9/10/2005


OMFG, NEW YORK TIMES NAILS IT

An example of how good the New York Times CAN be is here as John Tierney spreads the blame game from the bottom (our legislative genius class) all the way up to God. Congress appropiated money to the Army Corps of Engineers to build picnic tables, theatres, and a waste water treatment plant in---get ready--the Nevada desert.

Then, in another example of what the MSM could do if they weren't a biased bunch of shitheads, check out this one in the WaPo (requires cumbersome registration but you know how to get around that). WaPo mentions that the el porko $194 million deepening project for the Port of Iberia flunked a Corps cost-benefit analysis, Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) tucked language into an emergency Iraq spending bill ordering the agency to redo its calculations---Senate code word for do it or we'll fix it so your career ends in an Iraq Terrorst hostage situation. So guess what??? Unnecessary dredging is covered --- here's hoping sombody dredges up the pork as at least an unindicted co-conspirator.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

What do you Oraculators think about this?

...

These New Orleans residents have been scattered across the United States and are now under the control of FEMA. There is an understanding by the wealthy New Orleans elite that the poor will never be able to return. The Journal reported that the person who chaired the Dallas meeting was Jimmy Riess, one of the wealthy New Orleans elite who also served as Mayor Ray Nagin's Chairman of the Regional Transit Authority, which is in charge of the city's buses, trolleys, and trains. New Orleans sources report that public transportation was purposely not used to evacuate the poor New Orleans residents as a means to depopulate the poorer and more flood-prone sections of the city.

( ??? That's not logical. If the goal was to depopulate NO, why not evacuate da po' folk far far away. -- DD )

In fact, after the properties in New Orleans poorer communities are razed many of the deed records of the poor and middle class contained in government offices and title companies of Orleans Parish and neighboring Jefferson Parish may end up being casualties of the flood. As one New Orleans source put it, "people will not have proof they ever owned anything." As for renters and residents of public housing, they will be prevented from returning to their native city, according to New Orleans sources. Louisiana's Republican House member Richard Baker, a strong Bush ally, may have tipped his hand about the future plans for New Orleans when he told a group of lobbyists, "We finally cleaned up public housing in New Orleans. We couldn't do it, but God did."

http://www.prudentbear.com/bearschat/bbs_read.asp?mid=312181&tid=312181&fid=1&start=101&sr=1&sb=1&snsa=A#M312181

-- david.davenport.1@netzero.com

Anonymous said...

Re the $2k free money:

"... Around Houston, poor people who heard that the government was giving out money tried to get into the Astrodome complex for cards, prompting officials to lock the gates.... "

FEMA Will Not Continue Debit Card Plan
By HOPE YEN, AP

WASHINGTON (Sept. 10) - The federal government's relief agency said Friday it will discontinue its program to distribute $2,000 debit cards to hurricane victims and use bank deposits instead, two days after hastily announcing the novel plan to provide quick relief.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency said it will scrap the program once officials finish distributing cards this weekend at shelters in Dallas, Houston and San Antonio, where many of the evacuees were moved. No cards will be issued to victims in other states.

Hurricane victims at other locations will have to apply for expedited aid through the agency's traditional route - filling out information on FEMA's Web site to receive direct bank deposits, FEMA spokeswoman Natalie Rule said.

"We tried it as an innovative way to get aid to evacuee populations in Texas. We decided it would be more expeditious with direct deposits,'' she said, citing the large staffing operation that would be required to replicate the Texas operation in other states.

Under fire for its initial response to the hurricane, FEMA Director Michael Brown had announced the debit card program as a way to quickly get $2,000 to the neediest families and empower them "to make their own decisions about what do they need to have to start rebuilding their lives.''

He did not describe the program as applying only to Texas, which has accepted the largest number of evacuees and is the home state of President Bush, though Rule said that always was the plan.

The program called for debit cards to be issued to one member of each household and was aimed at people who did not have bank accounts or addresses to receive checks. The cards could be used at any ATM within 24 hours of issuance, faster than traditional FEMA aid, which can take several days or longer to process.

But from the outset, there was confusion.

Word spread quickly among the thousands of refugees in the Houston Astrodome following announcement of the program Wednesday. FEMA workers, however, were unaware of the announcement and had no cards to offer.

On Thursday, the Red Cross began distributing its own debit cards at the Astrodome. The Red Cross assigned appointment times to the refugees, but many people started lining up anyway and waited for hours. Many fainted in the heat, and police had to be brought in for crowd control.

Around Houston, poor people who heard that the government was giving out money tried to get into the Astrodome complex for cards, prompting officials to lock the gates. By Thursday evening, electronic freeway signs in Houston were flashing, "There are no debit cards at the Astrodome.''

FEMA issued 4,200 cards to families at the Astrodome on Friday, and officials said they were confident they have covered everyone still staying at the shelter.

Evacuees who were staying outside the main shelter and expected to get cards on Saturday or Sunday must now apply for assistance online at www.fema.gov or by calling 1-800-621-3362.

FEMA officials were concerned that people showing up at the Astrodome over the weekend might get angry when they are told they will not receive cards. Tom Costello, FEMA liaison officer for the Houston area, said FEMA workers will be on hand to help them get assistance via other methods.

"The debit card is just the third of three ways of getting the same amount of assistance,'' Costello said. "The fastest or preferred way is through a bank account or by requesting a check. This is not a reduction or a change in benefits