The News Hour just brought in press releases to the bloggers sitting in the Pepsi Center room to tell us about an interview they just finished with New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin who tells the News hour that he is prepared to evacuate New Orleans should hurricane Gustav appear headed for landfall above a category 2.
Katrina
New Orleans vs. Iraq: If Only it was Just Billions
Submitted by Frank J Ranelli on Tue, 07/29/2008 - 14:07.The Bush Iraq and Afghanistan wars will cost the U.S. $2.4 trillion, but some fiscal conservatives and anti-tax crusaders are still fixated on derailing the billions of dollars requisite to restore a city lost to Bush’s incompetence and hubris – the city of New Orleans.
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Katrina, George Bush, John McCain and Cake
Submitted by mole333 on Thu, 05/15/2008 - 07:09.Although I have done versions of this before, this was inspired by a Daily Kos Diary:
This is what happened Monday, Aug. 29, 2005...the day Katrina hit, John McCain's 69th birthday...the day America realized that Republicans don't give a shit about Americans.
Hurricane Katrina:

I remember the radar images from the weather channel the night before landfall. I remember distincly watching it and thinking, "My god...that's going to be bad." I also remember thinking that the government had better be ready to get people out and to deal with the situation.
I was right...it was going to be really, really bad. I mean THIS bad:
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PTSD - Katrina, Combat Theater Vets, Psychologist Who Developed It Herself
Submitted by jimstaro on Sat, 11/10/2007 - 19:01.The following, Hurricane Katrina Victims' Mental Health Worsens was aired on NPR's Morning Edition on Nov 1st
A new report on the mental health of Hurricane Katrina victims shows patterns in the Gulf Coast that are contrary to post traumatic stress disorder usually seen after major disasters. The mental health of Hurricane Katrina victims is worsening with the drawn out recovery time.
You can listen to a discussion of the report at subject link above.
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New Orleans: Two Years Later
Submitted by jimstaro on Tue, 08/28/2007 - 20:18.The two year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, and still there are tens of thousands of families without homes.
30,000 families are scattered across the country in FEMA apartments, 13,000 are in trailers, and hardly any of the 77,000 rental units destroyed in New Orleans have been rebuilt. To share some of these people's stories, we have put together a short film, "When the Saints Go Marching In."
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Hancock Bank Can Teach Bush A Thing or Two
Submitted by Ana Maria on Fri, 08/24/2007 - 09:43.Who would have ever thought that a bank would be the anchor business for beachfront revitalization in Bay St. Louis, Miss., one of the tiny beach towns that comprise Katrina’s ground zero? Yet, that is exactly the case with Hancock Bank, Mississippi’s largest and a strong regional bank as well.
Optimism and Anger in Post-Katrina Living
Submitted by Ana Maria on Thu, 08/23/2007 - 08:59.by Ana Maria
Yesterday, the Gulf Coast Business Council released Two Years After Katrina, which reports on the status of our recovery down here. The Biloxi Sun Herald, the only daily newspaper along the Mississippi Gulf Coast aptly titled its headlined article Keeping it positive.
As is often shown in our own lives, keeping an upbeat, appreciative, and grateful attitude for what has been done for us and for what we have always is always a good thing and generally generates more for which to be grateful and appreciative. It’s a mystical like quality that seems to magnetize our energy field to attract more of the same. The opposite is also the case. Coming off as ungrateful for anything often engenders a negative response from those around us giving us more for which we are ungrateful. Funny how life works that way..
Bush’s FEMA Again Lifting Wrong Finger for Katrina’s Families
Submitted by Ana Maria on Tue, 08/21/2007 - 16:18.With Katrina’s 2nd anniversary a week away and eyes glued to following Hurricane Dean’s path, evidence of post-Katrina stress abounds. From short tempers and increased alcohol and drug usage to low expectations that life can ever return to even the worst of pre-Katrina days to people whispering about various friends and family members in good health but who all of a sudden die without warning. In hushed tones, they share with me their various conclusions on the cause of death.
• Katrina took away their will to live.
• The stress of post-Katrina survival got to them.
• When the insurance companies failed to own up to their financial responsibilities to pay on wind policies, it killed ‘em—they checked out.
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“Run for Cover!” Republican Gov. Evacuation Plan for Gulf Coast Residents
Submitted by Ana Maria on Mon, 08/20/2007 - 16:28.Listen to podcast.
With Hurricane Dean tearing through the Caribbean, Gulf Coast residents watch the weather reports praying that whatever Mother Nature does, she does elsewhere. We’re still a long way off from recovering from Hurricane Katrina, which demolished the area two years ago. Many of our families—mine, included—have put into place evacuation plans that we had never before felt a need to have BK, Before Katrina.
The Associated Press reported that Mississippi’s Republican Governor Haley Barbour stated
“people should think about where they will go if an evacuation is ordered and how
they'll travel.”
Oh, so that’s it? What is this?! Barbour’s admission that he has no evacuation plan?
Growing Up After Camille, Reflections on Katrina
Submitted by Ana Maria on Fri, 08/17/2007 - 08:39.by Ana Maria
Thirty-eight years ago today Hurricane Camille hit the Mississippi Gulf Coast. I was but a child of ten. Our family home had been built on the highest land in Hancock County. We slept in the hall. One of the families in the neighborhood stayed with us bringing their grandkids with them. Great! More people to play with my younger brother and me.
I remember the eye of Hurricane Camille when the storm got deadly silent, truly the calm before the hurricane kicked up all over again but from the opposite direction. Someone opened the door and one of my older brothers had a rope around his waist as he ventured outside to check on the family dog in the shed. Peering out the door, all I could see were trees that Camille had knocked down making the outside appear as though we were inside Sherwood Forest.
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Young Mother in FEMA Trailer Yearns for Home
Submitted by Ana Maria on Thu, 08/16/2007 - 10:09.Originally published on August 16, 2007 at A.M. in the Morning!
by Ana Maria
Through stinging, burning eyes I listened as WLOX-TV 13 filmed a conversation between a young single mother of two living in a FEMA trailer and John Eaves, Mississippi’s Democratic Gubernatorial Nominee. Rare is the interview with FEMA residents.
Katrina Town Hall Reflected Selflessness of Gulf Coast
Submitted by Ana Maria on Tue, 08/14/2007 - 17:27.With standing room only in the large parish hall on top of a massive bluff overlooking the Bay which feeds into the Gulf of Mexico, Gulf Coast Congressman Gene Taylor (D-MS) hosted the second town hall meeting with a delegation of plenty of congressional leadership from across the country. From as far west as California to the northeast of New Hampshire, Democratic Congressional representatives gave up time with their families and their constituents to revisit the Katrina-ravaged area. We were honored to have the high-ranking leadership of Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and Democratic Majority Whip Jim Clyburn from South Carolina.
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Post-Katrina Living: Making Do and Good Enough
Submitted by Ana Maria on Fri, 08/10/2007 - 10:35.by Ana Maria
It’s finally here! We have the date on which the contractor will arrive and do the next set of renovations to my mom’s home.
He’ll sand and seal the wood that hasn’t been touched in that way since my parents had the house built 45 years ago. Hang the doors to the bedrooms. Rework the closet doors. Create new doors for the utility room. Put up the crown molding on the ceiling and the floors. I think that about covers this next leg of returning to life BK—before Katrina.
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Normalcy Long Overdue in Katrina-Ravaged Region
Submitted by Ana Maria on Thu, 08/09/2007 - 10:37.by Ana Maria
Two days ago, Mississippi voters in the Democratic Primary ousted Insurance Commissioner George Dale, whose cozy relationship with Big Insurance became his electoral albatross. Surely less than a year ago, Dale anticipated his re-election bid to retain the normalcy he had experienced over the last three decades of running for office.
A Breath Of Fresh Air In Post-Katrina Mississippi
Submitted by Ana Maria on Tue, 08/07/2007 - 08:18.by Ana Maria
Today’s a big day in Mississippi. While there are plenty of contested local races throughout the state—particularly on the Republican side, the insurance commissioner is the most important statewide race because it impacts every individual, family, community, and every form of government inside the state.
Here on the coast, electing Gary Anderson as the Democratic nominee and booting out George Dale from office would clearly send more than a few ripples of joy throughout the Katrina-ravaged region. You see, the insurance crisis impacts so many things that most of us—myself included—just don’t think about until it is pointed out.
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