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To: BurbankKarl

Excellent. The truckers especially need relief. For more than 2 weeks, but that will come in time, imo.

Did you just see all the ambulances? Huge convoy.

Help is on the way.


4,569 posted on 09/02/2005 11:10:00 AM PDT by Peach (South Carolina is praying for our Gulf coast citizens.)
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To: Peach

I was listening to Open Road last night, and they said that when Bush told people not to make unnecessary trips, the lines at the gas stations disappeared.....have never seen anything like it.


4,572 posted on 09/02/2005 11:11:33 AM PDT by BurbankKarl (u)
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To: All

Okay. I think I've got a fix on that fire and collapse. There's a very tall building in the shot behind the fire. That's One Shell Square. It's across a wide blvd ... Jackson Blvd? I think so anyway. The area on fire should be, if memory serves, across that wide blvd from the back of the Quarter. So the Quarter may be safe from that fire at least.


4,582 posted on 09/02/2005 11:13:15 AM PDT by Types_with_Fist (I'm on FReep so often that when I read an article at another site I scroll down for the comments.)
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To: Peach
Good email from the NRO Corner:

Interesting email, from my new Tank-truck guy:

Mr. Goldberg: I'm sick and tired of the media's treatment of the Katrina relief efforts. I run a trade association of tank truck carriers trying to assist in the relief efforts by transporting food and potable water. I'm in regular contact with many of the companies, and here are some "on the ground" facts:

1) Large trucks (80,000 lbs. gross weight) almost always have to use the Interstates. For trucks attempting to come in from outside the area, most of those roads (approaching the disaster area) are either closed or have bridges out. The so-called secondary roads may be somewhat passable, but their bridges (over rivers and streams) are not built to sustain such loads. Simply stated, you can't get there from here.

2) Trucks domicled in those areas (because that's where the companies traditionally serve customers) are still underwater, thus the equipment is not accessible;

3) Nobody in their right mind is going to take loads of gasoline and fuel oil into a city controlled by unfriendly folks carrying automatic weapons. A tank truck loaded with 8,000 gallons of gasoline can produce a very impressive fire;

4) Those local trucking companies can't contact their drivers. There's no power, thus (even) cellular is unavailable, and many of the drivers homes (in places like Kenner, Slidel, Metarie, etc) have been destroyed and families dispersed. I have one member with about 120 drivers and mechanics in that immediate area. To date, management has been able to contact 12. Those in the National Guard have been mobilized and are not available to drive.

5) Pumps -- needed to load the vehicles -- don't work because there's no power;

Finally, it's very interesting to see the media not-so-subtly inferred racism. NO's neighboring communities, noted above, and others are mostly composed of middle-class white neighborhoods. They too were flooded with the same level of devastation and face the same food/water shortages. So far, they've been "off camera". I'm genuinely puzzled by this.

If only George Bush could join the Governor in a photo-op "cry-a-thon" all of these problems would go away.

4,622 posted on 09/02/2005 11:19:53 AM PDT by WoodstockCat (Gitmo? Let them eat Pork!)
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