Daily Kos

Tag: Hurricane Katrina

Let's Circulate This As An Email

Tue Aug 19, 2008 at 07:47:40 AM PDT

John McCain is announcing his VP the day after Obama's convention speech, on his birthday, and on the 3 year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. Below, I put something together. Let's send it out as an email for everyone to see. In all fairness, I used parts of others' diaries. Thinking if you all save the pics, then copy/paste them in the email so its not linked to the photo website in case the pics are not available anymore.

Thinking the Subject/Title Should be "McCain's Judgement"

"slinkerwinks diary

John McCain has NO STANDING to pander on Hurricane Katrina

Sun Aug 17, 2008 at 07:13:05 AM PDT

Last night I made a valiant effort to watch the forum when John McCain was on the stage, I was doing well until he mentioned going to visit churches after Hurricane Katrina. That specific bit of pandering was particularly offensive to me because I had just done a diary on McCain's Katrina record, and it's not good.

What should I ask Carville/Matalin?

Thu Aug 14, 2008 at 09:21:54 PM PDT

So I have a chance to hear James Carville and Mary Matalin speak next week. Before the Phoenix Chamber of Commerce, no less.  

Poll

Who has done more damage?

24%29 votes
75%88 votes

| 117 votes | Vote | Results

"Country First" my @$$

Thu Aug 14, 2008 at 08:26:56 AM PDT

So, the third anniversary of Hurricane Katrina is coming up, and all of the bad memories about that time are coming back to me. I'm not from New Orleans, but I had lots of friends that were. John McCain's theme for this election is "country first." Does that not also mean DOMESTIC issues? Issues like Hurricane Katrina and the fact that it STILL hasn't been fixed (yet we spend BILLIONS a month on a war in Iraq). Was McCain putting "Country first" when he was eating birthday cake with George Bush.

It's Time To Talk About Katrina

Mon Aug 11, 2008 at 03:34:12 PM PDT

There's been a lot of reflection on the fact that Barack Obama's nomination as the Democratic Party's candidate for President will fall on the 45th anniversary of Martin Luther King's "I Have A Dream" speech.  But there's another, more recent milestone associated with the late August time frame.  The day after August 28, 2008 will be the third anniversary of Hurricane Katrina's landfall in the Gulf Coast and New Orleans, and the third anniversary of the catastrophic levee failure that caused a man-made disaster in one of America's great cities.

over..

Racism, sexism, organization, and the politics of mass distraction

Thu Aug 07, 2008 at 07:51:29 AM PDT

By now we've all heard the reasons Democrats have lost elections for the past four decades.  Frames.  Memes.  Defined by opponents.  Attack ads.  Political capitulations.  Weak on defense.  And crime.  And the voters are stupid.  Oh, and the media are biased.

I'm going to go out on a limb and suggest that all of the above are the politics of mass distraction.  The real reason Democrats lost elections for the past four decades?  Just three:

Racism.  Sexism.  Organization.

Please join me over the fold....

Musical Moondays

Mon Aug 04, 2008 at 11:53:50 PM PDT

Alright, I know I lapsed for a couple of weeks, and I'm pretty much posting this at the ass-end of a Monday, but I really couldn't decide on which songs to post!

I thought it would be a good idea this month to concentrate on topics centering on dignity, especially considering our approach of the 3rd anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.

Below the fold, paean of the week:

Trent Lott in Hot Water in State Farm Case

Sun Aug 03, 2008 at 10:55:06 AM PDT

The leading lights of the Republican Party like to endlessly badmouth trial lawyers.  Endlessly, that is, until they need one.  Former Mississippi Senator Trent Lott is no exception.

Back in 2004, Lott ridiculed John Edwards, saying of John Kerry's running mate, "He's a charming guy who was a suing lawyer -- that's S-U-I-N-G lawyer."  But when his own house was demolished by Hurricane Katrina three years ago, Lott was only too happy sue State Farm Insurance to pay for it.  And as it turns out, Trent Lott may soon need a different kind of lawyer – a criminal defense attorney – for his own shady role in the case.

Bushed: More Details On FEMA's Latest Scandal

Sun Aug 03, 2008 at 06:57:49 AM PDT

BowlAfter Hurricane Katrina slammed into the Gulf Coast in August 2005 the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) purchased more than $85M worth of basic supplies for storm victims. For more than two years, until last month FEMA let the supplies sit in warehouses at a cost of $1M/year.

During that two year period local government officials and non-profit relief organizations in Louisiana and Mississippi made repeated public pleas for donations of the exact sort of items FEMA had already purchased and were even stored locally.

That these supplies people have needed for years just sat in warehouses until mid-June of this year is bad enough, but FEMA was able to find a way to make this story even more sad and depressing the way only George Bush's administration can.

Minimum Wage Jumps to $6.55, No Thanks to John McCain

Thu Jul 24, 2008 at 12:22:03 PM PDT

On Thursday, Americans saw the minimum wage jump to $6.55 an hour.  Boosted by the second of three 70 cent increases passed by the new Democratic majority in Congress after the 2006 mid-term elections, the minimum wage will move to $7.25 next year.  But to be sure, the two million Americans who got a raise today won't have John McCain to thank for it.

After the Deluge

Wed Jul 23, 2008 at 01:29:11 PM PDT

The third anniversary of Hurricane Katrina is coming up next month.

Today Dolly has been upgraded to a Category 2 hurricane.  And again there are worries about levees:

Coastal officials worried Tuesday that Tropical Storm Dolly may bring so much rain that flooding could break through the levees holding back the Rio Grande.

Some stories don’t ever seem to change.

Bush math: $1 + $1 = $85 million

Tue Jul 22, 2008 at 01:51:47 AM PDT

Not much to expand on here, so you will have to accept it for what it is.

CNN reports this morning on the value of supplies actually given to Katrina storm victims. The Bush Administration, GSA and FEMA proudly claimed they had given away $85 million in relief supplies, but apparently this total was accomplished by assigning the value of a crate of toilet paper to a roll of tp, etc. The real value was a paltry $18 million and not all of that was distributed. Imagine that! A whopping $18 million to an entire city destroyed with hundreds of thousands of people displaced, and much of it never distributed. How generous!

The General Services Administration, which manages federal property, over-counted cases of toilet paper, plastic sporks and other cutlery, by mistakenly counting a single item as being worth as much as multiple items contained in a package of goods.

Louisiana's Relationship From Hell: The Sequel

Mon Jul 21, 2008 at 08:02:28 AM PDT

For anybody who thought Louisiana would get a far better deal from BushCo under GOP Gov. Bobby Jindal than she did under Democratic Gov. Kathleen Blanco, they'd better think again. For Bush's pattern of abuse against Louisiana seems to transcend her politics. According to the Baton Rouge Advocate,

Bobby Jindal,  angered over the increased costs that storm-wounded Louisiana must shoulder for construction of hurricane protection levees, asked Washington for more time — and a little fairness.

Under the latest war spending bill, Louisiana must kick in $1.8 billion by 2011 in order to activate $5.8 billion in federal funding needed to strengthen the New Orleans-area levee system.

Jindal said Louisiana’s share for repairs to the 360-mile, federally maintained levee system, is higher post-Katrina, than before the storm. "It seems ridiculous," Jindal said, tersely.

 Hurricane Katrina  Hits  the Banking System

Mon Jul 14, 2008 at 04:12:41 PM PDT

It was not  Hurricane Katrina that killed thousands of people in New Orleans. It was the breaching  of the levies. And the incompetence of FEMA administrators who were supposed to mount a rescue. The sheer indifference of the ruling class, symbolized by that flyover by Bush. Even as images of thousands of people taking refuge in the SuperDome filled our TV screens, Bush administration officials were deriding it all as a figment of our imagination. Sounds familiar?

Now a similar catastrophe is under way with the US banking system. The Hurricane is the downturn in the business cycle.  Dare I call it  the recession? The levies are the system of checks and balances put in place after the crash of 1929.  Federal guarantees of deposits under $100K. Freedie Mac and Fannie Mae to help with  mortgage liquidity.

The levies have been breached. Banks are failing. Bears Stearns. Indymac. Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae themselves need to be bailed out. The whole system is drowning in bad debt.  And the week before each Bank failed, its Government Regulator assured us that everything is fine. No need to panic. It is all in our mind. It is a mental depression, folks. Don't be whiners, says Dr. Phil Gramm. Like those people in New Orleans.

Poll

Who knows more about the Economy?

3%2 votes
7%4 votes
89%49 votes

| 55 votes | Vote | Results

Are we too tired, too busy, too... To care about NOLA and Katrina Victims?

Sat Jul 12, 2008 at 10:05:24 PM PDT

A memorial, that yet isn't - three years later!  It's almost like an IGTNT diary, but isn't.

The first time I ever looked at a blog or got curious about them was the weekend that Katrina hit because I needed a place to scream.  As the same for many, it made me incredulous, angry, confused and sad about all that happened, was happening, what did not happen, be it the effects of the storm and shameful response to all that occurred in its aftermath. Eventually, I found dKos - one good thing that came out of it, for me at least and not a person affected by the storm itself.

More after the jump and a link to the news article...

Katrina: How The Rest Of The World Sees Us

Tue Jul 01, 2008 at 07:24:03 AM PDT

I know this is talked about all the time as it relates to climate change, the war in Iraq, you name it. I want to come at it from a different angle.

Over the course of the last year or so I have become 110% addicted to BBC America. One of the best shows is Top Gear. Think three guys getting to drive the world's fastest and most expensive cars and then talking about them.

But in a few shows the three hosts are given a small sum of money to buy a junker and then complete nearly impossible tasks.

They came to the US for the first time. They started in Miami and had only $1,000 to buy a used car and drive to New Orleans. When they got to New Orleans it got interesting, and I don't mean in a good way.

NOLA/Gulf Blogathon Announcement

Mon Jun 23, 2008 at 11:24:19 AM PDT

This is in light of the fact that not only could I not get anyone to commit to a June Blogathon, I was also unable to think of anything fresh and new myself to write on regarding New Orleans and the rest of the Gulf Region.

Besides this, lately I haven't felt up to writing on the subject. I've felt burned out. And I find my own lack of good ideas and passion far more frustrating and discouraging than not being able to sign other people up.

Poll

Would you write a diary for a 3-day Katrina/federal flood Anniversary Blogathon?

93%15 votes
6%1 votes

| 16 votes | Vote | Results

Bush: Photo-Ops to Relieve Midwest Flood Victims

Mon Jun 23, 2008 at 05:26:52 AM PDT

It's become a hallmark of his presidency, climbing up on some rubble or a nicely cleaned town square to give a rousing speech about fixing a place he really doesn't give two spits about. Now, with the Midwest floods, Bush is calling for OUR tax dollars to support his photo-op FEMA.

Hat tip to RSN.com:

President Bush, speaking in his weekly radio address on Sunday in the wake of disastrous floods in the Midwest over the last three weeks, requested that Congress pass an emergency spending bill that would provide ample funds for photo opportunities in Iowa as well as potential other natural disasters that strike this summer.


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