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On Saying Goodbye to New Orleans
I arrived on Friday afternoon, August 26, expecting to visit friends and stay until Monday evening. My friend tells me Saturday morning to call the airlines and change my ticket so I can leave Sunday. He and his partner are packing basics and their two dogs and are evacuating the city very early Sunday morning. On Sunday I am among the last to flly out of the city since our plane left at 10 AM and they closed the airport, I am told, about an hour later. I imagined what it must have been like leaving Saigon before the fall-much more desperate of course judging from the photos I remember. Here in New Orleans, there was calm and an eerie peace that prevailed. Yet my feelings were these: Will I ever see this amazing city again? Will its history and museums and music and mementos and architecture be lost forever? Will the houses I viewed walking in amazing neighborhoods just yesterday be lost for ever? What if the plane is cancelled, will I ever get out of harm's way? How fleeting it all is-even the history and magnificent achievements of this one-of-a-kind city can be engulfed and swallowed up in one gigantic heave of nature. "Why is the plane not full and overflowing", I ask myself. Why have United and Delta cancelled all their flights instead of adding many new flights to transport people out of the city? How can they call for a complete evacuation but have no planes, trains, or buses lined up to evacuate the people? The highway is bumper to bumper with cars. But clearly not all people have cars or have cars that will make it to safety. My cab driver who took me to the hotel airport on Saturday (I insisted on staying near the airport) first got stuck in bumper to bumper traffic on Airline Boulevard but then took side streets instead. In these streets, all black neighborhoods, kids were playing about the yards and no one seemed to be going anywhere. Yet the storm was to land in 28 hours or so. In the hotel, when we finally arrived, things were far from normal. Airlines were canceling their flights in and out; many hotel employees had fled the city; the restaurant was being staffed by a manager and a janitor who were staying and apparently their families too intended to ride out the storm at the hotel. In the food line at the airport-which resulted in running out of most foods (except grits) after a one hour wait-stories were being told by freshmen college students who had just arrived that weekend to begin their first day of college and had been told to turn around and go home with their parents who brought them. We careened down the jet way toward take off and I said to myself "this pilot is a cowboy'; but then I realized that there were no other planes anywhere in sight at the airport; the place was deserted; why not fly down toward the runway on the way to taking off? If was the fastest I had ever traveled on a jet way by far. We went aloft and I thanked Southwest airlines for being our 'savior' who intervened to free us from the impending disaster. I was struck by how many people were stranded by other airlines who cancelled at the last minute. Sunday Night home in Oakland: I went to bed feeling the worst-that the city we know as New Orleans would no longer exist when I woke up. I woke up several times in the night very concerned. "Sic transit gloria mundi." But getting up at 6:30 I heard the good news. That the storm center had at the last minute veered to the right of New Orleans sparing it its worst onslaught. New Orleans will survive! Vive la New Orleans!! All is not lost, most of the levees are holding. Alleluia! Yet the old lessons are learned and relearned. The smallness of humans. Even our greatest enterprises and achievements are like blades of grass or grains of sand and putty in the big hands of Mother Nature. Creation dictates. We follow. A good time to evaluate again our priorities. But the good news shifted suddenly when the levees started giving way. Even though the storm was now passed, the real brunt of it was being felt by the levees after it passed through. They were no longer holding. People are flocking to the superdome and wherever they can get to higher ground, taking their loved ones-children and old folks, people in wheelchairs and various stages of incapacity with them. Looting begins but there is a difference between stealing necessities in a crisis and taking the 'extras' of tv sets or guns. The superdome is becoming a place sans air, sans food and water, sans law and order. Where are the national guard? Where is the rescue? They tell us the sewer system is backing up, that oil and sewage, feces and dead bodies, make up some of the flooding waters on the streets and in the homes and businesses of New Orleans. But it is not just sewage and oil discharge, dead bodies and feces that are rising for all to see and smell. It is also the classicism and racism in America and the poverty of America's underclass that is on display. And-more importantly-the decision-making by the ruling classes. (The same decision-makers who want to do away with all inheritance taxes and who just gave the energy companies another windfall tax break even though their profits were at all-time highs this year.) All this stinks and is at least as toxic as the fetid waters in the streets. Specifically I speak of the following realities. Yes, New Orleans if 70% black and is an impoverished city with much unemployment even before this latest crisis. But notice how 95% of the TV pictures of those who did not make it out are black. Why were there no plans to evacuate the poor? Telling people to evacuate when they have no cars or their cars don't work is no plan. Why weren't buses and boats, trains and planes, sent in all day Saturday and Sunday to evacuate the poor? How is it possible that 20,000 National Guard can be flown in and driven in in trucks but food, water diapers, cots, tents cannot be flown or driven in? Why did the airlines cancel all flights on Saturday and Sunday instead of increasing flights to get people out? Why didn't FEMA push the airlines to do this and offer financial incentives if needed? Where is the Red Cross? Where is FEMA? With water food, shelter, cots, medicines and necessities of life for people stranded day after hot day out in the open on freeways and underneath viaducts? Where is the vice president of the United States, Dick Cheney? Is he hiding in his now-famous bunker? Is he hosting meetings with oil presidents and Halliburton about how to make more money on this crisis? (This morning's paper confirmed what I suspect: Halliburton has been hired to rebuild Louisiana at tax payer expense.) Where was the press when the president of the United States and the congress voted to cut money for the building of levees and preserving of wetlands? How come CNN, CBS, NBC can get reporters into New Orleans and beam pictures out but no federal agency can get water, food, or supplies into New Orleans? This tragedy unmasks the real issues in American life today. The Theocracy wing of the Republican party who represent the worst of selfish corporate capitalism wedded to a crackpot Christianity ("Kill a commie for Christ" is now altered to "kill a duly elected president for oil" by a Republican presidential candidate whose followers including the president have barely rebuked his outrageous outbursts of hatred and homicide). This theocracy is anti-science ("There is no global warning;" "creationism should be taught in science classes;" etc. etc.) Global warming is contributing to the increase of hurricanes and their ferocity. This New Orleans tragedy proves that, aside from the questionable morality and legality of being in Iraq, we simply cannot afford it. Our national guard is dying in Iraq supposedly to bring "democracy" there. And they are absent from their primary purpose: To help in national disasters. The latest rationale for the destruction of Iraq is that we are there to bring democracy (even if they don't want it). But the truth is: There is no democracy in America-that is where we should be focusing our attention. We have an oligarchy, not a democracy. A rule of the few, not of the people. I live in a state of 34 million people and I have as many representatives in the senate (two) as the 600,000 people of Vermont; the same as the 500,000 people of Wyoming or the 900,000 people of Montana. This is not representative and it is not a democracy. It is a rule of the few and by the few and for the few. My values of eco-justice, racial justice, gender justice, economic justice, and gender preference justice are not represented in congress. The lower house has been 99% bought and kept and paid for by lobbyists and theocrats of the punitive Father God who hate women, blacks, homosexuals, wetlands, with equal vengeance. Yes, the rising sewers of New Orleans are revealing the shadow side of human nature and of America. That side is not the individual looting so much as the structural, political, economic, racial and religious looters who roam the halls of congress and executive and judicial branches of government and the media with impunity. They are stealing our rights as a democracy and the vision and hopes and future of our children. Isn't it time to do something? Isn't it time for a populist political uprising that demands that we get our money's worth from our tax dollars and that corporations pay their fair share and that all the citizens be represented equally? |
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