How the Free Market Killed New Orleans

How the Free Market Killed New Orleans Michael Parenti September 4th 2005 The free market played a crucial role in the destruction of New Orleans and the death of thousands of its residents. Forewarned that a momentous (force 5) hurricane was going to hit that city and surrounding areas, what …

The Big Easy Dies Hard

 The Big Easy Dies Hard Christian Parenti The Nation, September 26th 2005 The empty streets of this city present a vista of apocalyptic desolation: wind-ripped roofs, downed trees, smashed fast-food signs, dangling power lines, columns of dark smoke and everywhere heaps of garbage. On a lawn near the Ninth Ward …

Nation faces unprecedented choices:

Nation faces unprecedented choices: How far should U.S. go in making New Orleans whole? Rex Nutting and William L. Watts MarketWatch, September 9th 2005  WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) — Initially caught flat-footed by Hurricane Katrina, the U.S. government is settling into its familiar role of fixing up big public works after a …

The Difference Between being Displaced and a Refugee as it Relates to ‘African American Refugee’ Debate after Katrina

The Difference Between being Displaced and a Refugee as it Relates to ‘African American Refugee’ Debate after Katrina Tamara K. Nopper September 19th 2005  Since Hurricane Katrina, various political leaders, pundits and the general public have debated about how to describe Black people displaced by one of the greatest “natural …

New Orleans and the Third World

New Orleans and the Third World Mukoma Wa Ngugi    ZNet, September 8th 2005 The devastation of New Orleans by Hurricane Katrina is being compared to disasters in the “Third World” but with no specific countries or disasters named. And if not compared to this black hole or repository of …

NCAI Coordinating Hurricane Relief Fund for Tribes in Gulf Region

NCAI Coordinating Hurricane Relief Fund for Tribes in Gulf Region Adam McMullin September 1st 2005  CONTACT: Adam McMullin, amcmullin@ncai.org or 202-721-1386  WASHINGTON-September 1, 2005-As our brothers and sisters in southern Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama deal with the aftermath of one of the worst natural disasters to ever strike the U.S., …

The Impact of Disaster on Battered Women

The Impact of Disaster on Battered Women National Coalition Against Domestic Violence September 2005  The current state of chaos and devastation in the City of New Orleans and other impacted regions affords little solace to battered women – many of whom fled their abusive homes for the protection of the …

Malcolm X Grassroots Movement Grassroots Movement Mobilization and Demand Statement

Malcolm X Grassroots Movement Grassroots Movement Mobilization and Demand Statement   September 13th 2005 The Malcolm X Grassroots Movement (MXGM), a national New Afrikan (Black) human rights organization, calls on every sector of the Black community, including civil rights organizations, human rights activists, workers organizations, religious communities and civic and cultural …

Katrina’s Racial Wake

 Katrina’s Racial Wake Salim Muwakkil In These Times, September 7th 2005 Hurricane Katrina and its disastrous aftermath have stripped away the Mardi Gras veneer and casino gloss of the Gulf Coast region, and disclosed the stark disparities of class and race that persist in 21st century America. The growing gap …