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Katrina Shakes Global Faith in U.S.

By Pueng Vongs, Pacific News Service. Posted September 15, 2005.


Journalists around the world are watching images from the hurricane's aftermath -- and are shocked that a country so mighty could have fallen so far.
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Readers and commentators from abroad are watching images of chaos and despair in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and are wondering how a country so mighty could have fallen so far.

"Nature Lays a Superpower Low" reads the headline of an editorial in The Hindu, a daily in Chennai. Arvind Sivaramakrishnan, commenting in another article in the paper, writes that Katrina exposed "squalor that would shame a Third World country, as well as racial and political divisions reminiscent of apartheid South Africa."

"It is astonishing that these cruel indignities are happening today in one of the richest countries in human history," writes Dr. Firoz Osman in South Africa's Business Day.

Mario Diamant, a commentator in La Nacion, a Buenos Aires-based daily, posits: "Can such a powerful nation be so vulnerable? Can a capricious act of nature erase 200 years of progress and technology?"

An editorial in the Philippine Daily Inquirer takes a similar tack. The forces of the hurricane brought out the "lack of preparedness of a superpower that could invade and overrun another country thousands of miles away in a matter of days."

In Kathmandu, Nepal, the daily Himalayan Times writes in an editorial, "America the 'High and Mighty' had become America, the 'Humbled and Muddy.'"

A cartoon in the London-based Arabic-language Al Quds Al Arabi newspaper sums up the disbelief. It shows President Bush with the upper body of Superman -- and two skinny legs exposed by the hurricane.

Many foreign media focus on the Bush administration's failure to respond adequately in the aftermath of the storm. An editorial in the Taiwan-based, Chinese-language World Journal by Chen Sheyao blames the Bush administration for treating its own citizens like terrorists.

"Images of tanks roaming the streets of New Orleans, soldiers attempting to inact martial law: This is more like Iraq than America." The war in Iraq, Chen writes, "has taken a surprising emotional toll on Americans: everyone is now a possible terrorist. Soldiers who were trained to point their guns at Iraqi civilians are now pointing their guns at innocent evacuees in New Orleans."

South Korea's Pusan Daily also makes reference to the ongoing dilemma in Iraq and Afghanistan, finding it ironic that while the United States has spent billions of dollars and exhausted its military resources in dealing with the affairs of other countries, America cannot prevent the levees in New Orleans from being breeched.

La Nacion's Mario Diamant finds it suspect that Halliburton, the transnational corporation that vice-president Dick Cheney once headed and whose performance in Iraq is intensely criticized, "received a $12 million contract to rebuild ports. And Bechtel, the group that lists in its rosters the current president's father, received a million dollar contract to build temporary housing."

Other foreign media are more forgiving of the evacuation mishaps. Rajeev Srinivasan in Rediff.com, an online news site based in Mumbai, doubts that India has the capability for evacuating and caring for half a million people should a similar hurricane hit the country. He also wonders what India would do if ocean levels rose and millions of Bangladeshis "invaded" India.

Observers from around the world were united in their outpouring of empathy for victims of the hurricane. Many countries, rich and poor, sent aid. Kuwait gave a half a billion dollars. Uganda sent $200,000. Bangladesh sent tea, Namibia sent canned fish and Thailand sent rice. Others expressed their admiration for American citizens who helped each other.

"The response from American leaders seemed to lack political intelligence and sympathy, but the response of ordinary citizens was quick and compassionate," writes Liu Tian in the World Journal.

But some say the disaster taught bitter lessons. Vukoni Lupa-Lasaga writes in the Monitor, a daily newspaper in Kampala, Uganda, that Africans and those of African descent around the world should not put much faith in the United States.

"Whether you are in peril in Darfur, Sudan, Ruhengeri, Rwanda or New Orleans, saving your black behind isn't a priority for the American government, founded on a doctrine of white supremacy," he writes. He concludes that the Gulf coast disaster could well deplete funds committed to the global fight against poverty and disease.

London-based writer Joseph Hanlon, writing for the Agencia de Informacao de Mocambique (Mozambique) in Maputo, says that in responding to flood crises, the United States has much to learn from Mozambique, one of the poorest countries in the world. Hanlon says 550,000 people were displaced by flooding in 2000 in southern Mozambique. Only 700 people died.

The country had undertaken extensive preparation by training personnel and stockpiling goods including food, medicines, tents and plastic sheeting. When the disaster hit, local leaders evacuated people to tent cities on high ground, in intact neighborhoods. Forty thousand others were saved with small boats.

The country also used NGOs such as Oxfam and Doctors Without Borders, the South African air force and UNICEF. Helicopters were flying in one day and rescued some 14,000 people.

The United States, Hanlon writes, should have done the same.

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Pueng Vongs is an editor of New California Media, an association of over 700 print, broadcast and online ethnic media organizations founded in 1996 by Pacific News Service and members of ethnic media. Donal Brown, Aruna Lee, Sandip Roy, Eugenia Chien, Elena Shore, Jalal Ghazi and Rene Ciria-Cruz contributed to this report.

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tooly52
Posted by: tooly52 on Sep 15, 2005 4:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What can one say when confronted by the truth? A better question would be: How are we as a country going to respond? The government of G. W. is only interested in damage control and preservation of IMAGE. True repair is the responsibility of each one of us.

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» RE: tooly52 Posted by: D78
» RE: tooly52 Posted by: pepaw
» RE: tooly52 Posted by: cyclone
neo-liberalism + that screwed up Bangladeshi comment
Posted by: philame on Sep 15, 2005 5:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Maybe a positive out of Katrina will be that other countries will think more than twice about adopting neo-liberalism. It obviously is not a viable system as we saw with the pitiful response to Katrina. Leaders in other nations may still find the model seductive because it makes their wallets fat, but I hope this makes ordinary people in other countries even more resistant to the neo-liberal agenda but I don't doubt most people's ability to resist the seductiveness of greed... having a heard time seeing any light at the end of the tunnel these days.

BTW wasn't the comment about Bangladeshis "invading" India screwed up? That is f**ked up on so many levels. Comparing US citizens to "invading outsiders" is a disgusting thought, but what it reveals about this persons attitudes about his own neighbor countries is even more ugly.

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More for philame
Posted by: kelly.nickell on Sep 15, 2005 7:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you are indeed coining neo-liberalism in terms of tax and spend; your own dollars and where they go, then consider also how neo-conservatism wrecks the machine into which you pour your tax dollars and fosters the fucked up thought of “invading outsiders” and how it has become one of class, of the presence of the money itself. Conservative idealism leaves the lower class out of the equation, simply ignores it and leaves it out there for us all to pick up later in higher insurance premiums and a higher deficit, for instance. Liberalism is far from being much better but it at least figures a great many more of us into that equation in terms of money.

Consider liberalism as a copout; a cheap way to drop a little bit of money into the lower class so that they will not become invading outsiders. It becomes a way to keep them in their own neighborhoods, so they won’t show up in my neighborhood and start wrecking the place. In cynical terms it is much cheaper to us all than strictly ignoring one class until they become so fed up that they storm the ramparts of anyone with food and water. Hopefully many will use the money to better themselves. Conservative idealism plays up the existance of those that don't and uses them as pawns in their game. You get pissed off at the few, while ignoring the many.

So if you don’t like liberalism in the assumption of tax and spend presented here by coining or using neo-liberalism, consider the absurdity of the statement it makes. They may all suck right now, but you are selling yourself short if you buy into a new liberalism that defines the cogs of this machine. It thrives on the omission of fact and ignoring the presence of people that will ultimately cost more money in the end when it could have been so much cheaper to begin with.

The movement of the right is doing everything in its power to make you and me the invading outsiders, simply for lack of cash, and a lack of government built over two hundred years to keep that from happening. That is what the world is watching right now. This country of outsiders that has become a land of no-outsiders is re-sorting the guest list right now, convincing the middle class and even the poor that they are on the guest list. The simple reality of it is this; you and I are given lip service, turned away at the door, and are now being run off the property. Invading outsiders indeed and we are them, however you want to label it.

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» RE: More for philame Posted by: philame
» RE: More for philame Posted by: kelly.nickell
» RE: For Kelly.............. Posted by: cyclone
» RE: For Kelly.............. Posted by: kelly.nickell
» The children outside the door Posted by: Olympiada
» Pema Chodron Posted by: Olympiada
Uganda sent $200,000
Posted by: Olympiada on Sep 15, 2005 8:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What?! Ok I gotta run with this one. It ties into a dream I had last night.
Uganda a country let down by America's abstinence only fools who did not send them condoms. : "The United Nations special envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa accused the Bush administration of responsibility for a condom shortage in Uganda -- the result of the administration's evangelical Christian agenda of "abstinence.""
From: Katrina comes home to Roost
Uganda a country whose fertility rate is 7 children per woman, who has 820,000 people living with AIDS.
Oh, they shame us!
Uganda, whose school systems are so poor they do not have, hold on " have no books, no desks, no supplies, no sports equipment, no food programs, no electricity, no nothing. Often we don't even have enough classrooms, and classes meet under a mango tree " "Lunch programs� which tend to consist of a half-cup of white polenta ("posho") and a half-cup of milk per day� typically run out of food about 2/3 of the way through the term. "And so we just starve," one teacher said to me, with the kind of patience that has long been second nature."
And they sent us money?

Oh yeah, and check out the wit of this journalist:"Vukoni Lupa-Lasaga writes in the Monitor, a daily newspaper in Kampala, Uganda, that Africans and those of African descent around the world should not put much faith in the United States.""Whether you are in peril in Darfur, Sudan, Ruhengeri, Rwanda or New Orleans, saving your black behind isn't a priority for the American government, founded on a doctrine of white supremacy," he writes. He concludes that the Gulf coast disaster could well deplete funds committed to the global fight against poverty and disease.

My ex husband must be from Uganda, cause this how he thinks too. This ties into Earl's latest article about the Black Caucus and Reagan. Go check it. Y'all know that many African Americans do not know their countries of origin...

What is wrong with this God forsaken country?

Oh yeah, I like this one: "America the 'High and Mighty' had become America, the 'Humbled and Muddy.'" from Nepal. Gotta love that Buddhist humor.

I know what it's like to be humbled...I think this hurricane did the soul of this proud and puffed country some good, personally.

Think globally, act locally.

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» RE: Uganda sent $200,000 Posted by: kelly.nickell
» RE: Uganda sent $200,000 Posted by: cyclone
» RE: Uganda sent $200,000 Posted by: kelly.nickell
» RE: Uganda sent $200,000 Posted by: cyclone
» RE: Uganda sent $200,000 Posted by: johnny-boy2
» Grrls Posted by: Olympiada
» RE: Grrls Posted by: cyclone
» RE: Uganda sent $200,000 Posted by: cyclone
» I should know better?! Posted by: eosinglemum
» RE: I should know better?! Posted by: cyclone
» RE: I should know better?! Posted by: eosinglemum
Another Opinion of America from an outsider
Posted by: 454545 on Sep 15, 2005 9:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
America you are bloated, arrogant, narcissistic, contradictory, insensitive, ignorant, aggressive, destructive, greedy but also prone to sporadic acts of greatness.

In 1776 Benjamin Franklin was in France preparing to enlist their support to launch a republic that yet only existed in the minds of a few and on a piece of paper declaring independence from class rule.

Yours was the best attempt ever in the history of humanity to create an equal and just society, but it was not a perfect execution. You've rested on your laurels for too long and allowed your illusion of prosperity to distort the truth that there was still much work to be done, even in the time of the founding fathers.

Your country is awash with those who take the right of personal liberty as the right to use any means to elevate themselves to power and wealth to the detriment of the people, and to convince the people simultaneously that to complain about the inequalities is un-american.

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We Get What We Deserve
Posted by: cyclone on Sep 15, 2005 10:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The fallacy of "America the Noble" was shattered for me during the Iranian hostage crisis in the 80's. We were then thought of as the country that always prided ourselves on doing good for others, caring about the poor and oppressed of other nations and had the general good will of people around the world. We also had the big, bad USSR to protect the world from.

Then Carter was defeated, Reagan took control and cut a deal with the Iranian's to free our hostages. (the deal was likely struck before the election) Our hostages were freed, and then it was time to hold up our end of the bargain. And what did we do? We told them that now that we had our people back, they could kiss our ass, we weren't going to do what we told them we would do. And, here we are today, despised around the world and nothing more than a laughing stock.

That taught me this. We were really no different than the Soviet's, ever, our methods were merely different. If the Soviet's wanted something, they just simply went and took it by force. We, however, the good guys, just screwed people out of it. We screwed people with a smile on our face, and often left them with smiles on their faces as well, because they truly trusted us. And we gloated, thinking "boy we really pulled one off on them!" Well, these same gloater's are the ones leading us today. All this led to the arrogance that we see in our leaders, the holier than thou attitude that the far right shows, the "we can do anything we want and get away with it" administration in place today, and many other things that have led us down this path of destruction.

Now, we have become the modern day Soviet Union. We now just go and take things, or try to force our will upon the very nations that once depended upon us for their protection, and our arrogance has led to no one trusting us any more, including ourselves not trusting our own government. Boosh and company have merely hastened our inevitable destruction, destruction from within. The game is up, we have no credibility with anyone in the world, and we are about to pay for it.

We have indeed come full circle.

Cyclone

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» RE: We Get What We Deserve Posted by: bogey11
» RE: We Get What We Deserve Posted by: matilda
» RE: We Get What We Deserve Posted by: kelly.nickell
» RE: We Get What We Deserve Posted by: cyclone
» Full circle Posted by: Olympiada
» Amen Cyclone Posted by: Olympiada
Why is this standard of perfection always applied to America?
Posted by: johnny-boy2 on Sep 15, 2005 11:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And why does the world make snide comments every time we suffer a tragedy??

Did we have a heck of a time with Katrina recovery and rescue? Absolutely.

But was our recovery -and ability to rebuild- stronger/more effective than any other nation on earth? Definitely.

America tends to get hit hard by "surprises." But it is the long-term response to those surprises that help define us as the "superpower" that we are.

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» RE: IGNORE THE TROLL Posted by: bogey11
» RE: IGNORE THE TROLL Posted by: johnny-boy2
» RE: IGNORE THE TROLL Posted by: bogey11
» RE: IGNORE THE TROLL Posted by: johnny-boy2
» RE: IGNORE THE TROLL Posted by: bogey11
» Barbara Posted by: Barbara
» RE: IGNORE THE TROLL Posted by: zenwoman
» Barbara Posted by: Barbara
» Barbara Posted by: Barbara
Government Vs. Private Aid Part I
Posted by: bdcbryan@hotmail.com on Sep 15, 2005 11:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Whatever later investigation may turn up about the mistakes of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) in New Orleans, it is unlikely to show the shrill charges of "racism" to be anything other than reckless political rhetoric.

FEMA has bungled other emergencies where most of the victims were white and in previous administrations. Like many government bureaucracies, FEMA is an equal-opportunity bungler.

Many people who think that government is the answer to our problems do not bother to check out the evidence. But it can be eye-opening to compare how private businesses responded to hurricane Katrina and how local, state and national governments responded.

Well before Katrina reached New Orleans, when it was still just a tropical depression off the coast of Florida, Wal-Mart was rushing electric generators, bottled water, and other emergency supplies to its distribution centers along the Gulf coast.

Nor was Wal-Mart unique. Federal Express rushed 100 tons of supplies into the stricken area after Katrina hit. State Farm Insurance sent in a couple of thousand special agents to expedite disaster claims. Other businesses scrambled to get their goods or services into the area.

Meanwhile, laws prevent the federal government from coming in without the permission or a request from state or local authorities. Unfortunately, the mayor of New Orleans and the governor of Louisiana are of a different party than President Bush, which may have something to do with their initial reluctance to have him come in and get political credit.

In the end, there was no political credit for anybody. There was just finger-pointing and the blame game.

Politics is only one of a number of reasons why governments are not the best handlers of many emergencies. Nor is the United States unique in this respect.

A few years ago, more than a hundred Russian sailors paid with their lives for their government's reluctance to accept an offer from the U.S. government to have our navy rescue the crew of a Russian submarine that was trapped under water. How would it look to the world if the American navy could save Russians who could not be saved by their own navy?

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» Babara Posted by: Barbara
» RE: Babara Posted by: cyclone
Government Vs. Private Aid Part II
Posted by: bdcbryan@hotmail.com on Sep 15, 2005 11:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Public outrage within Russia after that episode caused the Russian government more recently to allow British naval experts to carry out a rescue of Russian navy men trapped under water in another submarine.

Sheer bureaucracy can slow down emergency help. It is not uncommon, when there are famines, for food shipments from other countries to sit spoiling on the docks, while people are dying of starvation in the interior, because the food is not being moved fast enough to reach them in time.

Back in 2001, refugees from the war in Afghanistan were dying of starvation while aid workers were completing paperwork before distributing food to them. During the tsunami in Southeast Asia this year, supplies of food, medicine and other necessities from abroad piled up at airports.

In both emergency times and normal times, governments have different incentives than private businesses. More fundamentally, human beings will usually do more for their own benefit than for the benefit of others. The desire to make money usually gets people in gear faster than the desire to help others.

This is not true of everybody. Virtually nothing is true of everybody. We rightly honor those who do their utmost to help others, in part because not everyone acts that way.

It would undoubtedly be a better world if we all loved our neighbors as we love ourselves and acted accordingly.

But in the real world that we actually live in, the question is what set of incentives has the better track record for getting the job done -- and especially getting the job done promptly when time can be the difference between life and death.

The country does not have one dime more resources available when those resources are channeled through government. The resources are just handled less effectively by government and dispensed in an indiscriminate way that encourages people to continue locating in the known path of predictable disasters.

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Bogey11/Cyclone...Same Person??
Posted by: johnny-boy2 on Sep 15, 2005 11:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm starting to think you guys are in one the same.

I don't have any proof...but something smells....

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» RE: Bogey11/Cyclone...Same Person?? Posted by: kelly.nickell
Money Mismanagement????
Posted by: johnny-boy2 on Sep 15, 2005 12:33 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What do you guys think about this interview? A republican bean-counter says that money that should have gone to levee upgrades was mismanaged.

Does this affect your "blame Bush" narrative at all??

LISA MYERS reporting:
It's called the Mardi Gras Fountain, and its unveiling was celebrated this year in typical New Orleans style. The cost? Two point four million dollars paid by the Orleans Levee Board, the state agency whose main job is to protect the levees surrounding New Orleans. The same levees that failed after Katrina hit.

Mr. BILLY NUNGESSER (Former Levee Board President): They misspent the money, so any dollar they wasted was a dollar that would have went to the levees.

MYERS: Billy Nungesser, a former top Republican official, was once president of the Levee Board, and says he lost his job because he targeted wasteful spending.

Mr. NUNGESSER: A cesspool of politics, that's all it was: provide jobs for people, and state senators and, you know, contracts--giving out contracts.

MYERS: In fact, NBC News has uncovered a pattern of what critics call questionable spending practices by the Levee Board, a board which at one point was accused by a state inspector general of "a long-standing and continuing disregard of the public interest." Beyond the fountain, there's $15 million spent on two overpasses that helped gamblers get to Bally's riverboat casino, critics tried and failed to put some of that money into flood protection. Forty-five thousand dollars for private investigators to dig up dirt on this radio host and board critic, then another $45,000 to settle after he sued.

Unidentified Man: They hired a private eye for nine months to find something to--to make me look whacko, to make me look crazy or bad.

MYERS: Critics charged for years the board has paid more attention to marinas, gambling, and business than to maintaining the levees. Example, of 11 construction projects now on the board's Web site, only two are related to flood control.

SOURCE: ABC NEWS

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» RE: Money Mismanagement???? Posted by: kelly.nickell
» RE: Money Mismanagement???? Posted by: kelly.nickell
» top Republican official.... Posted by: Ely Whitney
» RE: top Republican official.... Posted by: kelly.nickell
» RE: Money Mismanagement???? Posted by: hermit
» RE: Money Mismanagement/NBC ABC Posted by: johnny-boy2
» RE: Money Mismanagement/NBC ABC Posted by: kelly.nickell
» RE: Money Mismanagement/NBC ABC Posted by: kelly.nickell
» RE: Money Mismanagement/NBC ABC Posted by: kelly.nickell
» RE: Money Mismanagement/NBC ABC Posted by: johnny-boy2
» RE: Money Mismanagement???? Posted by: bogey11
» RE: Money Mismanagement???? Posted by: kelly.nickell
» RE: Money Mismanagement???? Posted by: johnny-boy2
» RE: Money Mismanagement???? Posted by: cyclone
» RE: For Bogey 11 Posted by: cyclone
» RE: Money Mismanagement???? Posted by: johnny-boy2
» RE: Money Mismanagement???? Posted by: cyclone
» RE: Money Mismanagement???? Posted by: johnny-boy2
» RE: for jb2 Posted by: cyclone
» RE: for jb2 Posted by: johnny-boy2
» RE: Money Mismanagement???? Posted by: cyclone
» RE: Money Mismanagement???? Posted by: Jeff Rohlk
» RE: Money Mismanagement???? Posted by: cyclone
» RE: Money Mismanagement???? Posted by: matrid
» RE: Money Mismanagement???? Posted by: ALANHESTER
» Yes Posted by: Olympiada
"Bush Proves There Is No God"
Posted by: monkeywrench on Sep 15, 2005 9:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
GOD! THE EMBARRASSMENT! That one of the poorest countries in the world, Mozambique, was better at saving its people from floods than the mighty U.S.A.

But, it may be understandable if WE understand that they may be poor in resources, but they are richer in their caring for each other; that our relentless celebration of competition in EVERYTHING (in my city, yuppies even compete in the greening of their lawns!), including basic needs, is at the root of our treating each other like the enemy.

An extension of that anti-humane attitude is the administration's ever-increasing ability to make the less-fortunate (and in our "economic recovery," that is becoming just about everybody) disappear – to be unseen, unacknowledged, in New Orleans (or in Iraq), even in death. Add to that an administration assembled by one of the most idiotic, AMORAL presidents in our history, and it is crystal clear why all those po' black folks in New Orleans were left to sink or swim, live or die, on their own.

That this presidente of ours could not even be bothered to put on an appearance for the sake of world opinion if for nothing else shows just how arrogant, stupid, and self-centered he is. I am profoundly ashamed that so many of my fellow countrymen still support this nincompoop. If there were any justice and fairness in the world, he would have been impeached, prosecuted as a criminal, and jailed years ago. His continued occupation of the White House without the whole population screaming for his removal shakes my faith that there is a God. How could any form of benevolent deity allow this abomination to continue?

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» RE: "Bush Proves There Is No God" Posted by: kelly.nickell
» RE: "Bush Proves There Is No God" Posted by: mandiwrite
» RE: "Bush Proves There Is No God" Posted by: Jeff Rohlk
» RE: "Bush Proves There Is No God" Posted by: ALANHESTER
» RE: "Bush Proves There Is No God" Posted by: ALANHESTER
Lost my marbles
Posted by: kelly.nickell on Sep 15, 2005 10:35 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
JB, I’m going to try in metaphor once more with my sorry wit (I don’t make what Molly does so I can make this statement) before I have to drag my laughing ass into my truck and drive on.

It’s about me, an optimist once upon a time. A patriot that figured the best way to protect the flag was to fight for what it stood for, not passing some lame ass bill to throw people in jail for burning it. It’s the people and the symbol not the object, and of course marbles.

One day a bad man in a black suit showed up on my playground and wanted my bag of marbles. It seems I had taken too many to be playing with at the time and they wanted them all back with interest. I had been one of the better marble players on the playground, but had been running into some bad games and the marbles just weren’t rolling in my favor. I had gone into the marble hole big because I figured that if I just played on the marbles would start coming back to my bag.

They didn’t. Some more bad men came along and started changing the rules of the game, they were taking a big cut of the marbles available on the playground and giving to them to the bad men I was borrowing marbles from. They hadn’t warned me that my ability to borrow any more marbles had been revoked. So as I got ready for my big game; that black suited man carried off most of my marbles, and since I had already lost my own, this was a bad situation. The only way off of the playground was making a promise to replace the marbles for a fraction of the value of small marbles on the marble.

The man in the black suit didn’t even have a face. He was big and powerful and had the backing of all of the bad men to make the rules going forward for all of the marble players on the playground. Everyone had to pay a third of their marbles just to play, and if they needed to borrow marbles, they couldn’t; the bad men had carried the marbles to a really cool playground on the other side of town. Little by little we all lost our marbles, the same way I had.

The bad men eventually left. The new playground across town was said to have really beautiful marbles but none of us could go there. The bad men ran us all off. We were left to polish the marbles for the players on the new playground. There weren’t very many of them and they weren’t that good, but hey, it was their marble game now.

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» RE: Lost my marbles Posted by: johnny-boy2
» RE: Lost my marbles Posted by: matrid
» RE: Lost my marbles Posted by: cyclone
» RE: Lost my marbles Posted by: johnny-boy2
» RE: Lost my marbles Posted by: cyclone
katrina shakes global faith
Posted by: je on Sep 15, 2005 11:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wdn't it be good if the pres and vp, instead of accepting $$$ from 2 of the world's poorest nations, asked their friends, the CEOs of Halliburton, Kellogg Root & Brown, all the major oil companies, to donate $millions of the $billions they receive from us taxpayers? And even to do pro bono work in hurricane-devastated areas? And even to refuse the pres's waiver of the Davis-Bacon legislation to protect poor workers in such conditions?

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» Yes it would be good Posted by: Olympiada
» RE: katrina shakes global faith Posted by: ALANHESTER
A little late, no?
Posted by: greekTowner on Sep 16, 2005 12:49 AM   
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I am sure someone has posted this but I think the world lost its faith in the US a few years ago

The Katrina disaster is the cherry on the cake

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» Barbara Posted by: Barbara
» RE: Barbara Posted by: ALANHESTER
» And humbling is a blessing Posted by: Olympiada
» RE: A little late, no? Posted by: matrid
Was Uganda or Tanzania involved in the Middle Passage?
Posted by: Olympiada on Sep 17, 2005 8:23 PM   
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Ok, off topic, but with 1.5 million readers and Uganda mentioned, I thought I would throw it out there.

I am really on fire...and disturbed. So any one who has done research about the involvement of East Africa with the African diaspora (Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Malawi, Mozambique), please, drop me a comment.

I figure I could start fishing here for leads.

I want to know if there are African Americans that have traced their heritage back to East Africa.

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ECLECTICIST- S JIM RODRIGUEZ
Posted by: SJR505 on Sep 18, 2005 7:21 AM   
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As an American with roots of over 300+ years in the state of Texas, Bush 43 and his parents are not, repeat , not Texans by births...They like the katrina evacuees are displaced persons...That is the facts...

If bush 43 was a Tejano, and instead an "urban cowboy", he would have a genuine concern about family, neighbors, land, environment, and the community...He has demonstrated in words and deeds his lack of concerns, especially for the poor of the poorest in our America...

If anything , Voltaire had it right when he stated :

"To the living we owe respect, but to the dead we owe only the truth. “

After watching this urban cowboy screw up in the administration of our precious country, I am watching how much his selected cronies, Cheny, Rove, Allbaugh, etc; the elitist corporations - KBR, SHAW GRP, Halliburton, United, Delta, etc; and the neocoms , republican politicians, etc are going to support him before and during his last two years in 2006 as he becomes a true "lame duck"...

Let us see if they will bail him out like his parents and the dead miltary soldiers did, etc as he selectively picked his option of "growing up"...


S...JIM...RODRIGUEZ+++EL ECLECTICIST+++
333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333

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Bangladesh sent tea
Posted by: Olympiada on Sep 18, 2005 5:02 PM   
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Isn't this sweet? I found this Indian love song I wanted to share with you all. Indian culture is so beautiful. Check this link:
Kirana Hluwalia Video

“Meri Gori Gori” belongs to the latter category and is from a number of songs dealing with a maiden’s constant search for the man who will give her some kind of jewelry that she has her heart set on—in this case, a gold bangle.

I know an Orthodox Christian family that met in India. Never been there myself. Got a new Indian friend at my daughter's school. She gave me some henna for Mendhi. And she is Muslim, not Hindu, much to my ignorant surprise. She had to tell my ex men do not wear Mendhi!

Ah thank God for India. What a sweet country. My daughter has an Indian friend in the 1st grade who absolutely adores her...

Ah, with India, there is hope. After all, who can live without tea? Certainly not I.

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