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An anxious quiet settles over those determined to wait
Houston Chronicle ^ | Sept. 10, 2005 | TONY FREEMANTLE

Posted on 09/10/2005 6:36:22 AM PDT by Archidamus

NEW ORLEANS - They sit on their front porches staring blankly into space. They sit on folding chairs in trash-filled parking lots drinking warm beer. They sit in their driveways watching as heavily armed soldiers patrol their neighborhood and helicopters thud past overhead.

For the few who remain, there isn't much else to do these days in the Big Easy except wait.

But wait for what? For the power to be restored? For the trash to be picked up? For someone to spray the city with deodorant and rid it of the awful stench of rot and decay that infuses the air? For the police to come knocking on the door and pull them out of their houses? For things to be like they used to be? For a miracle, maybe?

It's been nearly two weeks now, since Hurricane Katrina turned life on its head. After the looting and chaos of the first week, the panic has abated, the desperation has eased, but an eerie silence has settled like a pall on the city.

Frightened, emaciated dogs wander abandoned neighborhoods. Every now and then, rescuers still pull another survivor out of the attic of a flooded house, but that has become a rare event. Flocks of pigeons fatten themselves on garbage in the streets.

There are some signs of life. Bulldozers patrol the streets piling tons of tree limbs and other debris on the sidewalks. Some downtown hotels have started repairing the damage, perhaps in the vain hope that the tourists will return and the party will begin again.

Hard-hatted men are starting to restring the power lines and right the toppled poles. One by one, the levees are being repaired and the pumps that will drain the city are kicking back to life.

But this is a city without its people. They're in Houston, now, or Dallas, or Minnesota, or Jackson, Miss., and thousands of them will never return. Only a handful of holdouts remain, scrounging water and food where they can. For them, there is nothing to do except wait.

'I'm not leaving my house' Margarita Hernandez Lazaro sits alone on her tiny porch in front of her tiny house in Faubourg Marigny, her reed-thin forearms resting on the rail, waving her finger at a visitor who asks her why she won't leave. Why should she, she asks? This has been her home for 25 years. She has red beans and rice, jambalaya, coffee. And besides, her neighbor's dogs are locked up on the porch across the street and who will feed them if she goes?

She almost left on Tuesday, when soldiers pulled up in a truck so big it nearly dwarfed her house. They were gently leading the 63-year-old woman to her stairs, coaxing her, holding her by the elbow, edging her toward the truck.

"But where are you taking me?" she said.

"I don't know, ma'am," the soldier said. And then he mentioned something about a helicopter taking her out of the city.

"No. No. No. I'm not leaving my house," Hernandez said and sat herself down in her chair. Two days later she was still there, waiting for the soldiers to come back and forcefully take her away.

That is precisely what New Orleans Mayor C. Ray Nagin has vowed will happen to the stragglers who refuse to leave the city voluntarily. He is determined to empty out the city.

A personal secession A few miles away, but worlds apart, from Hernandez, sitting next to his Mercedes-Benz in the driveway of his mansion on St. Charles Avenue, a defiant Ashton O'Dwyer sips iced-down gin and tonics as he waits to see if the mayor will dare to physically remove a well-heeled citizen from his home.

He is angry. And he does not conceal his disdain for the mayor and the vast majority of his fellow residents. He has a shotgun and a sidearm. At times he paces up and down his driveway talking on his cell phone, waving his arms. A steady stream of television crews stop by to listen to his diatribes.

"I am announcing," he said one evening last week, "that I have seceded from the city of New Orleans, the state of Louisiana and the United States. I am now an independent nation."

On Magazine Street, in the shadows of downtown, Steve Thomas passes the time listening to his radio and waiting for his family, all of whom left town, to call him on the phone. He is also waiting for the nightmare to be over, for his neighbors to return to the houses he promised to watch over. He has food, water, kerosene for his lamps. His house is dry, his street is dry, he served with the 82nd Airborne in Vietnam in 1966 and he can look out for himself.

He cannot fathom why it is necessary for him to leave, but he, too, waits for the knock on the door.

Bodies also are waiting Even the dead wait. They float in water. They lie in attics or under the flood, snagged on Katrina's rubble before it was covered in filthy, black water. No one has any idea how many of them there are. Hundreds, certainly; possibly thousands.

Officials say they will be collected in due course, that they will be treated with the utmost dignity.

But two weeks after the storm they wait, just another ingredient of the toxic stew that still covers many neighborhoods to the rooftops.

By Thursday, the water that covered the Lower 9th Ward was gone, leaving behind a thick gray sludge that was drying and cracking in the heat. A hot wind blew through the deathly quiet streets, occasionally carrying with it the smell of death.

The only signs of life were the dogs. Some wandered about in a desperate search for food or tentatively lapped at the putrid puddles. Others bayed forlornly from behind locked doors. One mutt lay on the porch of its house, its head through the railings, waiting.

Marks of disaster Many of the houses bore the increasingly common mark of disaster — an X spray-painted on the walls with the date the structure was searched, the agency that searched it and either an L, to signify a live person inside, or DB to denote that a dead body had been found.

Some people apparently grew weary of waiting for the dead to be collected. Ed Nelson, a resident of the 8th Ward who said he was staying put only because there were still elderly people in their houses who needed his help, recounted how on Thursday morning, he saw a man pulling a cart up St. Claude Avenue. On the cart was a dead body, carefully wrapped in a blanket. Nelson said he had no idea where the man was taking the corpse.

"I never seen anything like that," Nelson said. "At first I though it was somebody tired and sleeping, but I got a better look and saw it was a body."

Nelson, a counselor at the child development center at a nearby U.S. Naval base, said he would probably leave in a few days if the people he was looking out for decided to leave.

But he would have to wait and see what happens, he said.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; US: Louisiana
KEYWORDS:
I would rather stay in my own house, even without power, than to be shut up with a bunch of strangers.
1 posted on 09/10/2005 6:36:23 AM PDT by Archidamus
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To: Archidamus
"He has food, water, kerosene for his lamps. His house is dry, his street is dry, he served with the 82nd Airborne in Vietnam in 1966 and he can look out for himself."

Sounds like he has everything he needs. It is stupid to evacuate everyone regardless of their circumstances. It is not going to take months for the city to begin operating with minimum services.
2 posted on 09/10/2005 6:38:29 AM PDT by Archidamus (We are wise because we are not so highly educated as to look down on our laws and customs)
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To: Archidamus

"just another ingredient of the toxic stew that still covers many neighborhoods to the rooftops."

The media sure love to hype some dirty water, don't they? While the water may not be fit to drink, the stuff is not nearly as deadly as the media like to pretend.


3 posted on 09/10/2005 6:40:22 AM PDT by Archidamus (We are wise because we are not so highly educated as to look down on our laws and customs)
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To: Archidamus

"They sit on folding chairs in trash-filled parking lots drinking warm beer."

This is what they did before the hurricane hit, too, so how is it different? It's too much work for them to get up and start trying to pick up trash, start shoveling out their houses, try to do something themselves rather than wait for Big Brother to do it. This piece tells us why too many of the "poor" did not leave - nobody picked them up, carried them off, and gave them handouts. This is the result of three generations of welfare dependency brought to us all by those good folks in the democrat party.


4 posted on 09/10/2005 6:46:29 AM PDT by astounded (We don't need no stinkin' rules of engagement...)
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To: astounded

..."he served with the 82nd Airborne in Vietnam in 1966"...

I believe the 82nd Airborne did not arrive in SEA until January 1968, at the height of the Tet Offensive. It was the 3rd Brigade, after its service in the DR for the previous 3 years.

This piece is typical of the know-nothing MSM with its portrayal of the poor, black, down-trodden, "Vietnam combat vet".


5 posted on 09/10/2005 7:05:04 AM PDT by astounded (We don't need no stinkin' rules of engagement...)
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To: Archidamus
I believe Nagin & co. are up to something nogood.

Forcefully evacuating people from their own homes 2 weeks after the storm is unnecessary. These people have successfully survived til now, and conditions will only improve with time.

Unless Nagin, Blanco, or Bush plan on going door-to-door, cleaning & fumigating every building, which I seriously doubt; these people are in no way hampering recovery efforts or security.

Just as people increasingly ignore curfews as time passes after a storm and the power begins to come back on; NOLA residents will start to filter back into the city until they become a flood. Ultimately, government(s) will be powerless to stop this, and they shouldn't try.

Without people, it is not a city!

My guess is that Nagin plans to condemn & bulldoze large, poor areas of NOLA, with no regard for private property rights, and no chance for the owners/occupants of these houses to claim salvageable property.

Using eminent domain, Nagin can cut deals with casinos & businesses to build on this freshly bulldozed land, with nobody even in town to protest the seizure of their property. In many cases, property owners wont even know until way too late.

This could be a good thing for NOLA in the long run - new commercial buildings & apartments could be built on tall pilings, new infrastructure, etc. But with the city empty of all but soldiers & politicians, and Nagin & Co. having the legal keys to every door in NOLA, many people are gonna get screwed!

And the beauty of it all is the Feds will pickup the ENTIRE tab!

Nagin's stomach must hurt from laughing so much!

Asking him to quit is like asking a gambler to return his winnings!
6 posted on 09/10/2005 7:53:28 AM PDT by Mister Da (Nuke 'em til they glow!)
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To: astounded

"they sit on folding chairs in trash filled parking lots drinking warm beer"
Thank you, astounded! Excellent observation! (reply post #4) This is an apt description of many people's pre-Katrina life!


7 posted on 09/10/2005 12:06:19 PM PDT by abovethefray
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To: Mister Da

I've been wondering if Nagin and Blanco (and Bush) had a plan the extends beyond the next ten minutes. You've just convinced me that they have. To my dismay.

I've been an admirer of W, contributed to his first campaign, voted for the guy twice. But after watching him remain quiet over and over as our rights rapidly disappear, I've pretty well gotten over that. Over the admiration.


8 posted on 09/10/2005 12:14:55 PM PDT by Sam Cree (absolute reality)
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