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Race, Lies and New Orleans

By Earl Ofari Hutchinson, AlterNet. Posted October 6, 2005.


Reports of rampant violence and theft in the wake of Katrina fit nicely into the media's beliefs about African-Americans.
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A week after Katrina hit, a reporter for the British Guardian newspaper was curious whether there was any truth to the wild, gossipy and hysterical reports of murder, rape, incest, and stacked corpses at the New Orleans Superdome.

He closely examined police reports, records, statements of city officials, and eyewitness accounts. He didn't find anything to substantiate the press reports, or official claims of the bedlam.

His story was ignored in the mainstream press and lightly mentioned on a few obscure websites. A number of web respondents sneered at the story as a lie, or an apology for black crime by a left-leaning tabloid. New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin quickly jumped into the fray, slandered his own city, and reinforced the worst racial stereotypes with his violence-is-everywhere rant on Oprah and national talk shows.

The Guardian may have been an isolated, and to some suspect, media voice with its counterspin on the mythical violence, but it wasn't the only press skeptic that tried to separate fact from fiction about alleged Katrina violence. Reporters for the Associated Press and the Chicago Tribune, which could hardly be tagged left-leaning, also found no credible evidence that marauding gangs terrorized anyone, or that they even existed.

A month after these lonely press voices took the time to check facts, rather than run with gossip, a few newspapers did a tepid mea culpa and admitted that the apoplectic frothing tirades by a legion of talking-head commentators and their bloodthirsty headlines about "Baghdad on the Bayou," rape, murder, incest, stockpiled bloated corpses, mass looting, the breakdown of civilization and the dark side of America were exaggerated, or more bluntly a pack of lies.

The media's mea culpa, however, came a month after New Orleans and the black crime fixation had been firmly pile-driven into the skulls of millions nationally and worldwide, and becoming an urban legend created that the press's belated, gentile damage control could never shake.

This was not simply another overblown case of cheap sensationalist tabloid news. That's become so commonplace it barely draws a yawn from a jaded public.

New Orleans fit neatly into the standard equation that black, especially poor black, equals crime and violence. That equation kicks in even when there is no crime, or when whites commit the crimes.

In a 2003 Penn State University study, researchers asked white participants to examine newspaper pictures of black and white crime suspects. Later they asked them whom the stories had highlighted. In nearly every case, the respondents incorrectly said that the suspects were black. The researchers blamed what they called the "mismemory" of whites on who commits crime on the top-heavy media emphasis on black crime.

That mismemory was evident during another big disaster a decade ago. This time it was the 1992 L.A. riots. TV reporters constantly tailored their reports to depict the violence as the handiwork of black rioters. But TV was an open mirror. Viewers could plainly see that many of those looting and burning were non-blacks. A Rand study of the racial breakdown of 5,000 riot related cases processed through Los Angeles municipal courts found that the majority of those arrested for riot related offenses were Latinos and whites. The arrest figures were reported in the back pages of one newspaper and ignored by the rest of the press. More than a decade later, the L.A. riot is still indelibly stamped as being a black riot.

The scapegoating of blacks for America's crime problem hit full stride in the 1980s. The assault on jobs, income and social service programs, a crumbling educational system and industrial shrinkage dumped more blacks on the streets with no where to go. The big cuts in welfare, social services and skills training programs during the past decade dumped even more young black males and females on the streets.

When some turned to gangs, guns and drugs much of the press busily titillated the public with inexhaustible features on the "crime prone," "crack plagued," and the "blood-stained streets" of the ghetto. TV action news crews routinely stalked black neighborhoods filming busts for the nightly news.

The explosion of gangsta rap and the spate of Hollywood ghetto films convinced even more Americans that the gangsta lifestyle was the black lifestyle. They had ghastly visions of the boys in the hood heading for their neighborhoods next.

Much of the media instantly turned the crime problem into a black problem and played it up even bigger in news stories and features. New Orleans was a textbook example of that. Those in the media, and public officials such as Nagin, that ignored evidence to the contrary, and spread wild tales of rape, murder and mayhem, edged dangerously close to demonizing the thousands of blacks that were forced to flee for their lives and endure indescribable, inhumane conditions. It was irresponsible, shameful, and reprehensible, but it showed that when disaster and race collide, anything goes, including the truth.

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Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. He is the author of 'The Crisis in Black and Black' (Middle Passage Press).

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View:
The willingness to accept the Superdome myths...
Posted by: sgtmartin1 on Oct 6, 2005 7:57 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
is rooted even in conservative "intellectuals" like Bennett. He was giddy to get the black baby abortion matter on the table.

Why else would he have literally changed the topic at hand in order to inject the analogy.

I'm taking a little heat today for firing back in kind, I invite you to visit and comment. Note the quote from the "famed French geophysicist Jacques Revanche" is nearly exactly the same as Bennett's, just substituted "right wing pundit" for black babies, "euthanize" for abortion and "temperature" for crime. Enjoy...

Today on EWM: Scientific Shocker: Study: Euthanizing Right-wing Pundits would Solve Global Warming

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interesting enough
Posted by: nellyman on Oct 6, 2005 8:04 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I received a "email" not too long ago about the "missing" prisoners and what not from the new orleans area, and how we should be "concerned" about these "escaped" rapist,murderers etc... What I couldn't understand was who could be so vile and detracted enough to even go to such lengths to even suggest that such a "paranoid delusional" event even took place. I'm sure if there were inmates who escaped, our "trusty news media" would have warn us all by now. By and large, the events that took place during that horrible and trying time can reflect that most people I doubt believe that such "atrocities" took place. The helicopters reporting being shot at I feel may have been mistaken for people "trying to get attention" so they could be "rescued".
There was some incidents I would assume that did take place but for the most, I don't think the reports where all that "accurate" as to what really went on down there.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: interesting enough Posted by: mkwagner
» RE: interesting enough Posted by: candi3kids
» RE: interesting enough Posted by: owleyes
» RE: interesting enough Posted by: nellyman
» RE: interesting enough Posted by: shandyman
» RE: interesting enough Posted by: nellyman
A CESSPOOL FROM SEA TO SHINING SEA
Posted by: LMNOP on Oct 7, 2005 12:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
America doesn't miss too many chances to avoid the honorable and embrace the dishonorable any more, does it?

The neocons have used this country as a toilet, and this is just another turd floating in the American toilet bowl. I'm sure there'll be a new one tomorrow to join it.

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Five Finger Discount is Ebonics for Disaster Recovery
Posted by: Jeffersonista on Oct 7, 2005 6:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I guess y'all didn't see the videos of the huge crowds of mostly blacks doing the mass looting of the Wallmart that everyone else saw.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» race card.. Posted by: DavidTbone
» RE: race card.. Posted by: NEWS4A2
» RE: race card.. Posted by: Andrew19
» RE: race card.. Posted by: NEWS4A2
» RE: race card.. Posted by: JayMax
» native american Posted by: montana freeman
Case in point
Posted by: esactun on Oct 7, 2005 11:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Is it me, or did "Jeffersonista" just prove Mr Hutchison's point? :) Hilarious!

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» RE: Case in point Posted by: owleyes
» RE: Case in point Posted by: nellyman
» RE: Case in point Posted by: brownsugar
Playing the race card ... puh-leeze Part I
Posted by: NEWS4A2 on Oct 7, 2005 8:51 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I live in Baton Rouge and was down in New Orleans on Search and Rescue missions when the general public was banned. I believe I can offer a perspective a columnist who wasn't here can't offer.

First and foremost, the information about the rapes and murders came from the residents themselves. The local tv news program ran video 24/7 that include interviews with storm survivors and I watched as Charmaine Neville, sister of Aaron, sat and made an oath to Roman Catholic Archbishop Alfred Hughes about the bodies of all the dead babies she saw floating and about the roving rape gangs of African Americans gang bangers carrying guns.

I saw interviews with African Americans men and women who claimed they waited at the convention center and Superdome and personally witnessed the rape and murder of a 7-year-old girl. In the background of the video was an ATM that had been cracked and the cash looted.

Eddie Compass, the resigned African Americans Chief of Police of New Orleans, told Oprah about the violence at the Convention Center and Superdome, a charge repeated numerous times by African Americans mayor C. Ray Nagin.

I also watch the Montel Williams show as Montel interviewed African Americans storm survivors who claimed to a national audience they also had witnessed rapes and murders, as well as super large rats gnawing on the bodies of corpses.

And the blame at that time was placed on the rich whites who left the poor African Americans families there to die at the hands of lawless bangers with guns.

So ... the question is, are African Americans people to be believed in a crisis or are they not? Are whites racist if they believe them or are they not?

That looting was widespread should not and cannot be denied. I witnessed many looted stores myself, stores that carried no food or water but items of pawn value.

Folk justify the looting by saying folk were just taking water and food to survive. Assuming a looter was hanging to life after a day and needed food and water that looter didn't store beforehand, I've yet to hear one story about a looter heading back to a store to pay the owner of the small business for the water or food they took.

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» You Miss The Point Posted by: DavidTbone
» RE: You Miss The Point Posted by: NEWS4A2
» RE: You Miss The Point Posted by: nellyman
» HA!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Posted by: DavidTbone
» RE: HA!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Posted by: NEWS4A2
» RE: HA!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Posted by: DavidTbone
» RE: You Miss The Point Posted by: JayMax
» RE: You Miss The Point Posted by: fjblair
» native american Posted by: montana freeman
Blame the Victims; Again!
Posted by: johnsh on Oct 8, 2005 3:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You know' I'm white and certainly one of amerika's working poor and I know that if I tried to leave the city and had those fascist cops shoot at me AND my family and then told us to turn around and go back... well I might just think taking a stinking TV isn't all that out of line and since there was no way to buy anything anywhere anyway, WHO THE FUCK ARE YOU JOE MORAL? IGNORANCE is america's stock in trade today. We have loads of "tough love" how about some LOVE?

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Poverty and crime
Posted by: Edward George on Oct 8, 2005 10:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Years ago I ran a prison library for several years where I spent many hours conversing with inmates. (It was a classic old fashioned prison with the tiers of cells; the whole works.)

I have read about rich people going to prison but I certainly didn't meet any there. I didn't do a nose count but it seemed that the prison population pretty well mimicked the percentages of poor blacks, Hispanics and whites outside the prison except the blacks were somewhat under represented. In particular it seemed to me that the blacks were more "human" and humane. As one black prisoner said to me in the midst of a long conversation, "Man! I'd lots rather embezzle money in a bank man! Than hit somebody the head to get money, man!" (As a group they had a lot of, "Cain't we all just get along.")

PS: My own ancestry is Welch-Scotch-Irish.

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» RE: Poverty and crime Posted by: NEWS4A2
» RE: Poverty and crime Posted by: Edward George
» RE: Poverty and crime Posted by: NEWS4A2
» RE: Poverty and crime Posted by: Edward George
» RE: Poverty and crime Posted by: Andrew19
» RE: Poverty and crime Posted by: nellyman
» RE: Poverty and crime Posted by: ALANHESTER
» RE: Poverty and crime Posted by: feller
» RE: Poverty and crime Posted by: Edward George
» RE: Poverty and crime Posted by: shandyman
» RE: Poverty and crime Posted by: NEWS4A2
» RE: Poverty and crime Posted by: fitzjohn
» RE: Poverty and crime Posted by: nellyman
» RE: Poverty and crime Posted by: lz0406
» RE: Poverty and crime Posted by: shandyman
Change and lack of change
Posted by: rvg on Oct 8, 2005 10:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is unfortunate that the 'black stereotype' has persisted. I flunked sexism and racism at UT many years ago for one of the main reasons this racism persists. America is a melting pot of all cultures. All minorities have suffered from racism in their integration into American socirty. The black culture has continued in its underclass role longer than any other population sector. Laws have been passed and enforced for all minorities, particularly for the black population. I flunked the Sexism and Racism class because I demanded, through my quotation of the writings of Malcolm X, Angela Davis, Eldridge Cleaver, et al, that the black minority start to participate in their many options and to bootstrap their culture from underclass to equal among peers. My professor, his aide and liberals in general found that view ludicrous and expounded that the 'proper' answer was to enact more laws and create more dependecy programs.

I am from Houston. There have been competing monorities here for decades, the black and Hispanic populations. In the recent years, I have noticed a renaissance in the Hispanic community. They ran a gubernatorial candidate (although they voted for the Republican white guy who inherited the governership from W) and have changed their 'fight song' to active participation in cultural and economic activities. The neighborhoods have also transformed from ugly, unpainted and grassless to prideful, clean and green. This metamorphosis was not based on programs raising their stake, but on a cultural change from alienated to participatory. Investigation shows that home ownership among the Hispanics is on the rise, education goals are being shaped and that higher economic participation is a community purpose.

I think it is time for the blacks to stop asking for exceptions and start seeking acception.

On the other hand, I recently lived in a neighborhood near downtown that is being 'gentrified' from poverty to opulent by redevelopment. The black neighborhood still features what I term the 'grinding black poverty' with no hope or will to change. The choices in life are stark sometimes, but change is an inside job.

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» Not Condescending, Racist Posted by: MarcGarvey
» RE: Change and lack of change Posted by: nellyman
RE: From New Orleans
Posted by: NEWS4A2 on Oct 9, 2005 6:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are none so blind who will no see. Clare, I'm glad you're safe but you have knowledge only about what you witnessed, not about what you did not witness.

Are we to believe what you write, like the media believed the stories of others? If so, we stand to be held in ridicule by folk like the columnist who wrote this opinion.

I was in New Orleans, helping with the evacuations, and I know what I saw, the looted buildings. I also know what I saw and heard on tv.

I don't doubt there now is a whitewashing/blackwashing of what occurred in New Orleans. I believe the book "1984" by George Orwell spoke of constantly rewriting history and destroying news reports to ensure the leaders were held in the best light possible. If the crime problem is so bad in New Orleans as was shown on tv, who would ever wish to return to the "Big Easy" as tourists? How would it look for the future of tourism if the body of a 7-year-old rape victim was found in the convention center with a slashed throat. So I'm sure the revisionist version of the aftermath of Katrina has broad support. And who can say ... witnesses are scattered, evidence destroyed. An average only 10 percent of rapes are ever reported officially.

Thank God for Google. BTW, I wouldn't consider beer or cigarettes essential items for survival, but that's just me.

New Orleans police break out of their 'Fort Apache'

A desperate S.O.S

What They Didn't Steal They Trashed

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» RE: From New Orleans Posted by: neosoul
» RE: From New Orleans Posted by: NEWS4A2
» RE: From New Orleans Posted by: neosoul
» RE: From New Orleans Posted by: NEWS4A2
» RE: From New Orleans Posted by: neosoul
RE: MAY GOD BLESS YOU!!! I KNOW HE WILL!!!
Posted by: stoney13 on Oct 9, 2005 6:22 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A bout time!! After all the tales of misery and woe! One voice cries from the wilderness with a message of hope!!

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Best wishes
Posted by: pjfwv on Oct 9, 2005 6:48 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Being a white universalist in the heart of the "Bible Belt", I understand those feelings of "racism". I believe this happens to everyone at some time in their lives.

I got to see New Orleans right after 9/11. I thoroughly enjoyed it. Unfortuanately, Pete Fountain wasn't playing-I had caught him earlier in my life. I dealt with a Pick Pocket (who was white).

When it comes to gangs, any gang of people can be dangerous. No matter what their race or gender. Don't be overly confident if you're the same in either case. Most of us are a little braver in that senario. Smoking happened to me that way. I now stand alone in crowds of people.

I gave up on television. I catch reports online. As with anything, about 20 percent is accurate. I don't trust video or photos or sound bytes. I have worked with imaging software and know how easy it is to use lighting, etc. to portray something.

Here, in Charleston, WV......we have the same dealings. I'm afraid that most of what had happened, not only here, but across the country......throughout history, was caused by lack of thorough investigation. Anyone can say anything. I have been dealing with some pretty cruel slander myself which caused me a lot of hardship. I have tried to find a lawyer to assist, but so far noone will do anything about it. I would like to see more suits against slander.

Studying the history of jazz, New Orleans was a key to it all. Not just for blacks and whites, but the Irish and others as well. I'm afraid we accept comments too readily in this country. Notice I say comments, not knowledge.

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I saw some interesting
Posted by: BaronMatrix on Oct 9, 2005 7:28 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
pics on Bill Maher's show around the time of the flood. There was one picture of a young black male dragging a plastic bag in one hand and a 12pack of Pepsi in the other hand. The water is up to his waist and the caption says "A child carries goods home after stealing them.


Then he showed another picture of a white couple doing the same thing, but the caption reads. A young couple makes their way home after finding food.


I am of the opinion that stories like these show an ultimate amount of jealousy and a definite inferiority complex. If white people are in charge you should NOT care about what the "NATIVES" are doing. We don't want to come to your neighborhood anyway.

I'm sorry that a lot of you white folks wish you could have lived during Jim Crow or slavery but that's not going to happen so you are the PROBLEM.

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» RE: I saw some interesting Posted by: NEWS4A2
» RE: I saw some interesting Posted by: Lightning Joe
» RE: I saw some interesting Posted by: NEWS4A2
» RE: I saw some interesting Posted by: DavidTbone
» RE: I saw some interesting Posted by: NEWS4A2
kenner la and why people didnt leave
Posted by: greenmannowar on Oct 9, 2005 10:08 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
i was in kenner, near new orleans, and i hadnt seen or heard of one store here that was looted (except wal mart who opened the doors, ands the looting was by emergency personel)
i saw one white guy, poorly dressed pushing a shopping cart with food and water. so far, i still havent heard of one home being broken into in kenner, and yes it has its share of black lower class people, and there were no cops here either.
i had a police scanner, and it seems to me that everything was overstated. there was an area or 2 that people were grouped together waiting for help, and emergency persons made a big deal about it, but on the scanner, i didnt hear any shooting, or reports of shootings at all. they were scared at how the croud would react, but they must have been pretty calm. thats the way it sounded to me anyway.

at least this should point out to people that the lower income people should have had help. they didnt have cars to leave, or money.
its not easy to pick up and go when a storm comes. we get lots of them that come close, but never hit. it costs a lot to miss work, and get a hotel room, food etc...
thats provided you even have a car.
http://911review.org/Hurricane_Katrina/photos/


katrina disaster victim experience

brad
http://911index.batcave.net
9/11 terror drill research

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News4A2 got a news flash for ya
Posted by: nellyman on Oct 11, 2005 10:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Pedestal for sale". includes Matches and a can of gasoline.
Careful news4a2, your motives are becoming "apparent". And I don't buy "yuppie conservative leftism" Black or white.....

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Levees BEING BLOWN confirmed!
Posted by: Here4TRuth on Oct 11, 2005 7:53 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My cousin, a professionsl and veteran REMAINED! I spoke with him AFTER Katrina had passed over New Orleans. He reported that there was 1 ft of water. When able to contact him AFTER Monday night' EVENTS, he reported that there was "boom, Boom, BOOM", just as Mr. Edwards REPORTED on ABC National news!

Although a staunch redneck, halturnershow.com reports the SAME in archived files PAGE one, between photo of Sean Penn with rifle and alligators consuming corpses report. Apparently, the US Army Corp of Engineers divers SAW THREE holes in the 17th St levee and sent a chunk of concrete with EXPLOSIVE marks for forensic tests! Results indicate that underwater, military, BORON enhanced Fluoro-nitramino AND FXBN-111 were IDENTIFIED in explosive 17th St levee DEBRIS!

This weekend, I attended an annual New Orleans University fund raiser and met TWO graduates who were evacuated to the Super Dome, since they did not depart as New Orleanians regularly do. They ALSO REPORTED that there was "boom, Boom, BOOM" and THEN the waters came, 12+ hrs FOLLOWING Katrina's pass over New Orleans!

They ALSO saw RAPIST in Super Dome who IS A WHITE MALE, contrary to what the media DEPICTED!

And ABOUT the weather, access www.bariumblues.com to SEE ALL that the POWERS that BE are DOING to our weather. I WITNESSED the CHEMtrails in New Orleans and questioned WHY these "sickos" WOULD intensify a Fla. level 1 storm with REGULAR trails OVER/IN New Orleans' skies, within 48hrs of Katrina's arrival! These CAUSED Laguna Hills, Beverly Hills Hollywood Hills et al to FALL and Pasadena, Orange County and So. Central L.A. to experience TORNADOES in 2005!!!! CHEMtrails are NO joke!!

Americans DESERVE the TRUTH and NEED to KNOW WHO had the mal-intent, capability and in-house terrorism mal-feasance to DESTROY a kind, gentle, TRULY AMERICAN city!

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Samm Bennett's song: New Orleans 2005
Posted by: flapjax_at_midnite on Oct 12, 2005 8:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I was outraged by the Bush government's disregard for the safety and well-being of those citizens of New Orleans (overwhelmingly poor/working class and African-American) left to fend for themselves in the days following Katrina. I've written a song, called New Orleans 2005, that attempts to articulate some of that anger, as well as express some hope for change. I hope that you'll find the time to go to the link below and listen to the song. If you think its message is one that should be heard by others, I hope you'll copy this link and send it to anyone whom you feel might have interest. Protest music is not dead! Here's the link:

http://www.polarityrecords.net

here are the lyrics:

new orleans 2005

see the black man down in New Orleans
waist deep in the flood waters wading
gunfire crackles in the distance
the last glimmer of daylight is fading
he didn't have much to begin with
now his world has come all unglued
he's on his way to bust into a grocery store
to get his family some water and food

now see the president way up in his airplane
he says zero tolerance for looters
i tell you one thing this president really knows how to do
is to send in the guns and the shooters
but less bullets more boats beds and blankets
and a few hundred lives he might save
ah but blaming the victim is what we do best
here in the home of the brave

they say the president loves all americans
no matter the color or creed
but you decide for yourself where the real truth resides
is it found in the word or the deed
if you say you don't think that it's racist
maybe this'll cut through your dense mental haze
just try and imagine a whole stadium full of white people
left to fend for themselves for six days
i don't think it would've happened quite that way

now if there's good that can come from this tragedy
it's that maybe things'll get rearranged
lord knows over in washington d.c.
we're long overdue for regime change
one hundred eighty six million dollars they spend
on the war in iraq every day
with just a fraction of that
they could've shored up those levees
and kept the floodwaters at bay

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It never happened
Posted by: NEWS4A2 on Oct 15, 2005 5:27 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It never happened #1 -- Confirming reports that snipers fired at hospital and rescue workers and the looters were intent on snagging drugs from pharmacies ...

They sang gospel songs, held a talent show by flashlight, ducked sniper fire and scavenged drugs and diapers from a flooded pharmacy besieged by looters.

In a collection of essays in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine, doctors detail the harrowing ordeal of being stuck inside crippled hospitals and shelters after Hurricane Katrina ravaged New Orleans.

It never happened #2 -- Confirming reports that animals were seen eating corpses ...

Bodies stuck for days or weeks in contaminated floodwaters, heat and muck after Katrina struck Aug. 29 are proving difficult to identify. Animals have complicated matters. Race and gender can't be determined by sight in some cases, Cataldie said.

"Unfortunately, a lot of these folks don't have skin anymore," he said.

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Looting for food and water to save our baby!
Posted by: NEWS4A2 on Oct 16, 2005 6:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Looting was only to save starving children ... and other lies

Helen Cheneau returned to her Ninth Ward home this week. The 62-year-old retired hotel maid knew her first floor would be ruined by floodwaters but expected her valuables upstairs to be safe.

Cheneau was wrong. Looters made off with her jewelry, TVs, a vacuum, a sewing machine and more - and even trashed the place. She's been unable to get police on the phone to take a report.

"I just feel like I was being violated," she said. "It's ridiculous."

(If there's no crime, then who needs police to answer the phone?)

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Don't you guys get it???
Posted by: billfaster on Oct 20, 2005 7:55 PM   
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Geesh, don't you guys get it?? The myths were perpetuated by your very own left-wing media in an attempt to discredit the White House Administration's response to the hurricane. The more death and mayhem reported equated to a lower Presidential approval rating. Of course they're (the mainstream left) not going to report the truth behind the lies as this would only further undermine the advance of their personal agenda - discredit Bush at any cost...

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Cops was even stealing from Wal-mart
Posted by: lady42 on Dec 14, 2005 5:46 PM   
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I could not blame anyone for getting water , food or things for a baby. But T.V's and other things they had no where to put them or electric service. That's just down right theiveing.I saw news coverage where 2 women police was even stealing a little of anything they could get their hands on. That's wrong . I also heard on the news where some people did want to live in a trailor park. Would that not be better then the dump they were living in ? When everything gets back to normal my suggestion is ; If you don't want what has been giving to you GET A JOB - this time and give yourself a better house

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