PDA

View Full Version : Politics ( And Politicians ) In My Part Of The Nation



RichardCranium
08-25-2006, 09:46 AM
NEW YORK (Aug. 25) - New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin criticized efforts to redevelop the World Trade Center site when confronted in a television interview about delays in rebuilding his city after Hurricane Katrina.

During the "60 minutes" interview, a correspondent pointed out flood-damaged cars still on the streets of New Orleans' devastated Ninth Ward. Nagin replied, "You guys in New York can't get a hole in the ground fixed, and it's five years later. So let's be fair," according to CBS.

The program is scheduled to air Sunday night. Text and a video clip from the Nagin piece were posted on CBS' Web site Thursday.

The chairman of the Lower Manhattan Development Corp., the agency created to oversee the rebuilding of the World Trade Center site and downtown Manhattan, said that tremendous progress has been made in lower Manhattan, with the Freedom Tower, a transportation hub and a memorial to the nearly 3,000 attack victims under construction.

"We understand how difficult rebuilding a city after such destruction can be," chairman Kevin Rampe said in a statement.

Nagin, known for his blunt style, is not the first to compare the two cities. New Orleans residents frequently complain that the federal government's response after Katrina has been far more sluggish than it was after the Sept. 11 attacks.

Nagin is confident New Orleans will be whole again and will even be able to withstand another hurricane of Katrina strength, pointing out that taller and stronger levees are being built. It will take time.

"We’re into a five-to-seven-year build cycle … . At the end of the day, I see the city being totally rebuilt. I see us eliminating blight, still being culturally unique," Nagin says.

One example of new development Nagin points to is a 68-story Trump Towers condominium complex, a project that makes some critics wary that New Orleans will lose the heritage that made it unique.

"I think you are looking at basically a town that will be a playground for the rich for the next 40 years," Leonard Moore, a professor of African-American history at Louisiana State University, tells Pitts. "I look at the post-Katrina piece as a game of musical chairs….Once the music gets turned off, the white folks have a place to sit down, a place to sleep, a place for their children to go to school. We’re going back to a trailer."

Nagin says he is looking out for the poor, mostly black, residents who are dispersed all over the country, some of whom are waiting to return to the city.

"What I do have a problem with is some entrenched interests that are looking and salivating over certain sections of the city," Nagin says.

The mayor says these interests want him to keep those poor people from coming back so they can get rich developing the land.

"I don’t think that’s right," Nagin says.

But before any rebuilding can take place, the clean-up and restoration of the city’s infrastructure must be complete and it will be Mayor Nagin, recently re-elected, who leads the efforts.

"Should things have happened quicker? Yes. But everyone has their own style of leadership, and right now our political leader, our political father is Ray Nagin," says Oliver Thomas, New Orleans City Council president.

Atlanteax
08-25-2006, 10:30 AM
How in the world did one of the most horrible Mayors in recent U.S. history get re-elected?

Parkbandit
08-25-2006, 11:34 AM
It cracks me up that anyone thinks that New Orleans is anything but a lack of a good state and local government doing their fucking jobs.

They re-elected the idiot.. let them fucking live in the same shithole for the next 4 years.

Landrion
08-25-2006, 12:52 PM
My friend told me that the people they put against him in the primaries and election were even worse. I asked the same question rather incredulously when I went down there in July.

Sean of the Thread
08-25-2006, 01:34 PM
Wasn't there like 28 or so canidates?? The guy is an embarrasing fuck up at BEST and a damned good share of what happened in NO was his part.

Back
08-25-2006, 01:53 PM
I think everyone is feeling the fallout on this one. Lets read about what some republicans are even saying...

Katrina's Damage to Bush's Standing Still Haunts His Presidency (Katrina's Damage to Bush's Standing Still Haunts His Presidency)
By Brendan Murray


Aug. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Hurricane Katrina's flood waters have long since receded. The human toll and political wreckage wrought by the killer storm continue to haunt George W. Bush almost a year later.

As the president and still-reeling Gulf Coast residents prepared to mark Katrina's anniversary, political experts say that dismay over Bush's response to the disaster continues to undermine public confidence in his managerial abilities.

``It was Katrina that broke the sense that the Republicans could govern well,'' former House Speaker Newt Gingrich said in an interview. Bush ``was still seen before Katrina as a relatively strong leader, and somewhere in this process there was a substantial erosion because Americans were shocked'' by the government's failure to perform.

CrystalTears
08-25-2006, 02:17 PM
Oh brother. :banghead:

ElanthianSiren
08-28-2006, 07:40 PM
What kills me is that the funding has only been presented to put the levees back up to cat 3s. We know what this means. The rest has been spent on studies. As someone going into research, I can say I would feel dirty getting my bottom line at the expense of something as necessary as category 4 and 5 levees for a bullseyed city that is mostly below sea level.


-M

Skirmisher
08-28-2006, 08:36 PM
Just make the current NO a landfill and start over on higher ground already.

Mighty Nikkisaurus
08-28-2006, 10:41 PM
Just make the current NO a landfill and start over on higher ground already.

Heh that reminds me of the solution to fix Seattle's amazing upflush toilets when the tide came in, long ago!

Stanley Burrell
08-28-2006, 10:50 PM
Someone should slap this guy for trying to draw corollaries between downtown Manhattan and New Orleans.

CrystalTears
08-29-2006, 08:10 AM
New Orleans = the chocolate city with a marshmellow center. :D

Gan
08-29-2006, 08:54 AM
It totally amazes me with what Nagin gets away with saying.

I think NO and Nagin deserve each other, personally. They voted him back in so they get to keep him.

Skirmisher
08-29-2006, 10:37 AM
Someone should slap this guy for trying to draw corollaries between downtown Manhattan and New Orleans.

There was a good culumn in the NYTimes today that made a point about this and while I agree Nagin has been a complete failure as Mayor of NO, it also does not negate the depressing fact that the WTC site is still a hole in the ground.