Posted on 08/30/2005 8:50:20 PM PDT by Dont Mention the War
[...]
Weber sat among hundreds of refugees rescued Tuesday from rooftops, attics and floating debris in the 9th Ward and St. Bernard Parish by an armada of more than 100 boats. Officials from the Coast Guard estimated they pulled thousands of people off of rooftops and attics, many with stories as grim as Webers. Officials believed hundreds and maybe thousands more remained in peril. They declined to estimate the number of dead. That will come later.
[...]
Then, in an evening press conference, Mayor Ray Nagin announced that the already crippled city would take yet another blow: Another surge of water from the failed 17th Street Canal levee that could push an additional 10 feet of water into already waterlogged neighborhoods and possibly flood the remaining dry sections of Uptown.
[...]
Uptown resident Keith Williams started his own security patrol, driving around in his Ford pickup with his newly purchased handgun. Earlier in the day, Williams said he had seen the body of a gunshot victim near the corner of Leonidas and Hickory streets.
"What I want to know is why we dont have paratroopers with machine guns on every street," Williams said.
Like-minded Art Depodesta sat on the edge of a picnic table outside Cooter Browns Bar, a chrome shotgun at his side loaded with red shells.
"They broke into the Shell station across the street," he said. "I walked over with my 12-gauge and shot a couple into the air."
The looters scattered, but soon after, another man appeared outside the bar in a pickup truck armed with a pistol and threatened Depodesta.
"I told him, Listen, I was in the Army and I will blow your ass off," Depodesta said. "Weve got enough trouble with the flood."
(Excerpt) Read more at nola.com ...
I'm gonna buy more guns.
I don't know how it works in Louisiana, but here's how it now works in Ohio:
You buy a house. If it's in a "100-year" flood plain-which means that in the last 100 years it has flooded, you must have flood insurance before you can even get your mortgage. I'd assume MOST of the city of New Orleans is in a flood plain so I'd think that at least a slight majority of people in NO would have flood insurance unless they either:
Purchased their homes years ago and never refinanced in the last 10 years
Cancelled the flood policy (which is expensive) after getting the loan.
Once again...the benefit of the Second Amendment is proven...
Whoops-the other reason would be if their homes were paid for.
Have you read the 9/11 report? It is a fine example of the inability of bureaucracy to protect people.
Sad as it is, our cluster of a gubmint has no ability to organize and get control of situations like this. The right hand never has any clue that the left hand even exists, let alone what it might be doing.
If there is any kind of disaster in your area, you better be prepared to take care of yourself.
Excuse me for being a moe-ron, but what the hell does that mean????
Are you competing with Cindy Shehan for attention?
Not to be picky, but thats not exactly what it means. It means that the flood plain is expected to flood as the result of a 100-year storm. A 100-year storm event is one that occurs, on average, every 100 years. It could be 200 years between events, or 2 years, but is expected to average every 100 years. You can also say that a 100-year storm has a 1% chance of occurring in any given year. Governments generally set a certain 24-hour rainfall total that would correspond to what a 100-year storm event is. Local municipalities usually do the same for 2-, 5-, 10-, 25-, 50-, and maybe 500-year storm events.
You're right.
Actually I was oversimplifying it...
Are you sure it wasn't an ACLU lawyer looking for a looter to defend?
Classic...
Gee, I wonder why?
They should just wall the place off and send in Snake Pliskin.
Is he looting that himself...or was it confiscated from a looter? In all honesty it could have been.
The city's being wiped off the face of the earth. Reminds me of what happened to the infamous pirate capital Port Royal, Jamaica, when it was submerged in the 1700's.
Which will mean what, exactly?
Kudos to all the state governors who are mobilizing rescue and emergency response teams to send to the effected areas. (My state of PA is one. We're sending several teams from across the state, incl. a team that dealt with flooding in the western PA area last year.)
I doubt it.
I read a book a few years ago titled Lucifer's Hammer, where a comet impacts earth, and much of the U.S. is flooded. Society collapses. The book's protagonist stockpiles spices, lime and ammo when he sees the comet is coming. Spices because they were the first currency, due to their preserving abilities, and lime to address dead bodies and a lack of sanitation.
New Orleans is beginning to look like a microcosm of that book.
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