Saturday, September 24, 2005

my political leanings

wow. It's been forever since I've been here. Just thought I'd post this. Keep in mind that after I've had more coffee, my opinions might change

You are a

Social Liberal
(76% permissive)

and an...

Economic Liberal
(21% permissive)

You are best described as a:

Socialist




Link: The Politics Test

Thursday, September 08, 2005

FEMA fuck ups

Tuesday, September 06, 2005

seven days...he gave them SEVEN DAYS to get there.

How could he do this? How??

FEMA Chief Waited Until After Storm Hit

Ok, he 'waited.' He 'waited' FIVE FUCKING HOURS after the storm hit to seek approval from Chertoff to send aid. FIVE FUCKING HOURS. And it gets better. Some people could arrive two days later. And it gets even better than that. 2,000 people could arrive UP TO SEVEN DAYS LATER. That was YESTERDAY, you slimy mother fucker.

How do these bastards sleep at night? The entire yahoo.com news article is below as the yahoo news links have a nasty habit of changing.

FEMA Chief Waited Until After Storm Hit
By TED BRIDIS, Associated Press Writer
09/06/05


WASHINGTON - The government's disaster chief waited until hours after Hurricane Katrina had already struck the Gulf Coast before asking his boss to dispatch 1,000 Homeland Security employees to the region — and gave them two days to arrive, according to internal documents.

Michael Brown, director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, sought the approval from Homeland Security Secretary Mike Chertoff roughly five hours after Katrina made landfall on Aug. 29. Brown said that among duties of these employees was to "convey a positive image" about the government's response for victims.

Before then, FEMA had positioned smaller rescue and communications teams across the Gulf Coast. But officials acknowledged Tuesday the first department-wide appeal for help came only as the storm raged.

Brown's memo to Chertoff described Katrina as "this near catastrophic event" but otherwise lacked any urgent language. The memo politely ended, "Thank you for your consideration in helping us to meet our responsibilities."

The initial responses of the government and Brown came under escalating criticism as the breadth of destruction and death grew. President Bush and Congress on Tuesday pledged separate investigations into the federal response to Katrina. "Governments at all levels failed," said Sen. Susan Collins (news, bio, voting record), R-Maine.

Homeland Security spokesman Russ Knocke said Brown had positioned front-line rescue teams and Coast Guard helicopters before the storm. Brown's memo on Aug. 29 aimed to assemble the necessary federal work force to support the rescues, establish communications and coordinate with victims and community groups, Knocke said.

Instead of rescuing people or recovering bodies, these employees would focus on helping victims find the help they needed, he said.

"There will be plenty of time to assess what worked and what didn't work," Knocke said. "Clearly there will be time for blame to be assigned and to learn from some of the successful efforts."

Brown's memo told employees that among their duties, they would be expected to "convey a positive image of disaster operations to government officials, community organizations and the general public."

"FEMA response and recovery operations are a top priority of the department and as we know, one of yours," Brown wrote Chertoff. He proposed sending 1,000 Homeland Security Department employees within 48 hours and 2,000 within seven days.

Knocke said the 48-hour period suggested for the Homeland employees was to ensure they had adequate training. "They were training to help the life-savers," Knocke said.

Employees required a supervisor's approval and at least 24 hours of disaster training in Maryland, Florida or Georgia. "You must be physically able to work in a disaster area without refrigeration for medications and have the ability to work in the outdoors all day," Brown wrote.

The same day Brown wrote Chertoff, Brown also urged local fire and rescue departments outside Louisiana, Alabama and Mississippi not to send trucks or emergency workers into disaster areas without an explicit request for help from state or local governments. Brown said it was vital to coordinate fire and rescue efforts.

Sen. Barbara Mikulski, D-Md., said Tuesday that Brown should step down.

After a senators-only briefing by Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff and other Cabinet members, Sen. Charles E. Schumer said lawmakers weren't getting their questions answered.

"What people up there want to know, Democrats and Republicans, is what is the challenge ahead, how are you handling that and what did you do wrong in the past," said Schumer, D-N.Y.

Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, said the administration is "getting a bad rap" for the emergency response. "People have to understand this is a big, big problem."

Meanwhile, the airline industry said the government's request for help evacuating storm victims didn't come until late Thursday afternoon. The president of the Air Transport Association, James May, said the Homeland Security Department called then to ask if the group could participate in an airlift for refugees.

Bush to oversee Katrina investigation

Bush to oversee probe into what went wrong

"Bush said Tuesday he will oversee an investigation into what went wrong and why — in part to be sure that the country would withstand more storms or even a weapons of mass destruction attack."

I'll tell you what went wrong you sonofabitch. You appointed jackass Michael Brown to head FEMA. Chertoff doesn't know a a city from a fucking STATE, your entire administration was on VACATION, you divered millions of dollars and thousands of national guard troops to Iraq, and it was more important to build a bridge in Alaska that a levee in New Orleans.

You shouldn't "investigate," you should resign.

Bureaucracy has murdered people in the greater New Orleans area

Bureaucracy has murdered people in the greater New Orleans area

Updates as they come in on Katrina

11:00 AM CDT on Tuesday, September 6, 2005
Tom Planchet

11:00 A.M. - (AP): Even as Hurricane Katrina's floodwaters recede from New Orleans, frustration among area officials continues to spill over.

The president of Jefferson Parish says people who were too poor to evacuate are now on the brink of starvation.

Aaron Broussard tells CBS' "The Early Show" these residents had the spirit to endure the forces of Mother Nature, but now their biggest obstacle may be "human nature."

In his words, "Bureaucracy has murdered people in the greater New Orleans area." He's demanding a congressional probe into what happened there -- headed by the right person.

As he put it, "Take whatever idiot they have at the top of whatever agency and give me a better idiot. Give me a caring idiot. Give me a sensitive idiot. Just don't give me the same idiot."

Meantime, Broussard is calling for any kind of help. Even a week after Katrina hit, he says locals still "need everything."

Monday, September 05, 2005

Barbara Bush is a ....

The people of Houston are being so hospitable to the hurricane victims that they are actually contemplating staying in Houston. Can you believe it?

This, according to GWBush's mom, Barbara, is one "scary" thought.

Listen to the MP3 here

Marketplace, September 5, 2005
Barbara Bush, in her best compassionate, conservative voice, says:
Almost everyone I’ve talked to says, “we’re gonna move to Houston.”
What I’m hearing, which is sort of scary is that they all want to stay in Texas. Everybody is so overwhelmed by the hospitality. And so many of the people in the arenas here, you know, were underprivileged anyway. This is, this is working very well for them.

Katrina.

Yesterday, a friend called from Shreveport. All is well with her. The normal inconveniences you might expect in a storm, with a few thousand homeless people tossed in. As one would expect from the Southerners, they are taking care of their own.

She called when I was looking for pictures of the past few day's events. She thought I might make a little 'movie.' That was already in my brain. The songs were her idea. I like them.

Katrina.

You'll need windows media player to view it.

Sunday, September 04, 2005

Johnny Dupree -- Who is FEMA?

"Who is FEMA?" That was Johnn Dupree, mayor of Hattiesburg, Mississippi.

"We have 50 water and ice trucks stationed in Camp Shelby which is located in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, and we're supposed to get X amount of water and ice trucks here every day. And we have 50 trucks sitting down there right now that will not be released by, who'd you call that? I think that agency's name was FEMA?? Yeah, I'm being facicious again....they are sitting down there right now because one person from FEMA won't make the call to say 'release those trucks to people in Hattiesburg, Mississippi and other cities so they can have ice and water'."

Clip from CNN today is here. You'll need windows media player.

compassionate conservatism, part 2

The Lost City

When the first buses arrived in Houston, to unload their unhappy cargo at the next domed stadium—the Astrodome—desperation mixed with relief. "I have no idea where my 2-year-old son is," said Nicole Williams, 41. She wore a T shirt marked PLEASE HELP ME FIND MY FAMILY. On the back were listed the names of four family members. They were separated at the I-10 cloverleaf. When Williams tried to reach for her baby so he could ride in her lap, she says, a state trooper sprayed Mace in her face to keep her from getting off the bus. "They maced my mother and my daughter," she said. "Then the door slammed shut."

Amazing. Simply amazing. How many children have been torn from their parents? Can you imagine?

compassionate conservatism in action

Meanwhile, in Iraq

Attacks on oil installations averaged 25 a week.

25 attacks a freakin' WEEK??? Christ. Can our dear leader do anything right?

Kirkuk oil exports halted after Iraq rebel attack

Sat Sep 3, 2:32 PM ET

Oil exports from Iraq's northern fields were completely halted following a rebel attack on a major pipeline west of the oil centre of Kirkuk, an Iraqi oil industry official told AFP.

"We have some interruption in the pipeline. There are no exports at all right now," the official said on condition of anonymity.

He said he had "no idea" when exports might resume since the scale of the damage had not yet been assessed.

An official in charge of oil installation protection said the explosion occurred after insurgents ignited an oil leak.

"Rebels set fire to some crude oil that was leaking from the pipeline. The fire then engulfed the pipeline, setting off an explosion," said Captain Ali Obeidi.

The pipeline links the four Kirkuk oilfields to the Baiji refinery 200 kilometres (125 miles) north of Baghdad.

Kirkuk's oil exports are pumped to Ceyhan in Turkey and exports can currently reach up to 350,000 barrels per day, though limited storage capacity means pumping is restricted to around three days a week.

Iraqi oil installations are also a frequent target of rebel attacks, especially country's restive north.

Earlier this week, officials said attacks on oil installations averaged 25 a week.

In late August, oil exports from southern fields around Basra were interrupted for a short time because of a power failure that may have been caused by a sabotage.

At least two thirds of Iraq's 1.6 million barrels per day of oil exports come from the southern oilfields.

Iraq's vast oil reserves, the world's second biggest after Saudi Arabia, are largely concentrated in the north and in the south of the country.

In early August, Oil Minister Ibrahim Bahr al-Ulum said oil exports and revenue had reached their highest levels since the US-led invasion of March 2003.

Crude exports rose 11 percent to 1.6 million bpd in July, compared to 1.44 million barrels the month before, Ulum said, adding that oil export revenues had reached 2.5 billion dollars in July.

Don't let Bush say "they didn't ask"

Bush is all over the place blaming the local authorities for what happened. Blame the DEMOCRATIC governor, blame the DEMOCRATIC mayor. Toss in a bit of DEMOCRATIC senator and you got quite a stew. Take no fucking responsibility. But don't forget that Landrieu asked for more fuding for the levees. Don't forget that the Goveror asked for help on the 28th. Don't forget that the Whitehouse gave FEMA blanket authority to do whatever was necessary. And that FEMA Director Michael Brown can't run a fucking horse show. And that the Washington Post has a lengthy, indepth article about how Bush has destroyed FEMA.

Oh, and don't forget that on Tuesday, when people were dying and drowning in the Southeast, Bush was playing gee-tar.

Chertoff: Katrina scenario did not exist

CNN.com - Chertoff: Katrina scenario did not exist - Sep 3, 2005: "However, experts for years had warned of threat to New Orleans"
++++++++
anybody with a fucking BRAIN in their head could have told you that this would happen you asshole. New Olreans IS UNDER FUCKING SEA LEVEL. Dick.

Saturday, September 03, 2005

so this is how it ends?

New Orleans Left to the Dead and Dying
By ALLEN G. BREED, Associated Press Writer
Sat Sep 3, 7:07 PM ET

NEW ORLEANS - Thousands more bedraggled refugees were bused and airlifted to salvation Saturday, leaving the heart of New Orleans to the dead and dying, the elderly and frail stranded too many days without food, water or medical care.

No one knows how many were killed by Hurricane Katrina's floods and how many more succumbed waiting to be rescued. But the bodies are everywhere: hidden in attics, floating among the ruined city, crumpled on wheelchairs, abandoned on highways.

And the dying goes on — at the convention center and an airport triage center, where bodies were kept in a refrigerated truck.

Gov. Kathleen Blanco said Saturday that she expected the death toll to reach the thousands. And Craig Vanderwagen, rear admiral of the U.S. Public Health Service, said one morgue alone, at a St. Gabriel prison, expected 1,000 to 2,000 bodies.

Touring the airport triage center, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., a physician, said "a lot more than eight to 10 people are dying a day."

Most were those too sick or weak to survive. But not all.

Charles Womack, a 30-year-old roofer, said he saw one man beaten to death and another commit suicide at the Superdome. Womack was beaten with a pipe and being treated at the airport triage center.

"One guy jumped off a balcony. I saw him do it. He was talking to a lady about it. He said it reminded him of the war and he couldn't leave," he said.

Three babies died at the convention center from heat exhaustion, said Mark Kyle, a medical relief provider.

Some 20,000 refugees had been waiting for rescue for nearly a week at the Superdome, with as many as 25,000 more at the New Orleans convention center. National Guard Lt. Col. Bernard McLaughlin said the number may have been closer to 5,000 to 7,000.

The last 300 refugees at the Superdome climbed aboard buses Saturday, eliciting cheers from members of the Texas National Guard who were guarding the facility.

At the convention center, thousands of refugees dragged their meager belongings to buses, the mood more numb than jubilant. Yolando Sanders, who had been stuck at the convention center for five days, was among those who filed past corpses to reach the buses.

"Anyplace is better than here," she said.

"People are dying over there."

Nearby, a woman lay dead in a wheelchair on the front steps. A man was covered in a black drape with a dry line of blood running to the gutter, where it had pooled. Another had lain on a chaise lounge for four days, his stocking feet peeking out from under a quilt.

By mid-afternoon, only pockets of stragglers remained in the streets around the convention center, and New Orleans paramedics began carting away the dead.

A once-vibrant city of 480,000 people, overtaken just days ago by floods, looting, rape and arson, was now an empty, sodden tomb.

The exact number of dead won't be known for some time. Survivors were still being plucked from roofs and shattered highways across the city. President Bush ordered more than 7,000 active duty forces to the Gulf Coast on Saturday.

"There are people in apartments and hotels that you didn't know were there," Army Brig. Gen. Mark Graham said.

The overwhelming majority of those stranded in the post-Katrina chaos were those without the resources to escape — and, overwhelmingly, they were black.

"The first few days were a natural disaster. The last four days were a man-made disaster," said Phillip Holt, 51, who was rescued from his home Saturday with his partner and three of their aging Chihuahuas. They left a fourth behind they couldn't grab in time.

Tens of thousands of people had been evacuated from the city, and Texas Gov. Rick Perry said as many as 120,000 hurricane refugees were in 97 shelters across the state, with another 100,000 in Texas hotels and motels. Others were in Tennessee, Indiana and Arkansas.

Emergency workers at the Astrodome were told to expect 10,000 new arrivals daily for the next three days.

Thousands of people remained at Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport, where officials turned a Delta Blue terminal into a triage unit. Officials said 3,000 to 5,000 people had been treated at the triage unit, but fewer than 200 remain. Others throughout the airport awaited transport out of the city.

"In the beginning it was like trying to lasso an octopus. When we got here it was overwhelming," said Jake Jacoby, a physician helping run the center.

Airport director Roy Williams said about 30 people had died, some of them elderly and ill. The bodies were being kept in refrigerated trucks as a temporary morgue.

At the convention center, people stumbled toward the helicopters, dehydrated and nearly passing out from exhaustion. Many had to be carried by National Guard troops and police on stretchers. And some were being pushed up the street on office chairs and on dollies.

Nita LaGarde, 105, was pushed down the street in her wheelchair as her nurse's 5-year-old granddaughter, Tanisha Blevin, held her hand. The pair spent two days in an attic, two days on an interstate island and the last four days on the pavement in front of the convention center.

"They're good to see," LaGarde said, with remarkable gusto as she waited to be loaded onto a gray Marine helicopter. She said they were sent by God. "Whatever He has for you, He'll take care of you. He'll sure take care of you."

LaGarde's nurse, Ernestine Dangerfield, 60, said LaGarde had not had a clean adult diaper in more than two days. "I just want to get somewhere where I can get her nice and clean," she said.

Around the corner, a motley fleet of luxury tour buses and yellow school buses lined up two deep to pick up some of the healthier refugees. National Guardsmen confiscated a gun, knives and letter openers from people before they got on the buses.

"It's been a long time coming," Derek Dabon, 29, said as he waited to pass through a guard checkpoint. "There's no way I'm coming back. To what? That don't make sense. I'm going to start a new life."

Hillary Snowton, 40, sat on the sidewalk outside with a piece of white sheet tied around his face like a bandanna as he stared at a body that had been lying on a chaise lounge for four days, its stocking feet peeking out from under a quilt.

"It's for the smell of the dead body," he said of the sheet. His brother-in-law, Octave Carter, 42, said it has been "every day, every morning, breakfast lunch and dinner looking at it."


When asked why he didn't move further away from the corpse, Carter replied, "it stinks everywhere, Blood."

Dan Craig, director of recovery at the Federal Emergency Management Agency, said it could take up to six months to get the water out of New Orleans, and the city would then need to dry out, which could take up to three more months.

A Saks Fifth Avenue store billowed smoke Saturday, as did rows of warehouses on the east bank of the Mississippi River, where corrugated roofs buckled and tiny explosions erupted. Gunfire — almost two dozen shots — broke out in the French Quarter overnight.

In the French Quarter, some residents refused or did not know how to get out. Some holed up with guns.

As the warehouse district burned, Ron Seitzer, 61, washed his dirty laundry in the even dirtier waters of the Mississippi River and said he didn't know how much longer he could stay without water or power, surrounded by looters.

"I've never even had a nightmare or a beautiful dream about this," he said as he watched the warehouses burn. "People are just not themselves."

___

Associated Press reporters Kevin McGill, Robert Tanner, Melinda Deslatte, Brett Martel and Mary Foster contributed to this report.