me better.

Then when these citizens get $25,000 together to hire 10 buses to get them out on Wednesday. A hotel organized the line in an orderly fashion by age and illness. The military confiscated the buses instead. They evacuated no people with the buses they confiscated. The citizens were out $25,000 and are now among the ones dying at the Convention center.

We should be dropping so many supplies that the people wouldn't know what to do with it all. Only when is there an abundance of supplies and/or 50,000 military troops can the the fighting and killing cease.

President Bush doesn't really care about the poor people in New Orleans very much.

[The above was written before Kanye West's comments, btw.]


More AP articles. Be careful--I'm kind of desensitized to the horror after collecting these articles for so many days now, but the articles are getting more and more grisly as we go, and there's discussion of suicide in at least two of the articles. The last two, I think.

New Orleans residents lament lack of insurance
By Belinda Goldsmith

[12 pm CST]

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Packing just a few T-shirts and some shorts, Jenny Bagert joined the hordes fleeing New Orleans after a warning that one of the fiercest hurricanes in U.S. history was about to hit the low-lying southern city.

Her lack of preparation was fairly typical for New Orleans residents who had grown increasingly complacent about hurricane warnings and evacuation plans, with few adequately insured against the long forewarned disaster.

"We evacuate so often we know what and how we should prepare, but you just get used to it. We never thought it would be this bad," Bagert, 32, a photographer, told Reuters by telephone from an aunt's house near Houston, Texas.


"I'm hoping my one-story, raised house in mid-city might be OK, but we saw my mother's house on the television with just the roof showing so we know she has lost it."

But Bagert's family is among the lucky ones. They took out flood insurance, well aware of the risks in New Orleans, which is below sea level and encircled by levees. They are still stunned by the devastation and thousands of deaths in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.

"We just keep breaking down," Bagert said.

Only about 40 percent of New Orleans homeowners have flood insurance, which is provided in the United States under a government program, the National Flood Insurance Program, run by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).

Standard homeowner insurance only covers damage from fire and wind while commercial or automobile insurance does cover flood damage. A high number of car claims are expected from Katrina with thousands of cars submerged.

Private insurers, like State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. and Allstate Corp., which lead the home insurance market in the state of Louisiana, do sell policies for the FEMA and can settle the claims for policy holders.

FEW INSURED

But only 85,000 residential and commercial policies have been sold in Orleans parish, in which the city is located, by the NFIP, according to latest figures -- while the U.S. census lists about 213,000 housing units in the city in 2002.

"We estimate about 40 percent of properties have flood insurance -- and virtually all the damage caused in New Orleans was by floods, not winds," a FEMA spokesman said.

The NFIP program also only offers up to $250,000 for homeowners to rebuild damaged properties, and up to $100,000 to replace contents.

Risk modeler Risk Management Solutions has estimated that 150,000 properties have been flooded in New Orleans.

But widespread flooding, debris, power outages and a lack of lodging could prevent damage assessments for weeks.

Early estimates expect Katrina to be the most costly U.S. storm, with insured losses of more than $25 billion -- topping insured losses of $21 billion from Hurricane Andrew in 1992.

"This is going to be one of the, if not the, most costly natural disaster in the United states," said Jeanne Salvatore, a spokeswoman for the Insurance Information Institute.

Salvatore said each claim would be have to handled on a case-by-case basis to see if the damage was caused by water, winds, or a combination of both. Some properties were destroyed by fire.

Homeowners without flood coverage whose homes were water damaged will have to rebuild using their own funds.

In past catastrophes, insurers have covered about 60 percent of total economic loss, but this could be considerably less with Katrina because so much of the damage has been caused by flooding, which is not covered by the insurers.

Instead, business claims, such as insurance for business interruption, could represent about 50 percent of claims, up from 30 percent after previous hurricanes.

LOST MEMORIES

People who rent properties are not insured for flooding.

Bedonna Wakeman, 56, a street artist, was renting an apartment in the Marigny area that was badly affected but she was out of town when the Katrina pummeled the U.S Gulf Coast.

"I have lost everything I own -- from my mother and father's wedding picture to the 12 canvases I had painted for a new show," Wakeman said from her son's apartment in New York.

"It's just so hard to fathom that it could be two months, six months, or a year before we are allowed back. No one knows."

Hurricane Katrina is likely to put further upward pressure on insurance rates, which were already rising in the Gulf states and the Southeast, by reminding insurers that too much exposure to coastal areas can be risky.

But the National Association of Insurance Commissioners said the property and casualty industry had adequate capital and liquidity required to withstand even the record losses expected to stem from Katrina. The industry has $425 billion in reserves, according to second-quarter figures.

However, residents who managed to leave the city to watch the disaster unfold from a safe distance said their losses were nothing compared with the suffering of those left behind, with flooding wiping out many of the poorer neighborhoods.

"You are just looking into the face of death when you see those people still there," Wakeman said.


HHS Chief: Katrina Death Toll in Thousands
[1:00 pm CST]

WASHINGTON - Health and Human Services Secretary Michael Leavitt said Sunday the death toll from Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath is in the thousands, the first time a federal official has acknowledged what many had feared.

Leavitt said he couldn't provide a precise number on the impact of the devastation, but when asked if it was in the thousands, he told CNN's "Late Edition," "I think it's evident it's in the thousands."

"It's clear to me that this has been sickeningly difficult and profoundly tragic circumstance," Leavitt said.

New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin said it was likely thousands were dead based on the city's population of 500,000, the percentage who left before the storm hit and the number evacuated from the shelters.

"So you probably have another 50-60,000 out there," Nagin said. "You do the math, man, what do you think? Five percent is unreasonable? Ten percent? Twenty percent? It's going to be a big number."

Earlier in the day,  Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff had declined to estimate the death toll, but conceded that an untold number of people could have perished in swamped homes and temporary shelters where many went for days without food or water.

"I think we need to prepare the country for what's coming," Chertoff said. "What's going to happen when we de-water and remove the water from New Orleans is we're going to uncover people who died, maybe hiding in houses, got caught by the flood, people whose remains are going to be found in the streets. ... It is going to be about as ugly of a scene as I think you can imagine."

Leavitt said he had received a report of an outbreak of dysentery in Biloxi, Miss., with disease among the concerns of federal officials in the hurricane's aftermath. Dysentery is a painful intestinal disease that can cause dehydration and can sometimes be fatal.

The lack of clean drinking water in parts of the Gulf Coast region and standing flood waters with decomposing bodies and human waste in the streets of New Orleans could cause a rash of infectious diseases, including  West Nile virus and the often fatal E. coli bacteria.

"All of the infectious diseases that occur when people are in large congregations of people can spread," Leavitt said.

Amid widespread criticism about a slow and ineffectual response to the crisis, the Bush administration dispatched several top officials to the region: Chertoff, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Richard Myers and Secretary of State     Condoleezza Rice.

President Bush and first lady Laura Bush visited the Red Cross' disaster operation center, where they thanked employees. The president also announced that the White House would hold a blood drive on Friday.

"The world saw this tidal wave of disaster ascend upon the Gulf Coast," said Bush, who plans to return to the region Monday. "Now they can see a tidal wave of compassion."

In a series of interviews, Chertoff said the evacuation and relief operations are under way — with federal assistance in place.

"There's no question that with the addition of National Guard and regular troops we've secured the city," Chertoff said on "Fox News Sunday." "We've got the adequate personnel now who are able to make sure that we have a comprehensive evacuation effort."

The criticism has continued unabated as it has taken days for food and water to reach thousands who took shelter in the Superdome, the New Orleans convention center and even the hard concrete of the highways traversing the city.

Nagin told NBC News on Sunday that the situation has been "a tragedy, a disgrace."

Chertoff said authorities are in place to handle the crisis, while cautioning that major challenges lay ahead.

"We are still in the middle of an emergency," he said on CNN's "Late Edition." "This is not the time when we can draw a sigh of relief."

Chertoff defended the job of FEMA Director Michael Brown and declined to get into a discussion about whether the government moved quickly and forcefully enough to deal with the catastrophe, saying there would be plenty of time for a review.

He did complain about problems getting information from local officials.

"One of the things we'll look at is why in the middle of this emerging crisis there was kind of a conflict on the information," Chertoff said on the Fox program.

Chertoff shrugged off suggestions that the demand for National Guard troops in  Iraq had depleted the numbers available to respond to the crisis.

On Saturday, Bush ordered more than 7,000 active duty forces to the region and 10,000 National Guard troops were being sent to the Gulf Coast. All total, the number of Guard personnel in the stricken states is about 40,000.

Chertoff said Saturday that more than 100,000 people had received humanitarian aid and the Coast Guard had rescued 9,500 people.



New Orleans Begins Grisly Cleanup
By ALLEN G. BREED, Associated Press Writer

[1:00 pm CST]

NEW ORLEANS - Rescuers going house to house searched for hurricane survivors Sunday, and New Orleans turned its attention to gathering up what could be thousands of bodies from the floodwaters. "It is going to be about as ugly of a scene as I think you can imagine," the nation's homeland security chief warned.

No one knows how many people were killed by Hurricane Katrina and how many more succumbed waiting to be rescued. But the bodies are everywhere: hidden in attics, floating in the ruined city, crumpled in wheelchairs, abandoned on highways.

"I think it's evident it's in the thousands," Health and Human Services Secretary Michael Leavitt said Sunday on CNN, echoing predictions by city and state officials last week about the death toll.

Craig Vanderwagen, rear admiral of the U.S. Public Health Service, said one morgue alone, at a St. Gabriel prison, expected 1,000 to 2,000 bodies.

"We need to prepare the country for what's coming," Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said on "Fox News Sunday." "We are going to uncover people who died, maybe hiding in houses, got caught by the flood. ... It is going to be about as ugly of a scene as I think you can imagine."

Air and boat crews from many agencies searched flooded neighborhoods in and around the city for survivors. To expedite the rescues, the Coast Guard requested that anyone stranded hang out brightly colored or white sheets, towels or "anything else that might help draw attention to those still in need of assistance."

Chertoff said rescuers have encountered a significant number of people who have said they don't want to evacuate.

"That is not a reasonable alternative," he said. "We are not going to be able to have people sitting in houses in the city of New Orleans for weeks and months while we de-water and clean this city. ... The flooded places, when they're de-watered, are not going to be sanitary."

In addition to civilian deaths, New Orleans emergency service agencies have had to deal with some suicides among their ranks, Mayor Ray Nagin said.

"I've got some firefighters and police officers that have been pretty much traumatized," he said. "And we've already had a couple of suicides so I am cycling them out as we speak, but we have a problem. I can get them to Baton Rouge, but once I get them to Baton Rouge there's no hospitals. They need physical and psychological evaluations."


Sunday morning, a woman's body remained lying at the corner of Jackson Avenue and Magazine Street — a business area in the lower Garden District with antique shops on the edge of blighted housing. The body had been there since at least Wednesday.

As days passed, people covered her with blankets or plastic.

By Sunday, a short wall of bricks had been built around her body, holding down a plastic tarpaulin. On it, someone had spray-painted a cross and the words, "Here lies Vera. God help us."

Outside the convention center Sunday, where walk-up stragglers and those picked up by rescuers were being evacuated, Navy Lt. Andy Steczo of Bossier City, La., was dressing a gash on 56-year-old Pedro Martinez' ankle and cuts on his knuckle and forearm.

Martinez said he was injured while helping people onto rescue boats. "I don't have any medication and it hurts. I'm glad to get out of here," he said.

Steczo, who came with other personnel from the Jacksonville Naval Hospital, was among medics checking evacuees before they leave. Bullet wounds, knife wounds, infections, dehydration and chronic problems such as diabetes were among the problems he'd dealt with.

"We're cleaning them up the best we can and then shipping them out," Steczo said.

Some victims scavenged what they could find among the detritus left behind.

John Henry picked up a pair of hiking shoes, a pair of tennis shoes that looked unworn, packs of cigarettes and a variety of spirits, including bottles of cognac and Jack Daniels. "We're looting the people who were looting," he said, cackling. "I love it. I have to admit it."

He also picked up a T-shirt showing the Three Stooges. "Larry, Curley and Moe. I'm keeping this one. It stinks, though," he said.

The last 300 refugees at the Superdome were evacuated Saturday evening, eliciting cheers from members of the Texas National Guard who had been standing watch over the facility for nearly a week as some 20,000 hurricane survivors waited for rescue.

On Sunday, utilities planned to send trucks into the city to assess storm damage for the first time since Katrina struck. Morgan Stewart, a spokesman for electricity provider Entergy Corp., said the National Guard would escort the company's vehicles.

The exact number of dead won't be known for some time. Survivors were still being plucked from roofs and shattered highways across the city. President Bush ordered more than 7,000 active duty forces to the Gulf Coast on Saturday.

The overwhelming majority of those stranded in the post-Katrina chaos were those without the resources to escape — and, overwhelmingly, they were black.

During a tour of damaged parts of her native Alabama, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice defended President Bush against charges that the government's sluggish response to Katrina showed racial insensitivity.

"Nobody, especially the president, would have left people unattended on the basis of race," the administration's highest-ranking black said.

Tens of thousands of people had been evacuated from New Orleans, seeking safety in Texas, Tennessee and many other states.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry warned Saturday that his enormous state was running out of room, with more than 220,000 hurricane refugees camped out there and more coming. Emergency workers at the Astrodome were told to expect 10,000 new arrivals daily for the next three days.

In Washington, Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta announced that more than 10,000 people had been flown out of New Orleans in what he called the largest airlift in history on U.S. soil. He said the flights would continue as long as needed.

Thousands of people remained at Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport, where officials turned a Delta Blue terminal into a triage unit. Officials said 3,000 to 5,000 people had been treated at the unit, but fewer than 200 remain. Others throughout the airport awaited transport out of the city.

Airport director Roy Williams said about 30 people had died, some of them elderly and ill. The bodies were being kept in refrigerated trucks as a temporary morgue.


New Orleans Begins Counting Its Dead
By ROBERT TANNER, AP National Writer

[5:40 pm CST]

NEW ORLEANS - New Orleans turned much of its attention Sunday to gathering up and counting the dead across a ghastly landscape awash in perhaps thousands of corpses. "It is going to be about as ugly of a scene as I think you can imagine," the nation's homeland security chief warned.

As authorities struggled to keep order, police shot and killed at least five people Sunday after gunmen opened fire on a group of contractors traveling across a bridge on their way to make repairs, Deputy Police Chief W.J. Riley said.

Fourteen contractors were traveling across the Danziger Bridge under police escort when they came under fire, said John Hall, a spokesman for the Army Corps of Engineers. None of the contractors was killed, Hall said.

The bridge spans a canal connecting Lake Pontchartrain and the Mississippi River.

No other details, including whether any of the gunmen were killed, were immediately available.

Air and boat crews searched flooded neighborhoods for survivors, and federal officials urged those still left in New Orleans to leave for their own safety.

To expedite the rescues, the Coast Guard requested through the media that anyone stranded hang out brightly colored or white linens or something else to draw attention. But with the electricity out though much of the city, it was not known if the message was being received.

With large-scale evacuations completed at the Superdome and Convention Center, the death toll was not known. But bodies were everywhere: floating in canals, slumped in wheelchairs, abandoned on highways and medians and hidden in attics.

"I think it's evident it's in the thousands," Health and Human Services Secretary Michael Leavitt said Sunday on CNN, echoing predictions by city and state officials last week. The U.S. Public Health Service said one morgue alone, at a St. Gabriel prison, expected 1,000 to 2,000 bodies.

In the first official count in the New Orleans area, Louisiana emergency medical director Louis Cataldie said authorities had verified 59 deaths — 10 of them at the Superdome.

"We need to prepare the country for what's coming," Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said on "Fox News Sunday." "We are going to uncover people who died, maybe hiding in houses, got caught by the flood. ... It is going to be about as ugly of a scene as I think you can imagine."

Chertoff said rescuers have encountered a number of people who said they did not want to evacuate.

"That is not a reasonable alternative," he said. "We are not going to be able to have people sitting in houses in the city of New Orleans for weeks and months while we de-water and clean this city. ... The flooded places, when they're de-watered, are not going to be sanitary."

In addition to civilian deaths, New Orleans' police department has had to deal with suicides in its ranks. Two officers took their lives, including the department spokesman, Paul Accardo, who died Saturday, according to Riley. Both shot themselves in the head, he said.

"I've got some firefighters and police officers that have been pretty much traumatized," Mayor Ray Nagin said. "And we've already had a couple of suicides, so I am cycling them out as we speak. ... They need physical and psychological evaluations."

In a showing of police power, foot patrols of National Guardsmen carrying M-16 rifles and backed by a convoy of several dozen Humvees set out on Jackson Avenue in Uptown New Orleans.

The strain was apparent in other ways. Aaron Broussard, president of Jefferson Parish, dropped his head and cried on NBC's "Meet the Press."

"The guy who runs this building I'm in, emergency management, he's responsible for everything. His mother was trapped in St. Bernard nursing home, and every day she called him and said, `Are you coming, son? Is somebody coming?' And he said, `And yeah, Momma, somebody's coming to get you. Somebody's coming to get you on Tuesday. Somebody's coming to get you on Wednesday. Somebody's coming to get you Thursday. Somebody's coming to get you on Friday' — and she drowned Friday night. She drowned on Friday night," Broussard said.

"Nobody's coming to get her, nobody's coming to get her. The secretary's promise, everybody's promise. They've had press conferences — I'm sick of the press conferences. For God's sakes, shut up and send us somebody."

Hundreds of thousands of people already have been evacuated, seeking safety in Texas, Tennessee and other states. The first group of refugees who will take shelter in Arizona arrived Sunday in Phoenix. With more than 230,000 already in Texas, Gov. Rick Perry ordered emergency officials to begin preparations to airlift some of them to other states that have offered help.

What will happen to the refugees in the long term was not known.

Back in New Orleans, walk-up stragglers at the Convention Center were checked by Navy medics before they were evacuated. Lt. Andy Steczo said he treated people for bullet wounds, knife wounds, infections, dehydration and chronic problems such as diabetes.

"We're cleaning them up the best we can and then shipping them out," Steczo said.

One person he treated was 56-year-old Pedro Martinez, who had a gash on his ankle and cuts on his knuckle and forearm. Martinez said he was injured while helping people onto rescue boats. "I don't have any medication and it hurts. I'm glad to get out of here," he said.

In a devastated section on the edge of the French Quarter, people went into a store, whose windows were already shattered, and took out bottles of soda and juice.

A corpse of an elderly man lay wrapped in a child's bedsheet decorated with the cartoon characters Batman, Robin and the Riddler. The body was in a wooden cart on Rampart Street, one shoe on, one shoe off.

Rene Gibson, 42, driving a truck while hunting for water and ice, said people are not going to leave willingly. "People been all their life. They don't know nothing else," he said.


Amid the tragedy, about two dozen people gathered in the French Quarter for the Decadence Parade, an annual Labor Day gay celebration. Matt Menold, 23, a street musician wearing a sombrero and a guitar slung over his back, said: "It's New Orleans, man. We're going to celebrate."

In New Orleans' Garden District, a woman's body lay at the corner of Jackson Avenue and Magazine Street — a business area with antique shops on the edge of blighted housing. The body had been there since at least Wednesday. As days passed, people covered the corpse with blankets or plastic.

By Sunday, a short wall of bricks had been built around the body, holding down a plastic tarpaulin. On it, someone had spray-painted a cross and the words, "Here lies Vera. God help us."







Site Meter

Date: 2005-09-04 11:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bakednudel.livejournal.com
Wow, that Ann Coulter quote was just...words fail me. Surely she has major mental problems? How can people take her seriously? She says things that make absolutely no sense...non sequiturs...

Pathetic, really.

Date: 2005-09-05 12:02 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jackieocean.livejournal.com
I can't stand Ann Coulter. And what makes it even worse is that my dad loves her articles. Grr. Argh.

But yes, that is really stupid of her to make a comment like that.

Date: 2005-09-05 12:14 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dorothywwom.livejournal.com
Is Ann Coulter from New York?

Date: 2005-09-05 12:24 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cleolinda.livejournal.com
Actually, I remember someone noting that she IS from NY, which just makes her comments all the more insane.

Date: 2005-09-05 01:11 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dorothywwom.livejournal.com
It's certainly a different sort of thing to say. I certainly wouldn't announce that everyone in NYC is a self centered bastard. In fact, I'm quite sure there are nice people there as there are in most cities. I just don't that woman.

Of course, she also announced that the Trail of Tears was an excellent example of the positive effects of the Executive Branch ignoring the Supreme Court.

Date: 2005-09-05 12:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] erica-roo.livejournal.com
Her biography says she's a Connecticut native, but that she practiced law in New York... so that obviously gives her the right to make such claims... *rolling eyes*

Date: 2005-09-05 01:01 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sigma7.livejournal.com
Actually, I'm pretty sure her mailing address contains something to the effect of "DEEPEST DARKEST DEPTHS OF HELL."

Date: 2005-09-05 12:14 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cleolinda.livejournal.com
Well, as I said to the person who originally posted that link, I hope Ann Coulter will go through all of NY and tell us who is and is not American. I mean, at least that way we can update all the passports.

Date: 2005-09-05 01:11 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sigma7.livejournal.com
And she'd just whisper to you that she meant, you know, those people.

Date: 2005-09-06 05:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] count-01.livejournal.com
That would be very helpful, but not to her fans. They already know who the real Americans are.

I have admit, I like reading Coulter's column. It's almost always entertaining...almost always unintentionally.

Date: 2005-09-04 11:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mandy0x.livejournal.com
Apparently, the police killed at least 5 of the people who shot at the contractors.

Date: 2005-09-05 12:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cleolinda.livejournal.com
Yeah, I'm catching that stub article before they update it.

About the "shots at aircraft"

Date: 2005-09-05 12:28 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] word-herder.livejournal.com
After listening to that interview of...oh, bother, I don't remember her name, but it was heart-wrenching...she said that someone fired a shot at the helicopters because he was trying to get their attention...Made me start wondering if the media had over-reacted to that story...

Date: 2005-09-05 12:37 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] roseredhoofbeat.livejournal.com
Hon, go play with some BPAL. Make up extravagant order lists. Go get some of your favorite imps and slather yourself for awhile. Trust me... it helps. And don't feel guilty for taking a break, either.

ap/ yahoo looting article...

Date: 2005-09-05 12:39 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] urox.livejournal.com
Snopes debunked it quite a while ago.

Date: 2005-09-05 12:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] edda.livejournal.com
Words continue to fail me, but thank you for the links. You're right about staying informed. And 'keyboard warriors' was a great turn of phrase.

Date: 2005-09-05 12:48 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] oohasparklie.livejournal.com
If there is a hell, I'm convinced that Condoleeza Rice will be burning in it.

Date: 2005-09-05 12:49 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tifaria.livejournal.com
God, that photo at the end... I don't know what to say. I keep hearing and reading about all these people dying, and it's like it just won't sink in for me, like I'm so shocked by it that I can't react at all. Thank you again for posting all of this. It just.. really puts things in perspective.

Date: 2005-09-05 12:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] grlnamedlucifer.livejournal.com
>I'm waiting to see if New Yorkers will run to support the suffering victims of Katrina. ... New Yorkers don't really consider themselves a part of the rest of America.<

You know, this has got to be the stupidest thing I've ever heard and she's obviously pulling it out of her ass because it's based on *NOTHING*. I'd really like her to come say that to my brother who's going to be heading out there because both his job at the volunteer ambulance and as a corrections officer have asked, because he'd punch her in her face.

Date: 2005-09-05 12:59 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sigma7.livejournal.com
The Times-Picayune's Sunday editorial (http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/09/04/times.picayune.editorial/index.html) is calling for the resignation of everyone at FEMA, particularly its director. I'd also offer to add HomeSec Secretary Chertoff (http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/09/03/katrina.chertoff/index.html) for his growing estrangement from reality.

Date: 2005-09-05 01:03 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladykatiewench.livejournal.com
Thank you so much for all the information you have been posting about Katrina. I am so impressed with you and your ability to get word out about ways to help. For that purpose, I would like to recommend another place for people to send donations and have the money go directly to the people who need it the most.

There is a group called Desire Street Ministries. Yes, it is religious but rather than just preaching, they also help alot of people around the south and especially in New Orleans. They have been doing this for some time and many of the people they help were in the worst place to be hit by flooding, Ninth Ward. Ninth Ward is the poorest section of the poor part of New Orleans. One of the levees that broke was right next to Ninth Ward. When you hear about bodies floating in the streets, that is where they are talking about.

Right now, Desire Street is trying to help evacuate the people of Ninth Ward and find them places to stay. They have found some places for people to stay in Texas and Georgia, but it isn't cheap to give them food, clothes, a place to stay, and transportation out of New Orleans. Therefore, they are taking donations. This money will not be handed down through channels, it will go directly to the people who need it.

If you want to send a check, make it payable to Desire Street Ministries to

Whitney National Bank
Mail Teller
1716 Mangum Road
Houston, TX 77092

The other way is to donate electronically through www.networkforgood.org -- enter the keyword as "Desire Street Ministries" and the state as Louisiana. Keep in mind, though, that this web site charges a 3% fee. So, mailing a check is best, especially if you plan to make a substantial donation.

If you are interested in checking out the website for the group, it is http://www.desirestreet.org/

If you would be willing to pass this information along, I would greatly appreciate it. I do know people who work with this group and they are doing good things. Thanks honey!

Date: 2005-09-05 01:30 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pride4u2.livejournal.com
Hey, Cleo...I don't mean to jeopardize your sanity even further (or anyone else's for that matter), but everyone needs to see this (http://movies.crooksandliars.com/Meet-the-Press-Broussard.wmv).

Date: 2005-09-05 01:55 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cleolinda.livejournal.com
Okay, before I download it, what *is* it?

Date: 2005-09-05 03:18 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] scaffold.livejournal.com
Sorry to respond to someone else's comment, I haven't downloaded it (cried just reading it) so I'm not 100% sure of its content, but I think that's a link to a video of :

"The guy who runs this building I'm in, emergency management, he's responsible for everything. His mother was trapped in St. Bernard nursing home, and every day she called him and said, `Are you coming, son? Is somebody coming?'...".

Date: 2005-09-05 03:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cleolinda.livejournal.com
Ahhhhhh. I was about to say, I'm not downloading it if it's a video of the actual carnage, thanks.

Date: 2005-09-05 04:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pride4u2.livejournal.com
Yeah, that's what it is. And, um...omg. Just...omg. *sobs*

Date: 2005-09-05 02:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] roseredhoofbeat.livejournal.com
OMG, we totally have to have a *facepalm* t-shirt!

Date: 2005-09-05 04:04 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] angelic-oni.livejournal.com
Hi Cleo,

Thanks for all the links. I like knowing what's going on and just being aware. If not for your journal, I probably wouldn't have come across even half of these links.

Just wanted to let you know that Maddox, the creator of the Best Page in the Universe (http://maddox.xmission.com/), has updated his site and for the next few days (until Wednesday) 50% of the profit made at his store (http://store.theworstpageintheuniverse.com/) will go to the Red Cross. A lot of people know about and love his site and yours, for that matter, so maybe you can pass this on.

Every little bit helps, I figure.

And again, thank you for being so active and keeping everyone aware.

Date: 2005-09-05 04:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mekania.livejournal.com
I started to cry a bit after seeing that picture of that woman's makeshift grave as well as Anne Rice's article. It's getting hard to want to read anymore but it's helping a lot better than the snippits I hear from my mother watching tv in the livingroom.

Thanks for all the work you've been doing for this, I wouldn't have found half as many news stories.

Suggested Link

Date: 2005-09-05 05:00 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Hey, PrincessCleo. Just wanted to suggest a link. JustHuman has a really good post on empathy, that I think would be helpful to those who have been reading your journal for days now:

http://www.livejournal.com/users/justhuman/195862.html

Regards,
Gwynevere1

Date: 2005-09-05 05:08 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shesnotallthere.livejournal.com
My husband said something to me today, and it set me back on my heels.

I was ranting about the White House, and FEMA, and the state/local governments, and how frankly, I wanted heads on platters. My husband pointed out to me that most of the people I'm pissed at?

Elected officals.

As he put it, "We put these people in office, we don't hold their feet to the fire to make sure they do their jobs, and the mistakes compound until people die. It took corpses floating in the streets to get our attention, to make us look into what FEMA was up to, to make us curious about why funds for the levees weren't what they should've been, and so on and so on."

As much as I'm loathe to admit it, I think he's right. Our leaders failed us, but we failed us, too. Maybe now, We The People will pay more attention, and do more to prevent anything like this from ever happening again.

Date: 2005-09-05 05:29 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] supersyncspaz7.livejournal.com
Here's something: in Arlington, TX (near my part of the world), the salon I get my hair done at is offering free hair treatments for evacuees around the nineteenth. I can't remember the name of the salon (the stylist who does my hair just moved over there and I've only been by once), but once I do, I'll be sure to mention it. Also, they're collecting school supplies for the kids too.

Date: 2005-09-05 06:53 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wirrrn.livejournal.com
Hey,

What I feared would start to happen has happened. All that floodwater and the corpses floating in it has started attracting hungry alligators. I just hope people realise they're just doing what they were designed to do and keep out of their way. They won't go for living people when there's so much carrion available. I hope everyone manages to get out okay, despite Dubya and his Goon Squad...

Wirrrn

Date: 2005-09-05 07:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ankhet.livejournal.com
If you're still collecting links, I'd suggest taking a look at this post (http://www.livejournal.com/community/hp_california/87231.html) about plus-sized clothing desperately being needed.

Date: 2005-09-05 09:02 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bacardibreezer7.livejournal.com
So...people still trapped in their homes are meant to hang "brightly colored or white sheets, towels or "anything else that might help draw attention to those still in need of assistance.""

Was it just me who thought, "And where are they going to get these from?" Anything white would be dirty brown from the filthy water by now, and anyway, most of these peoples' belonging are probably a) at a level in their homes that's under water where it's not safe for them to venture or b) completely swept away. I mean, these people have lost everything, it's a flood for frick's sake.

What are they supposed to do to attract attention, start tap dancing on their roofs or something?


Date: 2005-09-05 04:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] careyleah.livejournal.com
And, btw, how are they supposed to hear these "instructions"? Is the Coast Guard assuming they're reading the internets on their blackberrys while trapped in their attics?

OMGWTFDUH.

(PS Anger not directed at you, bacardibreezer, of course. Anger directed at officials annoucing things on TV and expecting people with no electricity to hear them magically somehow.)

Date: 2005-09-05 05:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bacardibreezer7.livejournal.com
It's all good, I totally got what you meant - ie. that you agreed with me on the stupidity of these instructions, etc.

Date: 2005-09-05 09:03 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] la-sonnambula.livejournal.com
Aaaah, that AnnC Coulter. You can always count on her to spit out incredibly devisive and hate filled diatribe in times of crisis. I was going to say that reading Ann Coulter is masochistic but that would imply I derive some pleasure out of it, nope, reading her is an act of mental self-harm.

Date: 2005-09-05 02:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kat-tigereye.livejournal.com
just depressing...i know it's not doing much, but i wrote my own entry of frustration.

http://www.livejournal.com/users/kat_tigereye/53650.html

cleolinda, your advice is good

Date: 2005-09-05 03:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bellatrys.livejournal.com
one of my readers is one of yours and sent me here.

I found this editorial in the Biloxi paper (http://www.sunherald.com/mld/sunherald/12555320.htm) which is also still reporting although they don't know where 9 of their people are yet, and it says much the same thing, but I think everyone shoudl read it because it's about survivors' guilt and practical, simple things to do - it's *good* you're a survivor, that you were less hurt than your neighbors, because now you will be able to help them, is the message. I needed to hear that, I know.

(I have been reading about Biloxi too because altho i've never been there it is where my family was stationed several times and I've heard all my life about how poor it was - I hadn't known they'd turned their situation around, which makes this all the crueller a blow.)

Date: 2005-09-05 03:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tangerinee11.livejournal.com
I've said it before, and I'll say it again, but now I have proof: Ann Coulter is an idiot.

Date: 2005-09-05 03:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sweetevangeline.livejournal.com
Every. Single. Time. Ann Coulter opens her mouth, I find myself wanting to punch her in it. Seriously, is she purposefully a parody at this point?

Date: 2005-09-05 05:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bacardibreezer7.livejournal.com
Incase your readers need a laugh (coz I was laughing my ass off so hard my stomach hurts now):

http://www.livejournal.com/community/ohnotheydidnt/3390900.html

You may have already heard, but it's about Britney Spears supposedly wanting to air the birth of her baby on her crap TV show to raise money for hurricane victims.

It's very unlikely this report is true, but who cares, the story and the notes on that entry had me pissing myself laughing.

AARON BROUSSARD

Date: 2005-09-06 05:22 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
http://www.americaswetland.com/article.cfm?id=241&cateid=2&pageid=3&cid=16

Broussard was a prophet (scroll down):

Parishes Against Coastal Erosion (PACE) Response to the Bush Administration's June 14, 2005 Policy Statement on the Proposed Energy Act of 2005

By Parishes Against Coastal Erosion
Scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey, NOAA and other federal and state agencies along with university experts agree that nowhere in the world is a coastal region losing wetlands and protective barrier islands faster than Louisiana. About this there is no doubt. It is predicted that by 2050, one third of coastal Louisiana will have vanished into the Gulf of Mexico. Our coast and its wetlands is a system on the verge of collapse. Without wetlands to buffer storms, our people and property and the nation's energy supply are at risk. Oil and gas pipelines and facilities, which provide 25% of the Nation's energy needs, are more vulnerable with each storm. Oil and gas activities and federal actions to control the Mississippi River for navigation and flood control are largely responsible for the drastic loss of our coastal. PACE believes we are completely within our right to ask the federal government to share money generated from offshore oil and gas revenues with the coastal states that bear a disproportionate burden in supporting this nation's energy needs.

Louisiana's congressional delegation has urged Congress for more than a decade to return to the state a fair share of the revenue from the production of offshore oil and gas both because of the impact of offshore production on Louisiana and because interior states get 50% of revenues from oil and gas production on federal lands.

The president has supported the concept, but has backed off when it comes to funding the restoration effort. PACE believes Louisiana can no longer afford to wait. Louisiana urgently needs guaranteed resources to thwart a catastrophe that is not being given the sense of urgency that it demands.

We believe the case has been made. Louisiana's wetlands - America's WETLAND - is crucial to the nations oil and gas production, commercial fisheries, navigation and commerce and national security. Restoring the damage hastened by years of inland and offshore drilling is clearly a national responsibility.

The President, in this Policy Statement, has failed us. To sidestep this as a key issue would be a serious deficiency, in the Energy Bill, and the entire nation will suffer as a consequence.

Our Louisiana legislature this month passed a constitutional amendment requiring any new offshore oil and gas revenue to be put in a trust fund dedicated to coastal erosion.

Louisiana has made a commitment. Now, it's time for the President to step up to the plate and support funding to prevent the untold damage to the ecology, economy and potential loss of life in large numbers.

With the National Hurricane Center predicting another active hurricane season, PACE President Aaron Broussard said he fears that it is going to take a major storm and significant loss of life before the nation acts responsibly.

The PACE organization's frustration with the Administration's Statement was reflected in St. Bernard Parish President, Henry "Junior" Rodriguez's comment that "Louisiana contributes much to this Nations energy needs. It's time we take a hard look at our alternatives and consider whether we want to keep up this level of oil and gas production. "

If you have any questions, please contact Jefferson Parish President and PACE President, Aaron Broussard at (504) 736-6400.

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