Political correctness: Refugees OR Evacuees

GhostofMarcus

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Exiles From a City and From a Nation

Published on Sunday, September 11, 2005 by the Observer/UK
Exiles From a City and From a Nation
by Cornel West

It takes something as big as Hurricane Katrina and the misery we saw among the poor black people of New Orleans to get America to focus on race and poverty. It happens about once every 30 or 40 years.

What we saw unfold in the days after the hurricane was the most naked manifestation of conservative social policy towards the poor, where the message for decades has been: 'You are on your own'. Well, they really were on their own for five days in that Superdome, and it was Darwinism in action - the survival of the fittest. People said: 'It looks like something out of the Third World.' Well, New Orleans was Third World long before the hurricane.

It's not just Katrina, it's povertina. People were quick to call them refugees because they looked as if they were from another country. They are. Exiles in America. Their humanity had been rendered invisible so they were never given high priority when the well-to-do got out and the helicopters came for the few. Almost everyone stuck on rooftops, in the shelters, and dying by the side of the road was poor black.

In the end George Bush has to take responsibility. When [the rapper] Kanye West said the President does not care about black people, he was right, although the effects of his policies are different from what goes on in his soul. You have to distinguish between a racist intent and the racist consequences of his policies. Bush is still a 'frat boy', making jokes and trying to please everyone while the Neanderthals behind him push him more to the right.

Poverty has increased for the last four or five years. A million more Americans became poor last year, even as the super-wealthy became much richer. So where is the trickle-down, the equality of opportunity? Healthcare and education and the social safety net being ripped away - and that flawed structure was nowhere more evident than in a place such as New Orleans, 68 per cent black. The average adult income in some parishes of the city is under $8,000 (£4,350) a year. The average national income is $33,000, though for African-Americans it is about $24,000. It has one of the highest city murder rates in the US. From slave ships to the Superdome was not that big a journey.

New Orleans has always been a city that lived on the edge. The white blues man himself, Tennessee Williams, had it down in A Streetcar Named Desire - with Elysian Fields and cemeteries and the quest for paradise. When you live so close to death, behind the levees, you live more intensely, sexually, gastronomically, psychologically. Louis Armstrong came out of that unbelievable cultural breakthrough unprecedented in the history of American civilisation. The rural blues, the urban jazz. It is the tragi-comic lyricism that gives you the courage to get through the darkest storm.

Charlie Parker would have killed somebody if he had not blown his horn. The history of black people in America is one of unbelievable resilience in the face of crushing white supremacist powers.

This kind of dignity in your struggle cuts both ways, though, because it does not mobilise a collective uprising against the elites. That was the Black Panther movement. You probably need both. There would have been no Panthers without jazz. If I had been of Martin Luther King's generation I would never have gone to Harvard or Princeton.

They shot brother Martin dead like a dog in 1968 when the mobilisation of the black poor was just getting started. At least one of his surviving legacies was the quadrupling in the size of the black middle class. But Oprah [Winfrey] the billionaire and the black judges and chief executives and movie stars do not mean equality, or even equality of opportunity yet. Black faces in high places does not mean racism is over. Condoleezza Rice has sold her soul.

Now the black bourgeoisie have an even heavier obligation to fight for the 33 per cent of black children living in poverty - and to alleviate the spiritual crisis of hopelessness among young black men.

Bush talks about God, but he has forgotten the point of prophetic Christianity is compassion and justice for those who have least. Hip-hop has the anger that comes out of post-industrial, free-market America, but it lacks the progressiveness that produces organisations that will threaten the status quo. There has not been a giant since King, someone prepared to die and create an insurgency where many are prepared to die to upset the corporate elite. The Democrats are spineless.

There is the danger of nihilism and in the Superdome around the fourth day, there it was - husbands held at gunpoint while their wives were raped, someone stomped to death, people throwing themselves off the mezzanine floor, dozens of bodies.

It was a war of all against all - 'you're on your own' - in the centre of the American empire. But now that the aid is pouring in, vital as it is, do not confuse charity with justice. I'm not asking for a revolution, I am asking for reform. A Marshall Plan for the South could be the first step.

Dr Cornel West is professor of African American studies and religion at Princeton University. His great grandfather was a slave. He is a rap artist and appeared as Counselor West in Matrix Reloaded and Matrix Revolutions.
 
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it seems to me, that when people decide that they don't want to be called something, we should respect that decision and not cry "PC".

When you use a term to describe a person, and that person said "use a different term, the first one offends me" and you continue to use the offensive term, you are doing it solely to be an asshole.
 
I don't give a fuck what they call them,as long as they don't say ******s and Spics running for their lives.


Also I'd like to know why you censor the word N-I-G-G-E-R- AND NOT SPICS
I find that word just as offensive as Blacks do the word N-I-G-G-E-R-,same goes for the word WETBACK.They should be censored as well,those words get tossed around this board everyday.And watch somebody will come into this thread and toss them at me.
 
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Brown Pride I agree If we are going to censor one recially insensative word then we should block them all off. But just like in your post there are ways to get the word in your post if you really want to. I think among minorities it has become acceptable for us to call each other niggas wetbacks or whatever, because of a familiar feeling of being downtrodden by whitey (THE MAN).

Regardless you cannot allow words from the ignorant guide your actions people who throw those insults around truly have no idea what they mean.
 
Brown Pride said:
I don't give a fuck what they call them,as long as they don't say ******s and S***s running for their lives.
The term is <u>not</u> allowed on this board. See, Rules of the Board. Moreover, I don't believe that anyone one has ever used that term on THIS board.

QueEx
 
Founded by Slaves -=- Wrecked by Katrina -=- Overlooked by FEMA

<font size="3"><center>
"... Turkey creek ... founded by a group of freed slaves
... Most residents ... are descendants of freemen and many
still reside in the homes built during the Reconstruction era ...
-- Katrina ... exposed the rift between the poorer residents
of the Turkey Creek and North Gulfport communities and
local and state officials ..."</font size></center>


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Re: Founded by Slaves -=- Wrecked by Katrina -=- Overlooked by FEMA

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DON'T MISS -- CLICK THE VIDEO CLIP IN THE ARTICLE <u>ABOVE</u>:</font size>
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One man brings relief to Turkey Creek
creek.vs.cnn.jpg


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Re: Founded by Slaves -=- Wrecked by Katrina -=- Overlooked by FEMA

<font size="6"><center>Creek residents rescue their own</font size></center>

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162435814190.jpg

DaShawn Thompson, left, Joshua McLaurin and Cedric Stewart helped
rescue people from homes off of Rippy Road during Hurricane Katrina.</center>

The Sun Herald
By TRACY DASH
tadash@sunherald.com
September 26, 2005

GULFPORT - Residents of Turkey Creek say they live among heroes. Not the comic-book kind like Spider-Man or Superman, but real men who risked their lives to save others.

Although thousands of South Mississippians heeded warnings to evacuate in the days before Hurricane Katrina, many stayed, believing they would be safe from her wrath.

Ercill Idom and her family were among those who remained. After all, she had stayed in her wood-frame home on Idom Street, just off Rippy Road, for other storms and was fine. Her feeling of safety vanished, though, when she saw flood waters buckle her new hardwood floors.

Seven men, young and not so young, walked in muddy, chest-deep, water at times to rescue at least four families from the flood, including two small children and an elderly woman. Winds topping 100 mph slammed against them, spraying rain water in their faces. They made their way around downed power lines and tried to avoid flying debris.

"You couldn't walk," said Joshua McLaurin, one of the rescuers. "There were white caps."

The close-knit community of Turkey Creek is made up of relatives and friends who have known each other for years. The houses that line Rippy Road and streets that branch off the main street are mostly wood-frame, one-story dwellings.

The area often has street flooding when the creek backs up, but residents said they don't recall the area getting that much water in the past.

Many of the homes that flooded Aug. 29 were empty last week, with some uninhabitable. Mattresses, furniture, wet carpet and other debris now sit on the curb in front of nearly every home.

McLaurin, his wife and 2-year-old planned to leave town for the storm, but decided to stay because his in-laws refused to leave. His mother-in-law is Idom, with whom he and his family lived.

The Idoms lost their home and are living with Thompson and his mother. McLaurin and his wife lost everything and live elsewhere.

McLaurin joined Dashawn Thompson, his cousin by marriage, who led the rescue. Idom said she and her husband are disabled and would have drowned if Thompson, who lives on Rippy Road, didn't check on them.

Thompson said he realized early during the storm that the water was quickly rising and knew that residents behind Mt. Pleasant United Methodist Church had stayed, including Idom, his aunt.

"It was out of bravery," Idom said.

Five other men joined the effort, stopping at every house in the area that looked occupied. The other men include Jerry Darden, Cedric Stewart, Delbert Bester, Donnie Smith and Hurley Johnson.

The men sometimes worked together and branched off into groups at other times.

Gulfport Mayor Brent Warr and President Bush have recognized Darden for his efforts, but the Gulfport city employee said the others deserve praise as well.

"I was not alone," said Darden, whose home was damaged.

Darden, McLaurin and Thompson said they were scared, but did what they had to do. Darden said he survived by thinking about his wife. Thompson said his son "kept me going."

At one point during the rescue, the men found a small boat that they used to save an elderly woman. None of the men know her name and believe she is in her 80s. They found her and her family in their garage.

"She was on top of a car and the water was coming up," Thompson said.

Darden said they found a couple standing in chest-deep water inside their home on Idom Street. The parents held their infant in their arms, he said.

Another family the men found refused to leave their flooded home. Darden said they went back to check on them after the storm and found them safe.

The men brought some people to a house on Rippy Road that sits on high ground and others to the church, which is made of cinder block and brick and has four steps leading to the front door.

"The people were frantic at first," McLaurin said, "but relieved when we arrived."

http://www.sunherald.com/mld/sunherald/12742484.htm
 
QueEx said:
The term is <u>not</u> allowed on this board. See, Rules of the Board. Moreover, I don't believe that anyone one has ever used that term on THIS board.

QueEx


You got you head in the sand Que,the wordS **** AND WETBACK get tossed around this board like 40 going North,I know I've had it them tosse at me,so don't say nobody never used them on this board.I been on this board since 98 and seen it many atime.

I see you allow the TERM WETBACK to be prited on this board
 
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Greed said:
why do you cry all the time?

why dont you go to migente.com if you dont like it here.

What you talking bout,go to migente.com, when you ever see me sing the blues ,Blacks like you always crying bout the White man holding you back.And then you feed into their Idea of keeping Black and Brown fighting each other instead of getting together and fighting against them.
 
Greed said:
thanks for the generalization, now you can leave.

I don't have to leave from anywhere son,you come at me and tell me to migente .com for pointing things out to Que.Sounds like you don't like to hear the truth.Instead of hearing me out ,you wan't to censor me and run me off,much like the White man does to both of our people.
 
peace
As I was breaking it down to some yesterday, I truly believe that the term caught onto the media followers lips after an early report
When I first tuned into the tragedy via the media on an early broadcast, this one particular British reporter covering the story for the BBC news station distintively gave an explanation for HIS use of the word for what HE saw @ THAT PARTICULAR TIME;

Dude was saying that he was there during a few grave travesties & worldwide tragedies - he saw the desolation of over 20,000 people lost in an earthquake in SouthAmerica a few back, he wittnessed firsthand & went on to name about 12 worldwide destructive occurances in a few nations Africa, S & Central America amongst other places and comented on the level of devestation along with physical & mental displacement of human lives;
based upon his own observances, he explained to the Studio reporter that what he saw was the same as other refugees he's witnessed

Fast Forward a few days later & add on the lack of immediate federal & emergency support to those affected & the term may have taken on another abuse of its original definition

peace
 
Brown Pride said:
You got you head in the sand Que,the wordS **** AND WETBACK get tossed around this board like 40 going North,I know I've had it them tosse at me,so don't say nobody never used them on this board.I been on this board since 98 and seen it many atime.

I see you allow the TERM WETBACK to be prited on this board
BP, when I say "on this board", I am referring to the Politicis and Topics board -- and those terms (or any "Name Calling") is not allowed on THIS board. I know a lot of shit gets tossed around on BGOL, however, I don't even try to deal with it there since it is well known that shit talking is not only allowed but encouraged over there. I don't have the time, energy or inclination to monitor, edit or imposed sanctions for what is the standard fare on BGOL -- or what some call The Main Board.

I picked up THIS board as moderator several years ago as a personal project to see if I could turn it into something educational and beneficial to all that read and post. It ain't easy to do and I take a lot of shit for doing what I hope might somehow be a learning experience for us all. In doing so, I realized that name calling adds nothing to the discussion or enlightenment of another. In fact, it only serves to reinforce prejudices among and between people. Hence, name calling whether using the "N", "S" or "WB" words are prohibited on this board and I do my damnest to deal with it -- even to the point of banning violators.

Again, I don't believe YOU have been abused on THIS board, however, if you can show me where, not only will I apologize, I will deal with it. If you can't show me where, I will expect yours ...

QueEx
 
QueEx said:
BP, when I say "on this board", I am referring to the Politicis and Topics board -- and those terms (or any "Name Calling") is not allowed on THIS board. I know a lot of shit gets tossed around on BGOL, however, I don't even try to deal with it there since it is well known that shit talking is not only allowed but encouraged over there. I don't have the time, energy or inclination to monitor, edit or imposed sanctions for what is the standard fare on BGOL -- or what some call The Main Board.

I picked up THIS board as moderator several years ago as a personal project to see if I could turn it into something educational and beneficial to all that read and post. It ain't easy to do and I take a lot of shit for doing what I hope might somehow be a learning experience for us all. In doing so, I realized that name calling adds nothing to the discussion or enlightenment of another. In fact, it only serves to reinforce prejudices among and between people. Hence, name calling whether using the "N", "S" or "WB" words are prohibited on this board and I do my damnest to deal with it -- even to the point of banning violators.

Again, I don't believe YOU have been abused on THIS board, however, if you can show me where, not only will I apologize, I will deal with it. If you can't show me where, I will expect yours ...

QueEx

I thought you were talking bout this whole website in general,that's were I was coming from.Anyway like I said ass long as the printed press and TV news don't use those words in question,what does it matter if they call the people running from Katrina refugees.Your boy Greed is already trying to pick a fight with me,by saying I'm crying and to go to migente .com if I don't like it here.When all I was doing was pointing out some things in general.But I ain't mad at the lil vato,if that was how he was raised then so be it.If he can't have a normal convo without telling somebody to go back where he came from,than he is jus showing how immature he is.Anyways

Vaya en paz mi hermano,
C/S Brown Pride
 
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