I'm astounded by the sheer volume of reaction to last week's post -- not so much because of the outpouring of emotion (both supportive and scornful, here on LJ and via email), but because it actually seems like I was telling people something they didn't already know. What? Poor people? We've got those here? And they have problems? Holy shit, you jest!
Obviously, some of you know all too well what I was talking about. And some of you were genuinely appalled, because the practical difficulties of poverty simply hadn't occurred to you. Others thought I was overstating the case, or being sympathetic towards lazy welfare bums, and giving too much credit to looters and vandals. Some of you asked gently (but cluelessly) why all the car-less poor people just didn't walk out of New Orleans when they heard the bad weather was coming ... and bless your hearts. If I seriously need to explain the logistics of that to you, what a precious and sheltered life you must lead.
Perhaps an object lesson is in order: I'd like to take you, all of you "walking escape" advocates, into a dense urban area in the middle of a thunderstorm ... and turn you loose on the street carrying bottled water, some food, your children, your wheelchair-bound grandparents, your pets (if you have any), and tell you to get the hell out of Dodge within the next day or two. And ... go! I sure do hope you're in a superhero state of health, because otherwise you ain't getting far.
As the news continues to pelt us with grim information, more "buts" come out -- that is, "I would have left, but." But my mother was bedridden, we had no car, and I couldn't leave her. But my grandparents live alone and are housebound, and we couldn't leave them. But I was watching my sister's kids and I couldn't find her, so I couldn't leave without her. But the shelter wouldn't take my pets, and I couldn't leave them.* But my neighbors are disabled and they needed help, so I stayed. But the hurricane hit at the end of the month, right before our paycheck/disability check/welfare check was supposed to come, and the car was out of gas so we couldn't go.
And now, of course, you're seeing more and more people who don't want to leave now that the worst appears over.
Who can blame them? What idiot in his or her right mind would - at this point - simply trust a government official in a boat? Come with us! We'll take care of you! Like hell you will. Thanks, we'll stay put. No water? No food? Well, at least we're home with no water and food, and not crammed into camp conditions in federal custody.
I'm not saying it's the best approach, or the right approach, or that they shouldn't leave -- I'm just saying that I understand why the stragglers are hanging on so hard. It's something worse than fear of the unknown; it's the certainty that their government has failed them in a spectacular and deadly fashion.
And that's the thing about low-income communities like the ones so hard-hit in NOLA -- they already know that their government isn't really there to help them, and that's why so many who could have otherwise left, did not. Who was going to look after the children? The old people? The disabled people? The animals? Should they rely on Uncle Sam, because this time things will be different? Of course not. You stay and take care of your own if you can, because God knows nobody else is going to.
So look at the demographic that arrived first on the scene, while government officials were wringing their hands and shoe-shopping. [Do understand that what follows is generalization, and I am aware that exceptions exist.]
First, of course -- came the press, members of which began roaming more or less freely while rescue efforts and supplies were still conspicuously absent. Next, the hideously overwhelmed local officials dove back in. And after that, along came the local authorities and other poor people from distant areas.
These were people who couldn't really afford to be there, but they went rolling in anyway -- with beater trucks and battered fishing boats -- because they were the ones who best knew how close they themselves were to such a situation. They came because they were only lucky, and they were acutely aware of it; and they too were pretty confident that if they were in NOLA's situation, government officials would be equally slow to act. Small churches and rural schools organized drop-offs of goods, and collected donations on street corners.
The people who had the least to give gave first and fastest, because they knew exactly how much they had to lose.
Shortly afterwards came the big organized charity groups, the blue-collar people and emergency medical people, people whose employers were donating equipment and manpower to the cause as it became increasingly clear that the infrastructure (both federal and local) was shot to hell and that official help was going to be slow in coming. And then the corporate donations gushed forth, because the eau de desperate urgency was beginning to waft the way of the white-collar world. What? You mean a bunch of poor people might have some sort of impact on the existing social, political, and economic structure? Who knew?
And last of all, as we all now know, came the feds -- the bloated, nebulous entities farthest removed from reality, and from poverty, and from the immediacy of the situation. There they go -- finally, grudgingly ... bringing up the rear and passing out blame. Wasting and under-utilizing available resources. Getting in the way.**
I don't know about you guys, but I'm so proud of my government that I could just burst.
* * * * *
Helpful Links:
* Scoff if you like, but this would've been me.
** According to the local relief official on the Today show this morning.
Obviously, some of you know all too well what I was talking about. And some of you were genuinely appalled, because the practical difficulties of poverty simply hadn't occurred to you. Others thought I was overstating the case, or being sympathetic towards lazy welfare bums, and giving too much credit to looters and vandals. Some of you asked gently (but cluelessly) why all the car-less poor people just didn't walk out of New Orleans when they heard the bad weather was coming ... and bless your hearts. If I seriously need to explain the logistics of that to you, what a precious and sheltered life you must lead.
Perhaps an object lesson is in order: I'd like to take you, all of you "walking escape" advocates, into a dense urban area in the middle of a thunderstorm ... and turn you loose on the street carrying bottled water, some food, your children, your wheelchair-bound grandparents, your pets (if you have any), and tell you to get the hell out of Dodge within the next day or two. And ... go! I sure do hope you're in a superhero state of health, because otherwise you ain't getting far.
As the news continues to pelt us with grim information, more "buts" come out -- that is, "I would have left, but." But my mother was bedridden, we had no car, and I couldn't leave her. But my grandparents live alone and are housebound, and we couldn't leave them. But I was watching my sister's kids and I couldn't find her, so I couldn't leave without her. But the shelter wouldn't take my pets, and I couldn't leave them.* But my neighbors are disabled and they needed help, so I stayed. But the hurricane hit at the end of the month, right before our paycheck/disability check/welfare check was supposed to come, and the car was out of gas so we couldn't go.
And now, of course, you're seeing more and more people who don't want to leave now that the worst appears over.
Who can blame them? What idiot in his or her right mind would - at this point - simply trust a government official in a boat? Come with us! We'll take care of you! Like hell you will. Thanks, we'll stay put. No water? No food? Well, at least we're home with no water and food, and not crammed into camp conditions in federal custody.
I'm not saying it's the best approach, or the right approach, or that they shouldn't leave -- I'm just saying that I understand why the stragglers are hanging on so hard. It's something worse than fear of the unknown; it's the certainty that their government has failed them in a spectacular and deadly fashion.
And that's the thing about low-income communities like the ones so hard-hit in NOLA -- they already know that their government isn't really there to help them, and that's why so many who could have otherwise left, did not. Who was going to look after the children? The old people? The disabled people? The animals? Should they rely on Uncle Sam, because this time things will be different? Of course not. You stay and take care of your own if you can, because God knows nobody else is going to.
So look at the demographic that arrived first on the scene, while government officials were wringing their hands and shoe-shopping. [Do understand that what follows is generalization, and I am aware that exceptions exist.]
First, of course -- came the press, members of which began roaming more or less freely while rescue efforts and supplies were still conspicuously absent. Next, the hideously overwhelmed local officials dove back in. And after that, along came the local authorities and other poor people from distant areas.
These were people who couldn't really afford to be there, but they went rolling in anyway -- with beater trucks and battered fishing boats -- because they were the ones who best knew how close they themselves were to such a situation. They came because they were only lucky, and they were acutely aware of it; and they too were pretty confident that if they were in NOLA's situation, government officials would be equally slow to act. Small churches and rural schools organized drop-offs of goods, and collected donations on street corners.
The people who had the least to give gave first and fastest, because they knew exactly how much they had to lose.
Shortly afterwards came the big organized charity groups, the blue-collar people and emergency medical people, people whose employers were donating equipment and manpower to the cause as it became increasingly clear that the infrastructure (both federal and local) was shot to hell and that official help was going to be slow in coming. And then the corporate donations gushed forth, because the eau de desperate urgency was beginning to waft the way of the white-collar world. What? You mean a bunch of poor people might have some sort of impact on the existing social, political, and economic structure? Who knew?
And last of all, as we all now know, came the feds -- the bloated, nebulous entities farthest removed from reality, and from poverty, and from the immediacy of the situation. There they go -- finally, grudgingly ... bringing up the rear and passing out blame. Wasting and under-utilizing available resources. Getting in the way.**
I don't know about you guys, but I'm so proud of my government that I could just burst.
* * * * *
Helpful Links:
- A friend in Gulfport, MS, collecting goods.
NBC's list of aid and affiliate organizations.
Search for missing friends and relatives here.
Noah's Wish - an organization rescuing and sheltering pets left homeless or abandoned by Katrina.
[EDIT: Trouble with the Noah's Wish site - may be overloaded. Try The Humane Society of NW LA. They too are taking evacuated/abandoned/rescued hurricane pets.]
* Scoff if you like, but this would've been me.
** According to the local relief official on the Today show this morning.
- Mood:tired

Comments
*applauds*
Mind if I link to this in my journal?
Amen. That says it all right there. No one from those communities in their right mind is going to trust the government.
Ayup.
And me.
Amen.
Your writing on this has been eloquent and spectacular. Thanks for posting it during some v dark days.
People like to make fun of the dumb rednecks down here, but that was Bubba in his Chevy Blazer with 200,000 miles on it, dragging his 20 year old aluminum fishing boat, the backseat packed with supplies that were supposed to take him on his annual deer hunting trip, burning up his vacation time (carefully hoarded for that same hunting trip). Let all the Yankees mock the rednecks, but when Bubba sees that he can take his chainsaw, his fishing boat, and his Blazer and do some much needed good, he'll go. And he's a hell of a lot more effective than the feds, in this case.
I'm raising money in my LJ here to send to her if you know of anyone who wants to help.
The "walking escape" advocates are getting to me as well. Good deconstruction of that position.
That would have been me, too. If I couldn't get out with all my family, I wouldn't.
In mid-August, we had a small pasture fire. Had I not been home, it would have been a much larger fire, and quite likely put my critters at risk: 3 dogs and (at that time) 3 cats. My first thought about being home was "OMG, I could have lost all the animals!" rather than "OMG, my house could have burned down!"
Financially, the house is the only thing of substantial monetary value I own in all the world, and it contains everything else I own. But that mattered a great deal less than Taz, Sky, Raven, Jasmine, Huck, and Tom.
This is why my offer on several Katrina-housing websites says 'bring your animals'. We have three dogs (all friendly) and five cats now, as two rescue kittens arrived over the weekend. We can take more of either. We can foster some until their owners can get them back, and we know that could be a long, long time. (I just won't tell the county.) That's why I have contacted animal-rescue sites and asked if we can foster; what if it were my guys?
And we are working poor, but we've been poorer, and we have a house, and we're therefore going to do whatever we can to the point of major financial pain for ourselves. Goddess knows if a major quake hits here, it could be us, and I don't see a shelter taking us in with three dogs and five cats.
I friended you awhile, and left for some damned reason. I miss your eloquency. Can I come back? Pretty puh-leeze? :)
I'm not saying it's the best approach, or the right approach, or that they shouldn't leave -- I'm just saying that I understand why the stragglers are hanging on so hard. It's something worse than fear of the unknown; it's the certainty that their government has failed them in a spectacular and deadly fashion.
And that's the thing about low-income communities like the ones so hard-hit in NOLA -- they already know that their government isn't really there to help them, and that's why so many who could have otherwise left, did not.
Very well said. *applauds* I can only hope a broader awakening is going to occur to the rest of the nation in the wake of this horror --maybe the cast majority of folks will finally wise up and grok what the NOLA folks now know in their bones --government AIN'T your friend, and it AIN'T gonna help you.
"I said, 'government is powerless to protect you,' not powerless to punish you." -- Chief Wiggum, The Simpsons
On a seperate note, Wicked_Wish I've added you to my Friends list so I can read your updates as they are so well written and informative.
That said, it never ceases to amaze me how truly ignorant the public can be about, well, poverty in general. And how we have more problems here in our "land of the free" than we care to admit at times. I'm not one to say our foreign policy is crap, though living the life of unemployed and virtually destitute, I certainly wouldn't mind a bit more help. And the help we have, it's not really something that is exactly easy to get. I'm amazed - I'll spare the sob story I went through to NOT get help with paying my rent. After being on a waiting list for over a year and living on next to nothing, I was told I'm in fact TOO poor to receive help. Got to love that, I'm so poor the government feels help is out of its capabilities.
Yet, rather than sympathy from these people paid to try and get you out of a situation like this, you're shooed on your way and given no avenues to pursue. It's a world where you wander around blindly trying to get help. And watch as the bystanders not in your position criticize you for anything you could or couldn't do to change it. As if it were only that simple.
*ahem* That was incredibly babbly...Sorry about that Cherie. :) The cliff notes: I get it, I get it all too darn well. And it doesn't make it any less upsetting.
~ ceo [http://ceo.wordpress.com]
There's one other factor that only just hit my eye this morning. Some poor people in LA believe they will be asked for an unaffordable payment in order to be rescued.
From: http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/09/05/sc
What I don't get is why so many other people are having such a hard time grasping this.
You have The Gift(tm), and this post shows it incredibly well. You said...what was in my head. And more eloquently than I could ever have done. Keep saying it. Maybe somewhere, someone will hear and finally "get" it.
Light is a wonderful disinfectant, however and I have no doubt what has happened in New Orleans has opened the eyes of many (including myself to some degree).
Many in our great society don't like to see proof that a rising economic tide fails to lift all(actually most) boats. Especially those who lack a boat to begin with.
I was a little surprised at the response as well, but I suppose its further evidence of how sadly divided our country has become. Thanks for adding your light to the mix regardless.
Doc
Beautiful entry, just... beautiful. Thank you for writing it so I can stop trying to say it.