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Choosing Your Rescuer
My Sandmen ^ | 09.12.05 | Major Mike

Posted on 09/13/2005 8:51:46 AM PDT by Mr.Atos

Below was captured from Friday's Oregonian...

I came across this piece in the Oregonian Friday morning and I was a bit stunned by it. Portland State University student Deborah Harris makes, what I believe is a sincere attempt to explain why evacuees from the Gulf Coast may be reluctant to come to Portland for refuge, but I think, in the end, she has done more harm than good.

In her first paragraph, she immediately implies that race is a factor even when sheer survival is at stake…that rescue and relief efforts are somehow negated if those being helped are not being helped by those of the same color. I am taken aback by this on several levels.

First, I understand any gulf coast resident’s reluctance to leave the area. Nearly everything here is different…the weather, the topography, the general culture, etc. But more importantly, a displacement of this distance induces other logistical problems for the evacuees…cost to return, cost to connect with and visit with relatives, who may also be in the same situation, or enduring the pangs of the simple desire to return to where one grew up. All very understandable.

But certainly, trying to incorporate over 400,000 evacuees within a few hours of their immediate homes, is also a near impossibility. Local services are already stretched, and the ability of the cities and communities in the southern region to immediately embrace significant population changes is dubious. It is extremely likely that surplus housing does not exist in those areas that the evacuees would prefer to live. In that case, temporary, and I think I correctly view Portland as a temporary refuge for the evacuees, refuge must be found spread across the near entirety of this nation.

Four hundred thousand, needy, evacuees cannot just assimilate into Baton Rouge, Meridian, Lafayette…today. In time, yes. But to relieve the strain on all of the services in the region, many of the evacuees will have to move to unfamiliar territory, at least temporarily…Portland being one of the likely spots.

Secondly, I am insulted by her statement. When I was flying ejection seat equipped fighters, I had no choice whom worked on those life-saving devices…man/woman, black/white/Hispanic/Asian. I had to trust in each and every specially trained mechanic regardless of their socio-economic or racial status. At their core, race neutrality, racial blindness, and racial accptance hinge on the idea that those barriers are rapidly disassembled in extremis. This has been proven time and again in combat, in our emergency services, and on our sports fields. Trust is the building block that moves race relations forward faster than any other factor. Faster than the wholey created business of "diversity." Faster than the near continuous din of "racism" that permiates post-Katrina.

Embracing “diversity” (our buzzword for racial harmony), means not looking in the mirror, but looking out the door. Sometimes this means taking risks…trusting strangers, reaching out even though you are unaccustomed to it…getting outside your comfort zone. And in this emergency, this might be a good exercise for both the evacuees from the south and caregivers here in Portland. The volunteers sure seem willing. Couldn’t this connection actually strengthen racial ties here in Portland?

A study of Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, will show that meeting the basic needs of life, supercedes higher level needs in time of crisis. It doesn’t mean the relief agencies are entitled to be insensitive, but it does mean that the evacuees need to prioritize their needs…it is hard to eat a “diversity” sandwich. Let’s deal with the immediate needs, then we can move on to the higher level needs. Not ALL needs can be adequately accommodated all the time.

I suggest that the African-American population in Portland is sufficient in size to tend to the very specific cultural needs of any diverse evacuees, but is color required to tend to all needs? If this is the standard, then should all monies to support African-American evacuees come only from African-Americans? I think we would find, because of the size of the African-American population in this country, that this standard would result in a significantly lower level of care in meeting basic needs. Why not agree that cultural support could come from within the culturally unique communities, and that the bascis needs could come from the relief agencies already equipped to tend to the basic requirmentst?

As for “damaging caring hearts”, how would African-American volunteers feel if whites declined shelters offered in black neighborhoods? One word, offended. I understand that it may be impossible for some African-Americans to see past color…I understand what a profound impact race has played in their lives, and I understand they may feel more comfortable in black neighborhoods, but when food and shelter are declined in a time of emergency, because of race, it is hard not to be offended. And it is nearly impossible for that attitude not to do irreparable harm to race relations. Without the multitude of white volunteers throughout the country where would the rescue/relief/recovery effort be? Tread lightly here, the harm you do may not be measured until the next crisis.

As for mis-labeling of evacuee as refugees…a minor nuance in the dictionary…I looked it up. Maybe insensitive, but not unexpected at the local level by MSM wannabes. I doubt it was intended at all to imply a different class of citizenry. The blathering idiots on local TV stations, often misspeak dozens of times in their reports. Be insulted if you want to, but this should not be a barrier to needy evacuees receiving help and a place of respite.

I also think, based on the images of the looting and lawlessness, that was readily apparent in the Superdome, the Convention Center, and the streets of New Orleans…asking about safety is a legitimate question by neighbors, and possibly caregivers. It is easily put to bed by the experienced institutions handling the crisis. But it is legitimate to ask, answer, and put behind us. No reason to ignore the legitimate concerns of care givers and shelter neighbors, in light of the violence presented on TV, simply because one group might get insulted. When we mature as a racially neutral country we will come to miss these “insults” rather than see them at every turn.

Ms. Harris comes very close to espousing the idea that only African-Americans should, or can, adequately care for other African-Americans in need. If this is true, I am sure there are many white Americans out there that would let them carry the entirety of the burden…and it comes with a significant price tag, one I am not sure that the African-American community can carry alone.

This idea, is, regardless of intention, divisive to its core. As our country continues to move farther from the bonds of slavery, the inequities of segregation and pains of discrimination…these kinds of ideas need to be more closely examined before they are espoused, because, regardless of the beliefs in the black communities, a vast majority of whites are not bigots or racists, and to be eyed as one at every turn is becoming insulting in the extreme.

Regardless of whether the Portland shelters are occupied or not, they will be predominately manned by whites, who seek only to help, and to profit only by the good they feel in their hearts…as it will likely be out into the future. But our country and our diverse communities will never connect as they should, until we can graciously accept help in the good light that it is offered.

UPDATE... It turns out that Portland will not receive any evacuees via official programs...was the printing of this OpEd piece worth the damage it may have caused to the relief organizations who toil away, everyday within our very liberal, and caring community? It is hard to imagine...perhaps behind Ann Arbor, and Eugene...any more progressive and socially involved community than Portland. I am not sure how this involved and committed community will feel about their warmest, and most welcoming efforts being dismissed soley because most of them happend to be white.


TOPICS: Government; Politics; Society
KEYWORDS: hurricane; katrina; neworleans; oregon; race; refugees
In the midst of this catastrophe, there is the kernal of opportunity. It isn't just the Oregonian making the point about race, but local Conservatives of talk radio indulged Ms. Harris view last week as well.

But, do let's look beyond color. Suddenly the nation finds itself with some half million Americans displaced from one of the poorest areas in the nation. Now, not all of the affected are poor, nor black. But, it will be the poor, regardless of any other characteristic, who will find themselves at the whim of the tides of mercy drifting wherever the current takes them. Now, regional population demographics suggest, they will be black on the order of nearly 70%.

Although they called the area home, most residents of New Orleans Seventh Ward were not there by choice, any more than any family would choose to live in Chicago's Horner District or New York's Bedford Styverson. Conditions had conspired to create a socio-political environment which kept generations effectively incarcerated by their own misconceptions, and the bigotry and misdirected altruism of their immediate benefactors.

Katrina destroyed those fences in addition to everything else. Suddenly, enormous numbers of people will be introduced to communities like Portland, Minneapolis, Salt Lake City, Sacramento, Seattle, Columbus, Austin, Madison; communities that don't reflect them in any number of ways from food to weather and yes even color.

Frightened, displaced, and confused at first, do you know what they will find? That Mormons are fine, fair, thoughful people. That German farmers of both Ohio and Texas found slavery to be deplorable. That the Pacific Northwest is as beautiful and inviting as it is wet. That Americans in general are really as color blind as they are charitable. And they will find that success exists for anyone willing to dismiss their own personal misconceptions and embrace the opportunity.

And many will find no reason to return to the squalor of Jackson, Sharpton, and Dean's Urban Concentration Camps... or the shackles and whips of entitlement.

An email is travelling around the office today with the subject line FW: Bush doesn't care about black people.

Well, here is a revelation. I don't care about black people either. I could really care less about the color of a man's skin as long as the content of his character renders virtue.

Martin Luther King Jr. agreed.

1 posted on 09/13/2005 8:51:47 AM PDT by Mr.Atos
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To: Salvation

Ping!


2 posted on 09/13/2005 8:52:30 AM PDT by Mr.Atos (http://mysandmen.blogspot.com)
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To: Mr.Atos

She is proposing that black people should be relocated to another southern urban ghetto? Well, I guess there are plenty of those to choose from.

I know that the Mayor of DC sent 10 buses down to NO and couldn't get any volunteers to relocate up here to the highest cost of living and lowest quality and most racially segregated school system in America. Even the destitute have standards.

Even so, the Mayor of DC got his hands on 300 souls who were loaded on an airplane without being told where they were going. How patronizing is that? One passenger tried to commit suicide on the way up North.

So DC finally got 300 involuntary NO evacuees, herded them into the National Guard armory (home sweet home), DC was declared a "federal disaster area" as a result, and the Mayor immediately got SIX MILLION DOLLARS in federal disaster aid. Do the math, per evacuee.

I believe as of this morning less than 150 of these evacuated souls, traded among the big city poverty pimps for a slice of federal disaster aid funds, still remain in the benevolent custody of the Mayor of DC...the rest having located an underground railroad and got the heck out of another urban poverty plantation


3 posted on 09/13/2005 9:06:05 AM PDT by silverleaf (Fasten your seat belts- it's going to be a BUMPY ride.)
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To: silverleaf
Mayor of DC got his hands on 300 souls who were loaded on an airplane without being told where they were going.

There are dozens of such Count Olaf's out there trying to seize America's catastrophe orphans.

We need to step in a remedy this. Reject the divisiveness of the race baiting and seize the opportunity to really help these Americans. They have escaped the clutches of villains for now. But the opportuntiy is fleeting, and will be lost the minute the refugees are shackled into the galloes of another poverty dungeon like DC or LA.

4 posted on 09/13/2005 9:50:55 AM PDT by Mr.Atos (http://mysandmen.blogspot.com)
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