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katrina commentary: call to action: conference/march from miss to neworleans: dec 8,9,10 (and a couple of my thoughts on what really should be done)

hello world

received this katrina call to action over the black radical congress list
dont know who sponsoring organization is, an email address but no link - unfortunate

the presentation is not as sophisticated as i would prefer it be
and no attendant website further indication of  perhaps not ready for primetime activism
which is really unfortunate cause struggle in the 21st century got to be primetime

needs editing too but im gon to put it up as i received it

had i been asked i would have suggested changing the tone of it also

something a little less predictable (thereby less dismissible)
folk hear that same old rhetoric it goes in one ear and out the other
unless you already a true believer

and i would have dumped the repeated attempts to link katrina to reparations

(i had hoped we were going to let reparations slide for awhile - i had hoped
katrina would make it clear to black activists that it is a new day (hell its a new
century)  - and that oldtime gimme gimme needs to be left behind w/the dodo bird -

notice how they mention  self determination almost everytime they mention reparations,

cause they know thats where the hole in the wall - ohwell im not going to worry
about it, strategically speaking reparations is a dead end street and eventually we gon come
to the end of that road - and i do make a distinction between reparations
for slavery and the government helping its citizens after a natural disaster - thats
what i expect of any government - calling that reparations instead of disaster aid
confuses the issue and makes it less likely - clumsy rhetoric points is all that is)

but i have to give credit where credit is due (the folk in the arena
always get some slack, i depend on that myself) - they trying to bust the move
and i love them for it
eventually they will get around to asking me about them archaic strategies

what i wish this crowd would do instead is get busy

get up in there and start rebuilding them blocks one by one
just get busy, imtalking strongbusy, then get folk to get and keep necessary funding going
if folk were in there habitat of humanity style, just building with whatever they
got the world would get behind that with the necessary funding and expertise

im talking dahomeyan dopkwe, im talking collective work,
one of the black nationalist verities

im not down, im in my own struggle, but the new orleans folk need to be
throwing down with the fuck this attitude, with the no god we aint accepting this
attitude, we gon raise these barns together one by one until we done attitude -

forget waiting for the federal government to save us - legbas beard, if this dont
convince us to move on what will

obviously not the whole answer, im talking about the limbo folk in
cause im feeling that spiritual pain, my hoodoo feelers been twitching bad

other issues like making sure it doesnt happen again (wetlands & levees)
and better prep for when it does
and other such have to constitute a comprehensive approach but i need to
get folk into hearth and home, either in new orleans or elsewhere, and i for
one am not willing to give up new orleans, not new orleans, one of the
afrospiritual and artistic centers of the americas, of the world, no, not new orleans

in the meantime i am relieved to see the activist community busting a move
of any sort
cause the condition of the katrina survivors getting worse off every day

i know some of them and they are caught in this catch 22
neworleans wont let them back in their homes/neighborhoods
they getting mortgage and eviction threats
insurance company balking for one friend cause they say his 9th ward house
isnt really totally destroyed just almost destroyed and therefore not eligible
and fema help is just a frustrating joke
for folk scattered across the country and living in shelters, hotelrooms and
with tired of it all family

folk really depressed, both katrinafolk and their hosts
and there seems to be no end in sight
because the bush administration and fema not even trying to help
beyond a politically motivated minimum they just dont care
about them people and their indifference becomes more glaring every day

the anger that attended the original tragedy continues to grow
and bush just a fiddling

folk gon have to take matters into their own hands
this march is just the beginning - that anger reaching critical mass

i was reading where fema feared riots in mississippi
the possibility of civil disorder is still there

mark my words

(unless of course they listen to me and use that energy
to get to building - ima go ahead and put this commentary
on some venues but i dont expect its gon do the do - none
of the others have - dont know why i still hit it, just dont know
no other way to be - in my deepest soul i believe in the
power of the word)

rickydoc trickmaster
wouldbe prophet of the hoodoo way

awaken the sleeper
protect the weak
guide the strong


--------------------------------

THE CALL!
FROM OUTRAGE TO ACTION !!!
********************************************** 
STATE OF EMERGENCY CONFERENCE AND SURVIVORS 
GENERAL ASSEMBLY, JACKSON, MS
DECEMBER 8, 9, 2005 
************************** 
MARCH ON NEW ORLEANS 
DECEMBER 10, 2005 
“DEMAND THE RIGHT TO RETURN”

On December 8, 2005 through December 10, 2005 scores of survivors and

their supporters,(people who believe in freedom and justice) will gather in

Jackson, MS and New Orleans. We will gather for the National State of

Emergency Conference in Jackson on the 8th and 9th of December. Supporters and
representatives and leaders from over 50 black organizations, and labor unions
and their third world and anti-racists allies will meet in support and
solidarity of the survivors initiate an action plan to rescue the black
population and all oppressed populations from their dependency on racist and
incompetent governments. Most important the Katrina Survivors will gather at
the same place and time to form a General Assembly to speak for themselves and
to exercise their rights to self determination.
 
Survivors have raised the demands are for immediate jobs, education, housing,
clothing and food. Survivors have made the demand to place the control and
direction of Gulf Coast reconstruction in their hands. Survivors demand
opportunity to exercise the right to return to the Gulf Coast with dignity and
without poverty. Survivors have demand ed a complete investigation into and
prosecution of all government agencies for crimes against humanity and human
rights violations.
 
 LOCATION OF EVENTS
 
On December 8, 2005 7pm-11pm the youth will speak out on Katrina at the
Business School of Jackson State University at 1300 Lynch Street, Jackson, MS, room 134.
 
On December 9, 2005 from 9am-6pm in the State of Emergency Conference the
survivors will tell their stories and conference participants will organize
for action in support of Katrina Survivors demands and to build a front which
will confront and combat the racist and abusive human rights violations of the
American Government and its friends.
 
The General Assembly and the Conference will take place at Anderson United
Methodist Church, located in Jackson, MS at
6205 Hanging Moss Road, off I-220.
 
On Friday evening December 9, 2005 from 8pm-11pm there will be a cultural
program and rally at a location to be announced in Jackson, MS.
 
On Saturday, December 10, 2005 which is International Human Rights Day. The
survivors and their supporters (all of us) will march on New Orleans in
support of all the survivors demands and in particular in support of the right
of the survivors to return to the Gulf Coast.
 
OBJECTIVES
 
The Objectives of the December 8-10, 2005 Assembly/Conference and the
Demonstration are as follows:
 
1. To build a Hurricane Katrina Survivors General Assembly which will speak
for the Gulf Coast Survivors and which will demand and exercise the peoples
right to self determination in New Orleans and other effected gulf coast areas
in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama.
 
2. To demand the people’s right to return to New Orleans and to the
Mississippi and Alabama Gulf Coast with dignity and without poverty.
 
3. To demand reparations for the governments’ criminal indifference,
negligence, and malicious actions towards the Victims and Survivors, before,
during and after Katrina.
 
4. To demand, launch and/or continue investigations, law suits and
prosecutions of governments, agencies and persons responsible for the human
rights violations and crimes against humanity committed before, during and
after Katrina.
 
5. To build a national united front in support and solidarity with the self
determination and reparation demands of Katrina Survivors, and through this
front to design and initiate a plan of action and institutions which will
allow black people to fortify themselves and serve their own needs in the face
of future disasters which are either natural or by human hands.
 
6. To link today’s demands for reparations and self determination to the
historical and future struggle of black people and other oppressed populations
for self determination and reparations.
 
THE BACKGROUND
On August 29, 2005 Katrina struck New Orleans and the Gulf Coast with the full
force of a category 5 hurricane. Within hours flood waters would rush the City
of New Orleans pouring out of an outdated levee system that, due to years of
gross and blatant government neglect, was not prepared to withstand Katrina’s
powerful winds. Quickly these waters would find and swallow up the city’s
blackest and poorest communities. Indeed many reported hearing explosions
before seeing the advancing waters. This has left some to conclude that the
floods invaded some black communities and missed some white ones not by chance
but by design.
 
For many there was a memory of 1927 when white business owners busted
the levee in black areas in order to guide the water away from their
businesses and affluent communities. This history supported the belief that
Katrina flood waters found their way to the jet black ninth ward and East New
Orleans by design.
 
Within days after Katrina struck, dead bodies, mostly black bodies,
floated through the streets, as ambulances and helicopters rushed passed black
and poor victims toward white and affluent communities, leaving the
economially less advantaged and the black to fend for themselves.
 
The situation would produce countless acts of heroism and courage as
men, women and children would reach out to each other and save the lives of
family, friends and strangers as government agencies and the red cross either
rushed to the aid of the affluent and the white or dilly dallied as the
devastation and disaster mushroomed. The survivors would seek refuge in the
New Orleans Super Dome and at the Civic Center as they would gather and then
wait for buses which took three, four and often five and six days to come. The
people waited in dangerous and unhealthy conditions without clean clothing,
water, electricity, toiletries, and often without food.
 
The major media would turn away, ignore or fail to show the peoples act
of courage and heroism and become preoccupied with what they termed acts of
thugs. Although there were few if any gun shot casualties reported to any law
enforcement or medical personnel, the media repeatedly ran stories on phantom
shootings at police and medical aids by so called armed thugs, while
broadcasting over and over again the same picture of the same few people
carrying gym shoes, clothing, food, and in one case a T.V. from a few stores.
To the major media blacks seeking and finding food from abandoned stores were
looters, while whites doing the same were identified as having found food.
 
The Governor of Louisiana would call on State and local law enforcement
to shoot to kill the so-called looters. The numbers of those gunned down by
police and National Guards are suspected to be at least thirty (30). In
Mississippi and New Orleans many were herded into jail with high bonds for
petty larceny or on other exaggerated charges.
 
When the buses finally arrived, blacks and much of the poor were taken
to so called shelters and placed in concentration camp like conditions at gun
point. Whites and the more affluent were transported to white churches and
other facilities and shelters.
 
Across the country outrage has grown and still grows as the criminal
indifference and mistreatment by the U. S. Government, FEMA, the Red Cross,
State Governments, Local Governments and others towards the survivors and
victims of hurricane Katrina became and still becomes more and more apparent.
 
The outrageousness of the behavior of these Governments and agencies
becomes even more obvious, as Katrina survivors were left with little money,
without homes, jobs and dignity and some without their children who could not
be found and nowhere have the American governments given adequate help or
shown genuine concern. Survivors seeking help have been shuffled from the Red
Cross, to FEMA, to insurance companies and back to the Red Cross again without
and have received little relief and full recovery is nowhere in sight. The
insurance companies refuse to pay for homes lost, FEMA pays too little, too
slow. Large numbers of Red Cross workers are racist, often dishonest, and
unreliable at best. The U.S.Government, the State and Local governments
involved and big time money changers go forward on plans to rebuild New
Orleans without most of its displaced black and poor populations. Meanwhile
hundreds of Katrina survivors linger in jail charged with a variety of
illegitimate charges, and well over 1,000 families of Katrina and the
government’s brutal neglect have buried their dead and no compensation for
wrongful death has been offered or seriously considered.
 
The burden of suffering and financial loss will once again be slung on
the back of the poor and a nation of black people which already finds millions
of its people in poverty, prison and jails, many being held as political
prisoners. This cross is to be carried by a nation of people already owed
reparation for centuries of slave trade, slavery, Jim Crow, lynching,
discrimination and countless other acts of lawlessness.
 
 Remembering the horrors of Katrina and the history of racial and class
oppression is not enough. The time has come to turn outrage to action.
 
CONTACT INFORMATION 
For further information call 1-888-310-PHRF(7473), or call 601-353-5566, or
email outrage2action@yahoo.com 

never again: allen wattleys hurrican song and the color of change: new paradigms of struggle

interesting that i found both hurricane song
and this article about colorofchange.org that came from
the black radical congress list

i read over the colorchange.org site while listening
to the hurricane song and i tell you dear surfer it
brought tears to my eyes

put the song on, download it and spread it around
call the stations and have them play it
join color of change.org

its time to make a difference
guess this will be the post that i work on this week after all
new paradigms of struggle, how and why

blackfolk ready to rumble
i can feel it in my bones

rickydoc flowers
wouldbe prophet of the hoodoo way


10,000 African-Americans Join Online Political Group

San Francisco, CA (BlackNews.com) - Angered by the government response
that followed Hurricane Katrina, two Black activists have launched a
new, online organization, ColorOfChange.org, to give a stronger voice
to Black concerns in U.S. politics. In its first month, the site has
attracted 10,000 members.

The founders of ColorOfChange.org, James Rucker and Van Jones, see
their early success as a sign that African-Americans and those who are
concerned about Black issues see Katrina as a "wake-up call - and that
they're ready to make a difference politically.

"Middle-class Black folks like ourselves got a clear dose of reality.
While many of us are doing well, millions of our folks have been left
behind," Rucker said. "When we saw the television screens, the emotions
were almost universal. First we were sad and angry, and then we
realized we had no political voice - no organized way to respond and
hold government accountable. That's when we decided to start
ColorOfChange.org. For too long, Black America has been effectively
left out of the political discourse - Republicans are rarely on our
side, and too many Democrats take our support for granted. And it needs
to change."

TAPPING BLACK ENERGY: "The energy is out there. It just hasn't been
tapped," Rucker said. Given simple, tangible ways to make a difference,
people will act. And when they act together, it amplifies their
political voice. We've seen it with MoveOn.org and were seeing it now.
ColorOfChange.org members use the Internet to pressure elected
officials using petitions and phone calls, and soon they'll be able to
support media campaigns that call attention to issues that concern them
and thereby frame the public debate. Our mission is to help Black
people and pro-Black people become politically engaged and to have a
renewed and strengthen political voice."

"A politician might be able to ignore one individual Black bumblebee,
buzzing and complaining alone," Jones said. "But nobody can ignore a
whole swarm." ColorOfChange.org is about using the web to help lots of
isolated Black individuals become a massive, unstoppable swarm.

EARLY SUCCESSES: The effort already has some successes under its belt.
More than 5,400 people signed the groups online petition to hold radio
host and former U.S. Secretary of Education Bill Bennett accountable
for his racial comments that "you could abort every black baby in this
country, and your crime rate would go down."

Pressure from ColorOfChange.org and other groups stopped Republicans in
Congress from using Katrina as an excuse to make massive cuts to the
social safety net. And almost 1,000 have bought the "Kanye Was Right"
T-shirts that put ColorOfChange.org on the map in September. (Kanye
West is the rapper who said, "George Bush doesn't care about black
people" during a national hurricane relief telethon.)

IMPRESSIVE FOUNDERS: James Rucker, 36, is a veteran leader of online
activism. As Grassroots Mobilization Director, Rucker helped MoveOn.org
grow into a powerful 3.3 million-member organization. MoveOn's mission
is to return political influence to where its supposed to be in a
democracy - everyday people - instead of moneyed special interests and
corporations.

Van Jones, 37, is the founder and executive director of the Ella Baker
Center for Human Rights (EBC). Under Jones' leadership, EBC has grown
from a small local non-profit to a leading organization in the national
fight for alternatives to the "incarceration industry." Jones is also a
leader in the push to integrate the environmental movement with other
social justice movements.

In time, the duo plans to build a membership of 250,000 people.
ColorOfChange.org will tackle many key issues, including economic
fairness and opportunity for African-Americans.

"When TV is showing you people who look like your grandmothers and your
children just dying and getting no help in the richest country in the
world, you can't just go on with business as usual," Jones said. "With
ColorOfChange.org, we are on the path to making sure that nobody gets
left behind like that ever again."

PRESS CONTACT:
Van Jones, 415-336-7688
James Rucker, 415-505-9048
www.colorofchange.org

katrina commentary: A Grass-Roots Group Is Helping Hurricane Survivors Help Themselves: nyt article by ralph blumenthal

HOUSTON, Oct. 30 - With Hurricane Rita bearing down on this city of refuge packed with survivors of Hurricane Katrina, a tense drama played out last month at the Reliant Arena, where hundreds of families from New Orleans, concentrated from the Astrodome and other shelters, were once again facing emergency evacuation.

Relief officials were lining them up for trips to yet other shelters as far afield as Fort Chaffee, Ark., when the officials ran into a storm of their own: a demand that vacant houses and apartments in secure inland areas be made available instead.

The agitation worked. Housing priority lists were hurriedly revised. Buses and taxis carried many families from the arena to their new homes around town.

And the Metropolitan Organization counted another victory. "As long as they're American citizens, they're not going to be forced to go to Arkansas," said Renee Wizig-Barrios, the group's lead organizer, who played a central role in the standoff.

In the two months since Hurricane Katrina hit, the Metropolitan Organization, a group of professional organizers affiliated with the Industrial Areas Foundation, a grass-roots network founded by the Chicago radical Saul D. Alinsky, has been busy sowing nonpartisan political activism and mobilizing survivors to champion their own interests in resettlement and rebuilding decisions.

Early on, with at least a quarter-million people finding refuge in the Houston area alone, it helped organize evacuees in the Astrodome, winning a playground for children and secure areas for the elderly. It persuaded the Federal Communications Commission to maintain evacuees' cellphone service even if they fell behind in their bills.

It held a seat on the emergency planning council convened by Houston and Harris County officials to cope with the disaster. And despite the challenges of organizing evacuees dispersed around the country, it is trying to collect 50,000 signatures on a petition setting forth reconstruction goals to influence the New Orleans election for mayor early next year.

"T.M.O. has been a great source of grass-roots wisdom on a variety of issues," said Mayor Bill White of Houston, who invited Mrs. Wizig-Barrios to attend the daily strategy sessions on disaster planning. "It was natural to look to them to be part of overall community efforts."

Mayor White said "there was only one particular time we weren't on the same page": the confrontation at Reliant Arena. But "it was an isolated case," he said, and "we don't mind a level of accountability."

The Metropolitan Organization, active for 25 years in Houston, has toned down the confrontational playbook applied by Mr. Alinsky and his followers in the Depression-ravaged 1930's and the revolutionary 1960's. Today, organizers seek alliances with partners like religious groups, schools and unions, while identifying and grooming local leadership.

"The iron rule in organizing is, 'Don't do for people what they can do for themselves,' " Broderick Bagert, one of the group's organizers, said at a meeting at a church last month that brought survivors of Hurricane Katrina face to face with public officials.

One woman from New Orleans, Sandra Nelson, was blunt. "Y'all just received $40 billion," Ms. Nelson said to a chorus of approving hoots from the audience that quickly turned to laughter. "My question is, 'Where's that money?' "

Others wanted to know why evacuees were being offered housing, often in decrepit areas, on a take-it-or-leave-it basis. "I don't want my son to fight and duck bullets," said Deborah Brown, who wore a cap with a T.M.O. button. "I want a choice where I live."

Helping to lead the gathering was one of the first evacuees chosen for leadership, Linda Jeffers, a former New Orleans businesswoman who ran a company called Leg Work, which guided citizens through the governmental bureaucracy.

Plucked from the roof of her flooded house by neighbors in a purloined boat, Ms. Jeffers had landed in the Astrodome when the Metropolitan Organization called for volunteers. She ended up as a rallying presence for her fellow survivors. "We got some opportunities here - I don't want to say problems," she told the officials at the church.

Stoked by anger over bungled relief efforts, similar organizing efforts are under way in Louisiana and other states where evacuees are concentrated.

"This gives us an opportunity to show what we can do," Ernesto Cortes Jr., the southwest regional director for the Industrial Areas Foundation, said at a strategy session several weeks ago in Los Angeles. "We want to shape the political dialogue."

Sister Christine Stephens, a Roman Catholic nun with the Congregation of the Sisters of Divine Providence of San Antonio, and the foundation's lead organizer for Louisiana and Texas, said: "Katrina has ripped the mask off of major cities so that people can understand the need for health care, the need for education. Katrina has opened up a conversation that, before, many people were not willing to have."

After the session, organizers fanned out to their districts. In a recent meeting in another Houston church, the Rev. Rodney Armstrong, a Roman Catholic priest from the refinery area around Baytown, was going through his litany - a litany of complaints about the runaround hurricane survivors were getting - when Mrs. Wizig-Barrios cut him off.

"What do you want to do about it, Father?" she said.

Father Armstrong wanted the federal government held accountable, he said. "Somebody should --" He got no further.

"How about you?" she said, recruiting him to arrange a meeting with a local congressman.

Anger had its place, but it had to be channeled, Mrs. Wizig-Barrios said: "We take our anger and figure out how we can make things better."

katrina commentary: acorn report of mortgage disparities for katrina victim

KATRINA CALL TO ACTION

following is a list of policies from group called the
african american coalition disaster relif call to action

headlined apparently by black congresswoman, stephanie tubbs
they recently met at howard to come up with 8 areas of concern:

i thought these were pertinent, particularly since i never
would have thought about these issues, my mind doesnt work that way

but in particular pertinent in light of the report from acorn
that africanamericans being victimized by mortgage lenders
who are apparently automatically giving the prime mortgage lenders
up to 3 months grace on payments and credit reports

but only giving their subprime lenders, 48% of black mortgages
only 1 months grace and that only if they call and ask for it

acorn has called for parity on the grace periods for katrina victims
across the board

"The communities that suffered the most from Katrina and the ineffective government response are now receiving inferior and disparate treatment from our nation's financial system," said ACORN President Maude Hurd. "Equal treatment and a chance to get back on their feet is not too much to ask for the homeowners in our communities. Those that have more expensive loans to start with should certainly get the same consideration as other borrowers."

this group foresaw problems of this sort
i did not

1. ENSURING AFFECTED FAMILIES' IMMEDIATE AND LONG-TERM RIGHT OF RETURN TO GULF   COAST REGION

- Provide temporary housing at all assets available to federal government,   including currently closed military bases in Gulf Coast region.
  - Provide economic incentives for families to return to Gulf Coast region.

2. REBUILDING AND RECONNECTING FAMILIES AND CHILDREN

  - Establish Family Reconstruction Fund (estimated $100 billion for providing   unemployment assistance, job training, school placement, assistance reuniting   families, etc).

3. ENSURING THAT LOCAL RESIDENTS HAVE FIRST CHOICE AT RECONSTRUCTION JOBS AND   CONTRACTS

- Establish Gulf Coast Region Reconstruction Fund (rebuilding homes, businesses,   etc).
  - Establish timeline to rebuild colleges and universities, including Historically   Black Colleges and Universities (Xavier University, Dillard University, Southern   University in New Orleans, Jackson State University).
  - Set 50 percent residency target goal for all contracts. - Set 40 percent minority   vendor target for all reconstruction.
  - Place moratorium on all contracts until civil rights provisions can be reinstituted   (Davis-Bacon Requirements).

4. PROVIDING PHYSICAL AND MENTAL HEALTH ASSISTANCE

  - Order the admittance of minority community-based counselors in facilities   with evacuees nationwide.
  - Provide health benefits to all affected citizens for a period no less than   24 months.

5. PROVIDING LEGAL, ECONOMIC AND VOTING PROTECTIONS

  - Direct Justice Department to immediately review individual cases of arrested   and detained individuals.
  - Ensure evacuees immediate ability to vote in state and local elections, including   February 2006 election.
  - Ensure home owners the right of first refusal to reclaim property.
  - Freeze all foreclosure proceedings against property in affected areas for   a minimum of 12 months.
  - Build in legal protections against predatory lenders.
  - Institute a prohibition of collections and deficiency judgments on real and   personal properties.
  - Institute a prohibition on negative credit reporting or the omission of negative   events from credit scores when the incidents were a result of Katrina.
  - Institute a voluntary waiver of late fees or interest on loans made to people   in Katrina affected areas, for a period of at least three months.
 
  6. MONITORING FEMA, AMERICAN RED CROSS, AND SALVATION ARMY DISTRIBUTION OF RESOURCES   

  - Establish a diverse commission to monitor the equitable distribution of relief   resources provided by FEMA, American Red Cross, and Salvation Army as well as   the equitable reconstruction of the affected Gulf Coast areas.
 
  7. SECURING THE ENVIRONMENT FOR FUTURE GENERATIONS

  - Develop action plan to secure wetlands in coastal areas of US.
  - Stop rollback/waivers of environmental laws.

8. DEVELOP COMPREHENSIVE STRATEGY TO ADDRESS POVERTY CRISIS IN AMERICA


katrina commentary: running up the flag: they done took my blues and gone

hello world

i been in the woodshed
crunching rest for the weary
a never ending battle it seems

but let me so some katrina update
as i see it

first, tried to run up the flag on the hoodoo lists
about katrina, new orleans and the delta

i still see a role for afrospiritual practitioners
in this struggle

no response except on one
which became a passionate discussion
on race but not in a useful manner

mostly whitefolk saying dont blame me
and asking what this got to do with us

imagine, a hoodoo list asking what the
destruction of one of the afrospiritual centers
of the world has to do with us

they just wanted to stay in their little witchy bubble
and trade their little slaverytime recipes

while i began ranting about how the point of
hoodoo is to protect your community
not how many recipes do you know

and finally had to just chill, it was a waste
of time and energy
wasting my time on somebody calls himself vlad (as in the impaler)
talking about dont be a hater

life can be so amusing sometime

instead of a discussion on neworleans
and what hoodoo can do

it became a melee of defensive whitefolk
and exasperated blackfolk trying to explain why this
is important to us

which is what happens when we dont
have our own space

where we dont have to constantly explain and defend our need
to discuss issues that vitally concern us

to think this is where they want to take my tradition

make it useless as the cultural instrument of empowerment
and resistance that its historically been
and turn it into a kumbaya campfire

and when i object to stripping hoodoo
of all its deeper meaning
they call me a racist - party pooper

i have tried to 'generalize' hoodoo by defining
its destinical obligations as a responsibility for all humanity
and all god creatures, great and small

instead of my original definition as responsibilty
for the destiny of the blackrace only

but they want hoodoo to be strictly giftbook magic
happily trading slaverytime magical recipes
in a witchy witchy bubble of feel good wiccaRasingtheflag_1

o my lord
they have taken my blues and gone
they have taken my blues and gone

when i raise the flag in those kind of forums
its more to help me identify who is ready
to salute it - i will take it from there

a luta continua


okay, an update of the katrina players

bush got out there trying to protect his rep
and made all these promises about sparing no cost
to rebuild neworleans and the delta

firstoff, weve heard all that before, think no child left behind
a lot of big words but no finance

thats going to be the scenario here
they will pay the initial costs, because the spotlight is on them
and its a political matter, which are the only kind that really move them

but once the spotlight dims, we will find that a lot of that was rhetoric
mostly because his base is going to object strenuously

they dont mind spending on taxcuts and cutting estate taxes
but deficit spending to rebuild neworleans and make the delta whole
o no, we couldnt possibly bust the deficit in this matter

so basically we can expect a bunch of backtracking on this

the question becomes what are they going to do
and thats problematic too

they have decided to experiment with the delta
going to run every necon theory of development that they can come up with
they gon try to treat my people like the treated the iraqis

they have already exempted companies from wage and affirmative action laws
talking about giving the students vouchers they can use in priivate schools
i was reading where they have just passed a tax cut for the evacuees
what good is a taxcut for poor people who probably dont make enuf to pay taxes

i was reading where a guy in tennesse said, why should my taxes be sent
to rebuild neworleans and it is so indicative of the kind of public they have bred

each man for himself
(and maybe the women)

bush is basically hoping this will blow over
him and bruh rove praying for that storm
to hit texas, so they can respond and show america
that they ready now

ive been thinking hard on what their moves will be
cause we just cant sneer at them and leave it at that

that aint struggle, struggle is trying to determine just what are they going to do
utilize what we can of it and finesse the rest

so i got to get a better idea of exactly what strategies are they going to try to use
to rebuild the delta so i can be in a better position to finesse them

at lot we are just not going to be able to stop
enterprise zones and the like, so the question is how best to finesse

also im noticing the use of this guy, bishops tj jakes
how bush has called him in to run interference for him
be his blackface so to speak

thats so sad

okay, anything else, probably should but im feeling
the need to get to work on rest

a section (just a section mind you) that i been working
on for some 4 years now is finally moving towards closure
and im eager to get back on the whole manuscript

when i finally pulled out of all that to do on the hoodoo list
it was with the statement that i had so much work to do

i keep saying im going to show the world what hoodoo can do
in this situation, but im not sure myself what hoodoo can do

if we were already the power i wish we were
the power that im trying to forge
basically a secret society kind of power encased
in a web of pushbutton power that gives spiritual and strategic
guidance to our players

(which is what i try to do now, just that folk dont listen to me
part of my lifegoal is to be a model of the hoodoos of the future
i will with my life show just what it is that a hoodoo prophet do
and hopefully future generations will trust the hoodoos of the future
to give them good spiritual and stategic advice - because of the geas of rickydoc
i am what you might call a sacrifice)

if hoodoo was trusted as a font of spiritual and strategic advice
contemporary shamans and witchdoctors protecting the tribe
then we could make some moves
have some true influence

but im having to construct that scenario from scratch damn near
and it might be something that i can only lay the seeds on in my lifetime

i have tried to organize a hoodoo based secret society but its
in its embryonic stages and not functional as yet

and all my personal conjure powers are more longgame powers than short
magic (and fiction) is a dicey power and you got to know what its good for and what it aint

this weblog is an attempt to manifest shortgame power
and its been functional but not to my satisfaction

i guess the first step is to keep trying to build it and my mailing list
into an alternative newsource/reality - but everything is so frustratingly step by step,
so damned incremental
but i guess thats the nature of the beast

im wandering now, got to go, that novel is calling me
will clean this up over the next couple of days

in love and peace
in spirit and struggle

rickydoc flowers
delta conjureman

katrina commentary:more horrible than truth: news reports: by davidcarr of nytimes regarding lurid rumors of rape murder and mayhem: urban myths, media lies and fox news

im glad to see this article
i knew all along that most of those lurid rumors
about rape murder and mayhem were just that

brooks piece storm before the storm
spoke on how rumors of that sort attended
most disasters of this magnitude

and since folk knew the historical precedent
i didnt understand why they were believing that trash

im sure there was some hoodlum activity
but nothing like the rumormill was generating
a rumor mill apparently fed by fox news,
which loves to dump on blackpeople

the real tragedy was that this criminalized all the evacuees
and led to situations like when that town closed the bridge
on folk trying to make it to safety - man that was cold

and it made housing the evacuees that much harder
who wanted to let potential rape murder and mayhem
into their homes - i surely wouldnt have

the real tragedy though was how many blackfolk were willing to believe it
believe and perpetuate it - the local leadership was bad enuf but when
randall robinson bemoaned acts of cannibalism it was like give me a break
we know how media like fox news likes to do us and still let them do it

i kept telling folk to listen to all that flimflam with a grain of salt and am very gratified
to see my reservations justified

i can only hope that the retraction of those rumors is as widespread
as their dissemination

------------------------------------------

 

More Horrible Than Truth: News Reports
david carr, newyorktimes, 9/19/05

First, anyone with any knowledge of the events in New Orleans knows that terrible things with non-natural causes occurred: there were assaults, shots fired at a rescue helicopter and, given the state of the city's police department, many other crimes that probably went unreported.

But many instances in the lurid libretto of widespread murder, carjacking, rape, and assaults that filled the airwaves and newspapers have yet to be established or proved, as far as anyone can determine. And many of the urban legends that sprang up - the systematic rape of children, the slitting of a 7-year-old's throat - so far seem to be just that. The fact that some of these rumors were repeated by overwhelmed local officials does not completely get the news media off the hook. A survey of news reports in the LexisNexis database shows that on Sept. 1, the news media's narrative of the hurricane shifted.

The Fox News anchor, John Gibson, helped set the scene: "All kinds of reports of looting, fires and violence. Thugs shooting at rescue crews. Thousands of police and National Guard troops are on the scene trying to get the situation under control. Thousands more on the way. So heads up, looters." A reporter, David Lee Miller, responded: "Hi, John. As you so rightly point out, there are so many murders taking place. There are rapes, other violent crimes taking place in New Orleans." After the interview, Mr. Gibson did acknowledge that "we have yet to confirm a lot of that."

Later that night on MSNBC, Tucker Carlson grabbed the flaming baton and ran with it. "People are being raped," he said in a conversation with the Rev. Al Sharpton. "People are being murdered. People are being shot. Police officers being shot."

Some journalists did find sources. About 10 p.m. that same evening, Greta Van Susteren of Fox interviewed Dr. Charles Burnell, an emergency room physician who was providing medical care in the Superdome.

"Well, we had several murders. We had three murders last night. We had a total of six rapes last night. We had the day before I think there were three or four murders. There were half a dozen rapes that night," he told Ms. Van Susteren. (Dr. Burnell did not return several calls asking for comment.) On the same day, The New York Times referred to two rapes at the Superdome, quoting a woman by name who said she was a witness.

It is a fact that many died at the convention center and Superdome (7 and 10 respectively, according to the most recent reports from the coroner), but according to a Sept. 15 report in The Chicago Tribune, it was mostly from neglect rather than overt violence. According to the Tribune article, which quoted Capt. Jeffery Winn, the head of the city's SWAT team, one person at the convention center died from multiple stab wounds and one National Guardsman was shot in the leg.

On Sept. 8, Lt. Dave Banelli, head of the sex crimes unit, told a CNN correspondent, Drew Griffin, that his division had reports of two attempted rapes at the Superdome. The caveat here is that rape is a notoriously underreported crime, perhaps more so under the chaotic circumstances.

The journalists who dwelled on some of the more improbable stories out of New Orleans might be held to account, except that they eventually received confirmation from both the mayor and the police chief.

Appearing on "Oprah" on Sept. 6, Chief Eddie Compass said of the Superdome: "We had little babies in there, some of the little babies getting raped." Mayor C. Ray Nagin concurred: "They have people standing out there, have been in that frickin' Superdome for five days watching dead bodies, watching hooligans killing people, raping people."

But the night before, Chief Compass had told The Guardian, "We don't have any substantiated rapes. We will investigate if they come forward." Many of the more toxic rumors seem to have come from evacuees, half-crazed with fear sitting through night after night in the dark. Victims, officials and reporters all took one of the most horrific events in American history and made it worse than it actually was.

Although I was not in New Orleans, I was at the World Trade Center towers site the afternoon of Sept. 11, 2001. People had seen unimaginable things, but a small percentage, many still covered in ash, told me tales that were worse than what actually happened. Mothers throwing babies out of the towers, men getting in fights on the ledges, human heads getting blown out of the buildings, all of which took place so high up in the air that it was hard to distinguish the falling humans from the falling wreckage.

"There is a timeless primordial appeal of the story of a city in chaos and people running loose," said Carl Smith, a professor of English and American studies at Northwestern University and the author of "Urban Disorder and the Shape of Belief." He says that urban chaos narratives offered "the fulfillment of some timely ideas and prejudices about the current social order."

In New Orleans, the misinformation extracted a terrible toll in another way. An international press eager to jump on American pathology played the unfounded reports for all they were worth, with hundreds of news outlets regurgitating tales of lawlessness. "They're Going to Kill or Rape Us, Get Us Out" read the headline in The Daily Star, a British tabloid. "Tourist Tells of Murder and Rape," was one headline in The Australian. "Snipers Shoot at Hospitals. Evacuees Raped, Beaten," The Ottawa Citizen reported.

"I think that citizens of New Orleans have been stigmatized in a way that is going to make it difficult to be accepted wherever they go," said Jonathan Simon, who teaches criminal law at the University of California, Berkeley.

Howard Witt, the Southwest bureau chief of The Chicago Tribune, wrote early on that much of what he had been told, even by public officials, did not check out. And he found himself inundated by rumors.

"The Web and talk radio fueled these rumors in the days following the storm, and the evacuees themselves contributed to the misinformation because they were so scared," he said by telephone from Baton Rouge, La. With the grid down and accurate information at a premium, a game of toxic telephone supplanted logic.

"I talked to a friend and, after the flood, they heard on the radio that a gang of 400 armed black looters were coming over the bridge to Hanrahan, where he lived," said Ken Bode, a professor of journalism at DePauw University and a former correspondent for NBC. "He and his neighbors were sitting in the street with guns and they decided to load up all they could and caravan out. He said the looters never got there because the National Guard turned them back."

There was no band of looters coming their way, but other things that sound too horrible to be true did happen. The widely reported and seemingly fantastical story about a man shooting at a rescue helicopter was confirmed. And the police in Gretna, La., did in fact turn back hundreds of fleeing refugees on the Crescent City Connector.

On Sept. 15, The Chicago Tribune had an extensive report detailing how thugs took some measure of control over people and supplies at the convention center. The Washington Post published a vivid article on the same day detailing how grave the situation in the convention center became, but again, the issue of whether people were murdered was left open.

And yes, true story, a Louisiana congressman under investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation hitched a ride on a National Guard truck to his flood-damaged home to pick up, among other things, a box of documents. A rescue helicopter was diverted from picking up survivors after the truck became stuck.

Even now, the real, actual events in New Orleans in the past three weeks surpass the imagination. Who needs urban myths when the reality was so brutal?

 

katrina commentary: racial tension mars initial discussions on rebuilding neworleans: no shit sherlock


rudys network sent this out
ive really envied the way hes worked it
the way he publically responds to emails in a manner
designed to build community


been thinking about how i could follow suit
im much more of a solitary worker
think what i might do is start by cutting down
my mailing list,


right now my mailing list is so big its unweildy
takes too long to send out a mailing
because roadrunner has a limit of 1000 a day
and it takes me days to get a mailing out
and by the time its out the post is oldnews


ima break that down to folk who really want
to stay on it, folk i know and folk who respond
to a 'im trimming this list down post'
anybody who wants to stay on it will have to tell me so


this article is interesting, says some things


one, that notorious wall street journal article
about basinstreet fatcats planning a themepark neworleans
exposed too much and put a lot of folk on guard


two, brother nagin seems to be holding relatively firm
(notice all the qualifiers, time will tell, but right now
that brother is not on the frontline, he is the frontline


gone pray to the gods of neworleans
to give him strength, honor, fortitude, slickness and
a consciousness of his historical role


apparently up to this point in his political career
he been something of a tool for the basinstreet fatcats

but this tragedy will make heroes
of fools and fools of heroes


hanginthere brother
may the gods be good to you
as long as you coming correct

may the gods be good to us all

rickydoc flowers


----------------------------------------------------


Rebuilding plans confront turf wars, political strife

Racial tension mars initial discussions
By Robert Travis Scott Times-Picayune Capital bureau, 9/18/05



BATON ROUGE - Twelve days after Hurricane Katrina, as the worst of the storm's physical perils subsided, about 60 business people and public officials from New Orleans gathered in Dallas with Mayor Ray Nagin to discuss the future of the city.

The room full of "type A" personalities, as one participant described them, showered advice on the mayor. But it was New Orleans-born trumpeter and composer Wynton Marsalis, one of several people participating by phone, who passionately made the point that seemed to resonate most with the group: New Orleans must rebuild its cultural, as well as its economic, strength.

For a city suffering an almost total exodus of residents and standing on the precipice of historic change in its population size and demographic makeup, the challenge of Marsalis' message struck deeply, according to people who attended the Dallas meeting Sept. 10.

One huge concern is the potential loss of a disproportionately large number of African-Americans whose neighborhoods endured some of the most damaging flood waters and whose low incomes hinder their return.

Reaching agreement on how to rebuild New Orleans won't be easy. Nagin's effort already has run up against a Louisiana political environment rife with historical divisions and turf wars. The city's initiative also will face a headstrong wave of federal aid and free-market forces that will play a role in making or breaking a new grand plan, whatever it turns out to be.

"We can talk in the abstract about what a rebuilt New Orleans would look like," said Jim Schwab, senior research associate with the American Planning Association. "In the end that is not going to matter nearly as much, I hope, as what the people of the region themselves decide they want."

And while critics from across the political spectrum darkly warn about the dangers of "social engineering" as a strategy for rebuilding the region, costs, safety issues and what insurance companies are willing to underwrite may be the determining factor in many decisions.

Urban planners who have studied the history of communities struck by disaster recommend they begin by building a consensus about what they want to preserve and create, Schwab said. But Katrina makes that job especially difficult.

"Every time you've done it before, you still had people in the community," Schwab said.

In Dallas alone, as the mayor's group met, thousands of evacuated citizens from New Orleans filled shelters and hotels, including about 2,000 people being placed there in federally subsidized housing. Nagin was in Dallas primarily to rent a place for his family and to settle his children into school until they can re-enroll in a New Orleans school.

Marsalis and others participating in the Dallas meeting predicted that if the diverse peoples of New Orleans do not return, its distinctive neighborhoods, musical inspirations and culinary traditions probably won't, either.


Confusion, hard feelings


The Dallas meeting was an early lesson in the difficulties facing those who seek a consensus on a plan for the future. It quickly ignited a controversy and led to miscommunication and hard feelings among some political leaders.

One of its organizers was Nagin's Regional Transportation Authority chief, Jimmy Reiss, a white businessman who was quoted that week in the Wall Street Journal saying that some people who want to rebuild the city foresee a town with a new demographic of fewer poor people. To some in the city, the story painted an impression of an elitist cadre of white New Orleans leaders callous to the plight of the city's poor.

"It was an extremely unfortunate article," said Bill Hines, a lawyer and leader of the economic development group Greater New Orleans Inc. who attended the Dallas meeting.

The story enraged a number of black state lawmakers and New Orleans City Council members, including Council President Oliver Thomas, state Rep. Cedric Richmond, D-New Orleans, and Sen. Diana Bajoie, both D-New Orleans, who confronted Nagin in a public meeting Sept. 12 at the state Capitol. They expressed concern that Nagin and the Dallas group of mostly white businessmen were coordinating a recovery program assuming that a large portion of poor African-Americans would be discouraged from returning to the city.

As the legislative hearing room gained the air of a formal inquiry, Nagin responded sharply that he had no such intention and said he had made that point clear at the Dallas gathering.

"So don't worry about this city being hijacked by a small group of people who are trying to take us backward," said Nagin, who is black.

Reiss, contacted at his home in Aspen, Colo., would not comment. In a letter to The Times Picayune, he said, "there was no selfish politics, no parochial goals" at the Dallas meeting. "We all shared the same objective: Make New Orleans a prosperous city that provided jobs and a high quality of life for all of its citizens, and preserving the diverse cultural and ethnic heritage that makes us special."

Some of those who joined the Dallas meeting, which lasted several hours, said it was positive and unified, and that Nagin persuasively articulated his dream for a prosperous city. In addition to Marsalis, there were other African-Americans who participated, including Entergy New Orleans chief Dan Packer, who is the board chairman of the Louis Armstrong International Airport, businessman David White and state Sen. Derrick Shepherd, D-Marrero.

Still, the event fed Nagin's reputation as an aloof leader indebted to the white business establishment that helped elect him. Nagin himself is a businessman with no prior experience in elected office. Few have forgotten that Nagin, a Democrat, endorsed conservative Republican Bobby Jindal in the 2003 governor's race over Kathleen Blanco, the Democrat who won. His relations with Blanco - and hence relations between New Orleans and state government - have been cool ever since.

He also has strained relations with council members and the black legislative delegation from New Orleans, many of whom feel shut out by his administration, especially in this time of crisis. Those same people were unaware of the Dallas meeting until it was over.

"You don't need to fight these battles by yourself," Thomas told Nagin at the Capitol hearing.

"You may have done it that way in the past," state Rep. Karen Carter, D-New Orleans, told Nagin. "But you don't have to do it that way in the future."

Nagin explained that he had been dealing with urgent and stressful conditions hampered by dysfunctional communication systems. He made his mea culpa and announced he would appoint a racially balanced task force dedicated to planning the city's revival. He was adamant that New Orleanians, not state or federal officials, will determine the new plan for New Orleans.


Limited local leadership


Bernie Pinsonat, a consultant with Southern Media & Opinion Research in Baton Rouge, said the public perceives the Katrina political landscape as devoid of outstanding leadership from the president on down.

"Louisiana produced no Giuliani figures for the rest of the country," Pinsonat said, referring to former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani's much-lauded handling of the 2001 terrorist attacks on his city.

Leadership is critical to the recovery process, and Nagin seems determined to emerge as the one setting the agenda for the future.

But the city has long been limited in determining its own affairs and revenue base. For example, state commissions own the Superdome and the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center, and the Legislature ultimately decides how much room tax New Orleans hotels will charge to pay for the buildings. The state, represented by the governor, is the primary negotiator in deals with the New Orleans Saints. Local sales and property taxes are capped by state law.

The city's public housing authority, which has temporarily moved to Houston, is under the control of the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development because of past financial problems. Financing for future public housing projects will depend largely on the impetus of the federal agency.

Last week, the state Bond Commission, acting on a request that preceded Katrina, approved a federally backed $49 million financing package to continue a redevelopment program for three of the city's major public housing developments, one of which was severely flooded. It won't matter if people don't come back to occupy the apartments; the federal financing is not based on occupancy.

One senator on the commission questioned whether the panel was moving too fast considering the many unknowns about New Orleans' public housing scene. But the commission decided it was better to have the money in the pipeline than to derail the projects while waiting for a grand new plan for public housing.

The federal government has its own recovery agenda, announced by Bush last week, and it plans to contribute billions of dollars. There has been much talk about the possible appointment of a federal tsar for the recovery effort.

Federal Emergency Management Agency money for the city will pass through state agencies. It remains to be seen whether state or federal authorities will interfere or attempt to dictate the city's plan.

The state at times has been possessive of the city's revenue. For example, the state is the main tax collector for Harrah's New Orleans Casino downtown. Blanco has refused to release millions of dollars of Harrah's tax money that was supposed to be passed on to the city, and pleas from city officials and lawmakers have not convinced her to let it go.

Blanco wrote President Bush this week requesting that federal dollars cover 100 percent of the cost for Katrina recovery, and lawmakers at the state Capitol last week were nearly universal in their expectation that federal money would take care of New Orleans, leaving state budgets to continue providing the same services and projects elsewhere in Louisiana.

Whitney National Bank President King Milling, who participated in the Dallas meeting, said that despite all the obstacles, he is hopeful consensus can be formed on a recovery plan.

"We can create a better community in the long run with the same sensibilities and culture," said Milling, who is white.

Late last week, Nagin spent considerable time building political allies and staking out a national media presence to put a confident face on the daunting recovery effort. Now out of crisis mode, he can spend more time on the future.

"We have a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to rebuild the greatest city in the world," Nagin said. "It's been a wild ride, and we're getting ready to get on another wild ride."

katrina commentary: rudy lewis and the black net work: a luta continua

 

Rudy and Arthur, you and others like you who have web sites have been and will continue to be vital in the effort of distributing information and raising awareness.  Miriam 

---------------------------

miriam sent this to me and rudy and some other folk
i thanked her, means a lot coming from somebody
i respect when it comes to commitment as i do miriam willis

thats one of my hometown elders
in the struggle

been interesting too how the black net came into its own
with katrina, networks that we had for the kind of personal
academic and artistic uses were suddenly turned into
instrument and we arent quite sure how the best use
of those instruments plays out because this is all
brand new territory for us, but what was wonderful
was that we had them in existence and under pressure
they just morphed on their own into insturments by
which we could forge alternative newsources and
alternative realities.

my numbers have been going up every day since
katrina so i know im doing something right though
lord knows im not quite sure what it is
or how its going to play out

i only know that im going to stay on it
im going to try to be creative and consistent
and sincere with it, try to live up to the responsibility
of it, of being a voice and a forum of our struggle

okay, ima let rudy speak on it, hes far more eloquent
than i am when it comes to self analysis of the web as instrument

i would like to say that i have been very proud of being
part of this network including rudy and miriam and kalamu
and such webworkers,

we have really missed the black commentator and look
forward to when glen and the commentary crew come back
online

somebody suggested us becoming a more formal network
and im all down for that, folk like black commentator, chickenbones
promotheus 6 and even sincere conservative black networks like
the bookeristas, if we were all able to coordinate our diverse activities
it would manifest a power like nothing we can at this point imagine

wish i had time to follow thru, maybe one day
im out of here, i got to get some novelwork done

all my love to you all
rickydoc flowers

---------------------------

During the evacuation drams, if you recall several of us set up a kind of clearinghouse -- Joyce King, Herbert Rogers, Arthur Flowers and others -- we all made use of our email address books in passing along and filtering information and finding out the health of people we knew and how they could be assisted. So we all discovered that this tool -- email system -- was not just for personal and business uses, but also a means of responding to community needs and acting as a community.

Most of these individuals we only know through cyberspace. Most of us have never touched flesh. Then, there were also academic listservs and more commercial websites, as well as bloggers who all came together in relating Katrina information, and relating to each other. This whole episode in the coming together of these diverse groups and individuals needs some reflection and thought on this special phenomenon.

One thing I learned is that I had to better organize information I was receiving for there was a ton of it. Of course, I had a couple people who asked be taken off my list. But they were a tiny few. To manage the material I started using folders and sub-folders. I also have an email system that can hold 2000mb of information (extra cost) and here I also use folders and I have a security system that assures me. I have also started using more links on ChickenBones: A Journal (www.nathanielturner.com), which is also a way of organizing information, that is, where websites and blogs are. I also had to make decisions on what to publish and what to link, what will have lasting value.

One of the peculiar things about ChickenBones in relation to other websites is that we have always behaved in a dynamic manner, unlike the behavior of "journals" and "magazines" with weekly, monthly routines. If information is sent us, it might be up an hour later. One well-known black journal was on vacation during most of the Katrina coverage. So with its  flexibility and dynamism and collaborative spirit ChickenBones was probably able to play a greater role than some other independent black websites.

Of course, our non-commercial, non-institutional character kept us at a distance from "media objectivity" and "Katrina donation" efforts as the more commercial and institution connected websites. Of course, I think that cultural consciousness and social  and personal commitment played a role, also, in these matters. Of course, there were black organizations with websites who did nothing in regard to the Katrina efforts. Yet some of them worry about where they appear in google.

As I have stated Kalamu ya Salaam is my model for black commitment in cyberspace. He has hosted the listserv e-drum 365 days for seven years. No charge. He used his new website Breath of Life (www.kalamu.com/bol, another of his non-commercial efforts, significantly and strategically with music to soothe and inspire our efforts. And he has been planning another site to deal with video and sound and New Orleans cultural life. He has been theorizing for years on the use of the internet by writers, artists, and other cultural workers. So he is the central example for me and others should pay attention to the genius of the man Digital Technology & Telling Our Story .

I think we all need to become more conscious of the tools and the potential of the tools we have in our possession. We need to be more conscious and aware of each other, and patient and tolerant with each other, and willing to learn from each other, and adopt a spirit of collaboration. We need to tabulate those listservs, websites, blogs, whether black white, Asian or, Hispanic, that we are able to work with and use in our efforts.

The Katrina experience should be viewed as a wake-up call for blacks in cyberspace. It can be used for more than just selling our wares and other business enticements, tea room talk, and institutional transmission of institutional information. I'm an infant, four years in cyberspace, I know I'm still learning, reflecting, figuring how I can make best use of our efforts and make it relevant to