< class="pagetitle">Archive for the “Katrina” Category

The scars never really heal, do they?

Algiers Point has always been somewhat isolated: it’s perched on the west bank of the Mississippi River, linked to the core of the city only by a ferry line and twin gray steel bridges. When the hurricane descended on Louisiana, Algiers Point got off relatively easy. While wide swaths of New Orleans were deluged, the levees ringing Algiers Point withstood the Mississippi’s surging currents, preventing flooding; most homes and businesses in the area survived intact. As word spread that the area was dry, desperate people began heading toward the west bank, some walking over bridges, others traveling by boat. The National Guard soon designated the Algiers Point ferry landing an official evacuation site. Rescuers from the Coast Guard and other agencies brought flood victims to the ferry terminal, where soldiers loaded them onto buses headed for Texas.

Facing an influx of refugees, the residents of Algiers Point could have pulled together food, water and medical supplies for the flood victims. Instead, a group of white residents, convinced that crime would arrive with the human exodus, sought to seal off the area, blocking the roads in and out of the neighborhood by dragging lumber and downed trees into the streets. They stockpiled handguns, assault rifles, shotguns and at least one Uzi and began patrolling the streets in pickup trucks and SUVs. The newly formed militia, a loose band of about fifteen to thirty residents, most of them men, all of them white, was looking for thieves, outlaws or, as one member put it, anyone who simply “didn’t belong.”

The existence of this little army isn’t a secret–in 2005 a few newspaper reporters wrote up the group’s activities in glowing terms in articles that showed up on an array of pro-gun blogs; one Cox News story called it “the ultimate neighborhood watch.” Herrington, for his part, recounted his ordeal in Spike Lee’s documentary When the Levees Broke. But until now no one has ever seriously scrutinized what happened in Algiers Point during those days, and nobody has asked the obvious questions. Were the gunmen, as they claim, just trying to fend off looters? Or does Herrington’s experience point to a different, far uglier truth?

And the worst part about a story like this? It still comes as news to a majority of Americans. Hell, one of my favorite things to tell people who think I’m making this stuff up is to tell them to Google the phrase “Gretna Katrina” and wait to see the looks on their face when they see the first links pop up.

Because, no matter how long this kind of thing has been going on, the scars never heal. Someone always picks at the scabs when things get really bad.

And that’s when the bleeding begins anew.

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Three years ago today.

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Bad news, New Orleans. George W. Bush is still president. Michael Chertoff is still the head of Homeland Security.

And it looks like you’re about to have company again.

Anyone want to take bets whose birthday party Dubya will be chowing down at this year?

Good thing FEMA finally closed down those toxic cesspools they called “temporary housing”. Three years in a cancer box wasn’t too long to wait for an unsatisfactory resolution, was it?

And it’s a good thing they fixed the levees … oh, wait, they haven’t.

I just hope that FEMA remembers where the Superdome this time.

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