Booman Tribune

This Is No Way To Treat Our Fellow Americans

by clammyc
Wed Aug 9th, 2006 at 11:56:20 AM EST

I bet if there was a missing white teenage girl it would get reported non-stop.  But when it is nearly 1,200 families in St. Bernard Parish who are still homeless nearly a full year after Hurricane Katrina, well, that doesn't need to be reported.

With hurricane season upon us and nary a word about New Orleans for lord knows how many months now, it is absolutely disgusting to hear of the lack of progress in helping to rebuild the lives of the thousands of families who lost everything.  Last week, one of my buddies, who has relatives in Metairie, LA showed me some pictures and videos of his trip to the Ninth Ward and New Orleans earlier in the year.  To say that I was blown away at the devastation and destruction that still lines every corner is a huge understatement.

And now we hear that there are trailers that are sitting on people's home sites but are locked and the families have been unable to get FEMA to help.  This is a full year after the mass devastation and FEMA is still giving excuses as opposed to assistance.

The amount of neglect that these families have received, as well as the complete ass-backwards handling of just about everything since before Katrina even touched down is staggering.  Yet, we can find a few extra billions on no notice from "supplemental emergency spending bills" to send over to Halliburton or Big Oil.

We heard back in March that there were approximately 10,000 mobile homes which were stored in Arkansas but can't be shipped to the Gulf Coast because they can't be placed in a floodplain.  And what are we hearing now from FEMA officials when it comes to these roughly 1,200 families?  

FEMA spokesman Aaron Walker said that he understands people are frustrated with the wait but that workers are filling requests as fast as they can. He notes the agency has provided housing assistance to more than 900,000 people regionwide since the Aug. 29 storm. Most years, the agency handles only 2,000 to 3,000 people.

"If you look at the sheer numbers, we've been very successful," he said.

Gee, that's just great.  If we take that same logical approach, than I guess we can say that we've been very successful in Iraq, since most of our troops haven't been killed or injured.  And most of the Iraqis are still alive.  But why stop there?  Nearly 2/3 of this country DOES have health care coverage, so we must be very successful there too.  And most of the states and localities haven't yet sued the Federal government over the No Child Left Behind Act, so it must have been very successful too.

But I digress.

To give you a small idea of how bad the situation still is in St. Bernard Parish:

In this parish adjoining New Orleans, virtually no one was spared massive flooding from the storm surge and breaks in the flood-control system; all but a handful of the 27,000 homes belonging to mostly working-class residents were inundated. Very few have been repaired yet.

These are people who can't afford to just pick up and leave to find work, schooling for their children and housing elsewhere.  These are people who are elderly and disabled.  

The disabled couple -- she's blind and he lost part of a foot in an industrial accident -- had been trying to get a trailer since shortly after the storm so they could begin working on their house, which was flooded and slicked by oil.

These are people who are having health problems for which they STILL have not received proper care and assistance nearly one year later:

Almost one year later restoration of federal funding for reconstruction -- and for the support of medical teams coming into the area from across the country -- have been tied up in congressional budget talks.

Meanwhile, patients still need treatment for skin problems and respiratory conditions caused by mold and dust, along with other illnesses prevalent in the area such as diabetes, hypertension and heart disease. And there are mental health problems to deal with as well.

Let me repeat a part of that once again:  federal funding for the support of medical teams has been tied up in congressional budget talks.

Hmmmm....where have I heard that one before?  Oh yeah, when Congress went on vacation for Memorial Day without approving emergency and necessary spending for supplies and armor for our troops.

And for all you Jesus freaks out there who are so quick to quote "the Lord" when it comes to smiting those damn gays or people who actually don't want someone else suppressing their rights and freedoms, lest we forget what the Bible says about the poor.

But we shouldn't forget these families who have had to endure a year of living hell, and sadly there doesn't appear to be an end in sight.

Are we a third world country yet?



Display:
by clammyc (clam227atyahoo) on Wed Aug 9th, 2006 at 11:56:58 AM EST
If we take that same logical approach, than I guess we can say that we've been very successful in Iraq, since most of our troops haven't been killed or injured.  And most of the Iraqis are still alive.  But why stop there?  Nearly 2/3 of this country DOES have health care coverage, so we must be very successful there too.  And most of the states and localities haven't yet sued the Federal government over the No Child Left Behind Act, so it must have been very successful too.

If you can get a base hit a third of the time, you go to the hall of fame.

by BooMan on Wed Aug 9th, 2006 at 12:19:31 PM EST
Harry Shearer brings the aftermath of Katrina up EV-ry SING-le BLEEP-in WEEK on his syndicated "Le Show" and occasionally devotes entire episodes to it (roundtable discussions with resident friends of his and the like). He just won't let the story die. You'd think eventually someone in the SCMSM would notice.

Maybe he should see if they can work it into the storyline on The Simpsons. "What's that, Smithers? FEMA has just renewed the lease on 10,000 of our nuclear waste disposal units as temporary housing in Louisiana? Exxxxx-cellent."

I for one welcome our new Twitter overlords. @Omir55

by Omir the Storyteller (omir.the.storyteller -CAT- gmail -DOG- com) on Wed Aug 9th, 2006 at 12:28:07 PM EST
The Simpsons may be too high-brow for many... maybe if it were run on American Idle [sic]

Simon... that singing was as bad as FEMA

When the power of love overcomes the love of power the world will know peace. - Jimi Hendrix

by Damnit Janet on Wed Aug 9th, 2006 at 02:10:15 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I do believe that this is the first time I've ever heard "Simpsons" and "hi-brow" together in the same sentence. Not that I disagree. :)

I'm just thinking that The Simpsons is probably watched by more people in one week than Le Show gets in an entire year (and Shearer does a bunch of the voices).

I for one welcome our new Twitter overlords. @Omir55

by Omir the Storyteller (omir.the.storyteller -CAT- gmail -DOG- com) on Wed Aug 9th, 2006 at 02:34:23 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Well you know.. .NTVLB

No TV left behind.

When the power of love overcomes the love of power the world will know peace. - Jimi Hendrix

by Damnit Janet on Wed Aug 9th, 2006 at 02:40:09 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Maybe bushco shouldn't have turned down Castro's offer of 1,500 doctors or medical teams after Katrina.

Bush is supposed to be visiting areas devastated by Katrina for a one year anniversary-to show he hasn't forgotten(hahahahaha)...bet he only has photo ops of all the 'wonderful' areas of improvement that have happened..personally I don't know how he has the nerve to even show up and pretend he cares.

'Poverty is the worst form of violence'--Gandhi

by chocolate ink on Wed Aug 9th, 2006 at 02:31:40 PM EST
Any chance some enterprising monkeywrencher can rewrite his itinerary and send him to St. Tammany and some of the other areas that are still a mess? That's a photo op I'd actually bother looking at.

I for one welcome our new Twitter overlords. @Omir55
by Omir the Storyteller (omir.the.storyteller -CAT- gmail -DOG- com) on Wed Aug 9th, 2006 at 02:37:35 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Yeah, wouldn't it be great if he had to come up against 'reality' and see how much devastation has not been touched at all and actually see the people there who are still homeless...........those would be some amazing photo's I bet....that and no doubt trying to listen to him talk about why some poor crippled up, disabled person is still homeless..heckof a job georgie.

'Poverty is the worst form of violence'--Gandhi
by chocolate ink on Wed Aug 9th, 2006 at 02:45:11 PM EST
[ Parent ]
It'd be nice to have people around who could ruin his staged appearances...

Maybe a chant of "go fuck yourself, Mr. Eat Cake, go fuck yourself". :)

CNN: for some reason we can't get you the audio of this segment...

When the power of love overcomes the love of power the world will know peace. - Jimi Hendrix

by Damnit Janet on Wed Aug 9th, 2006 at 02:39:14 PM EST
[ Parent ]
We can dream can't we...still I think that him showing up for an 'anniversary' photo op is a bad move really on whoever came up with this idea..I'm hoping it will backfire on him and remind people just what a disaster this was for his administration last year, how massively incompetent they were and are still.

The day he's supposed to be there someone like Jesse Jackson or Al Sharpton, John Edwards-someone very prominent- should make sure they go to any one of the places that have not been touched ..with lots of camera crews and see if they can get that on the news as a juxtaposition of bushie's pr stunt...

Anyone want to take any bets what his little speech might be....the true american spirit...blah blah blah....rise up in the face of any disaster to help a neighbor like you'd like to be helped yourself..just like after 9/11...blah blah blah...and now back to my regularly scheduled vacation....

'Poverty is the worst form of violence'--Gandhi

by chocolate ink on Wed Aug 9th, 2006 at 02:58:07 PM EST
[ Parent ]


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