Though all of my clan seems to be safe, the situation worsens in the hurricane-struck states. Via Boing Boing: an e-mail from a rescue worker in N'awlins, with commentary. First, the commentary:

The poorest 20% (you can argue with the number -- 10%? 18%? no one knows) of the city was left behind to drown. This was the plan. Forget the sanctimonious bullshit about the bullheaded people who wouldn't leave. The evacuation plan was strictly laissez-faire. It depended on privately owned vehicles, and on having ready cash to fund an evacuation. The planners knew full well that the poor, who in new orleans are overwhelmingly black, wouldn't be able to get out. The resources -- meaning, the political will -- weren't there to get them out.

White per capita income in Orleans parish, 2000 census: $31,971. Black per capita: $11,332. Median *household* income in B.W. Cooper (Calliope) Housing Projects, 2000: $13,263.


And snips of the e-mail:

There are dead animals floating in the water, pets left behind. Surely people thought they would be back to collect the pets. Not so. The rescuers smell like gas when they come back in; there's gas in all of the water that consumes the area. Fires are burning all over the place. Our teams are tired and they are thirsty and they are hungry. And they have a place to sleep and water to drink and food to eat. I can only imagine how the people without these "luxuries" are feeling right now....

Maybe it's not our worst nightmare scenario, but it still a nightmare.
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From: [identity profile] jkgriffin.livejournal.com


Now I'm feeling it, and I'm angry.

That's unforgivable. Disasters happen, but that makes me angry. Because I believe it.
.

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