I saw a NOLA refugee - an older black gentleman - interviewed at the Houston Astrodome. He expressed near astonishment at how nice, clean and well run things were in Houston, compared to NOLA. He said he would not be returning to NOLA.
Greta Van Van Susteren's view of Houston:
***....There are a few things I would like to say about Houston/Texas, etc. I have been here in Houston for many days and have a very small world meaning that I only know what is going on in the area immediately around me (Houston.) I am "wall-to-wall" Houston relief efforts. I know that my colleagues in New Orleans, Mississippi, etc., are seeing things that I am not. From time to time I hear their reports and the reports are bleak (to put it lightly.) Here in Houston I almost feel like I am in a magical city there is an incredible outpouring of help. You would be inspired by the help to the people who need it so much. I have spoken to literally hundreds of evacuees and each 100 percent of those I have spoken to are in awe of what Texas has done. Each expresses enormous gratitude to the people of Texas.
I have been to the three major shelters in Houston each is unbelievable and each, while housing thousands, was set up overnight. People don't wait in lines for services like medicine and food instead they get provided for quickly and with dignity. Every place you turn around, there is help. The shelters and volunteers are efficient and treat people with great dignity.
I went to the newest shelter last night the Houston City Convention Center and I was very impressed. They have air mattresses (not just cots), thicker air mattresses for older people so did not have a hard time in and out of bed, showers, game rooms for the kids, food looked great, a computer room, library, movie theatre size screen for movies, clothes, medical care, etc.... and all done within hours of making the decision to do it! I watched a crowd of kids under two feet tall playing the game "duck, duck, goose" with volunteers. The kids were all having fun squealing with laughter. The kids are kept busy by volunteers so that the parents can address the obviously more serious and distressing matters missing family members, no homes and no money.
You would not believe what the city of Houston (and Texas) accomplished in less than 48 hours! I really have never seen anything like this! The George R. Brown Convention Center is so clean you can eat off the floor and the service appears to be top notch. I watched carefully the service to make sure I got it right and I asked people staying there. You can get medical care and even dental care right on the premises... all set up in less than 48 hours! I met private citizens all pitching in. I was told corporations were also pitching in one local company in Houston came in and built 80 showers in the Convention Center within hours of the Friday morning decision that they needed to open still another shelter. The help to fellow Americans here in Texas is not only extraordinary but the fact that it is so well coordinated with no time is mind-boggling.
I have been stopped by many local Houstonians thanking me for the nice things I have been saying on the air about Texas and Houston. I have told each of them, "Don't thank me, I am only saying what I see." And, yes, I am seeing a much different picture than the devastation seen by my colleagues in other states.
Let me make one thing plain yes, things are going well in Houston but the evacuees have been through hell and that hell will continue. No matter how great the support is here in Houston, it does not erase the immense loss. In time, there will also be too much pressure on this area alone. We can't expect Texas to do this alone and they can't. They need other people and places to help. They need contributions so please give. I do know that many other states and citizens are helping a great deal this help is great but I suspect more help will be needed. I know it will be much appreciated. This is a BIG job!
....***
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,168491,00.html
I saw where cities like Philly and Cleveland were 'reaching out' to the NO blacks. Strikes me as a desperate attempt to keep the ranks of the dependency class filled.
That was a common theme among a few I saw interviewed. They seemed astonished to be treated as people. It's sad. But, it's not surprising considering that Louisiana is concerned that these people will not return. I hope they don't. I hope they can turn their personal disasters into something positive.
Louisiana is looking at them as property, wanted to get them back as quickly as possible and stick them in tent cities until they can get them back into New Orleans, and back into poverty and control. It was disgusting to hear them talk about these people as if they were domesticated animals, unable to adjust to a different way of life. I would be insulted at the insinuation that I am unlike other people and unable to adapt because of my skin color. Jesse Jackson, working for the dems, said as much yesterday. The Blanco spawn evidently were in Houston to try to convince people to return. I really do hope they don't.