Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Mercredi

"'Not one drop' is a lie"
~Your Right Hand Thief


America's Favorite Cities in 2008
~New Orleans #1 for fine dining.


Louisiana Lake Pontchartrain Floodgates When?
~Christopher Tidemore

(Well...his name is Tidemore:)

Buried wires stand up to storm

Water and Storm Management in New Orleans~Historical Documents

Case on Corps of Engineers official in Mobile dragging

Imminent Domain~Adiaphora

Corps inspecting roofs?
~U.S. Army Corps of Engineers personnel are on the ground in St. Mary and St. Martin parishes for their Blue Roof, Right of Entry collection campaign this week. Mark Davidson, public affairs officer for the Corps, said people with structural damage can come to one of the collection centers to fill out the appropriate forms, which if approved, make them eligible for temporary repairs to their damaged roofs with the placement of blue tarps.
~Editilla gotta ax~While we are of course glad folks get coverings for their damaged roofs, I have trouble wondering what the hell is the Corps of Engineers doing inspecting homes for wind damage. They are supposed to be repairing our levees, so why are we wasting our precious funding for those levees here on a public service which should and could easily be done by a more appropriate agency.
The only reason I can think of for the Corps to be doing this extra ciricullar data collection is for Public Relations. What does this have to do with safe flood control? Get mad at me if you want, but I want the Corps to get back on the Levees, back to engineering. That is what we pay them for, and we already pay others to do rooftops. Yeah, I'm pretty focused on safe levees. Wish the Corps was, then more people might want to return and invest in the city. As it stands now... it all depends on whether those levees stand --not The People's rooftops.


Remarks by Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff at Brookings on the Nation’s Critical Infrastructure

McCain and Palin are distractions. The real bad guys are still at work.
~In January of 2006, The Army Corps of Engineers gave a contract to KBR (yes, that KBR) for $385 million to build "emergency detention centers".
From the Halliburton website, "the contract, which is effective immediately, provides for establishing temporary detention and processing capabilities to augment existing ICE Detention and Removal Operations Program facilities in the event of an emergency influx of immigrants into the U.S., or to support the rapid development of new programs."


Truck-Side Dining~Chowhound
~The how, why, and where of high-end food trucks


Clay Franks and New Orleans
~21st Century Maroon Colony


Hurricane Song:
A Novel of New Orleans
~Virtual Loft


Stanton Moore Trio on Tour

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