Blogcritics On Hurricane Katrina - Page 13

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Blogcritics Hurricane Katrina Relief Fund
With over one thousand site contributors and hundreds of thousands of readers, collectively we can make a difference.
Posted to Culture by Lisa Hoover on August 31, 2005 01:30 PM

Randy Hurricane Katrina and Randy Newman's Louisiana 1927
Watching a culture and possibly a city drown is so unbelievably overwhelming sad that I sit in front of the news stupefied at the human loss, economic loss and potential cultural loss. While it doesn't hold the same emotional bereavement of...
Posted to Culture by Elana Centor on August 31, 2005 01:25 PM

PODCAST: THE T.A.S. SHOW4 - Colors, Katrina
Hurricane Katrina's aftermath is heavy on my mind , but hey, I try and bring a little hope through music
Posted to Music by Temple Stark on August 31, 2005 12:38 PM

Is There Blame for Katrina?
In 2005, humans are still no match for nature unleashed. Does someone deserve blame for that?
Posted to Culture by ProgressiveDepot on August 31, 2005 11:40 AM

Hurricane Katrina: Larry King Has Lost It
Watching Larry King last night on CNN, I was reminded of one thing: this man has clearly lost touch. Marring an otherwise excellent Live! program focusing, of course, on the wake of Hurricane Katrina,...
Posted to Video by The Errant Fool on August 31, 2005 10:52 AM

Hurricane Victims Need Your Help!
Last September, Central Florida was smashed by two powerful storms, hurricanes Frances and Jeanne. Both made landfall just south of where I live. The house I was renting at the time was without power for almost the entire month, which...
Posted to Culture by RJ on August 31, 2005 12:39 AM

Deathtoll Climbs Along With Gas Prices After Katrina
Katrina leaves rising death tolls and gas prices.
Posted to Culture by Erin McMaster on August 30, 2005 03:28 PM

Many Victims of Katrina Have Themselves To Blame
All the early warning technology in the world is no match for human stupidity.
Posted to Politics by Robert Burke on August 30, 2005 02:08 PM

Weekly BlogScan: Blogging Katrina (Special Edition)
Hurricanes striking the eastern coast of Florida are a seasonal cliché. Floridians plan for them, stocking plywood and bottled water in preparation for each year's big blow. 1992's Hurricane Andrew notwithstanding (the "costliest disaster in U.S history" with 15 directly-...
Posted to Culture by DrPat on August 30, 2005 12:37 PM

Katrina - Disaster and Relief
Though New Orleans was spared from some of the worst that had been feared for it by Hurricane Katrina, the Big Easy still suffered greatly and other Gulf regions are even worse off. "The devastation down there is just enormous," Mississippi...
Posted to Culture by Eric Olsen on August 30, 2005 08:50 AM

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  • 1 - Nancy

    Aug 29, 2005 at 8:46 am

    Ouch! I think most people would have laid bets it was California was going to disappear into the ocean first, not New Orleans. They're talking a 28-foot water rise; that might reach all the way up to Natchez.

  • 2 - Eric Olsen

    Aug 29, 2005 at 8:49 am

    is anyone any near the area? Would appreciate hearing how you are doing and what you are seeing. Hope you are well

  • 3 - Natalie Davis

    Aug 29, 2005 at 8:56 am

    Ditto -- warm wishes and concerned beams to all dealing with the crisis!

  • 4 - Justene

    Aug 29, 2005 at 9:53 am

    The hurricane jogged east of NO and it still sounds like Armageddon. Isolated reports that the Hilton, the Hyatt and the Sheraton are all suffering major damage with windows blown out on the upper floors that many thought would be safe.

  • 5 - JR

    Aug 29, 2005 at 10:05 am

    The Bush Curse continues.

  • 6 - DrPat

    Aug 29, 2005 at 10:31 am

    The fact that the storm weakened from Cat5 to Cat3, and swung east just enough to lower the feared 28-foot storm surge to 15 feet (just below the levee height) sounds more like a blessing than a curse to me...

  • 7 - Dawn

    Aug 29, 2005 at 10:42 am

    It's very distressing that the official shelter for those people who couldn't evacuate isn't holding up very well. I can't imagine being with my children in a public facility during a natural disaster and then having that facility begin to crumble.

    Prayers, many prayers.

  • 8 - Nancy

    Aug 29, 2005 at 10:52 am

    I wonder how many are still stuck on the jammed highways trying to ride this out? And what about the pets? I wouldn't leave unless I could take my 'kids' with me, any more than I would abandon actual children, but most people are pretty cavalier about their animals. When was the last time something this big came thru? From what I can tell, this one sounds bigger than Camille?

  • 9 - Scott

    Aug 29, 2005 at 12:10 pm

    I am in Pensacola, Florida and although we are a fair distance from the center of Katrina we are still feeling the effects. Heavy rain and alot of wind, occasionally gusting in the 70 mph range. Thankfully, I haven't seen any structural damage thus far or any toppled trees. And we've had our fair share of that with Hurricane Ivan last year and Hurricane Dennis last month. Given the situation, it could have been much worse for us but it sounds like New Orleans, Gulfport, Biloxi and Mobile are bearing more of the brunt of this.

  • 10 - Nancy

    Aug 29, 2005 at 12:32 pm

    Latest update: storm has dropped way down to a category 2 once it hit land. Some flooding in the very low part, but hardly what was predicted: no one getting washed out to sea or entire neighborhoods blown away. Overhype by (hopeful?) media, as usual.

  • 11 - Scott

    Aug 29, 2005 at 12:57 pm

    Well, make no mistake Nancy, there is certainly extensive damage to much of the gulf coast. As for overhype, I don't think it was over-hyped at all. It was a category 5 storm, more powerful than camille at one point, heading for New Orleans which we all know is in a "soup bowl" with water on all sides. The potential for loss of life was massive. We will see what the actual number is in the next couple of days...

  • 12 - Nancy

    Aug 29, 2005 at 1:07 pm

    Oh, I didn't say there wasn't; just not the kind of end-of-the-world, Galveston-6000-people-dead type damage the media seem to have been hoping would occur. No matter; they'll make the most of this one, I'm sure.

  • 13 - Eric Olsen

    Aug 29, 2005 at 1:09 pm

    I would say "caution and luck won the day" rather than media over-hype for this - better safe than sorry.

    And the radar is down per the second pic above, that can't be a good sign

  • 14 - KAte

    Aug 29, 2005 at 2:35 pm

    Does anyone know what's happened to the various communities south of New Orleans? Ballowe's CREOLE FOLK TALES (1948, LSU Press) presented a clear picture of the changing nature of the Delta, subsequently "contained" or "managed" by the Army Corps of Engineers. Am curious about the effects of Katrina on all that "engineering." Also, any reports on the oil refineries and chemical plants along the river between NO and Baton Rouge?

  • 15 - Eric Olsen

    Aug 29, 2005 at 2:42 pm

    excellent question - anyone in that area?

  • 16 - Heloise

    Aug 29, 2005 at 7:16 pm

    It's the OIL stupid

    I dubbed it "Killer Katrina" on my blog early Saturday morning and soon the media was calling it the same. But I have two other words: oil reserves!

    I have lived in New Orleans (the asshole of America) but for many reasons--I can't live there. I do visit my family still stuck in that butt of a city every 5 years or so. But all kidding aside it is one of the MOST important cities in America.

    Today some co-workers were calling it a scam or "politics" that oil prices would rise because of Killer Katrina. I wouldn't tell anybody you didn't know that 25% of our oil reserves and that major oil rigs were located in the Gulf...duh.

    I couldn't let that slide so I educated them on the Port of New Orleans and surrounding ports. A funny thing also happened today in my thoughts about this mess just as I was thinking that we need to put pressure on the White House to release some oil, it was announced that Bush was thinking of releasing oil from the reserves.

    Mr. President I think it's high time you do just that.

    We in Texas are about to be rich in natural gas reserves due to the shale deposits recently found here. But it will take a couple of years before it can be bought on the American market. My advice to Bush: don't compound your mistakes by not opening up the oil reserves.

    When students do something new they show great trepidation--i.e. afraid to make a mistake. I told them it's not a crime to make a mistake. But when they do make a mistake they'd quickly lie, and try to hide it by copying from another student. A student who may have the right methods and the right answers==don't confuse method and process with outcome.

    As a country we now have to deal with the outcome of Iraq, a big mistake, by not being afraid to correct that mistake by using the data/answers that go with that mistake. Don't make the mistake inexperienced students do: lie and think that the teacher won't notice!!!

    They do this by "borrowing" an answer and filling in the blank line with a response that was not honestly arrived at. I believe we did not earn the right to invade Iraq by correct process, CIA intelligence, and compounded that mistake by quickly adding lies. Lies that the Bush admin hoped the American public would be unable to detect--ever. Wrong.

    But to their credit they were right in their strategy that we would not catch the LIES in time to stop the wrong war.

    Bush you need to slam dunk some of those oil reserves on us.

    Finally, as for the damage, as per usual the poorest and the blackest in that city will suffer from the most water in their yards, and the fewest dollars in their pockets.

    Heloise

  • 17 - DrPat

    Aug 29, 2005 at 8:05 pm

    Kate, the post titled "Katrina could alter Louisiana geography, Mississippi river flow" contains some discussion of the Mississippi engineering works and the possible impact of Katrina's rains.

  • 18 - Mike Hunt

    Aug 29, 2005 at 8:39 pm

    Why does god allow these disasters? I it payback for bad deeds? The Casinos disappeared in MS is that God's will?

  • 19 - Silas Kain

    Aug 29, 2005 at 8:42 pm

    Man plans. God laughs.

  • 20 - Connie

    Aug 29, 2005 at 9:10 pm

    I haven't seen any entries here on charities that are providing relief to hurricane victims.

    I think we should set an example to other bloggers and recommend that people make donations. (I gave earlier today.)

    On my blog, I included links to 7 organizations such as the American Red Cross, etc., which are now taking donations.



    Connie

  • 21 - Silas Kain

    Aug 29, 2005 at 11:07 pm

    I couldn't agree more, Connie.

  • 22 - bullshit bully

    Aug 30, 2005 at 10:06 am

    to bad evil us get it from all sides

  • 23 - charlie

    Aug 30, 2005 at 1:47 pm

    this is going to tie a couple of topics together.....Rush Limbo has been saying that the president, {you know, the moron that continues to lie to us} {okay, for those of you that love him, I'll spell it out for ya...
    B U S H} anyway.. rush says the president never really takes a vacation, that he has all the technology with him at all times and never is away from the job...so he CAN
    still go for a five week vacation in BEAUTIFUL Texas {I've been to Texas..a lot..BEAUTIFUL it ain't} and stay just as informed {well, as well as he can be} as if he stayed in D.C.. So how come he has to go back to D>C> to monitor the relief efforts re: Katrina?
    Rush certainly didn't lie {again} did he?

  • 24 - Silas Kain

    Aug 30, 2005 at 2:05 pm

    Now the White House has announced that the President has 'cut short' his vacation.

    Two weeks ago: vacation
    10 days ago: working vacation
    7 days ago: not a vacation at all
    5 days ago: Oval Office carpet change
    Today: vacation cut short

    Now here's the rub:
    Can someone explain to me why it has taken 5 years for the White House to change the carpet in the Oval Office? Were they still trying to dig up Clinton DNA samples in anticipation of the 2008 elections? Mr. Rove, care to comment?

  • 25 - Durwood

    Aug 30, 2005 at 6:06 pm

    Evacuation should have been mandatory loading of box cars and train transport from New Orleans and other areas to get people to safety. The fact that Michael Brown and other Emergency workers at FEMA do not employ such pre-disaster action is unconscionable. Virtually all of the people that stayed behind because they "had no place to go" should have been forced to leave under marshal law. We certainly would not be seeing the looting that is now occurring.

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