Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Slidell senator wants mud from Corps projects for planned 'megaport' near mouth of Mississippi River
~Jen DeGregorio

~The Army Corps of Engineers may play a role in building a planned megaport near the mouth of the Mississippi River, potentially using mud dredged from the channel as construction material for the massive shipping platform.

Academics Dig Into Offshore Drilling Debate
~Jacksonville Observer


Katrina and the Paralysis of Fear
~Franklin C. Spinney


People to People Ambassador Programs Remembers Hurricane Katrina with Unique Summer Travel Opportunity for Students and Adults~Ambassadors GRP
~People to People Ambassador Programs, the leader in global educational travel experiences, commemorates the upcoming fifth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina with a new summer program in 2010 entitled "Leadership Summit: Remembering Hurricane Katrina." Taking place June 28 - July 6, 2010, the new program is part of People to People's premier Leadership Programs that teach students in grades five through twelve important leadership and teamwork skills through workshops, community service projects and discussions with well-respected authorities on service and leadership.
Participants will also learn more about Hurricane Katrina through cultural visits around the city and by hearing first-hand accounts of the events as told by important guest speakers, including General Russel Honore, the US Army Lieutenant who led Task Force Katrina in the aftermath of the devastating hurricane,
Tom Piazza, nationally acclaimed author of Why New Orleans Matters and Jim Reed, world-renowned weather photographer and self proclaimed "storm chaser".
~Editilla Notellas~ Genlte'rillas know how we Love to hang Noble Efforts of Flood Recovery here on da'Ladder.
Yet sewn'n'sown within the fabric of our Emperor's New Clothes lie the course threads of bad media framing, a sort of brittle public relations imagery that seeks to cover our body politic in a fetid haze of misunderstanding, even misunderestimation, of the true Causes of our devastation. We call it Katrina Shorthand Media.

But here we sense a good thing happening, a scene of an immune response for our wounded nation, yet not a word about the cause of our incongroovience. Thankfully there will be heroes teaching, but nowhere did they mention the Exquisite Corps, or any design to focus on That. All Katrina All The Time: The Katrina Network.
That is what we shall call a beast of this sort.
But we have golden opportunities her'ah for more than just spare change as they happen upon our Fed Flooded City to work their Can'doo magic.
Yes We Can show them Where, even How, if not Why.

Katrina Shorthand illustrates a symptom of a deeper still palsy on our body politic, to wit: Katrina=Natural Disaster Capitalism =Inevitable=New Orleans=Social Engineering Gone Wild Movie
-Civil Engineering Failure-Man Made Disaster-Lives Lost=Mo'Lies
=ASCEFORK from'da ASCECORPS... jus'sayin... give these bones
to Henry Jones --'cause Henry here don't eat no meat.

O'Henry~Teen In Jail

Wise as an owl, smart as a fox – Sarah Vance, Federal District Judge Eastern District Louisiana ~slabbed

Fielkow: Ed Blakely's comments 'offensive, divisive, unprofessional, erroneous'
~Gordon Russell


Homes at last: Jarvis DeBerry

Nutria: It's not just for Louisiana anymore ~Nikki Buskey
~
Louisiana’s coastal wetlands sustain the most damage from the voracious animal, and the state has pioneered efforts aimed at controlling the rodent’s population. But other states are starting to catch up. Enter the Nutria Eradication and Control Act of 2009, introduced by U.S. Rep. Charles Boustany, R-Lafayette, and Frank Kratovil, D-Md. The bill would authorize the U.S. secretary of the interior to provide money to Maryland, Louisiana, Delaware, Oregon, Virginia and Washington to eradicate or control nutria and restore damaged wetlands.

Masonic Lodge in the Quarters coming back~Krystal Allan
~A historic landmark left on life support after Hurricane Katrina is being revived in central Gulfport. The Masonic Lodge is coming back to life in a community known as the Quarters, a historically black community dating back to the early 1900s.

U.S. Navy honoring New Orleans this week (Nov. 2-7) ~NOLAFemmes

10 Pix from 11th Voodoo Fest
~Karen Dalton-Beninato

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