MENU

Bio
Wishlist

SEARCH



RECENT STOPS

The Show Will Not Go On
Technical difficulties
My Favorite Dance Company
My Brother's Keeper
Mojo Workin'
Ok-maybe I'll come back
Gone Fishing
Off the cutting room floor
Personal Responsibility
Ain’t Much to Say



FELLOW TRAVELERS

A Burst of Light

AfroerotiK

AllAboutGeorge

The Allen Gallery

Better Days Coming

Black Gay Blogger

Black Griot

Blabbeando

BrothaLove RantSpace

Clay Cane

culturekitchen

Daily Views, Pop Culture, Rants, and News

Donald

EJ Flavors

Edge of Night

The Emancipation of ProfessorGQ

Ergane in Retrograde

Every Shut Eye Ain't Sleep

Flan! Flan! Flan!

Frank Leon Roberts

Front Porch Storytellin'

Getting Myself Together

Greasy Guide

J-Notes

J's Theater

Jasmyne Cannick

Journey Back To Joy

Journey Into Light

Just be dat

Keith Boykin

The Larry Lyons Experience

Lee’s Space

Lynne d Johnson

Mama Junkyard's

The Mad Professah Lectures

Mandrake Society Radio

Mark Your Truth Here

Ms. World's Guide

Nalo Hopkinson

Negrophile

Noctuary: a record of what passes in the night

Notformi.ca

Novaslim

Old Gold Soul

On a Path

Opera and Cookies

Pam’s House Blend

Pica 12

Pink Mafia Radio

Pondering Negro

Prime

Professor Kim's News Notes
Prometheus 6

Republic of T

Rocka Candy

rod 2.0:beta

Seasoned Yet New in Da Life

Shavar's blog

Steven G. Fullwood

Street Writer

Taylor Siluwé

The Brotherlove

The LoveHater

The Ryan Chronicles

The Starr Report

The Unconquerable Soul

Troy

Water


INTERESTING SITES ALONG THE WAY

Albany Times Union
AntiViolence Project

AlJazeera Network

AlterNet

Alvin Ailey Dance Company

BBC News

Billy Porter

Broadway.com

City Limits

CSPAN

Dhani Jones

Epicurious.com

ESPN

Evidence Dance Company

Food Network

Garth Fagan Dance

Gay City News

GayHealth

Gotham Gazette

I Love NY Theater

Le Monde

LOGO

Los Angeles Times

MoveOn.org

National Black Justice Coalition
New York Blade

New York City Homepage

New York State Black Gay Network

New York State Homepage

New York Theatre

NY Times

NYC Bloggers

OutPOCPAC

PlanetOut

Playbill

TheaterMania

Toronto Globe & Mail

Village Voice

Washington Post

eXTReMe Tracker


REST AREA

©2005 Bernard J. Tarver
Content protected by Creative Commons.
Syndicate this site (XML).
Powered by Movable Type 4.0
� Pop Quiz | Main | We’re Three! �


August 29, 2006

Katrina Stories

A year after Hurricane Katrina swept across Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana, leaving devastation in its wake, most notably flooding to 80% of the city of New Orleans, only about fifty percent of the displaced and widely scattered residents of that great city have returned and much remains to be done to rebuild the entire Gulf Coast.

Through a sampling of news reports, here is a snapshot of where things stand:

As could be expected, the psychological toll on victims of the worst natural disaster in the nation’s history has been extensive. A survey of affected residents finds a drop in suicide rates, however the long-term impact may be considerable.
Post-Katrina Suicide and Mental Health Study
LINK

President Bush and his entire administration have rightfully been criticized for their slow response to the disaster and the inept way that FEMA in particular has handled the situation. A year later finds the president taking another photo-op through the region. In an election year, opposing Democratic politicians are also stopping by.
Politicians Make an Anniversary Driveby
LINK

The issue of how New Orleans will rebuild and who will ultimately live there is a particularly thorny one. Black residents are suspicious of what they believe to be a land grab by White real estate developers hopeful of redesigning for their own interests districts that were previously inhabited by mostly poor Black people. Plans to bulldoze public housing projects without a clear strategy to resettle displaced tenants is being met with opposition.
NAACP Opposes Demolition of Public Housing Projects
LINK

Everybody is trying to make a buck off this disaster somehow.
Katrina Commemorative T-shirts for sale
LINK

Some are taking full advantage of other people’s misery.
Rebuilding and Ripoff for Mississippi Katrina Family
LINK

New Orleans has always been synonymous with music. When Katrina hit, many of the city’s top performers, some of them nationally-known figures, were forced to flee to safety, the same as everyone else. Many of them also lost everything they owned. But an effort is underway, spearheaded by their fellow musicians, to provide them with new homes and a new neighborhood.
Musicians Village welcomes displaced artists
LINK

Robin Roberts, anchor of ABC’s “Good Morning America,” is a native of Pass Christian, Mississippi, one of the areas hard hit by the hurricane. For her this has been more than just a news story.
Pass Christian, Miss., Home of GMA Anchor Robin Roberts
LINK

Gambling has managed to bring people back to other parts of Mississippi. Casinos, that provide the foundation to an otherwise struggling economy, have reopened and with that, brought a measure of hope.
Casinos bring tourists, jobs back to Gulf Coast
LINK

Hurricane Katrina did more than flood a region and destroy property. It exposed some of the ugliest secrets about the priorities of this administration and issues of race, class and economic inequity that are endemic to this country. So what have we learned in the past year?
When Government Shrugs
LINK

Posted by bernie at August 29, 2006 9:16 PM


Comments

Well done Bernie, I wonder if any of you recently saw on Frontline how HAMAS in Lebanon, before the cease-fire was in place in their war with Israel, gave each person made homeless by the Israel's bombardment of their neighborhood $15,000 U.S.

What an insult it is that there are so many Americans still suffering rack & ruin as a result of Katrina.

George Bush's superficial presence in New Orleans is a slap in the face to all of us. Keep in mind people, the midterm elections are coming up. After Noah's Ark is over, and after we watch that sexy-sexy Michael Knight on Project Runway, let's call our people and ask them if they understand the issues, and convince them how important it is that we not only vote Mr. Bush and his lying clique out, but that we have to vote in a strong contingent of DEMOCRAT, LIBERAL or progressive party Senators and Congress-people into office so that our new Democratic President can govern, and make the necessary changes that need to be made, without being bogged down like President Clinton was; with frivolous, Whitewater type witch hunts.
Adarro M.
New York
www.gayblackcrippledfat.com

Posted by: Adarro M at August 30, 2006 11:48 PM


Post a comment










Remember personal info?