Survivor after survivor tells disturbing, and in some cases harrowing tales of intimidation, neglect and victimization by emergency and relief agencies.
For example: There are vast areas of New Orleans, Algiers in particular, that were spared flooding, suffering mostly from wind damage. Yet government officials aggressively pushed to empty out the city, even though residents insist there was no need for evacuation.
One of the hold-outs is Mama Dee, a matriarch of the Seventh Ward. Mama Dee is a community leader in a community of none. Most of the Ward inhabitants were literally scattered to the wind. Those with any means – a car, cash – fled to other cities. The dispossessed went to FEMA "villages," routinely likened to concentration camps, complete with razor ribbon fences, guards with guns, the whole bit.
"Bless those 82nd Texas boys," she said, referring to the paratrooper unit patrolling the city, "If it hadn't been for them, the New Orleans police would have killed us."
She spoke the words without drama, hugging new strangers. She's standing next to a formerly-flooded, now-dry house that serves now as a community center/kitchen, complete with tuna sandwich fixin's on a folding table.
Somewhere in the back, a generator mutters along, power supplied via a home-made wiring system – a whole room in the basement crammed with cobbled-together auto batteries. It’s testimony to the endurance and inventiveness wrought by desperation, and a dogged determination to keep a faint pulse in a neighborhood that is a neighborhood only in name.
Residents fear the tension will only mount as the city is reoccupied. Folks will be allowed in; some, the lucky ones, will return to structures tagged with green spots, indicating that their houses can be repaired and re-inhabited. The less fortunate will have their houses tagged red. Those people will be cast out of their homes to an uncertain gate, the houses to be demolished.
Hallie, a young woman working the Common Grounds relief camp in Algiers point, across the river from downtown, sees trouble.
"It is tense already," she said. "When they start kicking people out of their homes, it is going get a lot tenser."
-- Peter Eichenberger writes for The Independent Weekly (N.C.)
5 Comments:
this is what the wingnuts don't get -- when *everybody* on the streets of NOLA thinks they were deliberately being starved out, shouldn't it make u stop and think??
What don't the wingnuts get about that? After all, we heard that Blanco deliberately delayed the Red Cross because she wanted the people out of the superdome.
Ah, Synova ... life in fantasyland must be nice. The Red Cross wasn't "kept out," it decided to *not go in* as you could learn from any news report. Tell me if you have problems finding them. And of course, the main reason the RC higher-ups decided not to let their agency do its work of helping people is because of the Faux News reports about black gangsters slicing up babies, which of course all turned out to be false.
Oh, you are a riot, you know that?
Every news agency was reporting the same things because Nagin was on the air, whenever possible, saying that it was so.
But if you were watching Faux News (as you must have been to know how they were reporting the event) then you didn't see the other networks reporting the exact same stuff.
Yes, fantasyland is lovely. Thanks for asking.
Look at it this way--that's a hell of a lot of people whose lives have been disrupted and in many cases destroyed who have local, state, and federal officials in their sights. They have spread out over primarily the south, but over much of the country as well, and have much to think about when it comes time to place people in positions of responsibility again.
Seeds in the wind.
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