Absolutely Unbelievable
I have been following the post-Katrina coverage very closely. I’m completely and utterly furious, disgusted, appalled. It’s unbelievable what is happening there right now. This disaster did not have to be like this. And there are some ugly conclusions to be drawn about what’s happening right now – I don’t know if you’ve noticed but New Orleans right now is almost all black people – people who are suffering and not getting help – people who are increasingly desperate, sick, dying, rotting. Most of the white people, it seems, were able to leave. And now the black people are left to die.
Perhaps that seems harsh. But it’s hard not to come to that conclusion. I have seen some white people suffering in the city. But most of the white people I have seen are being loaded into ambulances, or surveying their property, or receiving supplies, or even eating a nice breakfast of coffee, waffles and eggs. The communities on the coast where the white people were took a serious blow and many died, yes…
But a much different situation has unfolded in New Orleans, the city that has long known of its dangers, the city whose newspapers warned was vulnerable, the city that had a plan to make itself safer but whose funding was cut off in 2003 by the federal government. The Iraq war was more important than making New Orleans safe. And maybe the authorities knew the white people and the people with money – in New Orleans, apparently, that’s pretty much the same thing – could leave.
The social and political consequences of this will be profound. If a white middle-class Canadian like me is thinking this way, think about how the poor and the people of colour in America are feeling right now. Think about how the people of New Orleans are feeling. As though they have been abandoned. As though the already flimsy shroud that covered the ugly side of America has just dropped away. As though people care more about the tsunami victims than them.
I urge you to watch this video, or if you’re unable to because your Internet is slow, read the transcript. Both are available here. The video is a bit long but it’s worth it. You need to hear what this photojournalist had to say. What follows is a brief snippet of the beginning of the transcript:
ALISON STEWART: Tony, I know you’ve seen a lot of things in your career, but have you ever seen anything like that?
TONY ZUMBADO: I’ve gotta tell you, I thought I’d seen it all, but just when you think you’ve seen it all, you go into another situation and you see something horrific. I’ve never seen anything in my life like this. … I can’t put it into words the amount of destruction that is in this city and how these people are coping. They are just left behind. There is nothing offered to them. No water, no ice, no C-rations, nothing, for the last four days.
They were told to go to the convention center. They did, they’ve been behaving. It’s unbelievable how organized they are, how supportive they are of each other. They have not started any mêlées, any riots … they just want food and support. And what I saw there I’ve never seen in this country.
We need to really look at this situation at the convention center. It’s getting very very crazy in there and very dangerous. Somebody needs to come down with a lot of food and a lot of water. There’s no hostility there … they need support. These people are very desperate. I saw two gentlemen die in front of me because of dehydration. I saw a baby near death.
September 2nd, 2005 at 7:13 am
This from the same network:
http://www.kget.com/news/national/story.aspx?content_id=D4B8AFA3-3564-4FF8-B91D-74F18D488C69
Can you really call it stealing anymore?
I suspect you are right Ade, on the subject of a inappropriate emergency response. More than being a race issue, it is a class issue.
Tart Cider makes a good point: http://www.tartcider.com/blog/
“It’s tempting to say that we’re witnessing a complete societal breakdown, but the elephant in the room here is the crushing, grinding poverty and criminality in which the majority of the displaced and dead — now believed to number in the thousands — already lived. You didn’t need to see the entirety of the homes atop which people awaited rescue to know that these were little more than shacks, inhabited by people with no insurance, no savings, no prospects […] Katrina didn’t break New Orleans society. It was already broken — Katrina just submerged it.”
Let’s face it, the New Orleans, Louisiana, and American governments never had any plan to save these folks. They are going to act under pressure. I want to see how the Bush administration tries to spin the delayed response. Was it Osama’s fault?
September 2nd, 2005 at 8:32 am
Words of inspiration from Sean (P Diddy) Combs after donating a million dollars with fellow rapper/producer icon Jay-Z:
“We are all descendants from each other’s families. When you hear black people say ‘brothers’ and ‘sisters,’ it’s really true. These are all people that I know I’m related to somehow, some way — the human race family.”
September 2nd, 2005 at 1:06 pm
From the Globe this afternoon:
“Even Republicans were criticizing Mr. Bush and his administration for the sluggish relief effort. “I think it puts into question all of the Homeland Security and Northern Command planning for the last four years, because if we can’t respond faster than this to an event we saw coming across the Gulf for days, then why do we think we’re prepared to respond to a nuclear or biological attack?” said former House Speaker Newt Gingrich.”