Katrina's aftermath

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omg. who is this N4ancy Gr4ce on CNN Headline News??! Her show keeps having a countdown in the corner showing when they'll return to coverage of the Missing Teen in Aruba...

my name is john. i reside in chicago. (frankE), Wednesday, 31 August 2005 23:22 (twenty years ago)

Nancy Grace is the devil. They moved her over there to try and keep CNN away from the garbage shows and stay on hard news (which was utterly brilliant and I love love love it). She's basically useless as a human being.

Alan Conceicao (Alan Conceicao), Wednesday, 31 August 2005 23:29 (twenty years ago)

Anyone else see something from the PM (or something) of the Netherlands (also mostly below sea limit), crowing about their superior pump system? Even if he's right, I mean, jeez.

dear netherlands: send us your best pump-building manpower.

stckhlm cnd (Jody Beth Rosen), Wednesday, 31 August 2005 23:30 (twenty years ago)

President Bush flew over the ravaged city and parts of Mississippi's hurricane-blasted coastline in Air Force One. Turning to his aides, he said: "It's totally wiped out. ... It's devastating, it's got to be doubly devastating on the ground."

gear (gear), Wednesday, 31 August 2005 23:31 (twenty years ago)

WWL: Mayor of New Orleans has declared Martial Law in Orleans Parish: "We won't have to worry about civil rights, or reading Miranda rights."

Alan Conceicao (Alan Conceicao), Wednesday, 31 August 2005 23:35 (twenty years ago)

oh good.

gear (gear), Wednesday, 31 August 2005 23:35 (twenty years ago)

xpost

TWO TIMES!

The Original Jimmy Mod: Waiting for the return of the Lohan's titties (The Famo, Wednesday, 31 August 2005 23:36 (twenty years ago)

haha "on the ground" = nine feet below the water level!

stckhlm cnd (Jody Beth Rosen), Wednesday, 31 August 2005 23:39 (twenty years ago)

"This tragedy is like the worst I've ever seen. Times two or something."

gear (gear), Wednesday, 31 August 2005 23:39 (twenty years ago)

water is so devastating-looking from the air.

stckhlm cnd (Jody Beth Rosen), Wednesday, 31 August 2005 23:41 (twenty years ago)

Is there anything a broke-ass chick in NE Georgia can do to help (aside from, like, joining a prayer chain)? Is a piddly monetary donation to the Red Cross worth it?

emilys, Wednesday, 31 August 2005 23:53 (twenty years ago)

The dirty bomb would be nothing like this. No one would stay. They'd just get the fuck out pronto before dying.

-- Alan Conceicao (deadandrestles...), September 1st, 2005 5:11 PM. (Alan Conceicao)

first of all, i sort of doubt that. "most" would leave, but "most" people already left new orleans, too.

second, the comparison i mean to make is: 100,000 refugees, uninhabitable city, chaos at the city level, frustration at the state level, ineffectual federal government.

vahid (vahid), Thursday, 1 September 2005 00:02 (twenty years ago)

I have the impression that a dirty bomb evacuation would probably be closer to the day of 9/11 than Katrina.
-- recovering optimist (christbaitrisin...), September 1st, 2005 5:06 PM. (Royal Bed Bouncer)

did they evacuate manhattan? seriously, if they did i wasn't aware of it.

vahid (vahid), Thursday, 1 September 2005 00:03 (twenty years ago)

i guess it would be like the humanitarian emergency / logistical nightmare of hurricana katrina plus the national hysteria of 9/11 x 10.

vahid (vahid), Thursday, 1 September 2005 00:04 (twenty years ago)

Is a piddly monetary donation to the Red Cross worth it?

It's exactly what they need right now, and no amount is piddly.

Rock Hardy (Rock Hardy), Thursday, 1 September 2005 00:04 (twenty years ago)

>first of all, i sort of doubt that. "most" would leave, but "most" people already left new orleans, too.<

Well, people didn't leave the hurricane zone because they assumed they could survive it based on past experience or that the hurricane would miss. Telling people that any sort of nuclear attack has occurred would cause them to completely lose their minds, simply because that's how people have been educated. Weathermen = sometimes wrong, nuclear anything = you fucking die fast. I'm sure a couple people who were less than mentally competent would stay, but nowhere near the amounts that stayed in New Orleans.

Additionally, anywhere they moved, and in fact, still in the city of NY or where ever, there would still be an infrastructure. Right now, there's so much damage in the surrounding areas that there's no phones, no electricity, etc. No way to communicate, and no way to get around, because water covers everything. People would be able to use trains, boats, their cars, and feet to get out. Right now, they're trapped in their attics because there's 12 feet of water.

Refugee wise and the logistics of having to clean up the city, yes, that would be similar. I think the likelihood of violence as we see it wouldn't occur, or if it did, it would do so immediately.

Alan Conceicao (Alan Conceicao), Thursday, 1 September 2005 00:15 (twenty years ago)

I'm wondering--since I wasn't in NO at the time--just how well the city's residents were warned. I mean, saying "mandatory evacuations for everyone" is one thing, but were they told specifcally that "the entire city could flood and certain neighborhoods could be under 20ft of water"?

gear (gear), Thursday, 1 September 2005 00:19 (twenty years ago)

Anyone else see something from the PM (or something) of the Netherlands (also mostly below sea limit), crowing about their superior pump system?

hahaha, the Dutch pump system is small potatoes compared to the one New Orleans has. It would get wiped out by a strong category 1 hurricane. After they had their disaster in the 50s and decided to get serious about flood control, guess which American city they turned to for advice and the latest technology?

fortunate hazel (f. hazel), Thursday, 1 September 2005 00:32 (twenty years ago)

Is a piddly monetary donation to the Red Cross worth it?

a piddly monetary donation can feed a lot of people!

stckhlm cnd (Jody Beth Rosen), Thursday, 1 September 2005 00:35 (twenty years ago)

I very much appreciate the links (espcially Ned's) that point to news and blogs that explain the damage. I'm in Baton Rouge, and have been without power since 8:30 Monday morning. Minor inconvenience, and got it back two hours ago. The only photos i've seen of the devastation have been in the newspapers. Bizarrely, i've been working as if nothing has changed.

My aunt's house is destroyed. I don't know the condition of family in Algiers, or several friends that live down there. None of the phones work. Cell phones are near useless. All circuits are overloaded.

SWAT teams are being sent into New Orleans. I saw several of them at a convenience store up the street an hour ago, one of them wearing two pistols on his belt, gunfighter style.

There are paranoid rumors about looters spreading to LaPlace and Gonzales, and it's pissing me off.

I have a general understanding of what was going on, but the reality is still sinking in.

badgerminor (badgerminor), Thursday, 1 September 2005 00:37 (twenty years ago)

about the paranoid rumors... what i've heard from customers are more about mass hysteria than actual incidents.

Also, a lot of people have been buying maps, and plan on going into New Orleans whether it's permitted or not. Some of these people are going vigilante.

On the bright side, there's a lot of charitable work going on. By the LSU fieldhouse, there are throngs of volunteers gathered, and mountains of goods donated for the evacuees.

badgerminor (badgerminor), Thursday, 1 September 2005 00:41 (twenty years ago)

vigilante, great. this is where some people use some isolated incidents as a fucking excuse to go to war, right?

gear (gear), Thursday, 1 September 2005 00:45 (twenty years ago)

Well, people didn't leave the hurricane zone because they assumed they could survive it based on past experience or that the hurricane would miss.

......

kingfish 'doublescoop' moose tracks (kingfish 2.0), Thursday, 1 September 2005 00:48 (twenty years ago)

Great. Here come the survivalists, into their own personal nirvana; absolute anarchy and lots of people of color doing "illegal" things.

Alan Conceicao (Alan Conceicao), Thursday, 1 September 2005 00:50 (twenty years ago)

Katrina's aftermath (666 new answers

MAKES YA THINK

stckhlm cnd (Jody Beth Rosen), Thursday, 1 September 2005 00:50 (twenty years ago)

GODDAMMIT YOU BEAT ME TO IT JODY

kingfish 'doublescoop' moose tracks (kingfish 2.0), Thursday, 1 September 2005 00:51 (twenty years ago)

>......<

Its pretty much what everyone who's been pulled to safety has said. "Oh, well, I lived through the last hurricane, I figured I'd be fine"..."I didn't think it was anything to worry about", et al. Having a nuclear device go off sends a very different signal in everyone's brains. I can guarantee you this.

Alan Conceicao (Alan Conceicao), Thursday, 1 September 2005 00:51 (twenty years ago)

the media has been quite irresponsible in some of what they've highlighted, to say the least.

gear (gear), Thursday, 1 September 2005 00:52 (twenty years ago)

>I'm wondering--since I wasn't in NO at the time--just how well the city's residents were warned. I mean, saying "mandatory evacuations for everyone" is one thing, but were they told specifcally that "the entire city could flood and certain neighborhoods could be under 20ft of water"?<

It was spread across every media outlet. TV, radio, print. The only way to miss it would be to have been blind and deaf; basically someone in a coma or a lower state of consciousness. Nature triggers certain responses in people. For instance, when engineers work on buildings and model fires, they assume that some people will go towards the fire, even if they have no capability to do anything about it. Certain disasters also trigger different responses based on how people have been trained to react. Telling people to worry about a hurricane or blizzard, for instance, is tough, because many people have grow accustomed to storms missing or fizzling out, and therefore don't take proper precautions when the "big one" finally arrives. On the other hand, telling people that a nuclear plant is melting down will cause panic and mass evacuation without being asked, simply because its such a rare and extreme circumstance.

Alan Conceicao (Alan Conceicao), Thursday, 1 September 2005 00:56 (twenty years ago)

Having a nuclear device go off sends a very different signal in everyone's brains. I can guarantee you this.

HELLO most folks were TOO FUCKING POOR TO LEAVE! jesus christ! fuck!

Media types saying "Well, they CHOSE to stay" just a bullshit rationalization for not havign to care about folks.

xpost

yeah, wot gear said.

kingfish 'doublescoop' moose tracks (kingfish 2.0), Thursday, 1 September 2005 00:57 (twenty years ago)

katrina was a category 5 before it hit land though -- you'd think that would be sufficient warning. i'm sure new orleans residents have enough experience with hurricanes to know what "category 5" means.

stckhlm cnd (Jody Beth Rosen), Thursday, 1 September 2005 01:00 (twenty years ago)

HELLO most folks were TOO FUCKING POOR TO LEAVE! jesus christ! fuck!

that's why the opened the superdome to people.

stckhlm cnd (Jody Beth Rosen), Thursday, 1 September 2005 01:01 (twenty years ago)

>HELLO most folks were TOO FUCKING POOR TO LEAVE! <

Lots of people were too poor to leave or own vehicles, but if you own a house, you have a car and you can go. I've yet to hear a single family pulled from a home today say "well, we just couldn't leave because we don't have the money". Honestly now: do you believe that New Orleans is so poor that 10-20% of its citizens are completely incapable of transporting themselves or finding transportation from others out of the city? That they're so completely impoverished, that they only have access to their local neighborhood?

Alan Conceicao (Alan Conceicao), Thursday, 1 September 2005 01:02 (twenty years ago)

>that's why the opened the superdome to people.<

Initally, only 10-15,000 people were there. That means that everyone else in the city was in a structure of some kind, probably one that they live in. If they have somewhere to live, they probably have a vehicle or know someone with a vehicle. Like I said: Go watch the interviews with people who are being rescued, and see how many "well, I just didn't have the cash to bail" responses you get. Or maybe its just the media making it all up for some unexplainable reason.

Alan Conceicao (Alan Conceicao), Thursday, 1 September 2005 01:04 (twenty years ago)

but if you own a house, you have a car and you can go.

or! I know! maybe if you live in rent-controlled housing, maybe this ain't quite the case!

've yet to hear a single family pulled from a home today say "well, we just couldn't leave because we don't have the money".

wot Gear said:

the media has been quite irresponsible in some of what they've highlighted, to say the least.

kingfish 'doublescoop' moose tracks (kingfish 2.0), Thursday, 1 September 2005 01:06 (twenty years ago)

hell, and maybe some people didn't own TVs or radios to quite understand what was happening.

gear (gear), Thursday, 1 September 2005 01:08 (twenty years ago)

>or! I know! maybe if you live in rent-controlled housing, maybe this ain't quite the case!<

So they don't know anyone with vehicles either? Besides, what does this have to do with comparing New Orleans to a city like NYC or Chicago in a dirty bomb attack? Those cities all have many more bridges, escape routes, modes of transportation (subways, trains, ferries), etc. Are you trying to make the point to me that you'd have 3 million people left in NYC in the event of dirty bomb attacks across the 5 bouroughs?

>the media has been quite irresponsible in some of what they've highlighted, to say the least.<

How do you even know its been highlighted?

Alan Conceicao (Alan Conceicao), Thursday, 1 September 2005 01:09 (twenty years ago)

dear netherlands: send us your best pump-building manpower.

And maybe some viagra for dykes? (No pun intended.)

Ian Riese-Moraine: a casualty of society's derangement. (Eastern Mantra), Thursday, 1 September 2005 01:09 (twenty years ago)

There are people that don't own TVs OR radios OR have access to newspapers OR have neighbors and family members to tell them to get out? Where are these people living in America? Especially in a huge urban enviroment like New Orleans?

Alan Conceicao (Alan Conceicao), Thursday, 1 September 2005 01:10 (twenty years ago)

I am watching the local news (flipping around between WAFB and WBRZ) and i'm seeing quite a number of people who outright state that they had no transportation.

Yes, some of New Orleans really was that impoverished, prior to Katrina.

badgerminor (badgerminor), Thursday, 1 September 2005 01:13 (twenty years ago)

new orleans has decent public transport so not everyone needs to own a car. presumably this is a major reason poor people flock to cities and many richer people flock to suburbs.

if you're unemployed or semi-employed and have to choose between getting an oil change or feeding your kids, you're gonna ride the bus.

stckhlm cnd (Jody Beth Rosen), Thursday, 1 September 2005 01:13 (twenty years ago)

there are people who are extremely poor and don't have complete media access. and maybe they only know similar people.

gear (gear), Thursday, 1 September 2005 01:14 (twenty years ago)

which means that there was a problem is letting everyone in the city know--at ground level--of the potential severity of this hurricane

gear (gear), Thursday, 1 September 2005 01:15 (twenty years ago)

Besides, what does this have to do with comparing New Orleans to a city like NYC or Chicago in a dirty bomb attack? Those cities all have many more bridges, escape routes, modes of transportation (subways, trains, ferries), etc. Are you trying to make the point to me that you'd have 3 million people left in NYC in the event of dirty bomb attacks across the 5 bouroughs?

i didn't make that comparision. also, note that Manhattan varies in scale and landscape from New Orleans by a bit...

across the 5 bouroughs?

LOOK OUT STATEN ISLAND! THEY COMING FOR YOU, TOO!

kingfish 'doublescoop' moose tracks (kingfish 2.0), Thursday, 1 September 2005 01:15 (twenty years ago)

>I am watching the local news (flipping around between WAFB and WBRZ) and i'm seeing quite a number of people who outright state that they had no transportation.<

I would believe that some do...but that the majority of people that stayed in New Orleans were there because of that reason? No. I don't buy that one bit. The percentage of people who stayed in New Orleans, from what I've read, was lower than that of the percentage of people who stayed in Gulfport or Biloxi (which neared 40%).

Alan Conceicao (Alan Conceicao), Thursday, 1 September 2005 01:16 (twenty years ago)

also, i can't find a link, but it was mentioned on this radio this morning that the recent U.S. Census results on poverty listed Louisiana with about ~20% of it population at a status that could politely be described as "really fucking poor."

kingfish 'doublescoop' moose tracks (kingfish 2.0), Thursday, 1 September 2005 01:18 (twenty years ago)

>there are people who are extremely poor and don't have complete media access. and maybe they only know similar people.<

In a city? I call bullshit. The only people living completely off the grid in this country (at least the vast majority of them) are doing so in highly rural areas, and even they have communication equipment of some kind. The number of people without a transistor radio in the US is in the fractions of 1 percent, and somewhere around 95% of all households own a TV. If these people are taking a bus to work, they're going to hear the call for evacuation from the Emergency Preparedness System that, in the state of Louisiana, like ALL states, has to provide information regarding evacuation once such an order is issued, somewhere, at some time. I wouldn't be surprised to know that there were cops driving down the street telling people to leave their homes either, and giving people information to go to the Superdome or elsewhere, especially since BUSES were set up to bring people there.

Alan Conceicao (Alan Conceicao), Thursday, 1 September 2005 01:20 (twenty years ago)

larry king to aaron brown: "it doesn't get any better than this, does it?" i kid you not.


aaron brown is an embarrassment. he sounded like he wanted to go kill looters himself. (jeezus, enough with the fucking looters. on the one hand, an entire city is submerged in water, on the other hand, black kids stealing sneakers from water-logged stores in their completely destroyed city and how we can best deal with them, hmmm, let's run with the lack of jail-space angle.)

scott seward (scott seward), Thursday, 1 September 2005 01:20 (twenty years ago)

Are you trying to make the point to me that you'd have 3 million people left in NYC in the event of dirty bomb attacks across the 5 bouroughs?

keep in mind that the poorest non-homeless people in nyc are still better off than poor people in most other places. there are many reasons why this is true but the point is that it's true. the first time i saw very poor areas outside of greater nyc i was amazed because i'd never seen that kind of financial rock-bottom on such a large scale. and i grew up in the old, scary, pre-giuliani new york.

stckhlm cnd (Jody Beth Rosen), Thursday, 1 September 2005 01:21 (twenty years ago)

>i didn't make that comparision. also, note that Manhattan varies in
scale and landscape from New Orleans by a bit...<

Fine then. Pick any city in the US. Any city. Hell, what about Detroit? Its the poorest city in America, according to a poll that just got released. Would you expect a similar portion of the city to stay put in the case of a dirty bomb attack, or do you think you'd see what was seen today (people just walking or riding bikes to try and reach safety) much faster in the process?

Alan Conceicao (Alan Conceicao), Thursday, 1 September 2005 01:22 (twenty years ago)


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