Greg Palast tells the story of some residents of New Orleans who were forced out of their homes — their nice, undamaged-by-flooding homes — and are being kept out at gunpoint.
Why? Apparently because these residents are black and impoverished, and the plan is to turn New Orleans into an upscale majority-white city:
“They wanted them poor niggers out of there and they ain’t had no intention to allow it to be reopened to no poor niggers, you know? And that’s just the bottom line.”
It wasn’t a pretty statement. But I wasn’t looking for pretty. I’d taken my investigative team to New Orleans to meet with Malik Rahim. Pretty isn’t Malik’s concern.We needed an answer to a weird, puzzling and horrific discovery. Among the miles and miles of devastated houses, rubble still there today in New Orleans, we found dry, beautiful homes. But their residents were told by guys dressed like Ninjas wearing “Blackwater” badges: “Try to go into your home and we’ll arrest you.”
These aren’t just any homes. They are the public housing projects of the city; the Lafitte Houses and others. But unlike the cinder block monsters in the Bronx, these public units are beautiful townhouses, with wrought-iron porches and gardens right next to the tony French Quarter.
Raised up on high ground, with floors and walls of concrete, they were some of the only houses left salvageable after the Katrina flood.
Yet, two years later, there’s still bars on the windows, the doors are welded shut and the residents banned from returning. On the first anniversary of the flood, we were filming this odd scene when I saw a woman on the sidewalk, sobbing. Night was falling. What was wrong?
“They just messing all over us. Putting me out our own house. We come to go back to our own home and when we get there they got the police there putting us out. Oh, no, this is not right. I’m coming here from Texas seeing if I can get my house back. But they said they ain’t letting nobody in. But where we gonna go at?”
Idiot me, I asked, “Where are you going to go tonight?”
“That’s what I want to know, Mister. Where I’m going to go – me and my kids?”
With the help of Patricia Thomas, a Lafitte resident, we broke into an apartment. The place was gorgeous. The cereal boxes still dry. This was Patricia’s home. But we decided to get out before we got busted.
I wasn’t naïve. I had a good idea what this scam was all about: 89,000 poor and working class families stuck in Homeland Security’s trailer park gulag while their good homes were guarded against their return by mercenaries. Two decades ago, I worked for the Housing Authority of New Orleans. Even then, the plan was to evict poor folk out of this very valuable real estate. But it took the cover of a hurricane to do it.
Malik’s organization, Common Ground, wouldn’t wait for permission from the federal and local commissars to help folks return. They organized takeovers of public housing by the residents. And, in the face of threats and official displeasure, restored 350 apartments in a destroyed private development on the high ground across the Mississippi in the ward called, “Algiers.” The tenants rebuilt their own homes with their own sweat and their own scraps of cash based on a promise of the landlords to sell Common Ground the property in return for restoring it.
Why, I asked Malik, was there this strange lock-out from public housing?
Malik shook his dreds. “They didn’t want to open it up. They wanted them closed. They wanted them poor niggers out of there.”
For Malik, the emphasis is on “poor.” The racial politics of the Deep South is as ugly as it is in Philadelphia, Pa. But the New Orleans city establishment has no problem with Black folk per se. After all, Mayor Ray Nagin’s parents are African-American.
It’s the Black survivors without the cash that are a problem. So where New Orleans once stood, Mayor Nagin, in connivance with a Bush regime more than happy to keep a quarter million poor folk (i.e. Democrats) out of this swing state, is creating a new city: a tourist town with a French Quarter, loose-spending drunks, hot-sheets hotels and a few Black people to perform the modern version of minstrel shows.
Malik explained, “It’s two cities. You know? There’s the city for the white and the rich. And there’s another city for the poor and Blacks. You know, the city that’s for the white and rich has recovered. They had a Jazz Fest. They had a Mardi Gras. They’re going to have the Saints playing for those who have recovered. But for those who haven’t recovered, there’s nothing.”
So where are they now? The sobbing woman and her kids are gone: back to Texas, or wherever. But they will not be allowed back into Lafitte. Ever.
And Patricia Thomas? The middle-aged woman, worked sweeping up the vomit and beer each morning at a French Quarter karioke joint. Not much pay, no health insurance, of course. She died since we filmed her – in a city bereft of health care. New Orleans has closed all its public hospitals but for one “charity” make-shift emergency ward in an abandoned department store.
And the one bright star, Malik’s housing project? The tenants’ work was done this past December. By Christmastime, they received their eviction notices – and all were carried out of their rebuilt homes by marshals right after the New Year, including a paraplegic resident who’d lived in the Algiers building for decades.
Hurricane recovery is class war by other means. And in this war of the powerful against the powerless, Mr. Bush can rightly land his fighter plane in Louisiana and declare that, unlike the war in Iraq, it is, indeed, “Mission Accomplished.”
I’ve nothing to add, other than to urge you to help out the folks at Common Ground, the people who are trying to fight this 21st-century American version of ethnic cleansing.



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PW!
NOLA Kitties!!
Tres
PW, bless you for spotlighting Malik and Common Ground.
and near zed!
Once again I am shamed by the actions taken by my country and fellow citizens.
Hmm, you paste in Randy Newman’s “Rednecks” and it get filtered out but if you put the n word in the headers it doesn’t.
See, Beloved Leader is right. It is getting better every time he visits. For “his base”, the rich, white, influential Americans.
If you are invisible to him, you’re fucked.
Again, where is the Democratic Leadership on this issue? The Presidential Candidates, other than perhaps John Edwards?
Mourning in America, indeed.
I was reading some of Palast’s ideas on a couple of other sites earlier today and was thinking to myself that we should be watching what happens to the taxable property values in the near future. This is how the developers stole the barrier islands (read Hilton Head) from the long-time inhabitants who could not afford the taxes as they were increased. Thieves should be called out for what they are!
PW.
Whom do you trust?
A government official who is telling you you need to go in X direction toward Y objective?
Or a poor black woman with no education whose sons have been arrested for violating the law who says, no don’t go there. Come here.
I knew there had to be balance to the Perry commutation today. I am just sick, but of course not surprised at the shenanigans in NOLA. Oh, and Jonathan is back to help us get our priorities straight, so all is Right with the world
I know it is OT, but since we here are all immensely interested in the subject, check out via Raw Story:
Rewritten surveillance law passed by Congress could give Bush more power for domestic wiretaps
That story comes from Secrecy News where you can also go to the Congressional Research Service’s actual PDF report here.
I’m really, really proud to know (some of) the street medics and nurses and docs and acpunturisits and herbalists who came together for the Common Ground Clinic after Katrina.
I’ll never forget watching Katrina a day or so out from NOLA here in SF with Michael Kozart – a really great person (who happens to be a shrink!) and other medics who were planning to help even before the damage was apparent.
We live in a nation of good people, by and large.
Together, we’ll seize back our government from the corporations and their hired killers.
And we’ll do it without a shot.
my god, that is sickening.
And Bush wants $50,000,000,000 more for this unwinnable war. Clark on Olbermann doesn’t like Lieberman.
Houston did a similar “cleansing” of some of its best public housing because the real estate was too valuable to let the common folk have use of it.
kirk murphy @ 12
We live in a nation of good people.
But people who feel betrayed.
Blackwater.
Black Mariahs.
they just bought themselves a couple of attack aircraft, as well.
http://www.strategypage.com/ht…..70827.aspx
Not one of the many tv reports on New Orleans yesterday mentioned public housing. Not one.
And Bush was in NO with Laura for photo opps yesterday. The man and his wife ain’t got no class.
And the Demo front-runners are rakin’ it in.
Perhaps the DLC will help rebuild NO.
Oklahoma kiddo @ 14
“Every gun that’s made, every warship launched, every rocket fired, signifies a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and not clothed. This world in arms…is spending the genius of its scientists, the sweat of its laborers,” Dwight David Eisenhower
PW, thanks for this. I read it this morning and was hoping it would get a linky here some time today. Incredible. And Just. What. We. Would. Expect.
TheOtherWA @ 18
That is like the reporting in the aftermath of the hurricane. MSM folks were totally shocked that there were black folk in NOLA. I don’t know the numbers, but NOLA had a huge population that lived in either public housing or totally substandard housing.
Mad Dogs @ 11
Unfortunately, that CRS report, as Aftergood mentioned, is full of words indicating uncertainty. The language is very, very vague–both in the report and in the Protect America Act.
The great danger is that the law, as written, gives huge amounts of wiggle-room for an administration which has pretty much ignored any kind of restraint, legal or constitutional. When we discover they’ve been screwin’ with us again, they’ll say, “the Protect America Act says we can do it.”
Shouldn’t federal reconstruction funds be used first for restoring public housing along with other public works projects?
Katrina response alone should have been more than enough for Dems to dance on table tops for impeachment.
Mad Dogs @ 11
Well, it’s not that it gives him more powers – he’s being doing this all along. It’s just that he realized he can’t just declare it legal.
People everywhere, especially the kids, are being crushed by the GOP steam roller.
thank you pw. Malik Rahim sounds like an amazing person… heard him interviewed today on democracy now! (they are reporting from NOLA today and tomorrow).
Americans have accepted the destruction of New Orleans.
They protest not against the defiling of the Constitution.
The stage is set for the undoing of America.
Jonathan @ 30
That undoing began a long time ago:
There are so many different things Bush should be impeached for – Katrina is one of them.
Montag at 31
I agree.
Was just trying to stir up some discussion.
The Republicans are clearly PreOp.
The impression here is that those most affected by Katrina don’t view either political party as representing them.
Jonathan @ 30
The stage was set in 2001. The timing was perfect in 2003 or 2004. Whether they lost their nerve or thought that Rove would manage to make it all “legal” doesn’t matter. The window is now closing.
Everythingseemssoneat @ 34
The Republicans are clearly PreOp.
I assume you’re not talking about lobotomies, right?
My prediction:
Rudy vs. Hillary
Rudy wins.
Divided government.
Americans talk amongst themselves about why the system works so badly.
Rahm supports all of Rudy’s initiatives.
So does Schumer.
The American people are fucked.
Theoretically, they could do this to any city following a “terrorist” event. It doesn’t have to be flooding, it could be “contamination” by asbestos or radiation…anything. They kick out the people for a certain amount of time, then take over the property. Talk about eminent domain.
Blackwater needs to be stopped.
LS @ 39
how do we stop them?
You know, I was thinking that that $50 billion that George wants sooo much for the war should go to rebuilding housing so that all of these folks who are in exile in Texas or in trailers can come home. But if we did that, it would be Halliburton or some other Bush or Cheney related company that would crap it up. Better for some not for profit, like Common Ground be given the management of that money – put the money in a bank someplace(I’m not thinking this out; I’m sure there is someone else here who knows better how to manage this) – and have the people come back, arrange for them to be put together with architects and builders who can help them come up with a plan, and let the people rebuild their own damn city. Shoot, find Brad Pitt and grab his ear and drag him down there – he owns property in NO now and he’s a big architecture maven. I am fairly sure that given the right people and information resources and management (get the churches involved), that money would go six times as far as it would in the hands of someone like Halliburton AND the job would get done.
kirk murphy @ 4
Thanks!
I wanted people to be aware of all of this.
It’s pretty obvious why blackwater wants to buy a Jet fighter trainer. They aren’t going to use it for overseas. They’re going to use it here. Afterall, the law says you can’t use the army in civilian situations. It says nothing about civilian contractors with no accountability. They’ll turn New Orleans into Iraq. Thin plan, but the way things are going, they’re gonna do it, and the king is gonna help them. Bye Bye Constitution
Elliott @ 40
We have to put aside the tin foil hats and thoroughly investigate the “conspiracy theories” with an open mind and find out what they’ve really been up to. Clearly, there is a method to their madness.
Elliott @ 40
No tax dollars for mercenaries. We pay our military, our National Guard and our Police Officers. Tax dollars do not go for private law enforcement. Period.
Ryan Adams @ 32
Yeah. And I thought that maybe — just maybe — this might be the thing that broke the corporate media’s alliance with him and with the GOP. But it didn’t take long for Brian Williams and Anderson Cooper to be whipped back into line by their corporate masters.
What a difference in what Jimmy Carter does since leaving the WH, and what George Bush Sr. and his wife, and Bill Clinton and his wife do.
Loo Hoo. @ 45
Well, we’re going to have to turn out most of the Congress, the speaker included before that happens. The Congresscritters are rich people. They represent the rich, not the people. That is what it has come to. Out with all of them. They pay no attention to the people. Off with campeign money, up with new candidates, the people in there now (almost all of them) have to go.
kirk murphy @ 12
OMG Thankyou for your message here.
No tax dollars for mercenaries is a good start!
Why they want a fighter jet? That scares me.
Is Congress doing any investigation of this at all? Please let us know who in Congress we should contact who have responsibility. It’s not like there has been no warning. There were quotes in the press from local real estate developers (both white and black, but all apparently rich jerks who had no scrubples whatever) about turning the place into a new Las Vegas on the Gulf Coast. This was when the place was not even dried out yet.
And yeah, I do believe that allowing private interests or public authorities to maintain private armed forces to keep people out of undamaged housing under fraudulent cover of hurricane damage is an impeachable offense. Why not action on this?
Who in Congress runs the committees that should be investigating?
Is there anyone in the Senate other than Lieberman who would have oversight?
cynic @ 43
Kind of doubt it. It’s a matter of money. My guess is that they want to bring over pilots from other countries and provide basic jet training here–it’s cheaper than setting up several foreign operations to do the same thing.
Now, I’ll amend that remark when I hear that the Air Force is selling its cast-off tactical fighters to Blackwater at fire-sale prices….
Sad, huh, PW? Anderson Cooper made his name on honestly covering New Orleans, and now…squat.
Perhaps it’s true that most people will sell their souls…
Read this article about Allawi and why he can’t disclose who is lobbying for him:
http://www.tpmmuckraker.com/archives/004039.php
Loo Hoo. @ 53
Cooper is (iirc) Gloria Vanderbilts son… Money for him is not an excuse.
LS @ 54
well, he is an expert on murder.
Elliott @ 50
They want the jet to train their contractors to take out cities in this country that resist them. It’s pretty thin. It should scare everyone. We live in a police state. We have allowed them to make the laws that will be the basis for a dictatorship. And so far they have everything they want. It doesn’t matter who is in Congress. They’re passing everything. The investigations are purely cosmetic.
Gnome de Plume @ 15
And a series of white riots — and the immediate creation of city ordinance designed to keep black citizens from rebuilding their destroyed homes and businesses — was all it took in June of 1921 to destroy the black neighborhoods of Tulsa, ten thousand souls strong, many of which neighborhoods were quite prosperous.
Jonathan @ 38
The winning combo is Edwards/Obama against any Republican ticket. Along with a resurgent Democratic Congress, this should take care of things for a while – untl a viable 3rd party is formed.
cynic @ 48
Go to http://www.publicampaign.org to learn how to do just that.
I’ve been down there several times doing hurricane reconstruction work. Mostly in Mississippi, some on Louisiana Mississippi border. Things moved a lot slower in Louisiana, regardless of the apparent wealth of the communities. I figured that the damage was more severe and widespread in Louisiana, and I supposed that perhaps Louisiana was just sloser at getting things started, generically. This summer, though, I saw significant rebuilding in rich and upper middle class neighborhoods in SE Louisiana, but in most workin class and poor neighborhoods around New Orleans in particular, very little, and many very pissed people asserting it was intentional. It was not subtle. But this is the first time I have heard of such outrageous fraud. Needs to be headline investigations over this. Ethnic or class cleansing, or just good olf fashioned fraudulant land grab, whatever, it sounds very bad.
Loo Hoo. @ 45
Amen to that.
Jonathan @ 38
Jonathon, I believe you woefully overestimate Rudy’s abilities AND woefully underestimate Mrs Clinton’s. I was working in Manhattan through most of Y2K and staying there during the week and recall that many of the pundits and espousers of the CW were sounding like you early in the year with regard to the potential Rudy vs. Hillary Senate race.
Rudy used his cancer as the excuse to drop out when it became obvious that Mrs. Clinton was going to mop the state with him.
Rahm and Schumer may have similar positions to Rudy in some areas but I will also wager confidently that both will lead the charge in support of Mrs Clinton. Although we may not like them and they may be corporatists, they are not on Rudy’s side.
Americans are still racist.
Politicians of both parties know it.
A politicians’s #1 goal is to get re-elected.
OT – Plane carrying U.S. lawmakers in Iraq comes under attack.
A military cargo plane carrying three senators — Mel Martinez (R-FL), Richard Shelby (R-AL), and James Inhofe (R-OK) — and a House member — Bud Cramer (D-IL) — was forced to take evasive maneuvers and dispatch flares to avoid ground fire after taking off from Baghdad on Thursday night. The AP reports:
The lawmakers said their plane, a C-130, was under fire from three rocket-propelled grenades over the course of several minutes as they left for Amman, Jordan.
”It was a scary moment,” said Sen. Mel Martinez, R-Fla., who said he had just taken off his body armor when he saw a bright flash outside the window. ”
http://thinkprogress.org/2007/…..er-attack/
Offered without comment.
Phoenix Woman, thanks for this
How do we stop them?
It may take application of Gandhi/Dr. King’s nonviolent protestations. In some places, with some things, that may work.
It most likely will need Malcolm X’s cure applied. The people may have to enforce their common will.
I see much ugliness and bloodshed in America’s future. Through places like the Lake, I also see how this ugliness and bloodshed canbe transformed to restore our country.
This is complete BS. I live in N.O., was here during and after Katrina. No one is trying to turn this place into some kind of white paradise. The people of New Orleans white and black are being abandoned. The city does not have and is not being provided the resources to care for any of its citizens, especially those in poverty. It is not in the best interest of the city or any dependent residents to return yet. If you can’t completely provide for yourself, you’d have to be crazy to come back at this time. What good is affordable housing without adequate police, healthcare, schools, or any other government service. More impoverished people moving back at this time just compounds all the other problems. They will only be victimized. Don’t be a do-gooder until you know all the facts. A few months back I bought an elderly lady an air conditioner because I felt sorry for her. Its been really hot and I thought it would be great if she no longer had to come outside and sit in the shade to cool off. She thanked me. Then two months later had her electricity turned off because she couldn’t afford the bill anymore.
dakine01 at 63
My prediction as to Hillary vs. Rudy is based on the strong dislike so many Americans of so many stripes have for Hillary.
Also on the fact that, although she appears tough, she’ll come across under pressure of running for president as somewhat brittle.
Marcus Aurelius @ 59
Yup. We’re looking at a replay of 2003-4, when Kerry’s campaign seemed to be dead in the water and Dean and Gephardt were riding high.
Then Dean and Gephardt destroyed each other in Iowa, and Kerry won, and suddenly Kerry was a lock to win the nomination.
HRC and Obama will pull a Dean-Gephardt; they’ll slug away at each other until the cows come, and meanwhile the DNC delegates will start looking at Edwards as the safe harbor — which works for us, because of the three candidates in the top tier, Edwards is the most progressive.
It is a qualitive thing with the GOP. If you are not rich and Republican, you are basically trash.
At the fear of an unwelcome knock on the door tonight; Blackwater and the like is the biggest threat to this country that there is. A mercenary force operating with the full approval of the government that has all the toys of the real military. Just put in a task order off their GSA contract and you too can do an ethnic cleansing of a major American city.
Last week Sports Illustrated had an article by Alexander Wolf titled, Two Years after Katrina.
It really was an excellent article and it wasn’t just sports but a social commentary as well. In it was this passage:
“When city planners speak of “a smaller footprint” to be served by a drastically reduced tax base, they envision cutting loose much of the city east of the Industrial Canal-and in that many black New Orleanians hear “ethnic cleansing” or see a Trojan horse for an opportunistic landgrab”.
Yes Katrina has helped to hasten the gentrification of New Orleans. Bring that valuable land back to the rich and away from the poor. Just the way the neocons envisioned the new century to be.
Amazing that a sports magazine would bring up such a subject. It should make the MSM embarrassed at their complicity with this crime ridden administration. But at least we have Katie Couric…
Boxer at 68
right on
Shadowstalker @ 67
The above seems like an endorsement of violent means. If it is, I reject it an do not wish to be associated to with it.
Pursang @ 72
Wrong. Please see 68.
Oklahoma kiddo @ 71
fixed your typo, OKK
Jonathan @ 69
And that’s exactly what they were predicting about her in Y2K and how the folks in the Upstate would respond to her.
They were wrong.
Edwards is our choice among the candidates.
wesgpc @ 61
Yup.
boxer says: August 30th, 2007 at 5:58 pm
“This is complete BS. I live in N.O., was here during and after Katrina.”
What are you saying is BS? The assertion about transforming New Orleans, or this particular story.
I did read stories in Wall Street Journal and Times Picayune quoting real estate people who used just that word “Las Vegas on the Gulf Coast” So, there were powerful people who had plans. I don’t have the cites from two years ago, but I do certainly remember reading them.
cynic, Jonathan. If we lived in the world you think we do, Bush would not have had to revise FISA. Rove and Gonzo (and at least a half dozen others) would still be at the WH. Padilla would not have needed a trial. Abramoff and Cunningham would not be in jail. “None of the above” would not be the top GOP vote getter. The press would’ve ignored the Craig story.
The time to worry was around 2004 when the conquest (not occupation) of Iraq was seen as a great success.
Many of the poor african americans are gone from NO forever. It’s all over- Louisiana is red–Bush won the second battle of New Orleans…Nixon used benign neglect- and Clusterfuck has perfected it.
Clusterfuck an Tricky Dick have some real times ahead- swappin stories about the shit they got away with- hope neither is heat sensitive.
Kirk, I’m not endorsing…I’m personally very anti-violence. Pain hurts.
But, it’s the human way of applying change. Do people just accept others violently imposing a nefarious order, or do you resist? How far will you go to resist to protect the rights and lives of your “tribe”?
GordonM @ 81
GordonM, I plead innocent, except of ignorance.
It may not work, but I try to be a realist.
wesgpc @ 80
Yes there was a lot of talk from powerful people, but no one is trying to gentrify New Orleans. It’s just not true. The city was initially abandoned after integration (white flight to suburbs) and now is being abandoned entirely by the white establishment. Other than some really special people with there heart in the right place who “get” this place, no white people or people of means are moving here.
Phoenix Woman @ 79
I can’t recall the specifics, but rattling around my aging brain is some hazy concept of the following:
Fed post-disaster funds (what flavor?) are dipensed to states on the condition the states make a “co-pay” of 10 (?) percent.
In past disasters, this was waived.
After Katrina, IIRC Shrub either didn’t waive it at all or didn’t waive it for LA>
Am I hallucinating, or does the above sound familiar to anyone?
[Causaully speaking, the above are not strictly mutually exclusive, I suppose…]
boxer @ 68
You were good to give your friend an air conditioner. The fact that she couldn’t afford to keep it running is no slam on you or her — it’s just yet another thing to show how horrific things have been allowed to devolve into, two years after Katrina.
That’s not an argument for keeping the people who lived in the Laffite development from going back to their homes — homes which, as Palast and Rahim note, weren’t in many cases touched by the flooding. That’s an argument for making Bush live up to his promises of aid — most of which were either not honored, or honored poorly at best.
Hmmm.. I’m a little miffed, FDL, booted me off… Am I too progressive…??? *g*
I vaguely remember right after Katrina that a prominent wealthy hotel owner was interviewed or something and that the gist was that he was adament that he didn’t want NOLA to go back to the way it was pre-Katrina…Anyone know what I’m talking about?
Rove was salivating two minutes after the storm hit at the prospect of a red Louisiana..every electoral vote counts.
CTuttle @ 89
too grinny! *g*
CTuttle @ 89
CT — FDL booted you off? I can’t believe it.
boxer says: August 30th, 2007 at 5:58 pm:
“What good is affordable housing without adequate police, healthcare, schools, or any other government service.”
From what I saw, that is exactly the question. Why could these things be restored in Sidell, Bay St. Louis, and finally, this summer starting to be restored in SE between Lake Pontchartrain and MS, but many neighborhoods around New Orleans: nothing. Why can you get the electricity for Waffle Houses (that is MS, I guess mostly) and fast food joints out in the sticks, but not in New Orleans.
I am not saying there is some big US government conspriacy. If this story is true, it could be state or local government or private fraud and authorities are looking the other way.
All I am saying is that as some one who has been down there several times, the uneveness of the reconstruction wrt to some parts of New Orleans is starting to look very odd to me.
I would like to know the stroy behind that.
Phoenix Woman @ 88
Completely agree, however Bush does not intend on keeping his promises. With this in mind why advocate for people to return if the net result will put them in a worse position.
Elliott @ 50
They’re not jets. They’re prop planes. They are widely used to train fighter pilots. You know, so American defense contractors can sell hugely expensive jets to other countries that want to pretend they have an air force.
Jet fighters are very useful against other aircraft. That’s about the only use they have.
Bombers are better at people, but not really all that good. It’s hugely expensive and not very effective, but legal, cheaper and less risky than anything else, so if you got ‘em, you use ‘em.
Nukes are more effective, but tend to give you bad PR.
I tell ya’, this world domination thing is hard work. Need a vacation.
boxer– so what yer sayin is that the neglect of the administration has created a situation the favors those with some money and discourages the return of the poor. This, of course, is a mere accident?
OT
Jeralyn on MSNBC now.
LS @ 90
Didn’t a recent wealthy hotel owner/slum lord just leave $12 Mil to her dog, and nothing to her grandkids…??? ;-)
Gentri-cide.
Brownie said that the plan for Bush and Rove was to drag their feet because they wanted to make the white, female Democrat, Gov. Blanco look bad.
Imagine the callowness, the vile hatred of ones fellow human to think in such a way.
This was a crime against humanity.
-GSD
Jonathan @ 93
I was aghast…!!! 8-(
I wonder how this will compare in time with Reconstruction after the Civil War. Obviously both failed and corrupt.
We are starting to learn that for Bush and Rove, there are no wars, no acts of God, no terrorist acts- only political opportunities. It’s how they see the world..What would have been surprising is if they did NOT see New Orleans as an opportunity to create a gooper state…
Didn’t Clusterfuck put Rove- the political guy- in charge at one point?
GordonM @ 96
And so is fighting it off!
Clusterfuck says- “ya can’t each just one- now every month or so I get this uncontrolable urge to kick the shit out of some little pissant country- can’t help myself”
Elliott @ 102
I’m thinkin’ the Gilded Ages that has toppled many ‘Isms” throughout recorded time!!! ;-)
rwcole @ 97
No the situation discourages the return of both. My point is that moving back is in many cases a death sentence for the poor and if they have a shot at making it somewhere else they should take it.
LS @ 90
I vaguely remember right after Katrina that a prominent wealthy hotel owner was interviewed or something and that the gist was that he was adament that he didn’t want NOLA to go back to the way it was pre-Katrina…Anyone know what I’m talking about?
I think so, but I don’t remember his name. Hopsicker did some stuff on him @madcowmorningnews.com, but I can’t remember the specifics – sorry.
This is sickening. The war on the poor is escalating and I think the best way win it is for the middle class to join with the poor and get the poor to VOTE (see Venezuela and how well that worked. Hint: the poor and middle class won).
Only around 16% of eligible voters vote our presidents into office right now, since only 30% of our eligible voters even bother to vote. 30-40% of the non-voters are poor people. If even half of those voters came out to vote, it would mean a landslide for ANY candidate ~ including 3rd party candidates, if the poor voted.
We are also watching this more subtle takeover in Seattle, where some SE Seattle and Capitol Hill WWII military housing, which for over 50 years has been converted into projects are now being sold to the highest bidders ~ yet for pennies on the dollar for what they are really worth. Also the old Navy base in NE Seattle where the family housing was sold for nothing and then converted into housing that not even Section 8 could help out with because it is too high priced to afford.
As an advocate for low income people, I beg of middle income people: do not be afraid of the poor, they are your allies, if you will just listen to them as Mr Palast has done (and he will tell you, it is the same in VZ, he has been there too). It isn’t rocket science, as the middle class shrinks do not think for a moment it will not happen to you or the ones you love ~ YOU will end up with Blackwater guns pointed at you eventually, or your children will, if you do not do it now!
Cat In Seattle
CTuttle @ 106
This certainly is a Gilded Age for some
Pursang @ 72
Yes, and the fact that SI printed this is an very, very strong indication that in fact, things are changing. Drastically.
boxer @ 107
Heh, play Taps for the great ‘American Dream…!!!’
Cat at 109
Some day, when I retire and give up the rat wheel, I’d like to join you.
CTuttle @ 99
Yeah, Leona Helmsley. She stiffed two of her grandkids and also left a little extorted sympathy gift to the two others, they have to visit the grave of her husband Harry once a year.
She also left 100K to her chauffer, 12 million to her dog.
There were those that were defending her charitable donations record.
Me, I think she was a mean spirited plutocrat. She epitomized Gilded Age mentality.
Not intending to speak ill of the recently departed….Just the truth.
-GSD
Clusterfuck took a wide stance in New Orleans- and the rest is historhy.
If we can put a man on the moon…
If we can spend half a trillion dollars in Irak…wesgpc @ 80
Oh, yes. I do too. But the main expense was going to be in building a new highway in Mississippi in order that gamblers could get to a wonderful new seaport to spend money. Also new housing developments. Taxpayer money for the highway.
Maybe this could make sense in terms of tax money coming in, but it’s so wrong. The people who had their lives there should certainly have first rights.
Every time Clusterfuck takes a wide stance poor folks end up in his ground zero.
-GSD
CTuttle @ 111
No kidding. ChimpCo makes the city essentially non-functional, prevents folks from returning to their homes (reasoning that they can’t make it without those withheld services), and the homes sit fallow until the job is complete.
Interesting NYT article from 1999 about hotels and development in NOLA:
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/f…..nted=print
Bless you, Cat In Seattle
(if you lived there in ‘99 near Broadway or the “convergence center” on Denny, apologies for making a ruckus….)
Cat In Seattle @ 109
Walt Disney has been hired to build a recreated New Orleans out of plastic and fammowood…Actors have been hired to represent poor black people who will be depicted fishin- cookin- laughin- an makin merry…Reagency grads are bein trained to play the parts- a CLEAN New Orleans–hosed down nightly- and the horses all wear little diapers.
The U.S. can put a person on the moon.
The question is: What is the will of the people?
John Kennedy gave the people a vision.
So did shrub.
CTuttle @ 111
Here’s Taps for you, but be prepared, it’ll hurt your heart.
and forgive me for not remembering who posted this link earlier today.
I know hearts are in the right place here. But understand there are literally thousands of properties for sale right now in these areas. They are extremely cheap. No one is buying them. Please buy one and move here. I sorry there just isn’t any evidence on the ground of a conspiracy to gentrify New Orleans
GordonM @ 81
Exactly.
One of the reasons I brought up the 1921 Tulsa riots — where white rioters in a city of one hundred thousand people systematically destroyed the city’s black neighborhoods, which held ten percent of Tulsa’s population, and then rewrote the city’s ordinances to prevent black families from returning to rebuilding their homes and businesses — was to show that this has happened before, and in the living memory of a few people.
As far as FISA and other laws go, remember that during the Civil War, Lincoln suspended habeas corpus and did his level best to censor and prosecute pro-South “Copperhead” agitators. Granted, he had far more justification than Bush did, but his actions were as controversial as were Bush’s (and unlike with Clement Vallandigham, Bush hasn’t tried to prosecute any sitting antiwar Congresscritters like Jack Murtha or Jan Schakowsky). Yet we came back from that and habeas corpus was restored. (And of course if you were black, the Constitution really didn’t exist for you until the 1960s.)
Let’s not forget the closest we’ve ever come to an actual military coup: 1934, when we almost had one, but for the good conscience of Smedley Butler, the man the corporate financiers backing the coup had picked to be the figurehead leading the American Legion troops that were to march on Washington to force FDR into spending more time with his family.
I say all this to point out that the apparent belief of many that America is massively regressing from a point of high perfection is a false one. America has crests and troughs, and the troughs often have to be really deep to spur people to action, but we’ve been through this all before and managed to come out the other side.
By the way folks, my Cardiac Sox was swept in da Bronx, shut out even, oohhh the ignominy!!!
Yet, they still have the best record and a diminishing 5 game lead…!!! 8~)
This nation is swirling down the bowl. We have become a very greedy, means spirited nation.
Pop culture is often a window to the collective soul.
Watch the petty, brutal folks gleefully casting one another under the bus on any reality show. That is what many of us have allowed ourselves to become.
America 2007, money, fame, power.
Not much dignity.
-GSD
Phoenix Woman @ 88
You may be right-there are better places for whites who want to resettle in their golden years, which is about the only ones who are going to move down there now. But once again we see the Republicans living in their fantasy world, where happy white people will move in droves, forcing the poor black people out and turning New Orleans into Vegas on the Mississippi. But the hurricanes and the closed-mindedness of the residents and the horrific inhumanity shown by Katrina will keep them away.
And with the browning of America, the new people who could fill the empty spaces will go where things are more tolerant like the West Coast.
rwcole @ 121
you can’t make this up
no tax dollars for mercenaries is a good slogan.
It is really amazing how Washington is embodying the worst aspects of State Capitalism and State Soc*alism.
Proliferating redundant, competitive “security” bureaucracies, each with their own internal spying apparatus, outsourcing to unaccountable contractors on a no-bid basis, with mercenary scum as the lowest layer, willing to do the ‘wet work.’
America has moved beyond the point where brash idiots can really be contstrained by a sense of shame, but decent Americans should treat anyone working for these incipient death squads as a pariah, contemptible.
~~~ModNote: Edited for content to clear filters.~~~
boxer @ 86
The fact that it’s not being massively gentrified does not mean it wasn’t the plan. Yes, there’s an argument that it was their plan to totally f-up the the middle east and they’ve been successful, but if that’s the case, NO is hard to fit in. I think someone watched Jean-Luc Piccard say “make it so” too many times, and came to believe that’s all that was necessary.
Elliot- Well—-I guess I DID make it up- but it COULD happen
Elliott @ 123
Heh, Elliot it twas I who posted the linky… ;-)
rwcole @ 131
you’re bad!
LS @ 90
Oh, yes. There was lots of that.
The Nation did an article right after Katrina talking about the high vacancy rate of properties in the French Quarter, because the rents charged were so high for properties that were in many cases not that great. Yet nobody suggested letting displaced families live in these properties until they could get back into their own homes.
CTuttle @ 132
like I said, forgive me…
she said sheepishly
FYI, new post
LS @ 90
I vaguely remember right after Katrina that a prominent wealthy hotel owner was interviewed or something and that the gist was that he was adament that he didn’t want NOLA to go back to the way it was pre-Katrina…Anyone know what I’m talking about?
Here’s what I was thinking about – don’t know if that’s the guy you’re talking about or not:
http://www.madcowprod.com/01032006.html
Scroll down to “Finus Shellnut dies and goes to heaven”.
wesgpc @ 94
Basic infrastructure is shot in Orleans parish. Roads, sewer, water, schools, hospitals, you name it. Construction workers are being shot to death while at a job site, and then the copper plumbing is stolen in braod daylight. There aren’t enough cops to go around, even with the National Guard still patroling parts of the city. I think part of the problem is that most of the areas you mentioned flooded, but the water came in and went back out in a relatively quick fashion. Because of the terrain, once Orleans flooded, the water sat and percolated for weeks. The effect of stewing in fetid water for weeks on end will pretty much ruin any structire, as well as underground utilities, which weren’t in great shape before the storm. Of course that is not to say that there is no sketchy behavior going on behind the scenes.
CTuttle @ 99
Leona “Only little people pay taxes” Helmsly (sp?). Yeah, she said that. In the 80s she made quite a name for herself for her treatment of the help (think Naomi Campbell on steroids with a flame-thrower).
boxer says: August 30th, 2007 at 6:29 pm:
“I know hearts are in the right place here. But understand there are literally thousands of properties for sale right now in these areas.”
I admit I just have been down for a few weeks at a time periodically for reconstruction work. But still, difficult for me to believe that areas are getting equal treatment after what I saw this summer.
If you have some links or sources for story on which areas are getting bucks for reconstruction, including that of public infrastructure and which are not and why, please post them. From what I saw there is money coming from somewhere to get neighborhoods up and running in many suburbs and towns remote from New Orleans, some out in the boondocks, with a big lack in certain neighborhoods right in New Orleans.
I have no interest in undocumented charges about evil conspiracies, but I will repeat for one last time, it looks very odd if you drive around and see the differences, and talk with people along the coast between New Orleans and Biloxi.
Phoenix Woman @ 134
Sometimes I imagine what would have happened if this whole disaster had been taken seriously from the get-go. The levees would have been done right and kept up properly, residents would have been evacuated before the storm hit, and those who remained would have been rescued — as best as possible. Relief would have been swift and as effective as could be. Oh I could go on but …
no do-overs.
Great freakin’ work, PW.
You are a treasure.
Phoenix Woman @ 125
Livin on Tulsa Time—-
do da doo
madmommy says: August 30th, 2007 at 6:37 pm:
Point well taken. But there was a lot of shot public infrastructure. And lots of looting. I remember first year after hurricane buying stuff in patched up warehouse stores, with as many armed national guardsmen and deputies as there were customers. There were places east of Lake Ponchartrain that were just wiped out. Nothing but foundations. I see them coming back now finally this summer. More than many places closer to New Orleans.
Jonathan @ 113
I work with the people associated with Solid Ground, formerly Fremont Public, I would love to do some awareness raising around this subject with you and others. There are some marvelous people there like Tony Lee, and Representative Frank Chopp, our Speaker of the House is on the board: http://www.fremontpublic.org/index2.html. There are a million things to do and you can do a lot of them while still running on that rat wheel. Plus you never met so many great people who really care, are intelligent, and know inside and out what the problems are and what COULD be done about them., not only in Seattle.
Also people out there, it is a 501C3 and deserves a hand if you have it to give. Thanks so much for your comments Jonathan and Kirk Murphy!
jayt @ 137
Here’s what I was thinking about – don’t know if that’s the guy you’re talking about or not:
http://www.madcowprod.com/01032006.html
Scroll down to “Finus Shellnut dies and goes to heaven”.
That’s the guy!!
“He saw the storm as a not-so-undesirable cleanup machine.”
“Despite all the chaos and destruction, the storm and the floods came with a silver lining for people like Shellnut. “Most importantly, the hurricane drove poor people and criminals out of the city,” he says, “and we hope they don’t come back.”
Elliott @ 142
Like if it had happened while Clinton was prez…
wesgpc @ 141
Don’t misunderstand. New Orleans is being treated unequally. We are being discriminated against. But I don’t think it is for gentrification. It’s much more insidious. It is for eradication.
wesgpc @ 61
I’d say I don’t understand it, but in large part it is because the “media” aren’t covering it. If it isn’t on tv or in the newspaper, average Joe/Jill American don’t know about it. Just like not showing the demonstrations against going to war – nobody knows they happened.
Phoenix Woman @ 70
And Edwards is the candidate the Repubs are the most scared to face.
(this took me forever to figure out how to format. likely this has been stated multiple times since I started writing.)
boxer says:August 30th, 2007 at 6:49 pm:
Eradication?
Well, tell us what you know. Eradication is consistent with what I saw this summer -some places just seem to have received zip, or nothing at all is happening. I’d like to know the story behind it, in detail, and don’t have any axe to grind about whose fault it is. The reconstruction story and the culpability of the Bush administration is bad enough, no reason to spice it up with speculative charges unless there is real evidence.
I know that New Orleans has some problems that would premit a benign (or malign) neglect policy to be effective for practical eradication of some of the poor black neighborhoods.
I know New Orleasn somewhat, and I noticed that it is not just the lower ninth ward, but some poor and working class white neighborhoods as well -nothing is happening. What is the story? Malign neglect combined with private land grabs? Why can suburbs come back in relative boondocks -I doubt those people are commuting to work in New Orleans. But not neighborhoods in or very near the city?
But if the story highlighted in this post is true, there is something very fishy going on.
madmommy @ 139
Malignant neglect — combined with the sort of hubris that caused the PNAC Platoon to believe the “flowers and candy” lines Ahmad Chalabi was feeding them. (Hence the title of this post.)
Just as the invasion of Iraq destroyed a system and Bush and his cronies hadn’t prepared for what would happen when that system was destroyed (or maybe they had: to quote Robert Fisk, maybe “chaos is the plan”, since it’s financially benefitting certain Bush-aligned outfits like Halliburton and Blackwater), the way the Bushistas handled — or, for the most part, didn’t handle — Katrina shows a mix of incompetence, arrogance and a not-inconsiderable portion of callousness. But why should they bother their beautiful minds with all that?
probably epu’d -
but whether it’s incompetence or the usual–use any government responsibility to outsource to profit making business. There was a piece on NPR yesterday (?) about how little of the billions raised/appropriated for the “Road Home” reconstruction of homes has been spent. It seems that the money is being distributed by some East Coast for-profit private company, and they’ve only spent 25%, 30%? (can’t remember precisely-wld look for a link but since there’s a new thread-hurrying).
My first thought – All those people -and businesses- in NO who need work, who know what’s needed and who needs it, not to mention how urgent it is – but someobody 1000 miles away is in charge, with no stake, no sense of urgency, just takin’ their time (and makin’ their money).
definitely epu’d — but here’s the link for the Road Home money spending:
http://www.npr.org/templates/s…..d=14009346
boxer @ 86
I am damn proud to be a no white people of means who lives in New Orleans (Though I hear I will no longer have to pay income tax – we people down hear are very , very grateful to you Americans for all your help)
Boxer is spot on
wesgpc @ 80
I remember watching some Texas Hold ‘Em p*ker and hearing commentators talking about the spread of cas*nos to several other places (aside from Nevada) around the country. Louisiana was mentioned as a new territory for development. All this was BEFORE Katrina. Was there some Fascistic coordinated redevelopment planning for that area? Who knows.
~~~ModNote: Edited for content to clear filters.~~~
rwcole @ 91
They probably KNOW they’re losing the south-west due to immigrants and felt they had no choice if they were to stay in the game for the long run.
But, NO is already red, so what did gaining NOLA give them more of? Probably one more R senator. Remember how they all cried crocodile tears for ‘poor Mary’ Landrieu (D-LA). They are fairly overt about their sins.
Almost immediately after Katrina I wrote an article for the late BOPnews saying that the hurricane would be used as an excuse to force people out and make a killing (literally and figuratively). The extra touch of using Blackwater is quite something though. Katrina, and America’s acceptance of the complete destruction of a city without more than a few muted cries of protest is what convinced me that the US ship is going to have to a Titanic – disaster isn’t enough, so catastrophe will be required to get people’s attention focussed enough so that they do what is required. Unfortunately, by that time it’ll be too late to stop most of the pain. But that’s a choice Americans and their leaders have repeatedly made.
I can’t believe it. I can’t believe it. Forcing folks out of their homes after such a tragedy. Using Blackwater thugs. This is horrific. I followed the link Common Ground, but is there anything we can do?