I have a new favorite show.
Dirty Jobs on Discovery. The guy is just a laugh a minute. He was cleaning out sludge pits tonight, and someone asked him how it rated. he responded, “In Dante’s Seven Rings of Hell? About 6 1/2.”
Hehe.
by John Cole| 8 Comments
This post is in: Media
I have a new favorite show.
Dirty Jobs on Discovery. The guy is just a laugh a minute. He was cleaning out sludge pits tonight, and someone asked him how it rated. he responded, “In Dante’s Seven Rings of Hell? About 6 1/2.”
Hehe.
by John Cole| 36 Comments
This post is in: Outrage
More rantings from the fringe:
Rev. Bill Shanks, pastor of New Covenant Fellowship of New Orleans, also sees God’s mercy in the aftermath of Katrina — but in a different way. Shanks says the hurricane has wiped out much of the rampant sin common to the city.
The pastor explains that for years he has warned people that unless Christians in New Orleans took a strong stand against such things as local abortion clinics, the yearly Mardi Gras celebrations, and the annual event known as “Southern Decadence” — an annual six-day “gay pride” event scheduled to be hosted by the city this week — God’s judgment would be felt.
“New Orleans now is abortion free. New Orleans now is Mardi Gras free. New Orleans now is free of Southern Decadence and the sodomites, the witchcraft workers, false religion — it’s free of all of those things now,” Shanks says. “God simply, I believe, in His mercy purged all of that stuff out of there — and now we’re going to start over again.”
The New Orleans pastor is adamant. Christians, he says, need to confront sin. “It’s time for us to stand up against wickedness so that God won’t have to deal with that wickedness,” he says.
Someone needs to kick that ‘Christian’ in the ass.
by John Cole| 39 Comments
This post is in: Domestic Politics
I agree wholeheartedly with this statement:
No whitewashes. Find out who fucked up. Republicans, Democrats, I don’t care. Anyone who screwed up should be tarred and feathered.
That is in reaction to the news that the Senate will hold investigations later on looking into the events of the past week.
Oh- the person who said it- Kos, which given the blame game going on at Kos the past few days is a touch amusing, but he is right about the investigation.
by John Cole| 4 Comments
This post is in: Domestic Politics
I have calmed down a touch, and this is good news:
Less than a week after Hurricane Katrina, American giving to help storm victims has surged past the level raised for South Asia tsunami relief in the same period, nearing the $100 million mark, according to charities and experts. But relief groups and federal officials worked to keep the donations flowing from Americans worried about oil prices and the economy.
President Bush yesterday appointed his father, former president George H.W. Bush, and former president Bill Clinton to spearhead fundraising for hurricane victims, in a reprise of their roles as tsunami money-raisers earlier this year. The American Red Cross, which has raised three-quarters of the total, planned a national direct-mail appeal as it welcomed a $5 million donation from Texas energy baron T. Boone Pickens. Corporations gave one-third of the total so far: Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the nation’s largest retailer, has pledged $17 million to the relief effort, the largest corporate donation yet, with chief executive H. Lee Scott Jr. delivering the commitment by phone to Clinton, officials said.
Keep it up.
And don’t forget the Mercy Corps ad to the left there.
Donate or I will tell Andrei and Joe Albanese you voted Republican and give them your home phone numbers.
by John Cole| 48 Comments
This post is in: Open Threads
A bus of evacuees has flipped over on the interstate and armed gangs are shooting at firemen in St. Bernard’s parish and may have killed a few cops.
I am going drinking before I just start crying.
by John Cole| 19 Comments
This post is in: Open Threads
Where are they going to put all of these people? And I am serious. Where are they going to put all of these people?
This post is in: Politics
It seems the blame game has begun in earnest, what with Elijah Cummings on CNN speaking for the Congressional Black Caucus claiming that race is why it took a while for relief to get to New Orleans, so, I will just direct you to this comment at One Hand Clapping:
Sorry Joel & ROE, but you guys are WAAAYYY off base in criticizing FEMA. Disaster preparedness is the responsibility of State and Local authorities – in this case LEMA (The Louisiana Emergency Management Agency). There is a state-wide director for disaster relief in every state – that person is called the Governor. There is a local director for disaster relief in every municipality – that person is called the Mayor. FEMA is a coordinating body that assists State and Local authorities in getting the resources they need. Because they are the “go to” people most folks are under the impression that they are in charge, and in fact if the State and Local authorities abdicate control over a disaster area they will take over. Typically after the initial response to a disaster the local guys do just that, leave FEMA in control. That’s because they have the experience and personnel to manage disasters of this scale.
Disclosure: I’m a volunteer coordinator for MEMA (The Missouri Emergency Management Agency), I’ve been through three major floods and a few big storms that generated enough tornado damage to get the affected counties disaster relief – believe me when I tell you what we are seeing from FEMA now is lightyears ahead of what I’ve seen from them in the past. Typically it took two to three days just to get the disaster declaration, then another two to three to get FEMA deployed – of course by then the local guys had been on the ground working around the clock for five or six days and we were more than happy to dump everything in FEMA’s lap. That’s the way the system is designed. Bush saw that and tried to skip a few steps to speed things up, he pre-declared the areas disaster areas. So what we are seeing in NO is the result of a convergence of factors:
First, the storm damage was bad, but the flooding has made relief efforts ten times harder than anything they could have imagined. Second, Mayor Nagin’s performance has been pathetic. This is the worst case of poor planning and criminal incompetence I’ve ever seen. Like I said, Bush declared the gulf coast area a Federal Disaster area on Saturday – two days before Katrina hit. That freed up FEMA resources for local and state coordinators and allowed for the pre-positioning of supplies so they could be rapidly deployed to the affected areas. Mayor Nagin waited until the last minute to call for an evacuation of the city, but the poorest people could not evacuate – why weren’t school busses used to get them out of town? Mayor Nagin made the last minute decision to declare the Superdome and COnvention centers as refuge relocation points – why weren’t they stocked with water, food, bedding, generators, and fuel? Why weren’t hospitals offered additional resources by the Mayors office? Mayor Nagin made the decision to allow looting and told the police to focus on Search and Rescue – but looting hinders S&R efforts (as we’ve seen) and no one I know could believe that decision – it’s emergency management 101, preserving order preserves life. There’s plenty of blame to go around – Blanco deserves her share too – but the real culprit in the aftermath here is Nagin.
That would be the Mayor of New Orleans, the guy who neglected to utilize these funny looking things:
Of course, because he was ranting and raving about getting the Feds in there faster and not ‘doing enough,’ he has achieved hero status in some circles:
Since he isn’t getting the Giuliani treatment, largely because he’s dealing with a far more incompetent federal bureaucracy and he’s calling out the fuckups, I’ve decided to point out that New Orleans mayor Ray Nagin is kicking ass and taking names.
That’s real goddamned leadership. He can’t save the city by himself. Louisiana can’t save the city by itself. At this point in 2001, Bush had already picked up his firefighter photo-op, had already made the requisite promises and speeches. Nagin is dealing with a liquid Hiroshima, and while people are suffering and dying, he’s got to deal with the “hard questions” about whether his city should be destroyed or merely given up on.
Nagin is Giuliani without the institutional support, dealing with what’s arguably a much more difficult situation. He’s not Republican, however, which excludes him from being an American hero among the conserverati. Sad thing is, we could use a lot more like him.
Bush = Evil
Nagin = Hero
FEMA has made some mistakes, but when the post-mortem is done on this, Mayor Nagin is not going to be the Great American Hero some have deluded themselves into believing.