Yep. Seems the main part of the "planning" was to say "it'll probably never happen here..." > Saw a programme on BBC News 24 when some environmentalist > guy was on saying "see, we told you so!!" and then all the viewers > txt-ed in and were going "aw whatever, sure they're the richest country > in the world, they can sort it out" and "bout time they got to see how > the rest of the world live"; the environmentalist was all > "b-b-but suffering is suffering, whereever it happens! you nasty heartless > viewers" and then they had a 20 minute feature about the impact on the > Insurance Industry. > I was feeling a bit nauseous by then so I changed channels. > > My own impression, for what its worth, was the the US authorities, > despite knowing there was gonna be a big hurricane, didn't bother > helping some of their poorest citizens to evacuate properly and so as > usual, all the poorest people suffer the most, as they had no transport > or means of getting out and safe till the storm was over. > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > http://www.feline1.co.uk > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "jonesalley" <jonesalley@...> > To: "Mellotronists" <Mellotronists@yahoogroups.com> > Sent: Thursday, September 01, 2005 9:00 AM > Subject: Fw: [Mellotronists] Re: OT: How big a story (overseas) is the > hurricane/New Orleans flood? > > >> Not trying to be argumentative, I can only say that watching cable news >> coverage of ordinary people trying to cope somehow with the sudden >> catastrophe that has befallen them, many of whom have lost everything >> they >> owned with no hope of recoup, I have yet to see anyone carrying a >> computer >> or a television set and I can't help but wonder about a media (I'm sorry, >> that should be "liberal media") that films people trudging through >> chest-deep water that is filled with agitated displaced wildlife, hidden >> obstacles, assorted poisons, dead things, sewage, and who knows what >> else, >> and who are carrying a gym bag packed with loaves of bread, bottled >> water, >> and packages of Pampers, damaged goods which will only end up in a >> landfill >> otherwise, stuff that they scavenged from a washed-out WalMart that they >> made it to without dying, and which has enough insurance coverage to >> actually profit on the corporate level from this kind of event... >> >> ... and refers to them as "looters." >> >> >> >>> Unbelievable, the scale of this disaster. >>> Unbelievable also, the looting. >> >> >> >> >> >> Yahoo! Groups Links >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >
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Fw: [Mellotronists] Re: OT: How big a story (overseas) is the hurricane/New Orleans flood?
2005-09-01 by jonesalley
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