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Here is the news of his request
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I don't really want to side with Kevin here at all, but I do have a question - if these people can't get/afford insurance, then aren't the citizens who live elsewhere effectively "insuring" the area through tax dollars?
Why is this something the government should have anything to do with? Disaster funds are one thing - getting people back onto their feet with some assistance is a great idea, and a necessary duty of government. Doesn't it seem like the NO funding requests are going far beyond this, though, and toward propping people up rather than extending a helping hand? Additionally, why do we act like insurance is some sort of right? That undermines what insurance really is supposed to be: pooling risk among a group. Insurance in this nation is beyond F-ed, but that doesn't mean we have to pretend the concept is something totally different. EDIT: Daemon, seriously guy, don't you get why those things are not at all related to each other? You're beating a dead horse here. Start a new thread if you really think NO funding is being quashed by the war effort, and show some evidence of that. |
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Also, it's not a matter of affording insurance. People based their decisions of whether or not to purchase a policy on federal government reports. Quote:
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Im sorry I must be 'stupid' Bush paying lipservice in NOLA on the same day while asking for money from Congress that the US may not have so it can be spent elsewhere on top of the billions already being wasted and you need me to show evidence....? They are NOT related? Ok. Let me say this again slowly... You Don't See These Stories Coming Out of Florida and it gets hit regularly by hurricanes....and when the governor asks for money...he gets it.... and we arent even gonna get into the wildfires that seem to be happening yearly out in the midwest. So WHY 2 years later and NOLA still looks a hot mess? Reading in between the lines is indeed Fundamental |
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Is the concept that the government intentionally misled people in a fashion that prevented them from buying insurance? Quote:
I'm certainly no disaster relief expert, but the desire to rebuild then upgrade seems like a terrible plan in terms of efficiency - thus, it must be catering to something beyond just getting people back on their feet. There is no requirement that anyone be allowed to live in a certain part of New Orleans, and it's not the government's job to guarantee that, right? If a "helping hand" won't do the trick . . . what will? And why should that excessive amount of effort go into it? I've been to NO exactly twice in my life, and loved it both times, but I'm trying to get to where we talk about exactly what the government's duties entail, rather than wishcasting a return to a pre-Katrina state. Quote:
I agree that people cannot make something from nothing - that's my whole point, that the effort should be made to give people enough to make something . . . I just wonder if we're not giving more, and whether there are better ways to handle this sort of thing. |
Sorry for the double-post, but the last one was long . . .
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Say what you really mean. You make innuendos about the difference between NO and FL, but give no real idea of comparison - I'm pretty sure Katrina did more damage to NO than any hurricane has ever done to a comparable city in FL. The freaking city was largely uninhabitable afterwards. You don't see FL saying this because the comparison probably isn't valid. So what are you really implying? A racial bias? A preference toward his brother's state? Hell, these things might be accurate, but if that's the discussion, discuss that. As far as comparing the war, there's zero evidence that the war has prevented any work on the city of New Orleans. There's no evidence that stopping the war tomorrow would lead to significant changes in New Orleans. Just because the money for the war is misspent, it doesn't mean money is being taken from other places - this is simplified, obviously, but the concept is deficit spending. The US Government has probably made massive mistakes regarding rebuilding New Orleans, but these mistakes exist independent of the war effort. Argue that you would rather have that money for NO if you want, but don't act like I am the retard for asking you for actual discussion and support for your views. Sugar08 is a great example for arguing your side with actual information, instead of inferring that I'm the simpleton. I guarantee you I am not. |
First off, thanks for the intelligent response. I appreciate the discourse. Also, I apologize for the length in advance.
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And this is where I cry foul. It's impossible to ignore that most, not all, of the people affected by Katrina in the city of New Orleans are black and poor... we can't say the same for the people in Washington State. Quote:
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Insurance,etc.
Full disclosure - My father is a cousin of Huey Long. I've had family in New Orleans and LA forever. My husband's great -grandfather sculpted many of the beautiful monuments you go see in the cities of the dead, and his grandmother sang at the Court of Two Sisters. I love the city.
And I'm tired of everyone assuming that the only people affected by Katrina are the poor and uninsured. Insurance companies have run riot over claims - playing fast and loose with definitions of what constitutes wind damage, and what is water. Many thousands of people from all over the LA and Miss. coast are displaced, and found out that their insurance company was willing to let them hang out to dry. I know of many natives who wish to return, but have been unable because of the lack of basic services and security. These taxpayers are, I think, entitled to running water, electricity, and some measure of safety. But they can't get it. Some of them are still wrestling with their insurance companies, two years later. And until the engineering is taken care of, who wants to put themselves at the mercy of the Army Corps. of Engineers? I've written everyone I can think of, from Oprah to Ray Nagin, with the idea that many of those who were poor and in government housing and wish to return should be allowed to as part of a works program. Teach them construction skills, and not only do you solve the labour shortage, you give them a means of pulling themselves out of the poverty they were mired in.They can support their families, who will in turn support the businesses that will make the community thrive. And this would work all along the Gulf Coast. It doesn't have to be a government program - private industry could do it. There are many small private programs that are working to bring New Orleans and her sister coastal cities back. The government housing projects there were a festering sore that the government chose to ignore until they could no longer. Those people in the Superdome were following the instructions given to them by their leaders - many of them could not evacuate, and the city and state failed them by not evacuating them when they could. Anyone else recall the shots of yards of school buses, empty and flooded, which could have been used to evacuate people? We need New Orleans for many reasons - as a port at the mouth of the Mississippi, as the spiritual and cultural home to so many different groups, and, YES, because of the heritage and history it contains. Do I expect the government to do it all? Hell,no - I just want them to provide the same level of infrastructure every other citizen in the U.S. has a right to expect, and I want them to straighten up the engineering nightmare that THEY put into place. And then I want them to get the hell out of the way, so the citizens of New Orleans can shine again. |
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My sentiments exactly... Everyone makes money off of NOLA from food to music, a cultural stronghold in America, then a Natural Disaster that caused piss poor levee design to have a complete enginneering failure that caused a flood. Then this comcominant disaster annihilated a corrupt local and state government and added an inept Fed government who should have taken over the reigns the minute the determined that crazy thing was headed in that direction... Watching live on TV, just made me question my birthland and my birth right and I was not involved in anyway... The several large insurance companies have FAILED their insurers in NOLA. Nationwide was one of them. They had issues that because the hurricane itself did not actually cause the damage, then flood insurance by storm surge would not apply. But if you have lost your entire house are you basically telling these people, "Go F Yourself?" Then, you get and pay your tax bills from the feds and the state. That is just a double-whammy and it is not right. Yes, we should be proud to foot some of this bill because it is about CITIZENRY and being a part of the United States. |
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