One Year Ago, About Two Years Ago
Aug. 29th, 2007 09:58 pmOne year ago today, I posted this:
I despair of the fact that I can post it unchanged and it's still as relevant as it was then.
New Orleans is being strangled in its sickbed. There is nothing that the current administration will ever do to change that; unless you are helping, you're hurting.
Updated to add: I should have realized
docbrite would have more and better things to say. Here is the updated list of 13 Reasons Why New Orleans Is Not OK.
. . . indifference, incompetence, and an unassailable sense of entitlement nearly killed one of the United States' most important cities.
Go read the step-by-step account of the disaster.
Go watch this musical howl. (And to the song which inspired it, and of the disaster which remade America.)
Go read.
New Orleans isn't optional; as long as the Mississippi flows into the Gulf of Mexico, there will be a city near its mouth, and the narrow spit of land between Lake Pontchartrain and the river is the most sensible place for it. New Orleans is a national treasure in large part because it is a national resource. We can't act like it was a mistake to build there, and we can't turn away from the task of rebuilding.
And we can't let the people who tried to kill it get away clean.
I despair of the fact that I can post it unchanged and it's still as relevant as it was then.
New Orleans is being strangled in its sickbed. There is nothing that the current administration will ever do to change that; unless you are helping, you're hurting.
Updated to add: I should have realized
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Date: 2007-08-30 02:30 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-30 02:54 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-30 03:03 am (UTC)The old quarter stood up. It was the newer parts of the city that seem to have been the ones that took it worse.
I'm basing this on what we've seen from the media, so don't yell at me. I can be educated.
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Date: 2007-08-30 03:22 am (UTC)There's also the fact that the entire city could easily (if expensively) be rendered almost flood-proof by a system of locks and dikes similar to what exists in Holland, but neither the city nor the state has a fraction of the money that would be needed to do this, and I don't think the feds will ever pony it up given that they've balked at even giving us enough to build basic, functional levees.
Sorry if my initial comment came off as abrasive. This is a shitty day for south Louisianians and a bad mood hangs over the whole region around this time of year. Again, thanks for caring.
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Date: 2007-08-30 03:55 am (UTC)*HUGS*
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Date: 2007-08-30 06:41 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-30 04:34 am (UTC)I have friends at one of the Naval bases in LA. New Orleans was a a preferred station for a lot of us.
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Date: 2007-08-30 06:45 am (UTC)*A phrase that would have a negative connotation in many cities, but the areas where most New Orleans tourists spend their time -- the French Quarter and Garden District -- are beautiful and fascinating, though I do urge you to see some of the rest of the city if possible.
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Date: 2007-08-30 02:42 pm (UTC)I'm coming back for Halloween.
We're getting there, I promise. :)
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Date: 2007-08-30 03:06 pm (UTC)(It's been too long since I've been to New Orleans; the last time I was there, not only was it a different place, but so was Lower Manhattan.)