I don’t really have anything else to say other than I hope many, many more first-person survival stories will be published. This is much better than any news story.
I was very worried because I had heard that they were not letting people evacuate with their animals. But these guys said that had changed, and so I put my computer and a few papers in my backpack, loaded the dogs, let the birds go, and put Oot the sugar glider with food and water in Kalypso’s room to await my return, much like Napoleon leaving for Elba I suppose. We drove in the boat all over the city looking for people. It was so surreal with the helicopters and all the boats up and down Canal Street amidst all the devastation. Towards dusk on Friday I arrived at I-10 and Banks Street, not far from my house. There they packed all of us pet owners from Mid City into a cargo truck and drove us away. They promised they would take us to Baton Rouge, and from there it would be relatively easy for me to get a cab or bus and meet the family in Jackson.
But then everything went to hell. They instead locked up the truck and drove us to the refugee camp on I-10 and Causeway and dropped us off. Many refused to get out of the van but they were forced. The van drove away as quickly as it could, as the drivers appeared to be terrified, and we were suddenly in the middle of 20,000 people. I would estimate that 98% of them were African Americans and the most impoverished people in the state. It was like something out of a Kafka novel. Nobody knew how to get out. People said they had been there 5 days, and that on that day only 3 buses had shown up. I saw murdered bodies, and elderly people who had died because they had been left in the sun with no water for such a long time. I’ve traveled quite a bit, and I have never seen the despair and tragedy that I saw at this refugee camp. It was the saddest think I have ever seen in my life. I am still so upset that there were not hundreds of buses immediately sent to get these people to shelters.
Michael Homan: One of the Millions of Hurricane Katrina Stories
Technorati Tags: Katrina
75% of the residents of New Orleans are African American, aren’t they? So that “98%” anecdotal figure seems reasonable.
And the simple question is: why didn’t the mayor and governor use their extensive municipal and state resources to provide a means of transportation out of the city after the mandatory evac.? That’s it. They knew, or had a good idea, that this was coming, after Ivan last year or the year before, and claimed that they were putting a plan together.
When the mayor issues a mandatory evac. and somehow doesn’t back it up, and when the governor deploys the national guard well after the storm – that’s not a federal issue.
That being said, the Federal response was slow – it’s ALWAYS slow (it was slow after Andrew in ’92, and it will always be slow – because it’s not there ahead of time). They only started deploying the Navy 2 days before the storm hit, for example, and it was only declared a disaster area 3 days in advance. And the guy running FEMA obviously needs to go.
I further understand that Bush has supernatural powers and could have transported everyone to safety via a black ritual involving goat sacrifice and virgins. That doesn’t change my view, though, that the majority of the responsibility has to be laid at the feet of the state and local officials. Plus, Bush was busy eating babies on his ranch in between planning other ways to oppress blacks besides naming a member of their community to be Secretary of State, a burden to terrible to tell.
Christ.