Tim Cavanaugh | September 1, 2005
Jack Shafer exhumes the corpse of L.A. Dodgers veep and Negro-swimming expert Al Campanis to consider why the media are ignoring the stunningly obvious issues of race and class in their coverage of Hurricane Katrina's devastation of New Orleans:
Race remains largely untouchable for TV because broadcasters sense that they can't make an error without destroying careers. That's a true pity. If the subject were a little less taboo, one of last night's anchors could have asked a reporter, "Can you explain to our viewers, who by now have surely noticed, why 99 percent of the New Orleans evacuees we're seeing are African-American? I suppose our viewers have noticed, too, that the provocative looting footage we're airing and re-airing seems to depict mostly African-Americans."
If the reporter on the ground couldn't answer the questions, a researcher could have Nexised the New Orleans Times-Picayune five-parter from 2002, "Washing Away," which reported that the city's 100,000 residents without private transportation were likely to be stranded by a big storm. In other words, what's happening is what was expected to happen: The poor didn't get out in time.
To the question of looting, an informed reporter or anchor might have pointed out that anybody—even one of the 500 Nordic blondes working in broadcast news—would loot food from a shuttered shop if they found themselves trapped by a flood and had no idea when help would come. However sympathetic I might be to people liberating necessities during a disaster in order to survive, I can't muster the same tolerance for those caught on camera helping themselves in a leisurely fashion to dry goods at Wal-Mart. Those people weren't looting as much as they were shopping for good stuff to steal. MSNBC's anchor Rita Cosby, who blurted an outraged if inarticulate harrumph when she aired the Wal-Mart heist footage, deserves more respect than the broadcasters who gave the tape the sort of nonjudgmental commentary they might deliver if they were watching the perps vacuum the carpets at home.
While I wait patiently for Aaron Brown, Prince of Denmark, to speculate on whether one might, indeed, say that Katrina is The Big Easy's ultimate Girl Gone Wild, you can read the whole article.
Help Reason celebrate its next 40 years. Donate Now!
Try Reason's award-winning print edition today! Your first issue is FREE if you are not completely satisfied.
I figured the lack of race talk was because the media
assumes:
1)Most people know New Orleans, like most major American cities,
has a disproprionate number of blacks
2)Most people know blacks are on average poorer then whites
3)Most people can figure out that the cities poorest residences
would be the least likely to have safely evacuated.
I guess the article more or less mentions all these points.
Ill-informed as the American public may be, most of us do grok
these three things, and see the subsequent explanation as to why
all the refugees/looters are black.
It seems to me the question of why blacks are, on average,
economically worse off then whites, is not relevant while people
are still trapped in their attics and dead bodies a floating down
the streets. In a few weeks, or a few months, perhaps this question
should be asked, and perhaps given such time, Katrina might spark a
new national debate on race issues.
On the other hand, I have to wonder if the fact that most of the
people shown on TV suffering the worst are not the same color as
the majority of the rest of the people in this country has had an
impact on our reaction as a nation.
I've had something of a nagging feeling, for as much as its been
smeared all over the 24-cable news networks, that this disaster
hasn't gotten quite the attention its deserved. Surely part of its
because the real disaster (the levees failing) didn't come until
the storm itself has passed, but we are talking about a disaster
that will likely turn out to be as bad or worse then 9/11 in terms
of lives lost and economic damage. Of course a terrorist attack
merits a much different treatment , because for all the human
failings that may or may not have caused Katrina to become the
catastrophe it is, 9/11 occured with undeniable malicious intent.
But still, I don't see how the near-total destruction of a large
and iconic American city can be too greatly exaggerated. I'm not
basing this on much, but I just have the sense people aren't quite
appriciating the magnitude of this (except as it related to gas
prices, having just witnessed a 40 cent jump in eight hours at
local pumps).
I should get back to my point here, but I don't think I really need
to thoroughly explain how the fact that most of the hardest hit
victims are black may somewhat stunt the reaction of both the media
and the nation as a whole. Racism or not, people naturally react to
the suffering of those who are most like them, and when TV is the
dominant means of conveying this suffering, color's gonna count.
Relief will pour in, it'll be the big news for months to come...In
fact, now that I've been typing this post for a bit, I'm inclined
to say that in the end the overall response will be the same if
most of the victims we see on TV had been white, but I think its
had an effect in these first few days. I'm not passing judgement on
this effect, and I'm not saying there'd ever be any way to quantify
it, but I do believe its there.
We shouldn't have sent the National Guard to first tear down and then try to rebuild Iraq. Bush lied. People are still dying.
The looters do what looters do, they loot. Come on most of the looters were after food and drink. The ones looting merchandize will not be able to take it out of the city. All the business owners wrote off their business as the lake water filled the city. Other than cash and jewelry all the goods will spoil (clothes and electronics etc.). All they showed was bad behavior after a disaster in 95 degree heat and 100% humidity. They had no other footage to show so the TV new shows covered the looting. The commentary was deplorable. If no one was being hurt and you know they could not take the goods out of the city and you knew the goods would spoil there really was no need to cover this other than that they had the footage.
Off topic:
Wondering if anyone noticed the resignation of Susan Wood, (former)
director of the FDA's Office of Women's Health, over their
"post-ponement" of a decision on allowing Plan B to be sold over
the counter.
CNN
Utah Daily Herald
For what it's worth, I don't have a TV and had no reason to
attach ``African-American'' to looting at all.
It's a TV effect, apparently. As is the idea that it ought to be a
consideration.
The only reactions I've seen that I think are different based on
the color of those most hurt by the hurricane are:
1) Republican types are maybe a fraction of a second quicker to
call for summary execution of looters...but they always say the
same shoot-'em-up crap anyway, so who knows if race really matters?
Inscrutable, those righties.
2) Democrat types have settled on the "Republican plot to kill our
voters!" script over the "Crackers get what they deserve for voting
Republican!" spin they started the week with...and that's what
passes for elevating the discourse on the "other" side these days.
I wish Foucault would stop being dead.
Libertarians are talking the same economic-philosophic shit they
always do, because they always do. You guys are boring, but not
racist, and not much for running corpses up the flagpole. You're
almost human, really. It's cute.
Meanwhile, down here in real life, everyone thinks it's all just
fucked up and sad, and that everyone on TV is an asshole.
[Insert Nietzsche quote re: the depth of superficiality here.]
"Mayor Ray Nagin ordered virtually the entire police force to
abandon search-and-rescue efforts and stop thieves who were
becoming increasingly hostile."
- from the news
Just when you thought no one respected property rights any
more.
Here are some theories on why this disaster seems to be
attracting less sympathy from the nation at large:
1. Unlike the Asian tsunami, these victims had notice. They knew
the hurricane was coming days in advance, and they knew that New
Orleans was extremely vulnerable to flooding decades in
advance.
2. There's not much you can do about it now, and it's not the fault
of individual residents that their city is sited in such a crap
location, but it's still worth asking "what were you thinking when
you built a house below sea level--next to a huge river and the
ocean?"
3. Any city with a reputation for decadence is less likely to
attract feelings of good will when disaster strikes. And New
Orleans beats Vegas in this area.
I really don't think race is that much of a factor. If anyone
mentions it at all, they should be fair and say something like
this: "All the looters we're showing you are African-American. You
should bear in mind that, in this city, so are their victims."
"Mayor Ray Nagin ordered virtually the entire police force
to abandon search-and-rescue efforts and stop thieves who were
becoming increasingly hostile."
On one news channel last night, I saw three uniformed cops
leisurely pushing a shopping cart through a Wal-Mart and filling it
with essential emergency supplies like fancy shoes and jewelry.
We're not just talking about cops who are looting, but cops who had
no qualms about looting right in front of a huge set-up of news
cameras. Didn't even trouble to hide their faces. The fact that New
Orleans has one of the most corrupt police forces in the country is
probably part of the problem.
And I disagree with MTC's comment that "everybody knew" New Orleans
was a dirt-poor city. This is just based on my own discussions with
people around me (as opposed to a scientific poll), but a LOT of
people seemed to think that all of New Orleans was the French
Quarter and Anne Rice mansions. I knew that there was poverty in
the city but I had no idea how bad it was. There are actual
dirt roads within the city limits!
Another news story talked about the fact that the storm struck at
the end of the month, when people living paycheck to paycheck had
no money to even buy gas to get out.
Jack Schafer is fantastic. I bet it's because he has thighs that go all the way up his back.
Dave W.-
I don't think the National Guard would have made much of a
difference, but the fact that funding for flood control and bulking
up the levees was cut to pay for our Iraq adventure surely did. If
the government spent less time inventing imaginary threats they'd
have more time and money to deal with the real ones.
They
hear you in MS, Jack!:
Resentment at being left behind in the path of one of the fiercest hurricanes on record may have contributed to some of the looting that occurred in Biloxi and other coastal communities.
A number of private residences, including some in upscale neighborhoods, were targeted, residents said.
Class divisions, which often fall along racial lines in this once-segregated southern state, are not new to Mississippi. It traditionally is one of the poorest states in the United States.
Personally, I could excuse the looting of food and water and
other survival necessities; one survives first and sorts out debts
later. But busting into jewelry stores to steal the "bling bling",
or the pharmacies to get the drugs for resale, or the casinos to
scavenge the coins out of the slots....that is just outright theft
and there is no way to justify it.
And then there is the looting of the closed-up Walmart stores and
the theft of their guns. There are reports of armed robberies and
marauding gangs. I'd guess maybe that is what finally got the cops
and authorities doing something about the "looters." I guess
looting is a whole different story when the looters can shoot at
you.
In the aftermath of other hurricanes I've seen, usually one of the
first things that is done is to declare a curfew and warn that
looters will be arrested, if not shot. I don't know why that wasn't
done this time. I have to wonder if it wouldn't have been, if the
majority of the perpetrators had been white.
As far as businesses writing off most of their stock, well maybe.
But that still doesn't mean that it isn't theirs or that it can't
later be liquidated at cost or for whatever it will bring. We'll
probably see lots of goodies on Ebay in the coming months.
Jmoore: I answered this on another thread, but New Orleans was
built where it was because the French needed a fort at the river
mouth-they were at war with the English and needed to stop them
from sailing up the river with frigates.
As for warning, the hurricane kind of turned in an unexpected
direction. I hadn't heard anything until Friday night.
[parody]
"We must not let their sacrifices go in vain," Bush stated as he
viewed the devastation and heard of the casualties. "This form of
violent extremism, you know, is exactly what we're struggling
against. We cannot allow this threat to our economy and citizens
continue."
Bush turned so that he was framed by an American flag. "I have
asked Congress to authorize the use of force in the event Alan
Quartermaine refuses to certify that he has destroyed the Ice
Princess. Robert Scorpio has had many chances to verify this, but
Quartermaine refuses to cooperate. We can't allow the proof of his
failure to disarm to be a funnel cloud. Therefore, I am preparing
to invade Canada to end this grave and gathering threat posed by
extremist storm fronts. I ask all Americans to sacrifice for my,
er, our noble goal of bringing democracy to the global
climate."
[parody]
After reading McPhee's "The Control of Nature," I decided that
New Orleans was one place I'd never live.
Pop-icon whizzdum from Led Zeppelin and John Wayne sum it up:
"If it keeps on rainin', levee's goin' to break,
When the levee breaks I'll have no place to stay."
"Life's tough; it's tougher if you're stupid."
Erratum: Memphis Minnie, not Robert Plant, wrote those lyrics. (See Wikipedia.)
In the aftermath of other hurricanes I've seen, usually one
of the first things that is done is to declare a curfew and warn
that looters will be arrested, if not shot. I don't know why that
wasn't done this time. I have to wonder if it wouldn't have been,
if the majority of the perpetrators had been white.
A 24-hour curfew has been in effect, along with the equivalent of
martial law. The implication that the various police departments
have been pussyfooting because most of the people left behind (or,
if you prefer, chose to stay behind) are black is moronic.
From the NO Times-Picayune:
Martial law clarified
The state Attorney General's office on Tuesday sought to clarify
reports in some media that "martial law' has been declared in parts
of storm-ravaged southeast Louisiana, saying no such term exists in
Louisiana law.
But even though no martial law exists, Gov. Kathleen Blanco's
declaration of a state of emergency gives authorities widespread
latitude to suspend civil liberties as they try to restore order
and bring victims to safety. Under the Louisiana Homeland Security
and Emergency Assistance and Disaster Act of 1993, the governor
and, in some cases, chief parish officials, have the right to
commandeer or utilize any private property if necessary to cope
with the emergency.
Authorities may also suspend any statute related to the conduct of
official business, or any rule issued by a state agency, if
complying would "prevent, hinder or delay necessary action'' to
mitigate the emergency.
It also gives authority the right to compel evacuations, suspend
alcohol and weapons sales and make provisions for the availability
and use of temporary emergency housing.
The law gives mayors similar authority, except they do not have the
right to commandeer private property or make provisions for
emergency housing, according to a background brief prepared by the
state Attorney General's office.
JMoore, the cost of evacuating, even if you have friends to stay
with for free, for someone without a car has been estimated at
$350-$550. You really think a family living in poverty has that
kind of money lying around?
And do you really think the people living in New Orlean's poorest
slums (which, surprise surprise, are also located at the lowest
elevations) built their own homes there?
The delusions some people will sink to...
Jennifer,
You are correct about the levee and that should probably be the
focus when we start learning from this tragedy.
However, it is also noted that many National Guarders are trained
in the arts of traffic management and bus driving. You should see
the efficacy of the traffic management checkpoints these gals and
guys can set up when they try. Its killer. Many can even drive
standard transmission busses in a pinch. Never underestimate the
talents of our people.
Considering the nightmare of looting that's going on, I'm
wondering if that won't make the next hurricane strike (wherever
that is) even worse--people won't want to evacuate, preferring
instead to stay home with their loaded shotguns in their laps so
they can defend what they own.
And a lot of those NOLA cops won't provide protection from looters,
because they're looting, themselves! I was absolutely appalled by
what I saw on TV last night, and when things die down I hope those
looting cops suffer penalties twice as harsh as what the civilian
looters get.
Keep in mind, now, that everybody is without power, clean water,
etc. Including the cops. I don't see how the "authorities" could
inform the populace of anything, like curfews, "we'll shoot you for
looting," or anything like that. Unless they somehow flew
helicopters around with loudspeakers... but then, they'd have to
put fuel in the helicopters, and the fuel pumps are under water,
and there's no electricity to power the pumps anyway.
One report I saw this morning summed it up nicely: they said the
cops down there have nothing but the bullets on their belts. And
these are people who likely don't even know if their families are
safe or whatnot.
It's mayhem, y'all. Just a taste of what's to come, if you ask me.
Peak Oil!!
Has anyone else thought of impeaching Bush just on the grounds he is America's Joe Btfsplk?
Pop-icon whizzdum from Led Zeppelin and John Wayne sum it
up: "If it keeps on rainin', levee's goin' to break, When the levee
breaks I'll have no place to stay."
At least give credit where credit is due on this, especially in a
thread about race. "When the levee breaks" is an old blues standard
first recorded by Memphis Minnie but made famous by other more
prominent blues artists.
To quote Led Zeppelin they "begged, borrowed and stole from the
blues" and this is just another example.
I don't see how the "authorities" could inform the populace
of anything, like curfews, "we'll shoot you for looting," or
anything like that.
I'd give a pass to people taking food or baby supplies, but who the
hell needs to be "informed" that you're not allowed to rob jewelry
stores, the Wal-Mart TV section, or banks just because there's been
a storm? For those people, I don't see why the cops (at least the
ones who haven't joined the looters) haven't instituted a
shoot-to-kill policy. No, they can't get them all, but maybe the
sight of a few dead looters would discourage some would-be
ones.
Apparently the gun stores have been cleaned out, and armed gangs
are making actual attacks on not just individual cops, but on
entire police stations. Once the stores have all been looted clean,
how long before individual homes (with people still in them) become
the next targets? It's probably happening already.
armed gangs are making actual attacks on not just individual
cops, but on entire police stations
If this is true and not just hype (I'M skeptical)then we have got
yet another where's-the-National-Guard issue. Is it a posse
commitatus issue or an Iraq issue on that?
Apparently the gun stores have been cleaned out, and armed
gangs are making actual attacks on not just individual cops, but on
entire police stations. Once the stores have all been looted clean,
how long before individual homes (with people still in them) become
the next targets? It's probably happening already.
They're attacking Ambulances (both boat and truck) and Ambulance
drivers.
Dave-
I don't know law details, but I don't think it would be a posse
comitatus issue to send in the Guard. It's not like you're using
the military in lieu of the regular police--you're using the
military because the regular police just can't handle the
situation.
They released the prisoners from some jails because they couldn't
care for them. The cops came right out and said "We can't help
you." Everything is falling apart down there.
Hey, Bush said in his speech last night that everything was being taken care of. I guess the people in New Orleans, not having TVs, didn't get the message.
Yeah, I don't think there is a posse commitatus issue. Before
someone else points it out, I will say that I understand that some
National Guard are there.
My criticism is that there were not enough National Guard there
early enough (eg before the levee broke). I still suspect that Iraq
is partly (maybe mostly) to blame for the short staffing here.
"I've had something of a nagging feeling, for as much as its
been smeared all over the 24-cable news networks, that this
disaster hasn't gotten quite the attention it deserved."
Well, I think one of the issues is that New Orleans' reputation as
a "Great American City" is more a product of its history than its
present. I mean, other than Mardi Gras and the Super Bowl, how
often do you see references to New Orleans in the media?
As for the thought that we have resources tied down in Iraq that
we need in New Orleans:
The usual problem in disasters like this isn't so much having the
men and materiel at all, but getting it to the disaster site. It
takes a few days. I wonder, personally, where the bottleneck is. Do
we have transport sitting around with no-one and nothing to take to
NO?
I doubt it, so I doubt the problem is deployment to Iraq. I suspect
what we are dealing with here is the disappearance of roads and
bridges, not a shortage of trucks and stuff to put in them. Even if
there are some specialized transport units in Iraq that could help
out, given the scale of this disaster, c'mon, what real difference
could they make?
As for applying federal funds to the levees. I am amused at how
many people who complain that Bush spends too much now complain
that he hasn't spent enough. And I still haven't heard a good
argument for why NO and LA couldn't and shouldn't make up any
shortfalls in federal funding.
As for the notion that looting of non-essentials is okey-dokey as
long as no one gets hurt and insurance will pay for it, well, I
trust it is too asinine to need a response.
JMoore -
Your post above shows the incredible power of ignorance to affect
public policy. The vast majority of the poor in New Orleans didn't
scan the country for bucolic spots to build a house, they were born
there, raised there, had entire extended families there for
generations, and could hardly be expected to scan FEMA contingency
reports prior to inheriting and moving into the shanties their
fathers built. Many don't have cars or credit cards, so it's a bit
rich to expect them to hike to central Louisana. Jackass.
To the rest of y'all, or at least the more radical
anarchist/uberlibertarian types (especially Rick Barton if he's
still around): This is where your theories get put to the test. Do
we need government? Are individuals capable of organizing their own
security and safety voluntarily, without threat of government
coercion?
And the answer is, no, they cannot. See Haiti and Somalia for other
examples.
I'm still waiting for some propeller-head president of a local
libertarian club to pipe up and explain his this is all, actually,
going by plan.
I still haven't heard a good argument for why NO and LA
couldn't and shouldn't make up any shortfalls in federal
funding.
Even ignoring the idea that it's good to protect cities for their
own sake, I'd think the huge amount of our energy infrastructure
that's down there would make building up the levees qualify as a
legitimate national security issue. And the money for updates was
already earmarked, until the powers-that-be decided we'd be better
off spending it in Iraq.
I'm not going to insult anyone's intelligence by comparing the
number of Americans killed by Saddam's WMDs to the number of
American's killed by New Orleans' levee breaches.
I am amused at how many people who complain that Bush spends
too much now complain that he hasn't spent enough.
RC,
I wouldn't say that people are complaining that he hasn't spent
enougg, but that he hasn't spent wisely.
I think the press has ignored the racial angle because it really
doesn't exist. The controlling factor in both the evacuation and
looting is poverty, not race. The fact that African-Americans are
disproportionately poor is the only reason they seem more
effected.
It also hard to credit racism as a factor in the planning and
management of response because New Orleans is an African-American
dominated city. The major and IIRC most of the city council, are
African-American and have been for a couple of decades. The state
itself is something like 40% African-American.
Just as most of us are a little bit country, we are likewise a little bit terrorist/looter. This ought to teach us that the War on Terror not only cannot be won, but that it breeds our terrorist tendencies.
Just as most of us are a little bit country, we are likewise
a little bit terrorist/looter.
Speak for yourself. I could surely see myself taking food if I were
down there (especially since it's impossible to BUY food--even if
you want to pay there's nobody to hand your money to), but I
wouldn't be stealing jewelry and television sets.
There are parts of NO that the cops won't even go into on a good day. You're going to have a real fun situation when they try to force evacuate an armed neighborhood of Master P disciples sitting on a pile of loot. I've got a feeling that our National Guard's recently acquired urban warfare experience will come into play.
Thousands dead and y'alls can't stop thinking about televisions and diamonds. I guess you need to find a way not to feel bad about the floating corpses that we could have helped but didn't. Whatever works.
But I bet without government around they'll soon have kick-ass internet access, Slippery Pete :).
Stolen televisions and diamonds are emblematic of the tragic
breakdown of order that results from a devastating disaster.
And while I'm not trying to suggest that looting will be the #1
obstacle faced by business owners trying to revive the local
economy (once the waters drain away), it certainly won't help
matters.
And it may seem callous to talk about the local economy when there
are corpses in the water, but economic revival will help people put
food on the table when they try to return home and start
over.
And, for the record, I have a cousin attending college in NO.
Apparently she was evacuated safely.
"but I wouldn't be stealing jewelry and television sets."
Then, Jennifer, you need to re-take the course, Looting 101.
Thousands dead and y'alls can't stop thinking about
televisions and diamonds. I guess you need to find a way not to
feel bad about the floating corpses that we could have helped but
didn't. Whatever works.
My take on it is, "Thousands dead and we can't stop thinking about
ways to mitigate the misery of the survivors."
And it may seem callous to talk about the local economy when
there are corpses in the water, but economic revival will help
people put food on the table when they try to return home and start
over.
Good let's talk about looting after the evacuation is over (a
couple mos projected) and stick with the corpses right now. The
problem with moving too quickly to "starting over" concerns is that
the corpses never get a chance to start over, and I frankly feel a
lot more of their pain right at the moment than that of WalMart's
shareholders or even that of the owner of the local jewelry
concern. You should too.
drf-
I have contemplated the possibility that Shannon and Jean are one
and the same, but I'm not convinced.
Never thought about Pete. What sparked your hunch?
"The implication that the various police departments have been
pussyfooting because most of the people left behind are black is
moronic."
Oh really? Do you think the Liberals ("Progressives") in this
country would not scream RACISM if the cops had shot a few of those
thieving bastards down there? Do you suppose "the authorities"
didn't take that into consideration when they gave the police their
marching orders? If you do, then you're naive, to say the
least!
Mr. Collins--
We're already hearing about people going so far as to attack the
very support and rescue vehicles trying to save people. So tell me
what YOU think the average looter's psychology is--will he make off
with a bunch of stuff from Wal-Mart and then think "Well, I'm
satisfied with what I've got so now I'll stop?" Or will he be
emboldened to move on to bigger and better things, like attacking
police stations and rescue vehicles?
To extend joe's point, I doubt most of the jewelry (and some of
the other stuff) being looted is going to be used as bling, most
likely it'll be converted to cash. This ain't no "Yay we won the
championship!" type of looting. Not saying it's right, but it's
definitely more survival than merely unruly mob celebration.
And Jennifer, I know of a couple dirt roads within the Chicago city
limits, too.
The looting and general mayhem has also halted the evacuation of the Superdome and several area hospitals so it's more likely that more people will die if it isn't stopped. If we wait until after the evacuation is over to worry about the looting, we'll be waiting a long time.
The problem with moving too quickly to "starting over"
concerns is that the corpses never get a chance to start over, and
I frankly feel a lot more of their pain right at the
moment
By definition, a corpse cannot feel any pain.
Moving on.
From CNN:
The head of Acadian Ambulance Service, Richard Zuschlag, said
Wednesday that a generator was stolen from his command center and
an ambulance was tipped over as his workers tried to evacuate
hospitals.
So no, it's not a matter of choosing between "stopping the looters"
and "saving people." They've become the same thing.
We're already hearing about people going so far as to attack
the very support and rescue vehicles trying to save people. So tell
me what YOU think the average looter's psychology is--will he make
off with a bunch of stuff from Wal-Mart and then think "Well, I'm
satisfied with what I've got so now I'll stop?" Or will he be
emboldened to move on to bigger and better things, like attacking
police stations and rescue vehicles?
I think the thing about rescue vehicles and police stations being
attacked is highly exaggerated. We will probably have a better idea
of which one of us is correct about this particular issue in a
couple days, I think. I know the paramedics are scared of the
desparate people with guns, but get back to me when the paramedic
body count reaches 1% or so of the total count.
I think attacks o rescue workers are being highly exaggerated for
the same reason that the looting so preoccupies everyone -- it is a
convenient excuse not to think about all those dead bodies and what
might, possibly could have been done different to prevent their
violent deaths.
More from CNN:
Acadian, based in Lafayette, Louisiana, is trying to evacuate some
2,000 patients from hospitals before nightfall Wednesday, including
dozens of critically ill babies at medical facilities with no
electricity or water.
The firm's priority is getting out 25 critically ill infants from
Children's Hospital and 100 babies from Touro Infirmary, said
spokeswoman Julie Mahfouz. . . .
He said his workers have been victims of the looting and
mayhem across the city.
"My people are in harm's way," he said. "They are scared. Our
command station about an hour ago had the generator stolen off the
back of it. We've had an ambulance turned over.
I know the paramedics are scared of the desparate people
with guns, but get back to me when the paramedic body count reaches
1% or so of the total count.
Um . . . why should the paramedic body count be any higher than,
say, zero?
it is a convenient excuse not to think about all those dead
bodies and what might, possibly could have been done different to
prevent their violent deaths.
YEs, I'm certain that a lot more positive good can be accomplished
by sitting around brooding over should, coulda, woulda, rather than
taking steps to protect evacuees and evacuation personnel
now.
Don't break your arm patting yourself on the back over your deep
pain-feeling, you smug jerk.
I'll bet the rescue workers don't feel the attacks are highly
exaggerated. I'll also bet that workers from other areas who might
have considered volunteering are thinking twice.
I think focussing on all the dead is a convenient excuse not to
think about how people are dying right this minute.
I heard the looter whose bullet grazed a cop's face was shot and killed (presumably by the same cop?).
about how people are dying right this minute
How many dead paramedics you counted so far, Meyer? Got a link for
me with an actual death -- or is is just more upturned
vehicles.
"but I wouldn't be stealing jewelry and television sets."
Then, Jennifer, you need to re-take the course, Looting
101.
Amen to that. Geez, Jennifer. That's the best stuff. You
gotta take that. Anybody know if there's an IKEA in New
Orleans? Papa needs a new pair of end-tables!
Got a link for me with an actual death -- or is is just more
upturned vehicles.
How about a link supporting your claims of "exaggeration"? Your
position, that somehow we should be able to ignore the people
running around shooting and terrorizing while trying to conduct a
massive evacuation of a area that is completely underwater is
absurd. They have no choice but to make the general environment
more secure so that the evacuation can proceed safely.
They don't have to be killed to hinder the evacuation effort.
These people aren't soldiers. They're just regular people trying to
do a job. They're not going to risk their lives to evacuate people.
In fact, they're trained to wait until the situation has stabilized
before they move in and start rescuing people.
So no paramedic has died yet, but a National Guardsman has been
shot and wounded and a Chinook helicopter has been shot at.
http://www.cnn.com/2005/WEATHER/09/01/katrina.impact/index.html
Jennifer already posted about attacks on ambulances. If these
people are threatened, they're not going to just soldier on.
They're going to quit and wait for order to be restored. Quit
apologizing for Bush's failure to restore order and realize that
more people are going to die unless the mayhem is stopped.
A co-worker of mine just received a cellphone call from his brother-in-law who works as a doctor at Tulane University Medical Center. Apparently people with guns are looting the hospital's pharmacy.
Hey, Phil Collins, why don't you go back to writing insipid, whiny, leftwing pop tune lyrics and quit posting insipid, whiny, leftwing bullshit here.
To make it clear to the world how disgusting your attitudes
are.
You are pre-occupied with looting and two injuries to police.
Meanwhile, thousands are dead and this is barely a blip on your
mental radar.
I don't doubt that there are law enforcement problems in NO and
that there may be an actual police or paramedic death at some
point. That is very important to know and to handle optimally for
the people involved locally. The wounding and near-wounding
incidents are as scary as the wounding and ner-wounding incidents
that go on in every American city everyday.
However, for you voters, sitting there in the comfort of your
offices, well away from the guns and floods, those thousands of
bloated, blue corpses should be categorically blocking your
thoughts of stolen tvs and small handful of wounded
police/guard/medics. Obviously they aren't. What a sick, sad
bunch.
Maybe Phil Collins can lead a big, gooey peace-and-love
encounter session where the looters can discuss what traumatic
childhood incidents are driving them to take an already-bad
situation and make it a thousand times worse. And then they call
all sing Kum By Yah.
And then they can sit around and "think about the dead," and if
they think hard enough, the dead will come back to life, and Phil
can point at us and laugh and say "See, you selfish bastards,
crying over spilt milk really does help!"
Personally, I think taking care of the survivors should take
precedence over deciding which, if any, political careers need to
be destroyed over this.
Meanwhile, thousands are dead and this is barely a blip on
your mental radar.
Last I checked, dead people are, well...dead.
Jennifer,
You aren't taking care of the survivors. If you were, then I
wouldn't be lecturing you like this. Rather, you, like everybody
else, are sitting far away from the action, prioritizing the
long-range problems, preventaitive measures and solutions. Nothing
wrong with that -- its a good thing. Its just that your (and
Thoreau's and Meyer's and the Night Watchman's) priorities are ugly
and wrong.
I was part of aid efforts in Haiti after flooding took out
entire villages. The bottom line here is that when people are hot,
hungry, thirsty, tired and fear for their lives they tend to do
things that make the rest of us want to believe that we are somehow
different than they are.
We're not. No matter what Jennifer says.
Those people occasionally resort to attacking the very people
trying to help them - like a drowning man pulling his rescuer down
with him.
The fact that these are poor people, or black people, or anything
else that helps us feel as tho we are different from them are just
attempts to deny the essential human nature we all share. Sometimes
it's glorious, sometimes it's horrific. It's still "just
human."
Last I checked, dead people are, well...dead.
Well, at least there won't be any food shortages then.
Rob--
When have I ever said anything to suggest I believe we're somehow
"different" than they are? I've admitted that I'd probably steal
food if I were trapped down there, but I damned sure wouldn't be
overturning ambulances or stealing jewelry.
I can't go down there to help the survivors first-hand, of course,
but I did sign a few day's pay over to the Red Cross. Though if I
had the chance, I'd take half of THAT and earmark it for guns and
bullets to shoot the sons of bitches who are looting the pharmacies
and interfering with the evacuation efforts.
"When have I ever said anything to suggest I believe we're
somehow "different" than they are?" - Jennifer
You do it in your very next sentence: "but I damned sure wouldn't
be overturning ambulances or stealing jewelry."
Of course you wouldn't do that, Jennifer. You're different than
they are. Right...
If I thought it increased the odds of survival for my family and I
to oveturn an ambulance, steal a power generator, steal drugs,
food, drink, guns, bullets, or even jewelry (if I thought I could
trade that for something I really needed) I wouldn't
hesitate.
The fact that you think you would not do those things, because you
are somehow different than everyone else, is either counter to your
own survival, or self-deluded.
I think this sums up the situation in NOLA well.
"An old man in a chaise lounge lay dead in a grassy median as
hungry babies wailed around him. Around the corner, an elderly
woman lay dead in her wheelchair, covered up by a blanket, and
another body lay beside her wrapped in a sheet.
"I don't treat my dog like that," 47-year-old Daniel Edwards said
as he pointed at the woman in the wheelchair. "I buried my dog." He
added: "You can do everything for other countries but you can't do
nothing for your own people. You can go overseas with the military
but you can't get them down here."
A lesson in humanity that we will not soon forget, foreshadowing of
a WMD incident, or whining by governement-dependants in the most
corrupt state of the union?
The most likely answer will be a combination, I think.
Fair winds and following seas to the rescuers.
Live free, fall or fight.
Hi Thoreau!
pete's use of colorful metaphors (to quote the good Mr. Spock in
IV, "save the whales"). his rudeness in the past. very
similar.
but then again, i thought rst was somehow mixed in.
My priority is to get the survivors who are currently trapped in
the Superdome out. Your priority is to start apportioning blame for
the tragedy, and you don't want to hear anything about hindered
rescue efforts until at least 30 paramedics are dead.
And my priorities are ugly and wrong? Gotcha.
Meyer,
You aren't getting anybody out of the Superdome. You are thinking
about politics and chatting on the Internet. How gullible do you
think we are?
If I thought it increased the odds of survival for my family
and I to oveturn an ambulance,
Oh, NOW I see, Rob. The people who are overturning ambulances and
shooting at the rescue helicopters think it's a survival
strategy. I don't blame them for cowering in fear at the hordes of
scary ambulances terrorizing the streets of New Orleans.
You aren't getting anybody out of the Superdome. You are
thinking about politics and chatting on the Internet. How gullible
do you think we are?
Phil, are you posting over broadband from the back of an ambulance
or Coast Guard chopper?
Here's the good bit from Lileks about the reaction to the NOLA
crisis:
"It�s as if there�s a superior breed of humanity, uncorrupt and
all-knowing, waiting in the wings to solve all our problems if only
we�d let them have the reins of power and speak the honeyed words.
Listen to them and human failings will be erased, nature turned
aside like a man who enters a French restaurant in tennis
shoes."
Yep, all those folks who know better how to handle a national
crisis than the guys who are in charge, apparently. I guarantee you
that there are plenty of people working for the guys in charge
fighting the real problem of how to help people in the flooded
areas.
In other words, just like when I was in Haiti, the problem is not
that Bush spent money breaking and repairing Iraq. The problem is
how to get to the area - impassable roads, bridges washed away - no
amount of Iraq-based US military personnel can overcome this
problem in time to help the folks who will, sadly, continue to die
before they can be reached.
About the only thing that will work are fleets of cargo
helicopters. You just can't get that much into the area by
helicopter. It's not a cargo plane.
Lileks, whom I like for his straightforward, mid-Western/Minnesota
nice approach to most things has great advice for everyone who is
trying to lay this at the feet of the Executive Branch:
"Wait a week, and let�s see what's accomplished by the humans we
have, and then we can start throwing javelins."
Rob,
The vast majority of people AREN'T looting and overturning
ambulances. Like most people, yes, I am different from thugs who
terrorize rescue workers, overturn ambulances, and roam the
waterways like pirates.
Well Phil, as a matter of fact I am participating in the relief
effort, although indirectly. I work at a hospital in Georgia and we
are currently accepting patients being airlifted out of New
Orleans. Obviously we're not helping the critically injured, but
those who are well enough to survive the trip are being sheltered
here.
But if we were to ask the people who actually are on the ground
trying to rescue the survivors, I'll bet they would agree with me
more than you.
Jennifer,
I think a rehash of the conversation is needed at this point.
You said: Personally, I think taking care of the survivors should
take precedence over deciding which, if any, political careers need
to be destroyed over this.
I Said: You aren't taking care of the survivors. If you were, then
I wouldn't be lecturing you like this. Rather, you, like
everybody else, are sitting far away from the action,
prioritizing the long-range problems, preventaitive (sic) measures
and solutions. Nothing wrong with that -- its a good
thing.
You now say: Phil, are you posting over broadband from the back of
an ambulance or Coast Guard chopper?
Now I respond: Jennifer, I said in my previous post that everybody
involved in this discussion is not actively involved in rescue
efforts. This should, go without saying, but somehow you and Meyer
keep trying to suggest that being pre-occupies with looting and
shooting (as opposed to the drownings) is somehow equivalent to
being
down there helping out. It is not. You are not down there. Meyer is
not down there. I am not either. We are having a political
discussion well-removed in time and/or space from the flooding of
NO and its aftermath. In the context of such a discussion, it
should be way, way clear that thousands of dead are a bigger deal
than a couple wounded.
Phil, are you posting over broadband from the back of an
ambulance or Coast Guard chopper?
Yeah, but all the dead people would side with me because, o wait .
. . rut-roh!
CNN just posted that boat rescues have been suspended because
the violent people in the city make it too dangerous for the
rescuers. So tell me, Phil, how does THIS fit into your "ignore the
looters and focus on the survivors" scenario? Nobody can GET to the
survivors because the violent ones made it too dangerous.
Also, Phil, at this point those who are already dead are less
important than those who are currently alive but WILL be dead if
they don't get food and clean water to drink. Or those who will be
dead when the looters kill them.
Who usually uses the link www.farceswannamo.com? I'm just
curious. All these internet handle changes are confusing.
I also ask because Phil Collins also reminds me of
Juanita/Jane/Jose right about now.
Here's excerpts from the CNN story. Now Rob can explain that
those attacking the rescuers are just trying to survive.
http://www.cnn.com/2005/WEATHER/09/01/katrina.impact/index.html
As police and National Guard troops struggled to restore order
Thursday in New Orleans, emergency teams suspended boat rescue
operations because conditions in the flooded city were too
dangerous, rescuers said.
The instructions to stand down came during a meeting with officials
from the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
CNN's Rick Sanchez reported that authorities were concerned for the
rescuers' safety because some people have become violent toward the
rescuers. . . .Troops and police have been working to evacuate tens
of thousands of people, who are growing weaker and more desperate
each hour. . . . .
Officers told CNN they lacked manpower and steady communications to
properly do their jobs -- and that they needed help to prevent the
widespread looting and violence now prevalent in the city.
CNN just posted that boat rescues have been suspended
because the violent people in the city make it too dangerous for
the rescuers. So tell me, Phil, how does THIS fit into your "ignore
the looters and focus on the survivors" scenario? Nobody can GET to
the survivors because the violent ones made it too
dangerous.
If this is true, then there must be a few dead police / guard by
now. It is easy to see what is really happening. The police are
afraid for their own skins and unwilling to take the kind of risks
they did on 9-11. Bad police. Now, let's get back to how to prevent
the thousands-dead problem. We can deal with chickenhearted
guardsmen later at the court martials.
Phil,
I'm not sure what thread you are reading, but many of us are simply
commenting that it is our opinion, based on the information
available, that it is justified to remove resources previously
dedicated exclusively to the rescue operations and have them
reallocated to restore some measure of law and order. This is not
so that a few TV sets can be saved, but so that the rescue
operations can better proceed and more people can be saved.
I have no clue why you are objecting to people offering up their
opinions. If you don't actually want to participate in this
discussion, then go away.
Phil Collins reminds me of Phil Collins. Insipid, whiny, and every sooo superior.
"Oh, NOW I see, Rob. The people who are overturning ambulances
and shooting at the rescue helicopters think it's a survival
strategy. I don't blame them for cowering in fear at the hordes of
scary ambulances terrorizing the streets of New Orleans."
No, Jennifer, I'm afraid you DON'T see. Irrational behavior is part
of being human, particularly during crisis. That you think you are
above it is very telling, in my opinion. I suspect that you fit the
paragraph I "looted" from Lileks to a "T."
I've read your comments on how you think things should be done
everywhere from Iraq to New Orleans, but I rarely hear you ever
mention actually doing anything OTHER than talking about how
superior your approach to things would be, if only we'd do it your
way. (I think you're the same Jennifer who is so outraged over how
the war on terror is being fought, anyway.)
Despite how wrong you think it is to be at war, you'd "take half of
THAT and earmark it for guns and bullets to shoot the sons of
bitches who are looting the pharmacies and interfering with the
evacuation efforts."
I'm REALLY glad that you don't have this guy's job: "Army Lt. Gen.
Russel Honore, 1st U.S. Army commander, will head the task force to
coordinate DOD active-duty support for disaster relief efforts in
the hurricane's aftermath, much of it already under way or in the
works."
From "Military providing full-scale response to hurricane relief
effort" at
http://www.blackanthem.com/World/2005083102.html
I never said it's wrong to be at war, Rob; I said this
particular war was wrong.
And do you seriously think things will get better in New Orleans if
people just shrug at the ones looting ambulances and shooting at
rescue helicopters by saying "Feh, well, that's human nature for
ya?"
No Randolph, you just think you are. You can write off those
people as different from you, or just plain evil, if it makes you
feel better. But human nature doesn't change just because we wish
it were different.
Much of the violence in disaster areas stems from desperation,
frustration, fear and anger. Of course, you have complete control
over those emotions and would never do anything irrational, right?
(When DID INS start accepting immigration from the planet Vulcan,
anyway?)
Maybe you should spend some time in disaster areas and war zones
and get back to me about the essential elements of human
nature.
I'm not sure what thread you are reading, but many of us are
simply commenting that it is our opinion, based on the information
available, that it is justified to remove resources previously
dedicated exclusively to the rescue operations and have them
reallocated to restore some measure of law and order.
I have no problem with this. But the flooding problem is still more
important for the US as a whole. Focussing on the looting and
shooting misses the point. Yes, I am glad that there are some
Guardsmen left to go down and shoot the looters. However, all of
that is small-potatoes compared to the leveee breaking, which
nobody seems to care much about here for some Reason. None of this
contradicts what you say, and I agree with what you say.
Jennifer,
I didn't say they shouldn't be stopped if they are attacking other
people, acting violently and irrationally. I just said that they
aren't any different than you or I. That you're so bloodthirsty
over some stolen jewelry, and so anti-war elsewhere strikes me as
self-contradictory.
Phil Collins? THE Phil Collins?!! I'm impressed. I dig some of your music, but Dude!, you are way off base about the death toll. Thousands? That's only speculation so far. Even if it is true, life is for the living. It is a trite phrase,...but let the dead bury the dead.
That you're so bloodthirsty over some stolen jewelry, and so
anti-war elsewhere strikes me as self-contradictory.
Both cases involve innocent people being hurt by scumballs. I
oppose both. No contradiction there.
However, all of that is small-potatoes compared to the
leveee breaking, which nobody seems to care much about here for
some Reason.
The priority is to get the people who want to be rescued out of
there. Fixing the levee is not going to make the water go away
before the people who need to be rescued end up dead.
You know, the guy who wrote the song about the guy who could
have saved the other guy from drowning, but didn't?
In other news: Thanks to H'n'R for the Instapundit entry and link.
It was nice to see something less frivolous about the tragedy.
Even if it is true, life is for the living. It is a trite
phrase,...but let the dead bury the dead.
Isn't that a quote from the speech Bush gave right after 9/11?
Rob,
I may have come off as a little arrogant there. What I meant is
that most of the people in NO are'nt looting. So the people in NO
are superior to/different from the other people in NO. Not every
single person becomes a lord-of-the-flies gangster when disaster
strikes. Only certain people do.
Looking at the actual numbers of looters/thugs vs. decent human
beings, I'd say that human nature by and large directs us not to
loot, kill, and pillage if the opportunity is presented.
Also, it doesn't make me feel "better" to think that I wouldn't
steal DVDs and pharmaceuticals if the opportunity was there. I've
never been the victim of a natural disaster myself, so I don't know
what I would do. It just makes me angry that some criminals are
holding up the evacuation efforts.
"let the dead bury the dead. Isn't that a quote from the speech
Bush gave?"
Yes, it may be. But it is a much older saying than that. Much
older. If I had a book of quotations handy, I could tell you how
old. Like I said: it's a trite phrase.
"let the dead bury the dead. Isn't that a quote from the
speech Bush gave?"
Jesus - 'Let the Dead Bury Their Own Dead' - Matthew 8:22
Google is your friend.
MP,
Yeah, you're right. I just went and looked it up in a Bartletts,
but you beat me to it. Google? I'll have to remember that.
well, I'm quite late in responding to the criticisms from joe
and Slippery Pete to my post early this morning, but for what it's
worth...
If either of you care to read what I wrote, you would understand
that I did not say anything like what you seem to think I did. I am
not blaming the sad bastards who could not afford better locations
for their homes or better means of leaving them, although I did
indeed imply that that might be a factor in the perceived lack of
sympathy for them. I'm sorry of I confused you.
Google is your friend.
And so it is. Here is what Bush actually said about the victims of
9/11:
"The victims were . . . secretaries, business men and women,
military and federal workers, moms and dads, friends and neighbors.
Thousands of lives were suddenly ended . . . The pictures of
airplanes flying into buildings, fires burning, huge structures
collapsing have filled
us with disbelief, terrible sadness and a quiet, unyielding
anger."
Far cry from the dead-burying-the-dead treatment the victims of the
flood are getting here.
I actually emailed Jack on this and got a couple terse
responses. Here's one:
Me: Again, I'm not sure what point racemongering serves. Can't we just treat everyone as people and not classify them by the color of their skin? Regards, Dave
Jack: If only.
Personally, nothing would make me happier than to never hear
another reference to anyone's race on television or anywhere else.
Because, frankly, race shouldn't matter to anyone but
racists. MLK's dream was that his children would be judged
on the content of their character, not that society would fret
endlessly about the color of their skin. Seems like the reality he
dreamed of is farther away than ever.
I'll start extravagantly. Whoever shoots a looter is not to be
judged or prosecuted. I'll leave it up to the person on the scene
to make the snap judgement and live with their own conscience
afterward.
The survival looting is understood by nearly everyone. The
recreational looting is abhorred by nearly everyone. It is tough to
make a rule that distinguishes, but like porn, nearly all the time
when you see it, you know the difference.
The recreational looters are humans without ethical development.
They're no different from people in any city in USA, who have not
been given by family and culture a sense of right and wrong. They
have no internal sense of order, and respond only to force. Causes,
blame, and all that do nothing to change the problem in New Orleans
today, or in New York or Detroit or Atlanta or Oakland during the
next blackout. The solution takes as long as it takes to awaken in
people a sense of responsibility and personal power, at least a
generation.
After the survival looting and recreational looting, now we have
what I'll call desperation looting. Once the food is gone, the
people stuck in town are faced with their own total dependence on
others for survival. They have no idea how to create their own
sustenance out of the remains of a city, and use they only power
they have: violence. The acts become increasingly grotesque over
inceasingly small tidbits. I'm sure somebody has been murdered for
a bag of M&Ms.
The aspects I described are intertwined in place and time, and
complicated by each individual psychology. Since I'm not there, I
am not qualified to judge.
This is not Libertopia. This is a failing of the state, an example
of why it is critical that all people at all times are given the
power and responsibility to choose. Without training and practice
in choice, people choose badly.
"Though if I had the chance, I'd take half of THAT and earmark it for guns and bullets to shoot the sons of bitches who are looting..."
I think I'm in love!
Oh, and FWIW, it looks to me like the finger-wagging types here (Phil Collins, rob) don't actually have a point to make; they're just in it to feel superior. We're not talking enough about the levee? OK, it's a terrible thing that the levee broke and that many people died; I hope they make some progress in fixing it and rescuing people; we need to look into why this happened and how we can prevent it from happening in the future. Is that what you want? Oh, that's right, you don't want anything except to feel morally superior. Sorry, I forgot for a moment.
My criticism is that there were not enough National Guard
there early enough (eg before the levee broke). I still suspect
that Iraq is partly (maybe mostly) to blame for the short staffing
here.
The NG sends in its people with empty M-16s and restrictive rules
of engagment; essentially, they are a source of automatic weapons
for the gangs, but the gangs do have to obtain ammo
elsewhere.
So not sending the NG in is the better plan.
Goddammit, I will not be morally lectured to by the man who subjected everyone in the FM radio world to two years of "Sussudio."
"Both cases involve innocent people being hurt by scumballs. I
oppose both. No contradiction there." - Jennifer
I think we agree on one thing: people who attempt to hurt innocents
should be stopped. But that's where our agreement ends,
apparently.
There are people in N.O. who need to be stopped from hurting
innocent people and there are people in Iraq who need to be stopped
from hurting innocent people. In N.O. it's looters, which is
somewhat understandable to me. In Iraq, it's people who are killing
innocent Iraqis (and targeting US military as well) with car bombs,
suicide bombings, and improvised explosive devices.
In the one case, you're all for "shoot on sight" against people who
may be looting for the first time in their lives out of
desperation, but in the other - where there is consistent,
repeated, organized attempts to kill people, you think it's a bad
idea to go there and stop them? Interesting point of view, and
yeah, I think it's pretty self-contradictory.
Robert Plant once sang "It's Nobody's Fault but Mine" and THAT
should be the theme song for the people who are stuck in the Big
Easy. Mother Nature's a real bitch, ain't she.
I don't know if anyone else saw the column by Clinonista Blumenthal
trying to pin this on Bush...I mean, yeah, the guy's not the best,
I don't think he's the man behind the curtain whipping up storms to
destroy LA and MS (that's his constituency, ain't it)
In the one case, you're all for "shoot on sight" against
people who may be looting for the first time in their lives out of
desperation,
I've already said, somewhere higher in this thread, that those who
are stealing food or baby supplies should be excused. But I don't
buy the thought that anybody has a desperate survival need to steal
a plasma TV, overturn an ambulance, or shoot guns at the
helicopters trying to rescue people in the city.
Christ, the situation has gotten so bad down there that FEMA rescue
missions are being postponed because it's too dangerous for the
rescuers! That means more people will die. They're running
out of food and water, hospitals are trying to operate with no
water, drugs or electricity, and if the current survivors don't get
the hell out of there soon they will be dead. And you're blithely
lecturing us why we shouldn't feel judgmental toward the ones who
are making it impossible for the rescuers to save these people?
Come to think of it, as many concertgoers of the 1980s can attest, Phil Collins has many times publicly stated, "If you told me you were drowning, I would not lend a hand."
JD,
You finally said what I wanted you to say. Now we are at
approximately the same moral positioning and I am no longer
superior in the superior moral position (but that doesn't bother me
as much as you seem to think).
Oops, poster "Eminem" beat me to it. Maybe I'll come back after I have time to read the whole thread.
And now CNN's reporting that a hospital had to stop its evacuation of the desperately ill because of sniper fire. But hey, that's no reasn to think law and order need to be re-established there pronto, right? We shouldn't judge the snipers, I suppose. Desperation and fear and all that.
Nuh-nuh-nuh-nuh-no, nobody's fault but mine
Screw em', let em all rot, wait 50 years when the delta has rebuilt
itself and then we can start the fun all over again
And you're blithely lecturing us why we shouldn't feel
judgmental toward the ones who are making it impossible for the
rescuers to save these people?
The looters should be shot. That doesn't excuse the rest of us from
honoring the memory of the dead, by letting the guards shoot the
looters while we focus on the much more pressing issue of why a
couple thousand people had to die of drowning. Repeatedly posting
about the looters only distracts from the thing with a big body
count here. yes, every tragedy has looteres and they all need to be
shot, every time. None of this is nearly as important of the
question you are blithely ignoring: could those drowning deaths
have been prevented?
"It just makes me angry that some criminals are holding up the
evacuation efforts." - Randolph Carter
Dude, I agree 100%. My bad for reading that badly. It's a hazard of
the medium.
"I'll start extravagantly. Whoever shoots a looter is not to be
judged or prosecuted. I'll leave it up to the person on the scene
to make the snap judgement and live with their own conscience
afterward." - Dynamist
I agree with your policy. But that's what happens when natural
disaster completely overrides the rule of law, anyway.
"The recreational looters are humans without ethical development.
They're no different from people in any city in USA, who have not
been given by family and culture a sense of right and wrong." -
Dynamist
Sadly, I can't agree with this, because I've seen God-fearing
people who go to church every Sunday knock down old people and
children and then stomp over them despite their injuried and
pitiful cries just to get to a bag of rice. When society breaks
down, human nature is to survive, regardless of the cost to other
humans.
JD - Don't be a jerk. And believe me, I don't feel superior,
because I realize that ALL people are capable of the worst. The
people who have are trotting their self-delusion out for public
display are those who believe that they will behave morally - at
the expense of their own wellbeing and that of their loved ones -
because of their own innate superiority.
I just happen to have the "benefit" of experience - I've seen
normally good people act deplorably to save themselves or their
families. And don't confuse me with Phil Collins - I believe in the
use of force to stop irrational and violent behavior, wherever it's
directed at me and mine. Or as Stevo Darkly put it, in one of the
funniest things I've read in a while: "I will not be morally
lectured to by the man who subjected everyone in the FM radio world
to two years of 'Sussudio.'"
"The recreational looters are humans without ethical
development. They're no different from people in any city in USA,
who have not been given by family and culture a sense of right and
wrong." - Dynamist. . . . Sadly, I can't agree with this, because
I've seen God-fearing people who go to church every Sunday knock
down old people and children and then stomp over them despite their
injuried and pitiful cries just to get to a bag of rice.
I believe the people stealing rice to feed their families would NOT
fall into the "recreational looter" category Dynamist referred
to.
Phil--
When everybody trapped in New Orleans is safe and sound, I'll lead
the goddamned brigade to find who to blame and make some political
heads roll. But right now, when there are living people who might
still be saved, what possible GOOD can come of wasting time
deciding who to point the finger at? Hell yes, things should have
been done differently, and so many people didn't have to die. I
think the levees should have been shored up long before this. But
there's not a goddamned thing we can do now for the dead, whereas
we CAN perhaps prevent more people from joining their ranks.
"The recreational looters are humans without ethical
development. They're no different from people in any city in USA,
who have not been given by family and culture a sense of right and
wrong." - Dynamist. . . . Sadly, I can't agree with this, because
I've seen God-fearing people who go to church every Sunday knock
down old people and children and then stomp over them despite their
injuried and pitiful cries just to get to a bag of rice.
I believe the people stealing rice to feed their families would NOT
fall into the "recreational looter" category Dynamist referred
to.
Phil--
When everybody trapped in New Orleans is safe and sound, I'll lead
the goddamned brigade to find who to blame and make some political
heads roll. But right now, when there are living people who might
still be saved, what possible GOOD can come of wasting time
deciding who to point the finger at? Hell yes, things should have
been done differently, and so many people didn't have to die. I
think the levees should have been shored up long before this. But
there's not a goddamned thing we can do now for the dead, whereas
we CAN perhaps prevent more people from joining their ranks.
"The recreational looters are humans without ethical
development. They're no different from people in any city in USA,
who have not been given by family and culture a sense of right and
wrong." - Dynamist. . . . Sadly, I can't agree with this, because
I've seen God-fearing people who go to church every Sunday knock
down old people and children and then stomp over them despite their
injuried and pitiful cries just to get to a bag of rice.
I believe the people stealing rice to feed their families would NOT
fall into the "recreational looter" category Dynamist referred
to.
Phil--
When everybody trapped in New Orleans is safe and sound, I'll lead
the goddamned brigade to find who to blame and make some political
heads roll. But right now, when there are living people who might
still be saved, what possible GOOD can come of wasting time
deciding who to point the finger at? Hell yes, things should have
been done differently, and so many people didn't have to die. I
think the levees should have been shored up long before this. But
there's not a goddamned thing we can do now for the dead, whereas
we CAN perhaps prevent more people from joining their ranks.
And don't confuse me with Phil Collins - I believe in the
use of force to stop irrational and violent behavior
Now, c'mon. Read my posts. I also believe in the use of force to
stop irrational and violent behavior. I have said so at least twice
(in response to similar charges from oter posters) and have never
denied it. Time to start hearing the real Phil and quit knocking
aroud the strawman you might wish I were.
Site comments/questions:
Media Inquiries and Reprint Permissions:
(310) 367-6109
Editorial & Production Offices:
3415 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
Suite 400
Los Angeles, CA 90034
(310) 391-2245