Friday, August 15, 2008

Vendredi

7 Days Ta'da Hoo'dat Rising!
2:30 - 3:45 - Local Politics Panel
- Panelists and Moderator-TBA???
~Gentle'rillas are DY'IN'TA KNOW!


New Orleans bloggers make national headlines, expose renovation scam ~Facing South

Is this for real? ~JUDYB

Fighting corruption is hard going in New Orleans

Lo! slabbed da'Ladda!
~Editilla Big Teas'a struck speachless. HA! Look for us soon to Guestilla Posta slabbin da'Coasta!

Editilla Welcomes Hrrmph!

Judge says he may remove lawyers from Katrina case

New Orleans Musicians Take Wetlands Message to DNC and RNC~Geogianne Neinaber

A raft of new state laws take effect today

The IRS blues~James Gill

Mississippi River Commission OKs levee plan~"We should address some sort of plan for this area," said Corps of Engineers Brig. Gen. John Peabody, a commissioner.
"I think we should have them (Congress) recognize that we do have authority of the upper Mississippi, from the origins to its Head of Passes. I think they should be reminded of that if they're looking for an oversight body as this plan goes forward."
~Editilla gotta tol'ya~ Obviously many in Congress may beg to differ with this cynical assessment.

As well, in fact, many American Tax Payers
refuse to assume this position.
We The People now Question the Authority of this band of rogue engineers to build a functioning latrine, not to mention adequate flood control.
And lest there be any missunderestimations of yer oh'so humble Editilla's view here, from down in da'bottoms: these "Officers" in Command'N'Control
of ASCECORPS should be drawn out and shot
for Dereliction of Duty in building our Failing Levees.
Barring that, We The People can at least Sever these Heads from our National Civil Engineering Psyche,
...after dragging them down the middle of Canal Street in New Orleans, in chains, tarred, feathered, and covered in Mardi Gras Beads! Jus'sayin...
More on the Question of Authority.

More barges run aground on Mississippi River

At least 20 Iowa levees need repairs



Congress Details Massive Use of Private Contractors in Iraq
Blackwater security guards, Republican Palace, Baghdad: US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) photograph by ACoE photographer Jim Gordon. Click pic to enlarge.

Faulty design turned border fence into dam~Simply put: The fence did not live up to promises made by officials from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the U.S. Border Patrol or Kiewit Western Co., the private company that built the fence for $21.3 million.
ASCECORPS: Everywhere you wanna'be --or Not!

For Those Of You Keeping Score ~Citizen K

Sarandon - PSAs on Child Molestation~NOLA radfem

Hearing tackles New Orleans VA med center location

Strut your stuff at Rooster Day
~Follow Me, Chicken. I'm Fulla'Corn!

Digging through the
New Orleans roots


Dropping the brotherly gloves

New Orleans Saints, Houston Texans scuffle in joint practice

Hurricane Katrina Survivor Turns Anger Into Art
"When I came to Iowa State, I wanted to make work that would help me cope with the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. I was looking for closure from what I had just been through. The emotional and psychological toll that my mind and body endured after Katrina left me questioning everything I had ever learned. The world seemed to be flipped on its axis and I felt as though I was free falling out of control. The ease at which everything I owned was destroyed left me sick to my stomach at times. The total lack of respect for human life at the hands of the United States government during Hurricane Katrina is something I will never forget." ~Michael Stanley

Telling N’Orleans Story in Brass
~The Hot 8 Brass Band plays the kind of music that moves feet, body and soul. Founder of the group Benny Pete says it’s music that “makes you remember, makes you hold on, gives you hope and lets you heal.”

School of Funk~Keith Spera

Interview: Silent Cinema
~Static's Blog


A gravestone for Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown
~More from the Houston Blues Society.

It’s the 800-pound sousaphone in the room
~Alison Fensterstock


Jerry Wexler, Dead at 91


1 comment:

K. said...

I for one am shocked -- shocked! -- to learn that fighting corruption is hard going in New Orleans. When did that happen?