Archive for the 'Partisans' Category

Disparity of Katrina Funds Short Changes Bayou

Sunday, June 8th, 2008

Division and disagreement over funding and methods of appropriations, for recovery in the communities along the U.S. Gulf Coast, is knee deep in bureaucratic paper shuffling and politics the expanse of Hurricane Katrina herself. The challenge of disentangling the mistakes made before, during and after the storm has started by way of Congressional hearings, such as the one being held by the U.S. Senate’s Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee. Thus far, more and more layers of dysfunction in the bowels of multiple bureaucracies are being revealed.

Unfortunately, for residents of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Texas and Florida who were victims of not only Hurricane Katrina but subsequent storms, Hurricane Rita and Hurricane Wilma, during the 2005 hurricane season, as well intentioned as lawmakers may be, politics has become an integral part of getting future help for hundreds of thousands still trying to rebuild their lives.

Senator Joseph Lieberman (D-CT), ranking member of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, perhaps summed it up best when referring to missteps made by the federal government prior to Katrina’s coming ashore, stating, “An outrage on top of an outrage.” But his phraseology could apply to almost everything government and how it is choking on its own red tape. Hopefully, the hearings and the investigations will not derail the efforts of the responsible agencies on all levels of government, playing a game of catch-up, in expediting the housing and rebuilding needs of the displaced.

While the federal government approved $67 billion dollars for emergency relief and long-term recovery in the Gulf Coast region over five months ago, the time frame in which it is to be disbursed and the breakdown for individual states has been met with both angst and approval depending upon the state. The necessary housing for homeowners as well as renters who no longer have inhabitable dwellings, has been a nightmare for Louisiana with thousands of people still living in hotels, motels and even retired merchant marine ships, with less than 2,000 living in trailers, as originally promised.

According to the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), there is a need for 85,000 trailers just in Louisiana in order to accommodate residents who have temporarily been living in hotels. But there remain discrepancies about how many evacuees actually are residing in over 6,000 hotels in several different states. FEMA admittedly does not know which Katrina victims are occupying over 25,000 subsidized hotel rooms or whether they have sought or have been denied FEMA aid. Due to the American Red Cross initially handling the hotel program, coordinating both housing and aid programs have become unwieldy.

About 20,000 trailers are held in staging areas collectively in Louisiana, Texas, Alabama and Mississippi, However, due to non-repaired infrastructure, there are utilities which remain down and necessary for trailers to be inhabited. With 6,000 trailers allocated for New Orleans parishes, 3,000 have now been delivered, but only 1,950 currently are hooked up. In contrast, Mississippi has over 30,000 trailers distributed and functioning and well ahead of Louisiana in terms of infrastructure repair and the removal of debris, also lagging well behind that of Mississippi. In fairness, the amount of people displaced in New Orleans and Louisiana vastly outnumber the amount of victims of Mississippi.

But politics has been a benefactor for Mississippi as well, evidenced by the rewards they have reaped and in the smoothness in which they have been carried out through the efforts of Governor Haley Barbour and Senator Trent Lott (R-MS). For instance, in Mississippi, 33,378 occupied and hooked up trailers are meeting the housing needs of approximately 89% of the displaced. Unfortunately, there have been 34,000 maintenance requests, according to U.S. Representative Gene Taylor (D-MS), for trailers which were to have cost $19,000.00 each and have now escalated to nearly $75,000.00 since FEMA acquired them. Pro-rated over an 18-month period, FEMA will be paying $3,200.00 monthly per trailer, arriving at that figure.

Yet, this endless bad dream for so many shows no sign of ending for 90,000 displaced families of New Orleans, as the housing assistance allowance for those lucky enough to be in apartments outside of southern Louisiana as well as those in hotels, is set to end shortly. The housing aid will only be extended beyond February 7, 2006, for those getting the run around for five months, on a case-by-case basis, with the 2006 hurricane season but four months away.

But the most difficult pill to swallow for many has been what many federal, state and local officials from Louisiana say is a gross miscalculation of its share of the $67 billion approved by the U.S. Congress in 2005. Out of the $67 billion, $11.5 billion has been approved for hurricane relief through the Community Development Block Grants (CDBG) program from which Louisiana will receive $6.2 billion. Mississippi will receive $5.3 billion and Florida will receive $83 million, with Alabama and Texas to receive $74 million each. The maximum allowed any one state under the relief law passed by Congress at the end of 2005 is 54% of the allocated amount which Louisiana was given.

That now leaves Louisiana with $6.2 billion which it must specifically pass on to the 20,000 homes destroyed outside of federally insured flood zones, essentially giving up on 185,000 home owners with destroyed homes, many of whom have been denied their insurance claims by either their provider or the federal flood insurance program, or those who did not have adequate insurance. Louisiana will now be required to find alternative funding for the state and its parishes for debris removal, barely begun, infrastructure repair, law enforcement, re-opening hospitals and schools, in addition to helping businesses rebuild.

Andy Kopplin, Executive Director of the Louisiana Recovery Authority, called it an “inadequate distribution.” “No one believes that Louisiana had only 54% of the damages,” he said. The department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) oversees the CDBG program. U.S. Representative Bobby Jindal (R-LA) said, “I certainly think we will need more. The key to getting more is spending the money well.” However, how the money is spent must be approved by HUD. And the U.S. Stafford Act mandates how federal dollars will be spent for any additional appropriations to be made.

The announcement in late January 2006 of the $11.5 billion being approved for the disbursement of funds will follow a payment schedule, the bulk of which is not expected to come through until 2008, according to lawmakers. Prior to the announcement, U.S. Representative Richard Baker (R-LA) submitted a redevelopment plan to the White House which was outright rejected. It had the bi-partisan approval of federal and state lawmakers which calls for creating a federal supported Louisiana Recovery Corporation. It requires purchase of large tracts of storm-damaged homes in Louisiana, borrowing up to $30 billion in U.S. Treasury bonds. The corporation would absorb the costs of home repair and resell the homes to either developers or to their original owners.

Baker believes those homeowners who lived in flood plains should be accorded an out, as it was the federal government’s responsibility to maintain the levees, through the Army Corps of Engineers, which breached and thus flooded New Orleans. Under the present funding, the most damaged areas of New Orleans would be unavailable for homeowners’ relief. And given that the federal flood insurance program is near bankruptcy, the Baker proposal would offer quick buyouts to homeowners in rebuilding efforts. But in another Catch-22 scenario, rebuilding must meet the approval of new advisory flood maps which FEMA officials said will not be available until mid-March 2006. Therefore, commitments to invest in rebuilding are on shaky ground without as of yet fully repaired levees, and not knowing whether they will be additionally funded in order to sustain more than a Category 3 hurricane.

With so many agencies, at this point primarily federal, without their own proverbial maps on how to proceed in un-chartered waters, it necessitates new ways of doing business in order to meet the imminent needs from the Gulf Coast disaster. Creative and critical thinking, something in short supply in bureaucratic management, is essential. Mechanisms to encourage better communications and oversight between the federal and state levels must be implemented in order to be prepared for future disasters, whether they be Acts of God or acts of terror. Only then will those people in the Delta who have sacrificed and suffered so much feel redeemed. And only then will lawmakers, and the agencies they are responsible to hold accountable, recover from the breached trust of the American people.

Diane M. Grassi - EzineArticles Expert Author

About the Author:

Diane M. Grassi is a freelance columnist, reporting and writing commentary on current events of the day providing honest and often politically incorrect assessments. From U.S. public policy to Major League Baseball, she is an eclectic thinker, and demanding of her readers to reflect on their own thinking patterns from an alternative perspective. Whether you agree with her or not, Diane M. Grassi will have you coming back to note her opinions, and if at best she wakes you up, then her goal will have been accomplished.

Ms. Grassi is featured with the online publications: New Media Journal.us; American Chronicle; Mich News.com; the Federal Observer; Opinions Editorials; the Conservative Voice; the Las Vegas Penny Press; the Sierra Times as well as many others. She also writes regular columns on Major League Baseball where she is a featured online columnist with The Diamond Angle Baseball Ezine and Sports-Central.org. Ms. Grassi may contacted at: dgrassi@cox.net

Masaru Emoto

Thursday, May 29th, 2008

Masaru Emoto is a Japanese scientist. He puts words on bottles of water and then freezes the water. After that, he lets the water warm itself. Then he hired a photographer to check under a microscope the crystal structures of the water.

He claimed that putting good words on the water, like thank you, or love, would result in good crystal formation.

On the other hand, putting bad words on the bottles, like “I hate you” will produce bad crystal formation.

You can search for Masaru Emoto on the web, or read more about him in wikipedia.

According to Masaru, the words we use are natural and somehow interact psychically with the water. Hence, the water retains memory.

Followers of Masaru suggest that we shouldn’t tell ourselves that we’re stupid. Less, it’ll change the structure of water in our body and make us really stupid.

When I first saw the pictures of it, I was quite surprised. Part of me thinks that this couldn’t be true. However, being a businessman for so many years stopped me from just diminishing this extraordinary finding.

So, I looked him up on the web. You should check out this page: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masaru_Emoto

It turns out, just like many conclusions made by those believing in spiritual stuffs, the method of the experiment is not robust.

In particular, the photographers knew before hand which water has good words in it and which water does not.

Hence, it is possible that Masaru got his result even though there is no causal effect whatsoever between the words and crystal structure.

How? Well, there are plenty of crystals in the water. That’s pretty obvious. A photographer that knows before hand and expect “good” crystal will pick the beautiful crystal from the positive water.

The photographer that knows before hand that the words are negative, like “I hate you” then he’ll simply photograph the bad crystal.

Now, that seems like a much more plausible explanation. James Randi, a skeptic, offers Masaru $1 million dollars if he can perform his experiments with double blind tests that would solve the original problem.

So far, Masaru still promotes his idea ignoring Randi’s pleas.

The scientific part of me says that Masaru’s work is total bullshit.

However, the businessmen parts of me see that it is indeed significant.

Just like there are many crystals in the water, there are plenty of potential events in our life. You see, just like the positive-thinking photographers pick the beautiful crystal to photograph, in the same way, thinking positively will put our attention to potentially good events in our life.

Just like the photographers turn the beautiful crystals into permanent photographs, the same way, we positive-thinking people put potentially good events into profits and fortunes.

This is just another proof how positive thinking works. So think positively, but judge facts skeptically.

Jim Thio is a silver medalist in International Physics Olympiad. He’s learning evolution theory to understand humans nature and make humans happier. He visions a better world where the productive make more kids and the parasites get more cash.

Free Speech Under Attack in Israel

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

Israel likes to pride itself on being a Western nation, and in
too many ways (idolatry and immorality) it is.

However, in too many other ways their bought and paid for
leaders act like they’re old-style Russian Communists who hate
religion and the religious and will exert a brazen
double-standard in enabling the left to get away with
murder
(remember Yitzhak Rabin?) and persecute the right for
any trumped up charge or wild accusation.

Those precious Israelis of American descent are particularly
“troublesome” to the hardcore leftists
who aren’t used to
such independent thought (1 Kings 18:17), who abhor any who dare
question the State, and who cherish their God-given rights of
freedom of speech and religion. Israel is blessed to be like a
Western nation in this regard, to the extent that those of
American and other Western Israelite democracies are free to
live and prosper in the Jewish homeland, free to set a noble
example for the nation to follow, and free from
politico-religious persecution.

Nadia Matar is one of the precious Israelis of freedom-loving
American origin who is now under fire for expressing her
heartfelt Jewish opinion
in the letter that appears below,
something that would be considered harmless in the United
States. Yet, in today’s quickly disintegrating Israel, Nadia
Matar (Co-chair of Women For Israel’s Tomorrow/Women In Green)
has been indicted for it!

The outrageous charge in the insulting indictment is “Insulting
a Public Servant.” More than a year ago, Nadia wrote her open
letter, a public plea, to Yonatan Bassi (head of the
Disengagement Authority — the man responsible for forcibly
evicting Jews from their homes in Gush Katif/Gaza/Samaria). Is
this further proof that Freedom of Speech, and legitimate
discussion is verboten (forbidden) in Israeli-style
democracy? Judge for yourself:

Fast of Gedaliah 5765 (2004),

September 19,2004

To Mr. Yonatan Bassi,

Head of the Deportation Administration

Re: Help in writing your letter to the Jews of Gush Katif

I read on the Internet that in the coming days you will send a
personal letter to each of the inhabitants of Gush Katif who are
designated for deportation. Your letter contains a “personal
appeal and initial explanation of the evacuation process.”
According to the report in YNet, the final version of the letter
has not yet been formulated, and therefore I am volunteering to
“help” you formulate the letter. I am attaching a document that
is chillingly similar to what you are about to send - and,
actually, all you need to do is to change the date (from 1942 to
2004) and the place of the deportation (from Berlin to Gush
Katif) and, here, your letter is ready.

The document is a letter from 1942 to the Jews about the
upcoming deportation from Berlin. The letter was sent to the
candidates for deportation by the Jews of the Judenrat (the
Disengagement Authority), in cooperation with the Nazi
authorities. The document goes into great detail as to where the
people will be transferred, what they are to take with them, and
what they are to leave behind. The letter can be found at Yad VaShem.

The document ends with an emotional appeal by the heads of the
Jewish community in Berlin to act calmly, and thereby facilitate
the work of the deportation. “We fervently request that you obey
the orders and perform all the preparations for the transport in
a calm manner. The members of our community who are designated
for immigration should be aware that they con decisively
contribute to the smooth implementation of the transport by
their personal conduct and orderly compliance with all the
orders. Needless to say, we will do all that is in our power, to
the extent that this is permitted us, to stand by the members of
our community and offer them all possible aid” [Council of the
Jewish Community in Berlin, 1942].

How similar is this to your words, when you say in various
interviews how much you “identify with the pain of the settlers
of Gush Katif,” and how important it is that you, specifically,
are involved in their deportation, in order to ease the process.
But all of your declarations will be of no avail, Yonatan. The
truth is that you are a modern version of the Judenrat -
actually, a much worse version, because then, during the
Holocaust, this was forced upon those Jewish leaders by the
Nazis, and it is extremely difficult for us, today, to judge
them. Today, no one stands with a gun to your head and forces
you to collaborate in the crime, without any conscience pangs.
Yes, I know. There is a difference between then and now. The
goal of the Nazi monster - that also annihilated most of my
family - was the physical annihilation of the Jewish people, a
physical Holocaust. But let’s not pretend to be innocent: the
goal of the deportation from Gush Katif and northern Samaria is
the annihilation of the entire Jewish settlement in Judea,
Samaria, and Gaza, as an interim stage of a spiritual Holocaust:
the elimination of the state as a Jewish state, and its
transformation into a secular state, a state of all its
citizens, without any Jewishness. Not to mention, of course, the
bloody price that we will have to pay for our retreat. If the
criminal Oslo accords cost us more than 1000 victims, Sharon’s
deportation plan will give such a push to the Nazi Arab terror
(for the Arabs will see that Israel’s folding is proof that
terror pays) that I fear to think how many Jews will pay with
their lives for Sharon’s “disengagement.”

In conclusion - I wish to correct the empty words by Minister
Poraz, who said today that “a Jew, too, may be an anti-Semite.”
This sentence should be: “History has proven that Jews are the
biggest anti-Semites.” And, Yonatan, you should know that there
is no escape from the simple truth: whoever participates in the
deportation of the Jews of Gush Katif and northern Samaria -
participates in an anti-Semitic act, and will be remembered as
such, for everlasting shame. It is still possible for you to
resign from your abhorrent post and arrive at Yom Kippur, the
Day of Judgment, clean and at peace with your conscience,
without being part of the modern Judenrat - the Deportation
Authority.

Nadia Matar, Co-Chairperson of (Women in Green)