Nerevar said:I really don't want to sound like an ass, but I never would've expected to happen in a developed western country like the US. I guess it goes to show you how much we're all still nature's bitch, no matter how nice the creature comforts we enjoy are.
xexex said:New Orleans is going to be an example of what will happen to much of the country when multipul disasters (natural or man made) strike.
JeffDowns said:I'm sure it would be happening anywhere else... This is life or death. You realize that right? I'm not saying it's right by any means, but you do realize this is about survival, right?
Is this going to continue to get worse? What's the status on the flooding... is it still ongoing (as in the water levels are rising)?Tommie Hu$tle said:In the next 6 hours we are going to see nothing but raw chaos.
Teddman said:Is this going to continue to get worse? What's the status on the flooding... is it still ongoing (as in the water levels are rising)?
Fragamemnon said:Basic services in the city have collapsed. The city is not habitable. The looting issue is NOTHING compared to the massive refugee problem that is going to start rearing its head in the next 12-24 hours.
Teddman said:Is this going to continue to get worse? What's the status on the flooding... is it still ongoing (as in the water levels are rising)?
GAS SCARE HITS ATLANTA
Tue Aug 2005 30 22:23:23 ET
Metro Atlanta drivers are facing the possibility of paying considerably more than $3 a gallon for gas by Labor Day -- if they can get it at all, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution is reporting Wednesday.
The two pipelines that bring gasoline and jet fuel to the region are down -- powerless to pump as Hurricane Katrina wreaked havoc on electrical infrastructure.
The metro Atlanta region generally has about a 10-day supply of gasoline in inventory, said BP spokesman Michael Kumpf. The pipelines have been down for two days.
Alpharetta, Ga.-based Colonial Pipeline Co., cut off from its suppliers on the Gulf Coast, is now pumping gas from huge storage tanks, many in Powder Springs, Ga. Whether electric power can be restored to the pipeline pumps before supplies run out is "the great uncertainty ... that hangs over all of us," said Daniel Moenter, a spokesman for Marathon Ashland Petroleum, a major supplier of metro Atlanta's fuel.
Teddman said:Is this going to continue to get worse? What's the status on the flooding... is it still ongoing (as in the water levels are rising)?
ManaByte said:You don't even want to know the worst-case projections of what would happen if that Yellowstone caldera blows.![]()
pollo said:anyone feel so helpless that all you can do is sit back behind your monitor and f5 this page?
...
you think this is bad in New Orleans, just think what it woulda' been like if Katrina had stayed at 175~184 MPH and the eye had swung more to the west, giving the city the full intensity of the right-front quadrant of the storm. The city would've been totally decimated, instead of what it is, "just" as massive disasterous mess. At least there still is a New Orleans left
pollo said:anyone feel so helpless that all you can do is sit back behind your monitor and f5 this page?
...
Teddman said:Damn, wish I'd visited New Orleans prior to this disaster. It's not going to be the same for a long time...![]()
argon said:But they are looting bags, carts, trashcans full of jewelry, electronics merchandise, etc. Some of the videos are just appalling.
I'm sure it would happen in any major city after a disaster, but that's why I dislike big cities.. People have no sense of community.
Fragamemnon said:I agree with the other poster that fire is could become a real problem in the near future.
The Pentagon late Tuesday ordered five Navy ships and eight maritime rescue teams to the Gulf Coast to bolster relief operations as worsening conditions overwhelmed the initial response.
The NEW YORK TIMES plans to report later tonight: One Navy amphibious assault ship, the Bataan, with six Sea Stallion and Sea Hawk helicopters that could be used for search and rescue missions.
Tommie Hu$tle said:Another thing to add to Frag's statement is that the VAST majority of those still in NO are the most destitute anyways. Those that could afford to leave left long ago. You are looking at those with the least to lose and nothing to gain and nothing to stop them from acting on their most primal ugres. The situation is as about as bad as you can get, and will only get worse when what little food and drinking suppiles diminish from what they have.
Krowley said:i hope they have a workable plan to get these people out of there.
Pachinko said:I'm thinking it'll be 5 years before this city is actually functioning again, atleast 8 months before any sort of rebuilding can really start and 2 months before they can get the water out. But atleast the historic sections are still standing. even if they are under water.
In fiscal year 2006, the New Orleans district of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is bracing for a record $71.2 million reduction in federal funding.
It would be the largest single-year funding loss ever for the New Orleans district, Corps officials said.
I've been here over 30 years and I've never seen this level of reduction, said Al Naomi, project manager for the New Orleans district. I think part of the problem is it's not so much the reduction, it's the drastic reduction in one fiscal year. It's the immediacy of the reduction that I think is the hardest thing to adapt to.
There is an economic ripple effect, too. The cuts mean major hurricane and flood protection projects will not be awarded to local engineering firms. Also, a study to determine ways to protect the region from a Category 5 hurricane has been shelved for now.
Money is so tight the New Orleans district, which employs 1,300 people, instituted a hiring freeze last month on all positions. The freeze is the first of its kind in about 10 years, said Marcia Demma, chief of the Corps' Programs Management Branch.
Stephen Jeselink, interim commander of the New Orleans Corps district, told employees in an internal e-mail dated May 25 that the district is experiencing financial challenges. Execution of our available funds must be dealt with through prudent districtwide management decisions. In addition to a hiring freeze, Jeselink canceled the annual Corps picnic held every June.
ManaByte said:How would they easily get the water out of downtown when its below sea level? Massive pumps they bring in or try to dam it off and then pump it?
Fragamemnon said:The Army Corps of Engineers can do anything given enough time, money, and manpower. In time we certainly have the means to rebuild New Orleans, but I sure hope we ask ourselves the question of whether it is worth rebuilding the whole thing, just to risk it happening again later.
Fragamemnon said:Having worked in the poorest, most destitute part of New Orleans during my teen years, I can't emphasize enough the truth to the above statement. Anyone who could afford to get out left Sunday. NO has a ton of people in poverty and destitution, who were living in rickety homes which were likely destroyed in the storm.
I bet a lot of the items that are being looted that aren't basic living essentials will be bartered for those goods. This will only get worse as the living essentials become more and more scarce.
argon said:I don't blame the poor for not leaving.. It really is expensive, especially with all the price gouging and shit going on. But the city and state should have supplied free busing days beforehand, to help people the poor evacuate. Not to prevent looting, but to protect their lives. Lets remember that it could have been a whole lot worse.. If the hurricane's trajectory didn't suddenly veer to the north, they could have all been dead.
ManaByte said:After $25 BILLION in damages?
The Army Corps of Engineers can do anything given enough time, money, and manpower. In time we certainly have the means to rebuild New Orleans, but I sure hope we ask ourselves the question of whether it is worth rebuilding the whole thing, just to risk it happening again later.
argon said:But the city and state should have provided free busing days beforehand, to help people the poor evacuate.
Fragamemnon said:The Army Corps of Engineers can do anything given enough time, money, and manpower. In time we certainly have the means to rebuild New Orleans, but I sure hope we ask ourselves the question of whether it is worth rebuilding the whole thing, just to risk it happening again later.
Nerevar said:They didn't know it was a severe hurricane until a day beforehand. Read the first part of the thread and you'll get an idea how quickly this storm turned deadly. This storm actually passed OVER Florida and did little damage.
gigapower said:Mayor Ray Nagin on CNN right now:
City is safe, significant number of people still in the city. People are out looking for food. Plenty of law enforcement in the city, main duty is search and rescue. 3500 more National Guard on their way to New Orleans. Over next 12 - 15 hours an addition of 9 to 15 feet of water, dry areas will be not be dry in the morning.
More coming...
How's the view from that Ivory Tower, man? I mean, isn't it a bit early to start pointing fingers? Or are the bodies floating in the streets not important enough to warrant your thoughts.argon said:Right, but given the particular circumstances of their city, they should have been more alert. Although I doubt the public would have really taken any early warnings to heart.
As a below-sea-level bowl surrounded by water on both sides, the city is a total death trap for hurricanes. Even a direct hit from a category 1 or 2 could break a levee, or damage a pump, who knows.
gigapower said:Mayor Ray Nagin on CNN right now:
City is safe ... Over next 12 - 15 hours an addition of 9 to 15 feet of water, dry areas will be not be dry in the morning.
ManaByte said:After $25 BILLION in damages?
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That oil rig was in drydock and Katrina blew it down the river.
whytemyke said:This is insane.... and the worst part is that, in my opinion, I've completely blown this off as just another hurricane until I came into this thread and saw everything. Up here in Michigan, most people are seeing this as jsut another hurricane and really aren't grasping that this has, for all intents and purposes, wiped New Orleans completely off the map.
I mean... if this doesn't make people feel weak as human beings, I don't know what will.