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Grex > Agora56 > #34: Bruce's NOLA experience (fall agora item 99) | |
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| Author |
Message |
| 25 new of 119 responses total. |
bru
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response 48 of 119:
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Jan 18 09:41 UTC 2006 |
damn! lost a response.
anyway, it looks like thingsa re going to be heting up down here as
more and more residents return. Three shootings during the MLK day
parade.
Our company lost the contract at Touro because they want armed guards,
and FEMA will not let us be armed. They offered to hire some of us at
$8 plus room amd board.
FEMA may be coming around after reading after action reports from
security officers unable to defend themselves from youths throwing
rocks and telling them they don't car if they are there to protect the
residents, the youths have guns, and the guards do not.
the hotels want a minimum of 5 armed guards around the clock for mardi
gras.
The city has okayed over 80 trailer park sites. with an average of 7
guards per shift at 1200 per week, and with the company operational
costs fo these contracts at 3 times the salary, you are looking at
contrats worth over $5,000,000 per week. And that is just from FEMA
contracts. The private security down here begins to look almost as
complicted and expensive as the situation in Iraq.
I also heard a report that 1/4 of all U.S. gun sales for the last
quarter took place in ... wait for it... Louisiana. Private security
is rivaling the local police and sheriff offices down here.
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klg
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response 49 of 119:
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Jan 18 11:54 UTC 2006 |
(Fitz: "Super Bowel"?? Handles hard to digest foods with ease??)
Anyway, good point about MLK day. Rather than using it as a positive
opportunity to teach the values the Reverend King preached to improve
our society, Demos have taken it as open season on Republicans. It's a
shame.
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rcurl
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response 50 of 119:
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Jan 18 15:18 UTC 2006 |
Republicans try so hard to make themselves inviting targets. That's a shame
too.
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marcvh
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response 51 of 119:
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Jan 18 15:57 UTC 2006 |
MLK was a controversial and divisive political figure in his day (and,
among some people, he still is.) I see little benefit in presenting the
day as some sort of "lollipop history" feel-good event that strips
away everything important and interesting.
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klg
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response 52 of 119:
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Jan 18 17:13 UTC 2006 |
It would seem to me that the purpose in designating a national holiday
named after Reverend King was to honor him for what he taught and
accomplished and to encourage others to follow his example. That's a
problem for you?
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tod
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response 53 of 119:
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Jan 18 17:53 UTC 2006 |
I don't know which is more annoying: religion being used to explain
disorganization in FEMA...OR...political parties being used to explain the
opinions of congress leveled on one another?
This is all called SPIN.
We, as citizens and voters, are being stupidly persuaded to take the eye off
the ball "government" by blaming religion or dems/gop for the ill performing
government in times of crisis. You can extend that namecalling or magic show
spin to using "liberal" or "neocon" slanders rather than addressing the acts
of individual electeds.
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marcvh
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response 54 of 119:
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Jan 18 19:03 UTC 2006 |
I think that an important part of encouraging others to follow MLK's example
is to talk about his situation and compare it to the present. For example,
MLK was persecuted by the federal government; they did (among other things)
illegal wiretaps of him and people associated with him. That means speaking
out against such things today is a vital part of honoring his legacy.
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tod
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response 55 of 119:
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Jan 18 19:11 UTC 2006 |
Let's join hands and sing Onward Christian Soldiers.
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klg
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response 56 of 119:
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Jan 18 20:11 UTC 2006 |
vnaheyngingen is more interested, apparently, in using MLK day to bash
the President than to honor the Reverend King. And judging by the Demo
newswhores, he's not alone in that regard.
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bhelliom
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response 57 of 119:
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Jan 18 20:19 UTC 2006 |
Jesus, klg. Can you refrain from posting complete bullshit for five
minutes?
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marcvh
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response 58 of 119:
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Jan 18 20:21 UTC 2006 |
Yes, let's be sure that on MLK's day we don't do or say anything that
might offend MLK's enemies. What a bunch of PC crap.
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twenex
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response 59 of 119:
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Jan 18 20:23 UTC 2006 |
Yeah. And so uncharacteristically klg, too. Obviously klg will post any old
BS just to disagree with the satanic liberals on grex. In England we have a
word for that kind of person, and that word is "arsehole".
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cyklone
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response 60 of 119:
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Jan 18 20:43 UTC 2006 |
The correct word is "troll."
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twenex
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response 61 of 119:
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Jan 18 20:49 UTC 2006 |
Not all arseholes are trolls, but all trolls are arseholes, so my terminology
was correct.
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bru
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response 62 of 119:
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Jan 18 21:07 UTC 2006 |
twenex is a troll.
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jadecat
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response 63 of 119:
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Jan 18 21:48 UTC 2006 |
He's from Michigan?
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scholar
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response 64 of 119:
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Jan 18 23:13 UTC 2006 |
I'm stunningly handsome.
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cross
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response 65 of 119:
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Jan 18 23:57 UTC 2006 |
This response has been erased.
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twenex
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response 66 of 119:
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Jan 19 00:01 UTC 2006 |
It'll cost ya!
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bru
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response 67 of 119:
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Jan 20 06:56 UTC 2006 |
now we have independent news crews going to sites and asking to see our
guns. What kind of idiot reporter does that?
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tod
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response 68 of 119:
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Jan 20 07:20 UTC 2006 |
The kind that exploits lawlessness.
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richard
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response 69 of 119:
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Jan 21 19:26 UTC 2006 |
re #67 Thats because it is news to the locals when companies on their
own bring what is in essence a private "armed militia" into their
area. Lets see how you'd feel if there was devastation up in Michigan,
and they started bringing truckloads of questionable sorts up there
from Louisiana armed to the teeth. Every guy who never got in the
army, or just wanted to be able to use his gun, coming up and acting
like a posse.
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nharmon
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response 70 of 119:
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Jan 21 19:52 UTC 2006 |
Would Nagin feel more comfortable if there were more "chocolate" private
police down there?
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richard
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response 71 of 119:
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Jan 21 19:54 UTC 2006 |
re #70 I think nharmon's use of the word "chocolate" in that context is
fairly obviously racial. Nagin simply wants NO private militias
whatsoever.
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nharmon
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response 72 of 119:
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Jan 21 21:00 UTC 2006 |
Do you think Mayor Nagin's use of the word "chocolate" in the context by
which he used it was fairly obviously racial?
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