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George Cleveland
September 9th, 2005, 04:35 PM
What the hell...

An old friend sent me this link:


http://www.socialistworker.org/2005-2/556/556_04_RealHeroes.shtml


Obviously a biased source but on the other hand only a fraction of
their allegations have to be true to be pretty damaging.


g.c.

"... For Justice thunders condemnation... "

Ken Fortenberry
September 9th, 2005, 05:00 PM
George Cleveland wrote:
> What the hell...
>
> An old friend sent me this link:
>
>
> http://www.socialistworker.org/2005-2/556/556_04_RealHeroes.shtml
>
>
> Obviously a biased source but on the other hand only a fraction of
> their allegations have to be true to be pretty damaging.

That first-hand report rings true, unlike the stories
of Dickie "On The Scene" Dean.

--
Ken Fortenberry

Tim J.
September 9th, 2005, 05:08 PM
Ken Fortenberry typed:
> George Cleveland wrote:
>> What the hell...
>>
>> An old friend sent me this link:
>>
>> http://www.socialistworker.org/2005-2/556/556_04_RealHeroes.shtml
>>
>> Obviously a biased source but on the other hand only a fraction of
>> their allegations have to be true to be pretty damaging.
>
> That first-hand report rings true, unlike the stories
> of Dickie "On The Scene" Dean.

Sorry, can't read that one until they change the title. Any article that
starts with "The real heroes and *sheroes* of New Orleans" has just got to
be full of crap. ;-)
--
TL,
Tim
------------------------
http://css.sbcma.com/timj/

Ken Fortenberry
September 9th, 2005, 05:12 PM
Tim J. wrote:
> Ken Fortenberry typed:
>>George Cleveland wrote:
>>
>>>What the hell...
>>>
>>>An old friend sent me this link:
>>>
>>>http://www.socialistworker.org/2005-2/556/556_04_RealHeroes.shtml
>>>
>>>Obviously a biased source but on the other hand only a fraction of
>>>their allegations have to be true to be pretty damaging.
>>
>>That first-hand report rings true, unlike the stories
>>of Dickie "On The Scene" Dean.
>
>
> Sorry, can't read that one until they change the title. Any article that
> starts with "The real heroes and *sheroes* of New Orleans" has just got to
> be full of crap. ;-)

Minds are like parachutes, Timmmaaaaay, they only work when open. ;-)

--
Ken Fortenberry

George Cleveland
September 9th, 2005, 05:27 PM
On Fri, 9 Sep 2005 12:08:03 -0400, "Tim J."
> wrote:

>Ken Fortenberry typed:
>> George Cleveland wrote:
>>> What the hell...
>>>
>>> An old friend sent me this link:
>>>
>>> http://www.socialistworker.org/2005-2/556/556_04_RealHeroes.shtml
>>>
>>> Obviously a biased source but on the other hand only a fraction of
>>> their allegations have to be true to be pretty damaging.
>>
>> That first-hand report rings true, unlike the stories
>> of Dickie "On The Scene" Dean.
>
>Sorry, can't read that one until they change the title. Any article that
>starts with "The real heroes and *sheroes* of New Orleans" has just got to
>be full of crap. ;-)
That *was* pretty lame.

On the other hand the writers of the piece weren't the same ones who
came up with the headline.

As a person who had dealings long ago with Socialist Workers I would
take anything they say with a large grain of salt. (Hell, I take
anything anyone says with a grain of salt. Its a wonder my blood
pressure isn't higher.) But... there are certain claims they made that
could be verified.

Were people prevented from fleeing the city by sheriff employees?
Was the operation these people set up distributing water etc. also
shutdown?

One of the posters here expressed the sentiment that he would have
evacuated even if he had to walk. These folks are claiming they tried
to do just that and they were prevented from doing so by the local
authorities. Seems to be a serious enough charge to be investigated.



g.c.

rw
September 9th, 2005, 05:32 PM
Tim J. wrote:
>
> Sorry, can't read that one until they change the title. Any article that
> starts with "The real heroes and *sheroes* of New Orleans" has just got to
> be full of crap. ;-)

Maybe you'll enjoy this Tom Tomorrow cartoon:

http://tinyurl.com/dr4j7

--
Cut "to the chase" for my email address.

John Hightower
September 9th, 2005, 05:37 PM
"Ken Fortenberry" > Minds are like parachutes, Timmmaaaaay, they only work
when open. ;-)
>
> --
> Ken Fortenberry

now that's funny!
jh

Tim J.
September 9th, 2005, 06:19 PM
John Hightower typed:
> "Ken Fortenberry" > Minds are like parachutes, Timmmaaaaay, they only
> work when open. ;-)
>>
>> --
>> Ken Fortenberry
>
> now that's funny!

I'm glad someone else picked that up. Ken's probably busy listening to Rush,
so he may not see this until later this afternoon.
--
TL,
Tim
------------------------
http://css.sbcma.com/timj/

September 9th, 2005, 07:22 PM
Why do you hate Iran? <G>

September 10th, 2005, 03:23 PM
On Fri, 09 Sep 2005 10:35:01 -0500, George Cleveland
> wrote:

>What the hell...
>
>An old friend sent me this link:
>
>
>http://www.socialistworker.org/2005-2/556/556_04_RealHeroes.shtml
>
>
>Obviously a biased source but on the other hand only a fraction of
>their allegations have to be true to be pretty damaging.
>
>
>g.c.
>
>"... For Justice thunders condemnation... "

And here's another of a similar vein and source:

http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/berkowitz090905.html

And when you read it, if you read it, try to read it with a critical
eye, noting the similarities and discrepancies, but also noting things
such as the fact that these folks were mostly white, had money, at least
a couple of days food and water pre-storm (and certainly, the
opportunity to stock up pre-storm), etc. What kind of people have been
created when, if they don't get Government-provided food and water
within _3 days_ after such a disaster, it becomes "leaving people to
starve?" And no, I'm making no reference to color - again, apparently,
the people writing and being discussed in these pieces were mostly
well-off, even spoiled, white folks.

What strikes me is the writers of both of these pieces are just the type
of whiny, affluent white folks that supposed "liberals" are accusing of
not caring. I really don't recall much in either piece about what any
of these, er, brave survivors did to help their fellow man, only about
how hard it was on them. The socialist piece did, interestingly, talk
about how OTHERS around them helped their fellow man, all the while
bitching about, again, how hard it was on the author.

Bottom line - just more bull**** from people with agendas separate,
miles apart from, and really, in direct opposition to, those of all
colors and socio-economic levels who actually live here...and, of
course, have refuges in Iowa....

R

September 10th, 2005, 03:54 PM
On Fri, 09 Sep 2005 11:27:12 -0500, George Cleveland
> wrote:

>On Fri, 9 Sep 2005 12:08:03 -0400, "Tim J."
> wrote:
>
>>Ken Fortenberry typed:
>>> George Cleveland wrote:
>>>> What the hell...
>>>>
>>>> An old friend sent me this link:
>>>>
>>>> http://www.socialistworker.org/2005-2/556/556_04_RealHeroes.shtml
>>>>
>>>> Obviously a biased source but on the other hand only a fraction of
>>>> their allegations have to be true to be pretty damaging.
>>>
>>> That first-hand report rings true, unlike the stories
>>> of Dickie "On The Scene" Dean.
>>
>>Sorry, can't read that one until they change the title. Any article that
>>starts with "The real heroes and *sheroes* of New Orleans" has just got to
>>be full of crap. ;-)
> That *was* pretty lame.
>
> On the other hand the writers of the piece weren't the same ones who
>came up with the headline.
>
>As a person who had dealings long ago with Socialist Workers I would
>take anything they say with a large grain of salt. (Hell, I take
>anything anyone says with a grain of salt. Its a wonder my blood
>pressure isn't higher.) But... there are certain claims they made that
>could be verified.
>
> Were people prevented from fleeing the city by sheriff employees?
>Was the operation these people set up distributing water etc. also
>shutdown?
>
>One of the posters here expressed the sentiment that he would have
>evacuated even if he had to walk. These folks are claiming they tried
>to do just that and they were prevented from doing so by the local
>authorities. Seems to be a serious enough charge to be investigated.
>
Reasonable questions and here's my answer, FWIW:

From Monday to about Wednesday/Thursday, it was chaos or nearly so in
about 100,000 square miles. That chaos was nobody's "fault" - it was
the result of a storm that trashed the entire area. It took chainsaws
and/or heavy equipment to get down streets, and all major highways had
some damage, including bridges _gone_ (not potentially unsafe or cracked
- _gone_, as in not there anymore) and/or hundreds of tons - yes, tons -
of sand and debris covering them. No airport in the area was really
serviceable, and most, if not all, of the harbors and transit waterways
were equally wrecked. Now, combine that infrastructure damage with
almost no communications beyond radio to radio, pockets of people
_EVERYWHERE_, some in need of immediate rescue, looting beginning from
the get-go, including firearms and ammo, and in the case of New Orleans,
with people shooting at helicopters and rescue workers. Frankly, the
fact that these whiny little snots got water and food and evac'd in
3-4-5 days is more a testament to a whole bunch of folks of all
political parties than a reason to investigate them, but, hey, as
always, YMMV...

As to the confrontation on the bridge, I heard about stuff like that,
and it is probably true as to people being prevented from going into
other areas/parishes. But it had nothing to do with race - it had to do
with the breakdown of law and order in New Orleans proper. And that, to
me, is a telling and important point: only in New Orleans proper was
there the extreme level of looting, gunplay, and criminal activity, and
not allowing it to spread seemed and seems only sensible. Now, is it
possible that some innocents were prevented from crossing a bridge into
another parish? Almost certainly. But as they would have been no
better off across the bridge, they weren't harmed by that prevention.

HTH,
R

Thomas Littleton
September 10th, 2005, 04:42 PM
> wrote in message

But it had nothing to do with race - it had to do
> with the breakdown of law and order in New Orleans proper. And that, to
> me, is a telling and important point: only in New Orleans proper was
> there the extreme level of looting, gunplay, and criminal activity,

At times, this past couple of weeks, I have thought about a discussion, er,
debate, er whatever(thank goodness for your level headed spouse, or we would
have set upon one another with crab forks after a couple more beers<g>). I
was trying, although near-delerious, to make a case for preventing the
development of a society where the "haves" separate rapidly from the "have
nots". I described how, historically, that type of situation led to anarchy
and revolution. To some small extent, I think we saw proof of that in New
Orleans, and if I am correct, it is a frightening glimpse of where this
nation is headed. Farbeit from me to come up with an easy solution, and I am
of the opinion that we have to get the Gulf mess headed further towards
recovery before trying to have a national debate. Still, the evolution of
the US over the past 25 years or so disturbs me, the idea that maybe 2% of
the populace is distancing themselves in true economic terms from the other
98% is going to breed more, and deeper issues. Just passing a thought along,
hopefully no readers see it as a "blame Bush", or "blame anybody"
observation.
Tom

September 10th, 2005, 05:02 PM
On Fri, 09 Sep 2005 11:27:12 -0500, George Cleveland
> wrote:

>On Fri, 9 Sep 2005 12:08:03 -0400, "Tim J."
> wrote:
>
>>Ken Fortenberry typed:
>>> George Cleveland wrote:
>>>> What the hell...
>>>>
>>>> An old friend sent me this link:
>>>>
>>>> http://www.socialistworker.org/2005-2/556/556_04_RealHeroes.shtml
>>>>
>>>> Obviously a biased source but on the other hand only a fraction of
>>>> their allegations have to be true to be pretty damaging.
>>>
>>> That first-hand report rings true, unlike the stories
>>> of Dickie "On The Scene" Dean.
>>
>>Sorry, can't read that one until they change the title. Any article that
>>starts with "The real heroes and *sheroes* of New Orleans" has just got to
>>be full of crap. ;-)
> That *was* pretty lame.
>
> On the other hand the writers of the piece weren't the same ones who
>came up with the headline.
>
>As a person who had dealings long ago with Socialist Workers I would
>take anything they say with a large grain of salt. (Hell, I take
>anything anyone says with a grain of salt. Its a wonder my blood
>pressure isn't higher.) But... there are certain claims they made that
>could be verified.
>
> Were people prevented from fleeing the city by sheriff employees?
>Was the operation these people set up distributing water etc. also
>shutdown?
>
>One of the posters here expressed the sentiment that he would have
>evacuated even if he had to walk. These folks are claiming they tried
>to do just that and they were prevented from doing so by the local
>authorities. Seems to be a serious enough charge to be investigated.
>
Reasonable questions and here's my answer, FWIW:

From Monday to about Wednesday/Thursday, it was chaos or nearly so in
about 100,000 square miles. That chaos was nobody's "fault" - it was
the result of a storm that trashed the entire area. It took chainsaws
and/or heavy equipment to get down streets, and all major highways had
some damage, including bridges _gone_ (not potentially unsafe or cracked
- _gone_, as in not there anymore) and/or hundreds of tons - yes, tons -
of sand and debris covering them. No airport in the area was really
serviceable, and most, if not all, of the harbors and transit waterways
were equally wrecked. Now, combine that infrastructure damage with
almost no communications beyond radio to radio, pockets of people
_EVERYWHERE_, some in need of immediate rescue, looting beginning from
the get-go, including firearms and ammo, and in the case of New Orleans,
with people shooting at helicopters and rescue workers. Frankly, the
fact that these whiny little snots got water and food and evac'd in
3-4-5 days is more a testament to a whole bunch of folks of all
political parties than a reason to investigate them, but, hey, as
always, YMMV...

As to the confrontation on the bridge, I heard about stuff like that,
and it is probably true as to people being prevented from going into
other areas/parishes. But it had nothing to do with race - it had to do
with the breakdown of law and order in New Orleans proper. And that, to
me, is a telling and important point: only in New Orleans proper was
there the extreme level of looting, gunplay, and criminal activity, and
not allowing it to spread seemed and seems only sensible. Now, is it
possible that some innocents were prevented from crossing a bridge into
another parish? Almost certainly. But as they would have been no
better off across the bridge, they weren't harmed by that prevention.

HTH,
R

September 10th, 2005, 07:43 PM
On Sat, 10 Sep 2005 15:42:58 GMT, "Thomas Littleton"
> wrote:

>
> wrote in message
>
> But it had nothing to do with race - it had to do
>> with the breakdown of law and order in New Orleans proper. And that, to
>> me, is a telling and important point: only in New Orleans proper was
>> there the extreme level of looting, gunplay, and criminal activity,
>
>At times, this past couple of weeks, I have thought about a discussion, er,
>debate, er whatever(thank goodness for your level headed spouse, or we would
>have set upon one another with crab forks after a couple more beers<g>). I
>was trying, although near-delerious, to make a case for preventing the
>development of a society where the "haves" separate rapidly from the "have
>nots". I described how, historically, that type of situation led to anarchy
>and revolution. To some small extent, I think we saw proof of that in New
>Orleans, and if I am correct, it is a frightening glimpse of where this
>nation is headed. Farbeit from me to come up with an easy solution, and I am
>of the opinion that we have to get the Gulf mess headed further towards
>recovery before trying to have a national debate. Still, the evolution of
>the US over the past 25 years or so disturbs me, the idea that maybe 2% of
>the populace is distancing themselves in true economic terms from the other
>98% is going to breed more, and deeper issues. Just passing a thought along,
>hopefully no readers see it as a "blame Bush", or "blame anybody"
>observation.
> Tom
>

Well, let me make it a "blame somebody" observation:

For the most part, folks in NO are law-abiding and decent, be they
black, white, rich, poor, or sorta in-between, both as to race and
status. The criminal activity situation in NO has nothing to do with
the poor and downtrodden revolting against some upper class. There are
lots more decent folks, who happen to also be poor, in NO and all over
the area, from west of NO to Mobile, AL, and of all colors, who didn't
loot, shoot, or otherwise cause mayhem. This has to do with the
subclass of lawless animals (yes, mostly black) bred into existence by,
amongst other things, a welfare/handout state taken way too far by a
bunch of sorry-assed guilty white supposedly "liberal" enablers,
sorry-assed black "leaders" like Jackson and Sharpton who play them like
fiddles, and the sour creme on top of the stinking froth, sorry-assed
white pols like Kennedy (any of several) and the Clintons, who use it
all to keep themselves in some form of power.

As to the race aspect, notice Jesse and Al didn't tarnish their jewelry
actually doing anything but running their mouths, as opposed to a number
of black preachers, real men of God and their fellow man, who were
actually working and who stopped just long enough to tell them to shut
up.

And of course, also contributing to the problem are things like the fact
that if Bill Cosby had posted the above, it'd be "something to really
think about" for some, whereas now, it'll just be "Dicklet" or some
other such silly-assed insult from those same folks.

R

Thomas Littleton
September 10th, 2005, 11:15 PM
> wrote in message

> This has to do with the
> subclass of lawless animals (yes, mostly black) bred into existence by,
> amongst other things, a welfare/handout state taken way too far by a
> bunch of sorry-assed guilty white supposedly "liberal" enablers,

So, to follow your logic, I am to assume that, say, Sweden will erupt into a
lawless state of chaos in a similar natural disaster. I suspect not. It has
more to do with a society establishing a permanent underclass with
inadaquate support systems in place to ever rise out of that state. It also
has to do with an unfettered worship of firearms, coupled with ridiculously
easy access, making the arming of the lawless quite easy to accomplish.
What is kind of frightening is seeing how quickly all in the area are now
arming themselves to the teeth. Eventually, those guns purchased in what has
been reported as a run on gun stores in the Gulf States, will in some
percentage find their way to the streets in that region, rendering the whole
area less safe than before, I would suspect.

>and the Clintons,

no sordid political blame game can omit these favorite pariahs. Still, I
dare say the whole situation post-Katrina would have been handled in a
somewhat better fashion had old Bill been in charge, as he possessed, at the
very least, a sense of humanity. Further, he, of all recent Democrat leaders
did more to try to move Welfare from a permanence to aid when needed, so is
therefore hard to accept lumping in with some of the others you mentioned.
Worth noting, Bill actually saw the problems with political hacks at FEMA
and worked pretty hard at changing that status, starting with the
leadership. That all changed when the 'lil cowpoke got to be President and
appointed an Arabian Horse judge to the job, with no further credentials
beyond political donor status.
Tom

Wolfgang
September 17th, 2005, 05:52 PM
> wrote in message
...

> ...whereas now, it'll just be "Dicklet" or some
> other such silly-ass...

You miscapitalized "dicklet".

Who, after a week in the wilds of da Yoop among the (comparatively) highly
(if cheaply) educated, is pleased to see that dicklet still has nothing to
say......and continues to say it so verbosely and hilariously.

Wolfgang
gee but it's great to be back home.....

Jeff Miller
September 17th, 2005, 08:19 PM
Wolfgang wrote:

> > wrote in message
> ...
>
>
>>...whereas now, it'll just be "Dicklet" or some
>>other such silly-ass...
>
>
> You miscapitalized "dicklet".
>
> Who, after a week in the wilds of da Yoop among the (comparatively) highly
> (if cheaply) educated, is pleased to see that dicklet still has nothing to
> say......and continues to say it so verbosely and hilariously.
>
> Wolfgang
> gee but it's great to be back home.....
>
>

dammit wolf... how about some lines writ about the lands far from the
maddening crowd? there's yoopin to be reported.

jeff (...and, uh, welcome back! <g>)

Wolfgang
September 18th, 2005, 03:22 PM
"Jeff Miller" > wrote in message
news:6%ZWe.26325$hp.1365@lakeread08...
> Wolfgang wrote:
>
>> gee but it's great to be back home.....
>
> dammit wolf... how about some lines writ about the lands far from the
> maddening crowd? there's yoopin to be reported.

TR of one sort or another is forthcoming. I thought, in the interest of
fairness, that I should give others a day or two to get in their licks
first. :)

> jeff (...and, uh, welcome back! <g>)

Thanks.

Wolfgang