Katrina's aftermath

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they deserved it

Squirrel_Police (Squirrel_Police), Monday, 18 September 2006 22:54 (seventeen years ago) link

one year passes...

White people don't loot, by the way. They "find bread".

-- Pleasant Plains /// (Pleasant Plains ///), Tuesday, August 30, 2005 5:55 PM (2 years ago) Bookmark Link

http://i276.photobucket.com/albums/kk34/feministing/kiabobbiecompareheadlines.jpg

and what, Thursday, 24 July 2008 03:14 (fifteen years ago) link

seven months pass...

Katrina's Hidden Race War

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?

Over the course of an eighteen-month investigation, I tracked down figures on all sides of the gunfire, speaking with the shooters of Algiers Point, gunshot survivors and those who witnessed the bloodshed. I interviewed police officers, forensic pathologists, firefighters, historians, medical doctors and private citizens, and studied more than 800 autopsies and piles of state death records. What emerged was a disturbing picture of New Orleans in the days after the storm, when the city fractured along racial fault lines as its government collapsed.
Herrington, Collins and Alexander's experience fits into a broader pattern of violence in which, evidence indicates, at least eleven people were shot. In each case the targets were African-American men, while the shooters, it appears, were all white.

The new information should reframe our understanding of the catastrophe. Immediately after the storm, the media portrayed African-Americans as looters and thugs--Mayor Ray Nagin, for example, told Oprah Winfrey that "hundreds of gang members" were marauding through the Superdome. Now it's clear that some of the most serious crimes committed during that time were the work of gun-toting white males.

Chris Barrus (Elvis Telecom), Tuesday, 3 March 2009 20:28 (fifteen years ago) link

that story is fucked and probably all true. algiers point sucks and is home to the single worst bar full of white people that i have ever been to.

the hundreds of "looters will be shot" signs that appeared everywhere in the days before hurricane gustav were disturbing. i'm not sure that posting a sign gives one free rein to murder people but i am no lawyer.

adam, Tuesday, 3 March 2009 23:43 (fifteen years ago) link

word

(what bar are you talking about adam?)

Tracy Michael Jordan Catalano (Jordan), Tuesday, 3 March 2009 23:46 (fifteen years ago) link

This type of shit makes me madder than the Hulk

the most disgusting savage on earth imo (The Reverend), Tuesday, 3 March 2009 23:51 (fifteen years ago) link

(old point bar)

adam, Tuesday, 3 March 2009 23:52 (fifteen years ago) link

Someone repost the photo of Tom DeLay and that little boy.

The Screaming Lobster of Challops (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 3 March 2009 23:54 (fifteen years ago) link

six years pass...

never forget:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iaej_HbaqZU&feature=youtu.be

Οὖτις, Friday, 28 August 2015 16:54 (eight years ago) link

You could say Alden McDonald triumphed over adversity, too. Today he runs the country’s third-largest black-owned bank, according to the Federal Reserve. But despite his personal success, McDonald is still focused on the eastern half of that map that he marked up at our first meeting. There, the recovery is far from complete — and in some areas things are worse than before the storm. In this frustration, he represents what might be called the black Katrina narrative, a counterpoint to the jubilant accounts of Landrieu and other New Orleans boosters. This version of the story begins by noting that an African-American homeowner was more than three times more likely than a white one to live in a flooded part of town. Where Landrieu sees black and white coming together, many African-Americans recollect a different New Orleans: rifle-carrying sheriffs and police officers barricading a bridge out of an overwhelmed city because they didn’t want the largely black crowds walking through their predominantly white suburbs; a white congressman overheard saying that God had finally accomplished what others couldn’t by clearing out public housing; a prominent resident from the Uptown part of the city telling a Wall Street Journal reporter that in rebuilding, things would be ‘‘done in a completely different way, demographically, geographically and politically’’ — or he and his friends weren’t moving back.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/23/magazine/why-new-orleans-black-residents-are-still-under-water-after-katrina.html?&moduleDetail=section-news-3&action=click&contentCollection=Magazine®ion=Footer&module=MoreInSection&version=WhatsNext&contentID=WhatsNext&pgtype=article&_r=0

curmudgeon, Friday, 28 August 2015 20:22 (eight years ago) link

10 years ago right now i was sitting in standstill traffic on I-10. harry lee, who was sheriff of jefferson parish and a local celebrity, came on the radio not to calm people or offer evacuation tips but to let everyone know that his birthday party, planned for that evening, had been postponed.

adam, Friday, 28 August 2015 20:36 (eight years ago) link

ten years and one day, actually--i left early, partially to try and avoid traffic but also because i was totally happy for an excuse not to go to work that day (expecting to be home on monday like everyone else)

adam, Friday, 28 August 2015 20:39 (eight years ago) link


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