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To: Mount Athos

Let business and industry rebuild New Orleans to suit its needs. Discourage government "visionary" interference in the rebuilding process. Remember Brazilia, the legendary lost city in the Amazon jungle. It bankrupted its country, it was a Marxist architectural fiasco, and nobody wants to live there.


9 posted on 09/06/2005 2:10:08 AM PDT by NaughtiusMaximus (The liberals promised to move to Canada but they lied . . . bwaaaaah.)
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To: NaughtiusMaximus
"Let business and industry rebuild New Orleans to suit its needs. Discourage government 'visionary' interference in the rebuilding process."

Yet more wisdom and eloquence from NaughtiusMaximus. (Note tagline.)

16 posted on 09/06/2005 4:06:22 AM PDT by Savage Beast ("We can all learn from this Katrina thing" -NaughtiusMaximus)
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To: NaughtiusMaximus
Remember Brazilia, the legendary lost city in the Amazon jungle. It bankrupted its country, it was a Marxist architectural fiasco, and nobody wants to live there.

New Orleans is not an artificial city. It has been around for almost 300 years. From 1803 until 1861, New Orleans' population increased from 8,000 to nearly 170,000. The 1810 census revealed a population of 10,000 making New Orleans the United States' fifth largest city, after New York, Philadelphia, Boston, and Baltimore and the largest city west of the Appalachians. From 1810 until 1840, New Orleans grew at a faster rate than any other large American city.

By 1830, New Orleans was America's third largest city, behind New York and Baltimore; and in 1860, it was still the nation's fifth largest city. New Orleans, despite the Post-Civil War boom that transformed the North into an urban-industrial area, would remain among the twelve largest U.S. cities until 1910.

Today the Port of New Orleans' throughput is the largest of any port in America. Approximately, 20% of our oil and gas come from the area. New Orleans is vital to the economic health of the region and America.

Pierce Lewis, perhaps its most knowledgeable scholar, describes New Orleans as the "inevitable city on an impossible site." It is a tribute to the ingenuity and greatness of Americans that a great city could be built and then flourish. NO will be rebuilt bigger and better. Count on it.

22 posted on 09/06/2005 5:29:26 AM PDT by kabar
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