10. September 2005 · Comments Off on Crescent City Requiem #6 · Categories: Domestic, General, Home Front

Courtyard in the Little Theater, Nrw Orleans

Another antique postcard from my collection, a vision from the past, of what people wanted to see in old New Orleans.

(Last night I was talking to Mom about FEMA, and disaster relief… since she had Dad had been on the recieving end of a national disaster when the Valley Center fire took their house nearly two years ago, they have had some experience of coming away from the disaster zone in just the clothes they stood up in. Mom said it did take FEMA and the Red Cross about a week to get everything really effeciently set up, and processing all the people who had lost homes to the fire. And she and Dad had sufficient resources, and good friends close by (and some who were from farther away, some who only knew them through this blog!) who were quite marvellous with help, they were not entirely dependent whatever official help was offered. But, there were some local community charity drives that got up to speed in the first few days, who made direct cash grants to people who had lost houses— not very much, really, a hundred dollars or so here, fifty there. Mom said it was enormously touching, because it came right away, without strings, or having to fill out complicated claims. Those little cash grants beat out the first of the insurance claim payments by weeks, and let them feel that, yes, they could bounce back from the loss of the house and practically everything in it.
The new house is nearly finished, by the way— just another inspection or two, and they will be offically moving in from the RV.)

09. September 2005 · Comments Off on Save The Animals! · Categories: General

I have heard lots of tear-jerkers about “all the animals that have been left behind.” Well, I am as much of an animal lover as anyone (anyone with a right-mind, that is). Just now, I am looking out my patio door at two feral cats – mother and kitten. And I’m debating whether or not to give them a bit of canned salmon, at the risk of my landlord signing my lease renewal.

But when it comes to this: When it’s a question of evacuating one dude’s pets, verses paddling on to the next house, where some human might be in hypohydratic shock, no – I’m paddling on.

No, I grieve for the animals. But one human life means more to me than every critter in the country.

Update: I didn’t give them any canned salmon – I gave them some canned pork.

09. September 2005 · Comments Off on Brown Recalled To Washington · Categories: General

Word is, just now, that USCG Vice Admiral Thad Allen will be taking over on-site management. This sounds like a good move to me, from both a logistic and political standpoint.

Update: in response to some commenters: I really think that, politically, Honore would have been a MUCH better choice. And, this situation having become so politically charged, politics accounts for much. The fact that the designee is a military person amounts to little: public opinion on the military is totally bipolar – either they are saints, or Satan’s Slaves.

08. September 2005 · Comments Off on Our Culture, What’s Left Of It · Categories: General

Frontpage magazine interviews Dr. Theodore Dalrymple, a contributing editor to City Journal and the author of his new collection of essays Our Culture, What’s Left of It: The Mandarins and the Masses.

FP: You have a fascinating essay in this collection: “Who Killed Childhood?” In it you profoundly illuminate the “egotistical inability to feel, compensated for by an outward show.” You connect this to the death of childhood. Could you talk about this?

Dalrymple: Childhood in large parts of modern Britain, at any rate, has been replaced by premature adulthood, or rather adolescence. Children grow up very fast but not very far. That is why it is possible for 14 year olds now to establish friendships with 26 year olds – because they know by the age of 14 all they are ever going to know.

It is important in this environment to appear knowing, or street wise, otherwise you will be taken for a weakling and exploited accordingly. Thus, feelings for others does not develop. Moreover, the model of discipline in the homes has changed, with the complete breakdown of the family (in my hospital, were it not for the Indian immigrants, the illegitimacy rate of children born there would be 100 per cent). Children grow up now in circumstances in which discipline is merely a matter of imposing the will of one person on another, it is raw power devoid of principal. Lenin’s question – Who Whom or who does what to whom – is the whole basis of human relations.

FP: You discuss the horrifying suffering that women endure under the vicious and sadistic structures of Islam’s gender apartheid. You touch on the eerie silence of Western leftist feminists on this issue, noting “Where two pieties – feminism and multi-culturalism – come into conflict, the only way of preserving both is an indecent silence.”

To be sure, the Left has long posed as a great champion of women’s rights, gay rights, minorti rights, democratic rights etc. Yet today, it has reached out in solidarity with the most fascistic women-hating, gay-hating, minority-hating and democracy hating force on the face of the earth – Islamism.

What gives? It’s really nothing new though is it? (i.e. the Left’s political pilgrimages to communist gulags etc.)

Dalrymple: I think the problem here is one of a desired self-image. Tolerance is the greatest moral virtue and broadmindedness the greatest intellectual one. Moreover, no decent person can be other than a feminist. People therefore want to be both multiculturalist and feminist. But multiculturalism and feminism obviously clash; therefore, you avoid the necessity to give up one or the other merely by disregarding the phenomena. How you feel about yourself is more important to you than the state of the world.

Lots more very erudite nuggets of wisdom in the article. The book is now on my must read list.

08. September 2005 · Comments Off on VFW Relief For Katrina · Categories: General

From the current VFW newsletter:

When the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) learned of the havoc and destruction caused by hurricane Katrina, $230,000 was immediately sent to the VFW Departments of Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi. The emergency relief will mainly benefit devastated VFW and Ladies Auxiliary members in these hard-hit states. But the need is staggering.

VFW is calling on all Americans to “band together” for hurricane victims. To donate to VFW’s Hurricane Relief Fund please click here (https://www.vfw.org/index.cfm?fa=what.levelc&cid=2774&tok=1).

In the words of newly elected VFW Commander-in-Chief, James R. Mueller, “It is critical that we respond immediately. Tomorrow is too late.” Mueller is asking the 9,000 VFW Posts worldwide to pledge at least $1 per member from the Post relief fund toward this immediate relief effort.

In addition to monetary aid, VFW Posts near affected areas are serving as temporary shelters for families seeking refuge in Katrina’s wake. For example, VFW Post #3619 in DeRidder, LA is currently sheltering more than 150 people. In the true spirit of the VFW’s AMERICA BANDS TOGETHER, local businesses are also uniting to provide clothing, food and supplies.

In late-breaking news, a VFW Headquarters Response Team is being dispatched to the area to survey current needs, help administer immediate relief as well as to assess – and report on – additional needs as they unfold. VFW Leadership will be broadcasting the VFW National Defense Radio Hour live from the flood-ravaged region on Monday, September 12, 3:00-4:00 p.m. CST. Tune in online at http://www.1510.com.

Please visit http://www.vfw.org frequently in the weeks ahead for more on the VFW’s work to help veterans and their families suffering from the aftermath of this horrible catastrophe.

Just in case you haven’t contributed somewhere yet…ya know…and were thinkin’ about it.

07. September 2005 · Comments Off on iPod Porn, (050907) · Categories: General

Ya gotta love Apple. All week on all the geek sites there’s been talk about the new iPod/Motorolla Cell Phone mutant gizmo called the ROKR that would be introduced today…and we got that, looks like it’s gonna run about $250.00 with a contract with Cingular. I won’t buy it, I like my phone to be my phone and my MP3 Player to be my MP3 Player, but I’m sure there’s a market.

“>

But we also got a brand new, smaller, iPod…the Nano. Smaller than the mini but holds 2 gigs/500 songs for $199.00 or 4 gigs/1000 songs for $249.00 and comes in black or white and only weighs 1.5 oz.. Not much bigger than the shuffle and only weighs twice as much with a color window and the clickwheel..

Suhweeet!

Also…there’s a new version of iTunes to cover the new toys.

07. September 2005 · Comments Off on Memo: Katrina, Deep Water, and Invincible Ignorance · Categories: Ain't That America?, Domestic, General, Home Front

To: Various
From: Sgt Mom
Re: Aftermath
The decent thing— which I would really prefer to do— would be to wait to criticize various responses to the hurricane disaster until the dust has settled, the water drained, and every hurricane evacuee neatly tucked up in freshly-washed sheets in a pleasant and semi-private temporary refuge, while the recovery and rebuilding proceeds apace – but what the hell, I have been practically deafened by the chorus of bickering, blaming and second-guessing. I may as well join in and chew a number of good juicy hunks off those who have managed to annoy me the most.
1. To our foreign (mostly European) friends— please understand that this was an enormous disaster. The area most damaged is about the size of entire independent nations, and we have never had a major city so thoroughly trashed: Chicago lost about a third in the great fire, and Galveston was on the far fringes in the hurricane of 1900. Really, only the San Francisco earthquake and fire comes anywhere close. So, the first few federal resources to make the scene were pretty overwhelmed, and spread about as thin as a pat of butter on an acre of toast. And keep in mind that anyone going into the devastated area has to come a fair distance. You can drive on the interstate at a good clip for three days straight, and still only cross two or three states.
2. To the panjandrums of the major media (but I am looking straight at NPR’s croaker-in-chief, Robert Schorr)— please repeat this mantra to yourself: local, state, federal. Again: Local, State, Federal. (I can’t hear you!!! ) That is the order in which civic authority has responsibility for responding to a disaster. Write it on a body part with a Sharpie, if you have trouble remembering.
3. This goes to Sen. Nancy Pelosi, also.
4. Also keep in mind, oh media geniuses, that the Mississippi/Alabama coast was body-slammed directly by the hurricane, and the smaller coastal cities look from the air as if they were nuked. Try and wrap your searching intellects around this: with a similar racial and socio-economic makeup, they managed to not go all lord-of-the-flies on national television. Their communities held, their municipal and state authorities apparently did their jobs, and their police forces refrained from looting retail establishments. From the reports I have seen or heard they are clearing away rubble, banding together against looters and loss, and generally behaving like responsible citizens. Please amuse me by coming up with a rationale for this that does not mention FEMA, the Bush administration or institutional racism – or condescension to the blue-collar working classes.
5. Governor Blanco: you are not being paid to cry on television. You are also not being paid to be vapid, indecisive, and flutter around like a Barbara Cartland heroine, waiting for the big strong, studly hero to rescue you. This is the sort of woman I have always fought down a desire to slap silly. I’d do it in your case, but fear I would have to get at the end of a long line. Thanks for being the sort of woman that male chauvinists always insisted that a women in so-called authority would be. God, please butch up before you embarrass us any further.
6. To the “Reverend” Jesse Jackson; please make yourself useful. Sit down with Mayor Nagin and review New Orleans’ disaster preparedness plan with him. Please pay special attention to the bits about stocking emergency shelters with food, and water, evacuating the sick and elderly, and the use of publicly owned transport to do so. Also, pay special attention to the bit about how long it will take the federal authorities to arrive in force.
7. To “Hizzonor” Mayor Nagin; I’d be laughing at your impromptu performance of the old Coasters’ hit “Along Came Jones”, if your crisis-management skills hadn’t worked out on so many embarrassingly inept— and probably fatal levels. I haven’t seen such appalling news footage since – well, the last humanitarian disaster in a less-than-third-world country. Obviously, you are doing the “Sweet Sue” (Oh, hep me, hep me! He’s tying me up again!) whilst General Honore plays the part of the stalwart rescuer . (See note 4, above.) Frankly, I hope most of your constituents relocate permanently in cities where a simple desire to have a stable job, an adequate housing situation, a police force that can be distinguished from the local gang-bangers, and crisis managers who can actually manage a crisis may actually be indulged. You might be able to win re-election to mayoral office after this. But I cannot imagine where, or by what turn of machine politics.
8. So many idiots, so little bandwidth.
Sincerely
Sgt Mom
PS As always, those are not “scare” quote marks— they are “viciously skeptical” quote marks.

07. September 2005 · Comments Off on Just what sort of dog are you? · Categories: General

Just thinking of Sgt. Mom’s post here, or Timmer’s here. And I wonder, just what sort of dog am I: After much contemplation, I conclude I am a border collie. I’m not so reticent as the sheepdog – sitting back; and waiting for trouble to happen. Nor am I the excitable terrier or the hound: – out front, just trying to make trouble happen. No, I am the border collie – out on the perimiter – patrolling; just waiting – half-hoping trouble happens.

I think, more than flocks, or tribes, we are packs. And, with that in mind, how can we make it work for us?

06. September 2005 · Comments Off on Crescent City Requiem #5 · Categories: Domestic, General, History

Iron-work in Royal Street, 1920ies

The city that once was, and may yet be again… at least the old-timers had the sense to build on the highest bit of low ground around.

(I feel a rightous rant coming on, in addition to a strong desire to slap Governor Blanco silly— sweetie, it’s not in your job description to cry in front of the cameras, leave that to the newly named Miss America, m’kay?
Strong women in high office, and positions of responsibility do not cry in public. Ever. It’s just not done. Butch up, and carry on.)

06. September 2005 · Comments Off on Just Who Are The Morons Here? · Categories: General

This from OpinionJournal’s Best of the Web (reprinted in full):

The Book the Angry Left Loves to Hate
When we wrote our defense of the religious right a few months ago, we treated somewhat dismissively the claim that the secular left is guilty of “antireligious bigotry.” Blogger Bob Krumm calls our attention to something that gives us second thoughts.

Michael Hyatt, CEO of Thomas Nelson Publishers, a Christian House, decided to do his part to help Katrina victims, and he described the effort in a post on his own blog:

This morning, I started getting e-mails from our employees with ideas for how our Company could help. Everyone feels the need to do something. I know I do. You can only watch the images for so long before you feel compelled to take action.

Realizing we need to act quickly, I asked Jim Thomason, our HR Director, to form a “Disaster Relief Committee” and make a recommendation to me by the end of the day. He and his team met and then made two proposals. . . . I immediately approved both.

First, we will donate 100,000 Bibles to the relief efforts. Why Bibles? This afternoon, an official in Baton Rouge said on Fox News, “We need water, food,  . . and Bibles.” This is something I knew we could help with. Samaritan’s Purse, an organization headed by Franklin Graham, one of our authors, has agreed to distribute these for us. We will begin shipping them to Louisiana as soon as we get instructions from Samaritan’s Purse.

Second, I have approved a matching contribution program for our employees. We will match dollar for dollar any contribution our employees make to Samaritan’s Purse up to [a total of] $50,000.

Here are some of the comments that readers submitted to Hyatt’s blog; we’re quoting them verbatim and running them together:

100,000 Bibles. That is the most asinine thing I have heard in years (and I’ve heard a few) You are fool of the first order. You sending bibles to people who need food, water, medicine, blankets, clothes and shelter. I shake my head in wonder and dismay.

Bibles !!!! Unbelievable…… In my eyes you are a moron! Unbelievable…. there are people DYING and babies and old people suffering indignities beyond any comprehension and you send them BIBLES – aaaaggggghhhhh – America IS nuts – no doubt about it.

If I were starving, thirsty, homeless, and in need of medicine, and someone handed me a bible, I would spit in their face. This is the most ridiculous, useless, self-serving thing I’ve ever heard, and anyone who gives money to this cause is going to hell.

Yeah, sure, Bibles, you f***in Moron!!! In order to support this neo-con creationist ideology that got these poor people in this situation. One of the posters here got it right, these people are about to die – shot by our own soldiers when trying to get some grocieries in order to survive! BY OUR OWN SOLDIERS, GOT IT???

There are positive comments too, but it’s quite astonishing that the Bible would inspire such hatred, especially from people who supposedly don’t believe in it.

It goes without saying that, along with food, medications, blankets and such, one of the most important human needs is hope. And, no matter what one’s personal religious disposition is, to assume that tens of thousands won’t find hope in those Bibles is truly moronic.

06. September 2005 · Comments Off on This makes my eyes water…. · Categories: A Href, Domestic, General, Home Front

..in a good way. 🙂

Baldilocks pointed me to a Guardian online article.

excerpt:

Asian Countries Offer U.S. Hurricane Aid
Tuesday September 6, 2005 2:31 PM
AP Photo XLEE102
By ROHAN SULLIVAN
Associated Press Writer

BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) – Some of the world’s poorest nations – Bangladesh, Afghanistan and tsunami-hit Thailand – have offered the United States aid and expertise to deal with the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

While some of these aid pledges were small compared with the millions of dollars and heavy machinery promised by Europe, they come from nations with far less to give and are symbolic recognition of the role U.S. aid has played in their development.

Bangladesh, one of the world’s poorest countries, where millions of people live on a monsoon- and flood-prone delta, pledged $1 million to Katrina’s victims and offered to send specialist rescuers to inundated areas, the Foreign Ministry said.

The list of countries mentioned in the article: Bangladesh, Thailand, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Honduras, Mexico, Peru, Cuba, Venezuela, & Singapore.

06. September 2005 · Comments Off on What are bloggers? · Categories: General

I know, what kind of question is that? But I find myself getting irritated, once again, with a cyber-friend who routinely ignores how blogs have evolved.

The context: A message-board discussion about Katrina’s aftermath. I posted a link to the Katrina timeline that Timmer blogged about, and another member posted a variety of items from blogcritics.org. Her comment (below) was more to that poster than to me, based on when she posted it. But it still rankled with me, because she said the same thing during the 2004 election-cycle, so it’s a long-standing opinion with her.

Her words:

Frankly, bloggers don’t mean anything to me, because they are just people speaking their minds. Just because someone blogs, doesn’t mean what they say is factual.

How would y’all have responded to her? Do y’all ever get this type of comment thrown at you?

My response:

They’re more than just commentary. Have been for a few years, now. It depends on which ones you read, of course, but many bloggers are experts in their fields, and many of them do a lot more digging and basic research than some journalists do. It’s not unusual to find a blogger serving as a consolidation point for a multitude of news articles, for instance, as well as linking to other blogs from folks who are where hte news is happening.

Many of the bloggers that I read rely on source documents, including wire reports, as well as their personal knowledge & expertise. They quote their source documents, and provide links to them, so their readers can read the originals, and make up their own minds, much like the blogger I linked to did with his timeline. They also rely on first-hand accounts from people in the field, and most of them accept viewpoints from all spectrums. In other words, a conservative blogger will have liberal readers, not just conservative ones, and they will all discuss the blog-post in the comments section. Same for liberals and libertarians (and yes, often the readers and commenters will be the same political persuasion as the writer, which leads to preaching to the choir – often, but not always) . The conversations in the comments sections can get quite interesting, believe me. And responsible bloggers (including the ones I read) will correct their entries when more information is known, factual errors are found or pointed out by their readers. And they don’t bury the correction in a hard to find spot – they usually put a comment at the top of that post saying that there are updates further down.

I agree with the need for an accurate opinion, but honestly, if I relied on the news media, whether print, radio, or televised, I’d feel like I was only seeing what they wanted to share with me. There’s more to the story than what they show us.

disclaimer: I am a casual blogger, and if she were reading my sporadically-updated blog than her comment would be just. But when I think of the blogs I visit regularly, and the wealth of information I gather from them, I couldn’t just leave her comments alone. /disclaimer

05. September 2005 · Comments Off on More On New Orleans Police Corruption · Categories: General

Auryn is a nurse at a New Orleans hospital, and has been keeping a LiveJournal blog of her experience. It’s interesting reading. But this really stuck out:

Also, our NOPD (cops) that we had stationed at the hospital, along with our National Guard boys (who were all teenagers and didn’t help out worth crap) decided to use their “marshal law” and boat to Walgreens to get us supplies. They got some food products and water (which we got a small bottle of gatoraide and sparkling water, that’s all. never saw anything else), but also went to Dillards and “used marshal law” to acquire expensive Polo shirts, jeans, Fendi purses, perfume, candles in which they traded (?) to family members on the floor. It didn’t help patients or staff. I was disgusted about this. Our own cops LOOTED. They are all crooked. That’s why I want out of Louisiana. You can’t trust anyone.

04. September 2005 · Comments Off on Memories Of The Rehnquist Court · Categories: General

Earlier today, I was watching Justice William Rehnquist in a 2001 interview on C-SPAN, concerning his book The Supreme Court. This primarily served to re-enforce my long-standing impression of him as a profoundly decent, and personable man – the type of man anyone would welcome as a dinner guest, or cherish as a good friend.

This, coupled with the courage and wherewithal he demonstrated in his ultimately futile battle with thyroid cancer, also makes him an ideal role-model for any teen emerging upon the world.

But the interview has also set me about reflection upon Rehnquist’s legacy. I’ve since found myself searching my own memories, as well as reading the eulogies of others. Among those memories, perhaps the most profound are the words of the pundits; circa 1986, who thought that Rehnquist taking the helm, and Scalia stepping up, would dramatically “turn” The Court, radically undoing a tradition of liberal activism in both The (particularly Warren) Court, and Congress, which had only grown and festered over the past half-century. But, like O’Connor before him, he really fooled ’em.

No, as Chief, rather than being a conservative firebrand, Rehnquist has been a model of judicial moderation. Rather then attempting to crack the stone, he has gently chipped away at the edges of the liberal monolith. The Rehnquist Court, contrary to being one of stasis as I (having previously commented as such at The Volokh Conspiracy), and other libertarians, had feared, or revolution, as the authoritarian conservatives might have hoped, has been one of gentle evolution, and narrowly, carefully, crafted decisions.

And, reflecting upon it all, and recognizing the context of his capacity, America is a MUCH better place than it was in the early-‘eighties. Our next Chief Justice has some big shoes to fill.

04. September 2005 · Comments Off on Crescent City Requiem #4 · Categories: Domestic, General, Home Front

Old St. Louis Cemetary, 1920ies

From my collection of antique postcards…

(This is where the careers of some local politicans in the “Big Easy” may very well wind up… however hard they are trying to shift it off onto practically anyone else.)

04. September 2005 · Comments Off on Katrina Response Timeline · Categories: General

Rick Moran over at Rightwing Nuthouse has put together a Katrina Response Timeline. It’s the best wrapup that I’ve seen so far and doesn’t point fingers but let’s the story tell itself.

Via Protein Wisdom, where Jeff is trying to wrap his brain around how and when the Federal Government and Military are supposed to step in and take over. Good luck buddy, I overheard some of the brass wrestling with that issue when we were standing up NORTHCOM and I’m not sure who had it worse, the lawyers or the logisticians.

04. September 2005 · Comments Off on With Cat · Categories: Domestic, General

I truly believe that our pets choose us, rather than the other way around. Sometimes we are chosen because that particular dog or cat is a crafty sort, detecting the presence of a “soft touch”, those of us who have “incredible sucker for our dumb chums” writ in invisible letters across our foreheads. We are singled out of a pack of humans as an acceptably reliable source of kibble, shelter and affection which any dog or cat considers its’ rightful due. They decide “Well, that one will do very nicely”, and move in.

But at least as often, it is an instant, passionate affection, motivating an animal to attach itself to our household or person, and that is what has happened to Cpl. Blondie and the white cat, Sammy From Across The Road. Sammy is actually not exactly white, more of an ivory color with faintly orangish points and watery, severely crossed blue eyes. He looks as if he were a white cat washed with insufficient bleach, or an orange cat washed with entirely too much. He was found as a tiny kitten a couple of years ago, by the neighbor in the rental house across the street, and bottle-fed. By curious coincidence it was the previous tenants of that very house whose un-neutered and bounteously fertile queen provided me with Henry VIII, Morgie, Little Arthur, and the sadly deceased Bad Nimue-cat. These neighbors are just as soft about animals; besides Sammy and one or two other cats, they also gave house-room to a pack of half a dozen or eight yappy, excitable teacup Chihuahuas— all them merged together would barely make a fraction of a proper sized dog, although they would produce enough noise for a good many of them.

This was not a situation that any self-respecting cat could tolerate for long, so Sammy soon began hanging out in the Garden of Cats, a peaceful, gentlemanly retreat for a peaceful, gentlemanly sort of cat, who only wished to snooze on sun-warmed stones and watch the birds at the feeder, without being pestered by a pack of yappy, noisy, teasing little rat-dogs. Sammy and the senior clubman, Bubbah From Down The Road exchanged the usual cat-rudenesses (hissing and spitting) until I bought another cat dish, so they didn’t have to share. They got along, rather grumpily, after that, taking very little notice of the junior member, Parfait, who waits patiently until his bettors are finished, until Cpl. Blondie was home for Christmas. And Sammy fell hopelessly, haplessly, deeply in love, much to his owners’ surprise.

“He isn’t really all that good with people, usually, “ they said in baffled surprise, but his adoration was open and demonstrative. He was constantly twining around her ankles, or curled in her lap, purring and blinking his bleary blue eyes at her in rapt adoration. After she went back to Cherry Point, he returned loyally every day for a week or so, and then he didn’t show up at all… and my neighbor Judy told me he had been struck by a car while crossing the road, struck a glancing but not fatal blow. I hated to tell my daughter this, and Judy and I sincerely hoped that after this, his owners would keep him inside for his own safety. Alas, they did not: when Sammy ventured into his old haunts in my garden again, he was thinner, and held one front leg close up against his body, the paw curled uselessly, but hopping easily on three legs nonetheless. He flopped down onto a sunny patch of the stone path, purring with as much enthusiasm and affection as ever. I did take this up with his owners— they said he yowled and clawed at the door so much, they had to let him out. Well, were I stuck in the house with all those little dogs, I think I’d be yowling and clawing at the door myself… but still. Judy and I worried, nonetheless.

A couple of weeks ago there was a for-sale sign on the front lawn of the house across the road— Sammy’s owners were moving to another house in the neighborhood, lock, stock barrel and yappy little dogs. But Cpl. Blondie asked; would they take Sammy? Perhaps they would just leave him to us— would I ask, at least?
They didn’t want to at first, but Sammy made his preference quite plain. He was missing for three days, they said indignantly, the three days where they were moving to the new house, and I said,
“He was over at my house that whole time. If you ever can’t find him, look in my yard first.”

The husband didn’t care all too much; he was agreeable to leaving Sammy where Sammy obviously wanted to be. The wife, though— she was in two minds. She came to the house to get him, the day after they were in their new place, three blocks away, trailing two of the little dogs on leashes. She sent a neighbor boy to ring the bell and ask for Sammy. I carried him around from the back, and made one last plea.
“He’s so fond of the garden, and my daughter loves him— if you take him away to the new house, I’m afraid he’ll be killed trying to get back, unless you keep him in the house all the time.” And I promised that Blondie would always take care of him, and she relented— the dogs were yipping without pause, and it was late in the day. I carried Sammy back, and closed the gate on the outside—so full of dogs and noise and busy streets, and put him down, safe in the quiet garden that he loves so much.
Blondie, sweetie, you are “with cat”… and he’s waiting for you, in the garden.

(Note: Actually, after a through check-out by the vet, he is in the house now. He sleeps in the foot of her bed, and doesn’t have all that much to do with the other cats. They are curious, but fairly polite. The veterinarian thinks he must have some Siamese ancestry— the crossed blue eyes and the raucous yowl are very, very Siamese. So, five cats… but I hold to my self-respect by insisting that only four are mine— Sammy is my daughters’, and when she has her own place, Sammy will go with her. I think he is adjusting to the indoors thing; he would like to go out… but he is not insisting on it very strongly at all)

04. September 2005 · Comments Off on Before and After Katrina · Categories: General

The crew over at Global Security dot Org has what I’m sure aren’t going to be the last before and after pics of Katrina’s work.

04. September 2005 · Comments Off on Katrina Around the Blogosphere · Categories: A Href, General, Home Front

Ran across this interesting blog post today, whilst surfing and trying to catch up with Katrina blogs after a week on the road.

The blogger, whom I assume is named Eric, since the blog name is “Eric’s Grumbles before the grave,” says that the aftermath of Katrina is showing us the natural result of 70 years of government dependence.

A sampling of his thoughts:

We have empowered our government to make us into dependent children over the past 70 years, give or take a day or two, and it shows. Tens of thousands, perhaps hundreds of thousands, of people were as effectively isolated from their state and national government by this disaster as if they lived on the American frontier 150 years ago. No matter how dramatically and quickly the various government entities had responded, many of these people would have been isolated from food, water, law enforcement and health care for days. Let’s talk about some of the current problems and criticisms and then we’ll tackle why those criticisms are simply ignoring the blindingly obvious truth of the correct direction to go, both in disaster relief specifically and governance much more generally.

Baldilocks (always a fave read) is adding a Katrina support agency link to each of her posts, regardless of its topic (except for the post announcing Rehnquist’s passing). Baldi also linked to another site that is calling for RVers to donate the use of their vehicles that would otherwise sit idle all winter, and for RV sites to donate unused hookups. Living in a trailer is better than living in a sports stadium, I think.

Please consider donating, for long-term use, your idle RV or travel trailer. We are opening our park to our good neighbors from Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama who have lost so much in Hurricane Katrina. We have RV hookups available for their use, but we don’t have RVs. Your donation can make all the difference in the world to people who are looking for a place to call home for a few weeks or months as they sort through the aftermath. It’s absolutely crucial that we all work together to help out our friends and family. Please email (info@buckbrazos.com) or call (254-898-2825) if you’re able and willing to help out. We can help make arrangements for getting your RV or fifth-wheel to our place. Buck loves to drive.

This is the weekend that bloggers are holding a donation drive for Katrina, as well. I learned about it from Baldilocks, but it’s being hosted/coordinated/tracked at TTLB. And it was from following a link on that site, that I ran across Eric’s post that started this entry of mine. If you have donated, or do donate, please log your contributions there, especially if you donated as a result of someone’s blog entry. This started as a one-day deal, similar to what was done back in Jan for the Tsunami survivors, and the response was so huge that they extended it through the holiday weekend.

Their stats as of this posting:

$714,139 in contributions so far
1,659 blogs participating
221 charities recommended

If you’ve not given yet, please give what you can, when you can. If all you can afford are prayers, then offer those. They help too. And remember, while there’s a tremendously generous outpouring right now, the need will still be here months from now. So if you can afford ongoing donations, that’s a good idea, as well.

On a more personal note, I was supposed to have lunch with Joe Comer today, but my work schedule changed, so he obligingly flexed his schedule as well, and we were going to meet at a Cracker Barrel last night, since we would both be in Atlanta. I was very disappointed to hear that he had only gotten as far as Macon, but I know we’ll get together another time – I’m thinking we’re only about 200 miles away from each other, and *everyone* comes to Atlanta at some point.

03. September 2005 · Comments Off on when a plan doesn’t come together · Categories: General, Home Front, My Head Hurts

Well, the best laid plans…..I left today enroute to help with rescue and communications in the gulf coast. Sorry folks, I only made it 100 miles. As I approached Macon, GA, the transmission on my van gave up the ghost. I was loaded to the gills with stuff for the folks out there and my own survival items, so now I may have to find another way to get things out there. As for me going, that’s out. Last time I replaced a transmission it ran $1700, and I have already spent all I had on things to take out there. The van is gonna sit under my carport for a month or so while I try to find a way to get a new (or used) transmission.

You never know…..I’m just glad it didn’t wait until I was in the middle of nowhere, in the middle of the night, to let go. It cost me almost $400 to get it transported back home by rollback truck, so that’s it for now. What devastates me is not being able to do the job I know so well how to do. I don’t care about the truck, I just wish I could have done my job.

More later…..Right now, I’m going to go crawl into a deep hole. I can’t help those people who have nothing, and that’s the absolute worst for me….

Pray for the people who lost it all, friends!

02. September 2005 · Comments Off on Crescent City Requiem #3 · Categories: Domestic, General, History

Bonaparte House

Another from my collection of antique postcards… an image of the city that was, the city of memories, of the good times rolling.

It may yet be again.

(The concerted rescue effort is rolling into town this afternoon. Four days, people. We cannot collapse the space-time continuum— it will always take about four days, as much as everyone wishes otherwise.)

Later: Additional for Mayor Nagin— what about the busses, then?!!

02. September 2005 · Comments Off on Kids of Katrina · Categories: General

Michele is working her mojo again, filling a need where she saw one and just doing something about it. If you’re looking for a different way to donate, stop on by and help her get school supplies together for the displaced kids.


02. September 2005 · Comments Off on New Orleans: Let’s Just Walk Away. · Categories: General

Some will say, “oh, look at the culture that will be lost.” But I say, we are far past tying a culture to a physical local. And we can’t deny the fact that New Orleans, and its attendant suburbs, have been an environmental blight on the entire Deep South for the past century.

I suggest we start a new city, further upstream – call it Nuevo Orleans.

01. September 2005 · Comments Off on This Is Crazy · Categories: General

I am just now watching some shit on the Discovery Science Channel about the Etruscans, and their shipping. And they are wondering whether or not the Etruscans stacked their amphorae, and whether or not they “crammed vines in between as interface.” FUCKING IDIOTS! Doesn’t the standardization of size among amphorae across the Mediterranean indicate that there was some packaging consideration at play? And, if so, wouldn’t some ingenuous sole quickly devise using woven mats as interface, rather than “cramming” loose vines?

Stop being idiots.

01. September 2005 · Comments Off on To Whom, Or What, To Place The Blame? · Categories: General

Many voices of reason have said that this is not the time to point the finger of blame, but rather to concentrate on first aid for the wounds our society has suffered. I must agree that we must not become obsessed with finger-pointing. But, once the hemorrhaging is controlled, we must look beyond to seek further remedy.

I suggest that much of the civil break-down we see, in the wake of Katrina, is due to the infantilization of society, via the twin evils of the Welfare State, and the War on Drugs.

As usual, I’m refraining from making a big dissertation here, knowing I will largely be just preaching to the choir. What I hope to do is illicit a conversation. And there is much here to converse about: Even before Katrina, New Orleans has been legendary for crime and police corruption. Now, the hens have come home to roost.

01. September 2005 · Comments Off on Good News and Good Hearts · Categories: General

First of all if you’re tired of all the bad news coming out of NOLA and MS and AL, you might want to stop over at A Small Victory. Michele is working on finding the good news stories coming out of there. She’s also working on a way to get school supplies to some of the kids affected by Katrina.

They found Fats Domino!

I just received an email from iTunes asking me to donate to The Red Cross with a “donate now” button built right in. I think that just rocks. It didn’t take a lot of work I know, but they didn’t have to do it either.

01. September 2005 · Comments Off on Global View: The Eastern Front · Categories: General

I am currently watching The History Channel’s excellent series, Global View. The subject of tonight’s episode: WWII’s Eastern Front. The consensus amongst the panel seems to be that WWII in Europe was fought and decided on the Eastern Front.

I beg to differ. To make a chess analogy: The Eastern Front was a battle of knights and pawns, the Western Front, bishops and rooks, with Germany bringing out her queen in the Ardennes, and then having her captured.

And, of course, we cannot discount the fact that Eisenhower stopped at the Elbe, to allow Zhukov to take Berlin. (Nor must we discount the fact that this decision wasn’t entirely political.)

If you look at gross carnage, of course the Eastern Front is the greater. But, if you look at overall war-making capacity, I think the Western Front takes the fore.

All this aside, this is still a great show. Of particular interest is the virtual civil war among factions in Ukraine and Romania.