Controversial CPB Board Chair Ken Tomlinson resigns!

Looks like nobody picked this one up.  From Broadcasting and Cable:

The Corporation for Public Broadcasting Board of Directors said Thursday that embattled former board chairman Ken Tomlinson has resigned.

The board has been reviewing a CPB Inspector General’s report–called for by a pair of congressmen–on Tomlinson’s relationship with the board stemming from Tomlinson’s attempts to add more conservative programming.

The board said in a statement: “[F]ormer chairman Kenneth Y. Tomlinson has resigned from the CPB board. The board does not believe that Mr. Tomlinson acted maliciously or with any intent to harm CPB or public broadcasting, and the board recognizes that Mr. Tomlinson strongly disputes the findings in the soon-to-be-released Inspector General’s report.

Can Bill Moyers return to NOW?

And yes, Tomlinson does look as if he is thumbing his nose at everybody.  Not any more.
Additionally:

CPB Inspector General Kenneth Konz gave key Hill staffers a three-hour briefing late last month on his investigation into “deficiencies in policies and procedures” at CPB.

Following a request last May by Reps. David Obey (D-Wis.) and John Dingell (D-Mich.), Konz was investigating whether Tomlinson violated the Public Broadcasting Act by commissioning an outside content analysis of the politics in Now With Bill Moyers–and other PBS shows–and by enlisting a White House staffer to help write rules for two new ombudsmen, one a former Reader’s Digest colleague of Tomlinson’s.

The response from Tomlinson’s critics in Congress was swift:

“The public interest is hurt when there are no checks and balances,”said Obey “This Administration believes that since they control all branches of government, they can abuse the public trust and get away with it and Mr. Tomlinson is part of this pattern. Mr. Tomlinson’s resignation should be used to bring people together, not divide them as he and the administration have done.  Public Broadcasting is too important to be anybody’s partisan or ideological play thing.”

Now what?  Who might sit in Tomlinson’s place?  Not a liberal or a centrist or a no affiliation.  Why?  WaPo sez:

Despite his departure, the CPB remains firmly controlled by conservatives. Tomlinson’s successor as chairman, Cheryl F. Halpern, is a longtime contributor to Republicans, including President Bush and Sen. Trent Lott (Miss.). Its vice chairman, Gay Hart Gaines, another Republican contributor, was a founder and former chairman of GOPAC, a powerful GOP fundraising group.

As Chicago once sang: Only the beginning/only just the start. It’s going to take a change in 2006 to make this change more concrete and pull Halpern and Gaines off their high horses.

Besides I want to continue to see Frontline and documentaries like this.

Joe Wilson on Larry King tonight…9 p.m.

Check your listings.  This may be for Eastern time zones.  If it is 9 p.m. there, it’s 8 p.m. Central.  And on and on:

http://www.cnn.com/CNN/Programs/larry.king.live/index.html

Be there or be square.

Expect King to shill for his keepers.  Expect Joe Wilson to apply the hammer once more.

The insanity.  This is a complete turnaround for me that I begin to support the CIA for telling the truth!

Mrs. Rosa Parks will lie in state in the Capitol Rotunda

I was hoping that this would happen.

 From Salon.com (you may have to watch an ad to get it free for one day):

Black civil rights pioneer Rosa Parks would become the first woman to lie in honor in the Capitol Rotunda under resolutions considered Thursday by lawmakers.

Parks’ refusal to give up her bus seat to a white man in Montgomery, Ala., in 1955 led to a 381-day boycott of the city’s bus system and helped spark the modern civil rights movement. She died Monday in Detroit at age 92.

The Senate approved a resolution Thursday allowing her remains to lie in honor in the Rotunda on Sunday and Monday “so that the citizens of the United States may pay their last respects to this great American.” The House was expected to consider the resolution Friday.

Of course, only former presidents, sitting presidents who die in office, members of Congress and military commanders are given this honor.

I was hoping that this would happen.

 From Salon.com (you may have to watch an ad to get it free for one day):

Black civil rights pioneer Rosa Parks would become the first woman to lie in honor in the Capitol Rotunda under resolutions considered Thursday by lawmakers.

Parks’ refusal to give up her bus seat to a white man in Montgomery, Ala., in 1955 led to a 381-day boycott of the city’s bus system and helped spark the modern civil rights movement. She died Monday in Detroit at age 92.

The Senate approved a resolution Thursday allowing her remains to lie in honor in the Rotunda on Sunday and Monday “so that the citizens of the United States may pay their last respects to this great American.” The House was expected to consider the resolution Friday.

Of course, only former presidents, sitting presidents who die in office, members of Congress and military commanders are given this honor.


Additionally, Parks will lie in repose not only in Detroit but in other locations.  Rep. John Conyers, who was once Parks’ employer, and Rep. Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick have sponsored the bill allowing for Parks to lie in state.  They are also working in conjunction with the Rosa & Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development in making these funeral arrangements.  

The Capitol event was one of several planned to honor the civil rights pioneer. Parks will lie in repose Saturday at the St. Paul AME Church in Montgomery, Ala., and a memorial service will be held at the church Sunday morning.

Following her viewing in the Capitol, a memorial service was planned for Monday at St. Paul AME Church in Washington.

From Monday night until Wednesday morning, Parks will lie in repose at the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History in Detroit. Her funeral will be Wednesday at Greater Grace Temple Church in Detroit.

All of these events will be opportunities to bear witness.
Update [2005-10-28 15:41:56 by blksista]: The House did approve, by voice vote, the lying in state of Mrs. Rosa Parks in the Capitol Rotunda.
Update [2005-10-28 20:2:37 by blksista]: The singer Aretha Franklin will sing at her funeral at the Greater Grace Temple Church in Detroit on Wednesday. Franklin also sang at Martin Luther King, Jr.’s funeral in 1968.

Frustration grows over body recovery in New Orleans

Looks as if the Black Voice’s efforts were in vain.  Mark House and his volunteers were prevented from assisting in the recovery of bodies in New Orleans:

Local community organizers raised funds to send Mark House, owner of Winthrop Industries and a team of experienced volunteers to help in the recovery of bodies. Those efforts have now been blocked by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) in favor of a Texas based firm being paid more than $118,000 a day to recover and process remains.

[…]

House said he responded initially to a request that went out from New Orleans for morticians and law enforcement officers and since, he and his team both felt they could help. After failed attempts to contact FEMA, the Disaster Mortuary Operational Response Team (DMORT), and Homeland Security, he was able to contact a source in the office of Dr. Louis Cataldie, the medical incident commander for the recovery of deceased victims of Katrina for the state, who said, “We no longer have a need for you.”

[…]

[T]he money initially raised will be returned and used for other victims of Katrina.

Looks as if the Black Voice’s efforts were in vain.  Mark House and his volunteers were prevented from assisting in the recovery of bodies in New Orleans:

Local community organizers raised funds to send Mark House, owner of Winthrop Industries and a team of experienced volunteers to help in the recovery of bodies. Those efforts have now been blocked by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) in favor of a Texas based firm being paid more than $118,000 a day to recover and process remains.

[…]

House said he responded initially to a request that went out from New Orleans for morticians and law enforcement officers and since, he and his team both felt they could help. After failed attempts to contact FEMA, the Disaster Mortuary Operational Response Team (DMORT), and Homeland Security, he was able to contact a source in the office of Dr. Louis Cataldie, the medical incident commander for the recovery of deceased victims of Katrina for the state, who said, “We no longer have a need for you.”

[…]

[T]he money initially raised will be returned and used for other victims of Katrina.

Last time, you Tribunes might recall, I wrote about this issue in this diary, “Black newspaper spearheads coalition to help bury Katrina blacks.” Unfortunately, no one is going to be allowed to cut into Kenyon’s profiteering.

The sadness and consternation resulting from this failed effort is palpable and may have ramifications elsewhere.  Kenyon’s cushy no-bid contract has also guaranteed that local black morticians will be driven out of business.  

This development is yet another blow to the black middle-class of New Orleans, a middle-class that may not be able to stand as a pillar from which the community can rebuild and grow.  Many of the black middle-class made their livelihoods (and sometimes fortunes) from the funeral, insurance, personal grooming (barbering, hairdressing, cosmetics), haberdashery/tailoring and medical professions–that is, providing services to the black community that whites once refused to perform or to provide. While the country has become more integrated, however, the black funeral business continued more or less to flourish while other businesses (black resorts and vacation parks, for example) faded into memory.

The situation has Rev. Raymond Turner, President of the Inland Empire Concerned African American Churches IECAAC) and others in the local area very upset. […] He remembers when white mortuaries didn’t do black funerals.

“I am from the South,” said Rev. Turner, o­ne of the co-sponsors of the candlelight service. “White mortuaries would not touch a black body. They do not understand our culture when it comes to death,” he continued.

FEMA has not o­nly left heads shaking in the Inland Empire,  but also has upset the Rhodes and the Crescent City Funeral Directors [as well as] the community. In addition, [it has] frustrated Coroner  Frank Minyard, who complained Tuesday that Federal regulations had unnecessarily slowed the recovery and autopsy process. He said that FEMA, responsible for keeping the morgue operational, sometimes shut down early.

“We are often told to shut down at 11:30 AM despite a backlog of 300 bodies,” he said.  Minyard said he needs more pathologist and volunteers to help with autopsies but FEMA would not allow its doctors or staff members to assist. He also said FEMA told him that their doctors could not help for fear of being tangled up in lawsuits. “Bureaucratic obstacles are a constant frustration.”

Only 73 bodies have been positively identified.  The death count currently stands at 1078. Little by little, body by body, though, the count is rising as residents return from temporary shelters around the country.  Eleven family members that past Sunday (October 9) had discovered three bodies of relatives in the wreckage and stench of their homes.

Harold Pinter wins Nobel for Literature

Original posted at DailyKos.

Straight from the Beeb and the Guardian:

Controversial British playwright and campaigner Harold Pinter has won the 2005 Nobel Prize for literature.

Pinter, 75, whose plays include The Birthday Party and Betrayal, was announced as the winner of the $1.3m (£723,000) cash prize on Thursday.

The Nobel academy said Pinter’s work “uncovers the precipice under everyday prattle and forces entry into oppression’s closed rooms”.

The playwright is known for speaking out on issues like the war on Iraq.

Well, whaddaya know about dat…?

Original posted at DailyKos.

Straight from the Beeb and the Guardian:

Controversial British playwright and campaigner Harold Pinter has won the 2005 Nobel Prize for literature.

Pinter, 75, whose plays include The Birthday Party and Betrayal, was announced as the winner of the $1.3m (£723,000) cash prize on Thursday.

The Nobel academy said Pinter’s work “uncovers the precipice under everyday prattle and forces entry into oppression’s closed rooms”.

The playwright is known for speaking out on issues like the war on Iraq.

Well, whaddaya know about dat…?
As a writer, I admit: it is hard to understand Pinter’s work. He also doesn’t explain it.  I saw one of his plays while in college in the Seventies.  The silences were killing.  I figure now, that was probably the point.

Known for their menacing pauses, his dark, claustrophobic plays are notorious for their mesmerising ability to strip back the layers of the often banal lives of their characters to reveal the guilt and horror that lie beneath, a feature of his writing which has garnered him the adjective “Pinteresque.” He has also written extensively for the cinema: his screenplays include The Servant (1963), and The French Lieutenant’s Woman (1981).

Pinter, widely regarded as the UK’s greatest living playwright, is well-known for his left-wing political views.

A critic of US and UK foreign policy, he has voiced opposition on a number of issues including the bombing of Afghanistan in 2001.

One more slap for Bush and Blair.  The Guardian went on to say:

Pinter’s authorial stance, always radical, has become more and more political in recent years. An outspoken critic of the war in Iraq (he famously called President Bush a “mass murderer” and dubbed Tony Blair a “deluded idiot”), in 2003 he turned to poetry to castigate the leaders of the US and the UK for their decision to go to war (his collection, War, was awarded the Wilfred Owen award for poetry). Earlier this year, he announced his decision to retire from playwriting in favour of poetry, declaring on BBC Radio 4 that. “I think I’ve stopped writing plays now, but I haven’t stopped writing poems. I’ve written 29 plays. Isn’t that enough?”

In 2002, Pinter was diagnosed with cancer of the oesophagus and underwent a course of chemotherapy, which he described as a “personal nightmare”. “I’ve been through the valley of the shadow of death,” he said afterwards. “While in many respects I have certain characteristics that I had, I’m also a very changed man.” Earlier this week it was announced that he is to act in a production of Krapp’s Last Tape by Samuel Beckett as part of the 50th anniversary celebrations of the English Stage Company at London’s Royal Court Theatre. Last weekend some of Britain and Ireland’s finest actors got together at Dublin’s Gate Theatre to celebrate Pinter’s 75th birthday, which was on Monday.

He can leave this world tomorrow in style if it was his time.

Pinter, married to Lady Antonia Fraser (biographer of Mary Queen of Scots; her mother, the Countess of Longford, wrote a much lauded biography of Queen Victoria), was not even considered a front runner.  Still waters run deep…

Until today’s announcement, Pinter was barely thought to be in the running for the prize, one of the most prestigious and (at €1.3m) lucrative in the world. After Pamuk and Adonis (whose real name is Ali Ahmad Said), the writers believed to be under consideration by the Academy included Americans Joyce Carol Oates and Philip Roth, and the Swedish poet Thomas Transtromer, with Margaret Atwood, Milan Kundera and the South Korean poet Ko Un as long-range possibilities. Following on from last year’s surprise decision to name the Austrian novelist, playwright and poet Elfriede Jelinek as laureate, however, the secretive Academy has once again confounded the bookies.

Pinter has also acted in film.  I saw him in a 1999 version of Jane Austin’s Mansfield Park, directed by Patricia Rozema, in which the landed family’s holdings of slaves and property in Antigua are given much greater focus and serve to give Austin’s dark commentary about manners, marriage and morals greater urgency.  His character, Sir Thomas Bertram, is shown as joining in the brutality of the slavocracy that bolstered his and the British nobility’s fortunes until it was abolished in the 1830s, long after Austin died.

I was impressed by his performance, although his character was not a good guy.  And really, he is a handsome, distinguished individual.  I can see why he was considered a ladykiller when younger.  And I can respect brilliance and courage and conviction when I see it, too.

Good show.

New Orleans beating incident only one example of abuse and forced labor since Katrina

Via Raw Story and the NewStandard.

When Robert Davis emerged from the temporary detention center in New Orleans, his eye was swollen nearly shut, his face was bruised, and he had a couple of stitches under his left eye. He told The NewStandard that police had beaten him and then charged him with public intoxication and battery, even though he had not had a drink in 25 years and had merely asked a police officer to leave him alone.

[…]

But what did not make it into the tape or national attention was that Davis is just one of more than nearly a thousand people who have suffered in a horrific place the police call “Camp Amtrak,” an improvised jail in what used to be the New Orleans bus terminal.

Is that really why Greyhound no longer goes to New Orleans?

Update [2005-10-13 20:56:35 by blksista]: The Associated Press has released an unedited version of the beating/arrest of Robert Davis. Click to AP Videos. A list on the right shows videos for viewing; it is the second or third video in the list. It is five minutes long. They said that he was resisting arrest; but if someone is pounding on you as well as threatening and you are trying to protect yourself from the blows…see what you think.

Via Raw Story and the NewStandard.

When Robert Davis emerged from the temporary detention center in New Orleans, his eye was swollen nearly shut, his face was bruised, and he had a couple of stitches under his left eye. He told The NewStandard that police had beaten him and then charged him with public intoxication and battery, even though he had not had a drink in 25 years and had merely asked a police officer to leave him alone.

[…]

But what did not make it into the tape or national attention was that Davis is just one of more than nearly a thousand people who have suffered in a horrific place the police call “Camp Amtrak,” an improvised jail in what used to be the New Orleans bus terminal.

Is that really why Greyhound no longer goes to New Orleans?

Update [2005-10-13 20:56:35 by blksista]: The Associated Press has released an unedited version of the beating/arrest of Robert Davis. Click to AP Videos. A list on the right shows videos for viewing; it is the second or third video in the list. It is five minutes long. They said that he was resisting arrest; but if someone is pounding on you as well as threatening and you are trying to protect yourself from the blows…see what you think.
Reporter Jessica Azulay (who is conducting several reports in the coming weeks about the aftermath of Katrina on New Orleans residents) continued:

In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans authorities are arresting hundreds on minor charges such as breaking curfew or public intoxication, housing them in brutal conditions and then pushing them through a court process that forces most into working on clean-up projects at police facilities, according to numerous interviews and documents obtained by TNS.

At the converted Greyhound terminal, which now serves as a different kind of way station, no passengers arrive with luggage. Instead, police bring people in and book them at what used to be a ticket counter. In the back, where travelers used to board buses, police now push detainees into wire pens where they sleep on the concrete in the open air.

In interviews both inside and outside of Camp Amtrak, people who had been through the process told harrowing accounts of police brutality and harsh conditions. Some of them, like Davis, had visible injuries. Many said police had attacked them or others in their cells with pepper spray. All recounted trying to sleep on the concrete floor of the bus parking lot with just one blanket – or in some cases no blanket – to protect them from the cold and the mosquitoes which swoop in on randomly alternating nights here. None was given a phone call or access to an attorney.

So when Davis was released from police custody, he was not leaving the Orleans Parish Jail.  He was leaving the converted Greyhound Bus Terminal.

If it had not been the Associated Press there, there would not have been this uproar.  Davis would have been just another victim of police harassment.

I am sure that if they had been offered minimum wage, as Anthony Fontenot and Mike Davis had suggesting their “24 Questions about the Murder of the Big Easy,” these people would have worked and gladly.  But no,  that is too good for black people.  Frankly, this mirrors white coercion during World War I, when most of the able-bodied white men from the South were at war and there were too few white men available to work. They forced blacks who already had jobs to work from sunup to sundown, even black women who were happy to be housewives. The same thing happened during the Mississippi floods of 1927, when blacks were pressed against their will into doing levee work for food and shelter, and were refused rescue.

Several witnesses spoke for the record, including the following:

Michael Resovsky was one of several men outside the jail yesterday waiting to be picked up for a shift of what the sheriff’s department calls “community service.” He recalled the night he spent inside: “They threw you a blanket and they gave you those MREs – you know, those meals in a bag – and they take the heater part out of it and the little bottle of hot sauce so you have to eat it cold. And you sleep on the concrete with a blanket, and the smell is not too nice.

“They were coming in there and macing people, and people were hollering and I couldn’t get no sleep, and you know, it was pretty bad,” said Resovsky, who is white.

Anthony Jack, another former detainee, added: “It was cold [inside]; I couldn’t sleep.” Jack, a black immigrant from Trinidad and Tobago, said police had arrested him on his own property and charged him with violating curfew, which in most neighborhoods here is still in affect from 8 p.m. to 6 a.m.

“I was in my yard, and a young white guy came by the gate and I was talking to him and the police came and arrested both of us,” he recounted. “He was outside breaking curfew; I was inside… behind the gate. The police broke my gate down with a pick-ax. They broke it completely off the fence.”

Jack continued: “It makes me really angry, man. It made me realize that the law isn’t working the way it is supposed to.”

Even an aid worker from Wisconsin, Sandy Freelander, was caught in the police dragnet, along with two friends of his, one of whom had helped rescue dozens of survivors in the Seventh Ward.  New Orleans police had a field day with the man who was called Reggae:

“This middle-aged white [police officer] got real excited about kicking Reggae, Freelander said. “He came running across the parking lot and kicked [Reggae] in the hip while [Reggae] was down on his knees with his hands behind his head. [The officer] pushed [Reggae] on the ground and put his foot to the back of his neck and pointed his gun at him and said he was going to blow his fucking brains out if he moved again. This guy was really excited about beating up the first black guy he saw or something.”

Freelander maintained that he and his friends had permission from the owner to be in the parking lot.  Nevertheless, the police arrested them on criminal trespass charges.

Inside, Freelander said his friend was denied medical attention and that they witnessed police pepper-spraying other detainees police handcuffing a woman to a pole and leaving here for hours and other abuse. He, like all others interviewed by TNS said he was not permitted a phone call or legal counsel, even after repeated requests.

Unfortunately, Major Tony Poret, who was unapologetic about the macing, beatings and illegal detainings, and who helps run Camp Amtrak, is a former prison official from the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola, one of the most notorious prisons in the United States.

“These poor police officers are stretched out as far as they can be and yet you’ve got to mess with a bunch of gourd heads like we have down here and we have to make a jail for these kind of people,” he said. “That’s what’s really bad about this whole [situation].”

Gourd heads?

“Look up at the setup that we have,” he said. “It’s an old bus terminal. It’s keeping the bad guys off the streets from harassing the poor people of the New Orleans district from worrying about their houses being broken into or worrying about some drunk laying on their porch…”

Are these people really the bad guys?  But here is the money shot:

Freelander, Resovsky and Jack all said that in the mornings after their arrest, they were taken to a courtroom upstairs where most prisoners were pressured into pleading guilty and accepting between 40 and 80 hours of unpaid labor.

A visit to the courtroom yesterday confirmed their accounts. In a stark, second-floor room of the Greyhound station, police brought in about 20 inmates who had spent the night in the cages. When they entered the room, public defender Clyde Merritt briefly explained the options while the defendants strained to hear him. In most cases, he told them, they could plead guilty and they would be sentenced to about 40 hours of “community service.” If they wished the maintain their innocence, he said, they would be sent to Hunts Correctional Facility where they could wait as long as 21 days to be processed, no matter how minor or unsupported their charges.

[…]

Off to the side, the lone female defendant stood shyly in her pajamas and flip-flops. She later told the judge she had been arrested right in front of her house.

In the end, given the choice between unpaid work and continued incarceration, nearly all chose to plead guilty.

This has got to stop.

"Drunk" Davis, attacked by NO police in French Quarter, tells his story

Original on Daily Kos.

The old guy wasn’t drunk.  And he was a retired New Orleans schoolteacher.

Robert Davis said he had returned to New Orleans to check on property his family owns in the storm-ravaged  city, and was out looking to buy cigarettes when he was beaten and arrested Saturday night in the French Quarter.

Police have alleged that the 64-year-old Davis was publicly intoxicated, a charge he strongly denied as he stood on the street corner where the incident played out Saturday.

“I haven’t had a drink in 25 years,” Davis said. He had stitches beneath his left eye, a bandage on his left hand and complained   of soreness in his back and aches in his left shoulder.

New Orleans cops, imho, have issues.  And that is putting it mildly.

Original on Daily Kos.

The old guy wasn’t drunk.  And he was a retired New Orleans schoolteacher.

Robert Davis said he had returned to New Orleans to check on property his family owns in the storm-ravaged  city, and was out looking to buy cigarettes when he was beaten and arrested Saturday night in the French Quarter.

Police have alleged that the 64-year-old Davis was publicly intoxicated, a charge he strongly denied as he stood on the street corner where the incident played out Saturday.

“I haven’t had a drink in 25 years,” Davis said. He had stitches beneath his left eye, a bandage on his left hand and complained   of soreness in his back and aches in his left shoulder.

New Orleans cops, imho, have issues.  And that is putting it mildly.
Davis–and his attorney–doesn’t think that the attack was about race.  But he still doesn’t understand why he was hit in the back of the head.

Davis said he had been walking in the French Quarter and approached a mounted police officer to ask about the curfew in the city when another officer interrupted.

“This other guy interfered and I said he shouldn’t,” Davis said. “I started to cross the street and — bam — I got it. … All I know is this guy attacked me and said, `I will kick your ass,’ and they proceeded to do it.”

Normally, a sixty-four year old guy is no fool.  Of any race.  He’s not someone looking for an opportunity to act up.  And certainly not with some cops/Federal agents/Guard/Blackwater mercs.  If he is a former New Orleans schoolteacher, then he knows how to speak to people: to ask questions politely and moderately and then go about his business.

This guy could have been my stepfather, who will be returning himself to New Orleans to see about damage to his home(s).  He is 72.

Just what was Davis ‘interfering with’ before the video cameras rolled?

Two city officers accused in the beating, and a third officer accused of grabbing and shoving an Associated Press Television News producer who helped document the confrontation, pleaded not guilty Monday to battery charges.

Trial was set at a hearing Monday for Jan. 11. Afterward, officers Lance Schilling, Robert Evangelist and S.M. Smith were released on bond. They left without commenting.

Of course, the NO police union chief says Schilling, Smith and Evangelist were confident that they ‘justified’ in banging Davis up.

New Orleans police: Business as usual after Katrina?

My mother, now in her seventies, once told me a story about her (or someone else) walking by a police precinct and hearing the sounds of someone black receiving an awful beating in a cell.  She was a little girl then in the Forties.  Of course, the sounds of suffering–night sticks or saps on flesh, the curses and groans of grown men–must have terrified her.

We’ve all heard about the heroism of some NOPD officers who stayed at their posts during a horrendous time. They deserve to be lauded.  Unfortunately, though, some others may have reverted back to their old ways of dealing, with fewer still under a lot of pressure.

How?
Some NOPD cops were caught on videotape whacking a drunken, 64-year-old black man not a few minutes ago (6:01 p.m. CDT, as I write this):

Two New Orleans police officers repeatedly punched a 64-year-old man accused of public intoxication, and another city officer assaulted an Associated Press Television News producer as a cameraman taped the confrontations.

There will be a criminal investigation, and the three officers were to be suspended, arrested and charged with simple battery Sunday, Capt. Marlon Defillo said.

Rodney King stuff again.

The APTN tape shows an officer hitting the man at least four times in the head Saturday night as he stood outside a bar near Bourbon Street. The suspect, Robert Davis, appeared to resist, twisting and flailing as he was dragged to the ground by four officers. Another of the four officers then kneed Davis and punched him twice. Davis was face-down on the sidewalk with blood streaming down his arm and into the gutter.

Meanwhile, a fifth officer ordered APTN producer Rich Matthews and the cameraman to stop recording. When Matthews held up his credentials and explained he was working, the officer grabbed the producer, leaned him backward over a car, jabbed him in the stomach and unleashed a profanity-laced tirade.

“I’ve been here for six weeks trying to keep … alive. … Go home!” shouted the officer, who later identified himself as S.M. Smith.

Police said Davis, 64, of New Orleans, was booked on public intoxication, resisting arrest, battery on a police officer and public intimidation. He was treated at a hospital and released into police custody.

A mug shot of Davis, provided by a jailer, showed him with his right eye swollen shut, an apparent abrasion on the left side of his neck and a cut on his right temple.

The thing that I wonder is, was Davis threatening passersby or police?  Was he staggering?  Cursing?  Was he about to whip out a gat?  Was he about to lay down on the sidewalk and refuse to move? Were other patrons or the owner of the bar feeling threatened?

All reports say that all the man was doing was standing outside a bar.

Hell, if I had survived what’s happened within the last two months, I’d want to have a few drinks myself.

All the cops needed to do was summon a paddy wagon or something and let Davis dry out somewhere.  Instead, they decided to revert to form.  Maybe, for real, they needed to go home.  There really is no excuse for exploding their frustrations on blacks.

Yet another episode in the annals of New Orleans policing:

On Friday, state authorities said they were investigating allegations that New Orleans police broke into a dealership and made off with nearly 200 cars — including 41 new Cadillacs — as the storm closed in.

Perhaps that’s another reason why some of their compadres haven’t returned to duty.

And still another troubling episode that warrants an investigation.

A man listed as one of Katrina’s victims in New Orleans was actually shot by police.

Police confirm that 45-year-old Danny Brumfield was shot and killed outside the convention center in the early morning darkness of September 3.

Brumfield’s daughter and niece dispute that account. They say the officer who shot Brumfield hit him twice with a squad car before firing. Afterward, the two say the patrol car ran over Brumfield, then left his body unattended for hours until other officers arrived.

Sigh. Have mercy.  I don’t know what is worse.  The presence of Blackwater.  Bush insisting on using the military in situations like this.  The NOPD.  Or the fact that our National Guard who are trained for this kind of thing are still in Iraq.

Would there be any of this occurring?  I remember when they called the National Guard out to protect tourists in the French Quarter because of a rash of muggings and shootings that police could not control because of corruption, firings and resignations.  Things definitely settled down then.

I am just so tired of seeing this.

A map of the Katrina Diaspora

For a second time I was confronted with this map on another blog.

I thought it was time for Tribunes to consider the magnitude of thousands of people practically flung across the country rather than in places of refuge nearby so that they could partake of the aid and comfort others have sent or given to them.  Like all those emergency rations the British sent to the Gulf States that was probably destroyed because it was below standard (the same rations feed the British soldiers in Iraq).


The text was written by Brad Edmondson, and is part of a series on ePodunk called “Mass Migrations.”  (You’ll be able to link to other catastrophic events at a box on the lower right.)  This site at http://www.epodunk.com/top10/diaspora/index.html is linked to hundreds to locations where people from New Orleans have been sent to refuge, either temporarily or permanently.  Simply point and click at any of the white dots.

The map data was compiled by Laurie Bennett of ePodunk and the mapping was created by Daniel Shorter.

This may or may not be a dupe; my apologies if it is.

ePodunk (http://www.epodunk.com/) apparently is a webpage where you can find out information about cities, peoples, communities, regions, and even colleges and cemeteries throughout the United States.

A word from NO artist Jose Torres Tama, arts worker in exile

Jose Torres Tama is a visual and performance artist who, like many others, was driven from his home in New Orleans during the Katrina disaster.  He is currently living, albeit temporarily, in Florida.  An interview with Torres Tama can be found here..  His webpage is at http://www.torrestama.com/.

Torres Tama loved living in New Orleans.  This is how he felt about his adopted city:

New Orleans has been very very good to me. I’ve lived a dozen years in this sub-tropical swampland. Gabriel Garcia Marquez, who is the literary godfather of a writing style described as Magical Realism, has called it the Northern most point of the Caribbean. New Orleans is the Macondo of the United States. Macondo is the fictional city of Garcia Marquez’s epic novel One Hundred Years of Solitude and much like New Orleans, it is a Confederacy of Dunces with fantastic eccentric characters. Its locals describe New Orleans as Babylon by the Mississippi, the Big Easy, and the City that Care Forgot.

New Orleans is magical and mysterious, and writers, painters, poets, actors, dancers, musicians and creative folks of all colors from all parts of the U.S. and the world come here. Many creative souls are born here. It is the birthplace of Jazz, indeed, but like in the past, its creative sons and daughters usually need to go north or west to make a living and receive due recognition. Its most famous musical son Louis Armstrong left for Chicago to become a legend. At present, Harry Connick Jr., the Neville Brothers, Dr. John and others in the music business have had to follow similar routes to achieve recognition in their time.

New Orleans does not have the resources to support its artistic talent. It is a provincial metropolis with all the vices that a big city can offer, but without the creative industry of Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York. It is a small art Mecca so artists can create here without any pressure. Although this can be very helpful for the development of work, it can also be detrimental for the exposure of work. The Contemporary Art Center and the New Orleans Museum of Art are major institutions, but the art audiences are still small and rather fragmented. It has grown considerably since I first arrived in 1984, but it pales in comparison to other cities. Sometimes I think that the intrinsic party nature of this town, its laissez-faire attitude, keeps it from being a more important intellectual center.

Over all, I cannot thank New Orleans enough because it has been the place where I have matured as an artist. I have experimented with various mediums and I discovered the performer within me right here. I owe my artistic life to this city. It is my spiritual home. I have always felt that I have lived in New Orleans before. And living here as a Latino has been comfortable because New Orleans was once the capital of the Spanish owned territories in this area. It has Spanish roots and it continues to be a city with a Latin nature.

Here is a message he sent to his friends, fellow New Orleanians, and supporters in mid-September.

Dear National Arts Communities and New Orleanians-in- Exile,

Three weeks ago I managed to escape the chaos of New Orleans on a pirated/stolen school bus in a scenario that can only be describe as a Hollywood South version of “Hotel Rwanda.” I can only write to explore the madness that we are still bearing witness to today in the political aftermath of Katrina. It is my duty as an artist, activist, writer and cultural critic to present my analysis of an endemic disease in this society that was exemplified in the inaction of federal support after the natural storm of Katrina. Below is the latest piece that I have written. Know that I do not take things lightly and I am deeply disturbed about the direction of this Union. No, correction, I am outraged! I offer these words to you my cyberspace arts communities.

I believe it is a crucial time for action and my pen has always been my best sword against any injustices I have experienced in this country. Know that as a Latino immigrant, I have always wanted to believe in the “American Dream” mythology. It has been at the thematic center of all my work in the arts, and when I offer such critique of the system, it is because I care deeply about this “multiracial experiment” called the United States. Ashe, gracias. —JTT

The “Armies of Compassion” Were AWOL in New Orleans After Katrina

I keep hearing about these “armies of compassion,” and while I was sequestered by the chaos of New Orleans in Katrina’s aftermath–trapped in a perverse social experiment that seemed to be engineered by homeland security sadists–these armies were absent without leave. AWOL! Where were they while my beloved bayou city descended into an even greater terror than the physical damage that Hurricane Katrina spawned with her category five fury of water and wind? Their absence exemplified the criminal incompetence of local, state and national FEMA officials–who actually heightened the social upheaval by preventing private citizens and organizations from delivering urgent aid without their “official” bureaucratic “rescue” stamp.

These prevention strategies still continue even now, more than two weeks after the natural storm, because FEMA can only seem to flex its ineffectual muscles, which are trained in military practices, and have transformed a natural disaster into a state of war. Lets’ not forget that this is a “northern” confederacy of dunces who only know “war” and breed a “culture of war!” It should come as no surprise that FEMA has employed a strategy of uniformed military siege on the city of New Orleans, and the social chaos that was unleashed in their inaction gave them the best excuse to take the “perfect storm” and turn it into a war at home. And be informed that the practices being implemented on evacuees are turning them into “prisoners” of FEMA, and their “armies of compassion” when visible seem to lack the sensitivity training to exact a more humane effort in support of those who are left with nothing. These are your tax dollars at work.

While we have been privy to TV staged efforts of FEMA’s aid and the photo opportunities of Bush hugging evacuated African American children, many current accounts demonstrate that the “armies of compassion” seem astute in the act of disappearance after the cameras are gone or are rarely to be found on the fields of the disaster. Such was the case on the third day after Katrina had passed and the social storm in New Orleans was increasing in strength. It became more evident to me that the “armies of compassion,” still “missing in action,” were part of a political strategy to punish this Southern port city because it recently voted itself the color “blue” in a “red” state?

It was not a stretch of the imagination to envision this Christian maniacal executive chief whipping New Orleans into submission like so many African slaves were whipped by similar bible-toting masters only a century and half ago? Let’s not forget that previous “armies of compassion” have been used to protect slave-holding patrons and hold hostage their booty of dark-skinned property in a disturbing history that is not too far removed from this post-modern disaster.

In a city of ghosts like New Orleans, the past is always present, and I do not suffer from the cultural amnesia that often prevails in this channel-surfing consumer society. I know too well that this nation has an extensive resume of denying its citizenry of color due justice and protection under a set of laws–which have been historically applied with a biased gavel. From one century to another, I have seen little difference and only forty years ago similar “armies of compassion” were denying African Americans the right to assemble in the South and trying to suffocate the civil rights movement as much as they were denying proper voting rights and humane working conditions to Mexican American farm workers in California and engaged in acts of predicated murder to stop the American Indian movement. Welcome to a brief history of abuse of power in America.

I see a similar indifference in Katrina’s wake and the inaction by FEMA and the current heads of state is just as sinister and calculated as other previous atrocities committed against people of color. Where do I begin and how do I continue? Well, here are a few more examples just for the sake of practical argument: the “trail of tears” against native Americans, the Zoot Suit riots against Mexicans in Los Angeles, the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II, the planned acts of arson against the Latino community in the Hoboken, New Jersey fires of the 1980’s that displaced thousands for real-estate development condos overlooking the New York skyline? Oh, give me a decade in this history, and I can point to an atrocity for your palette. If we are to have any justice for the future of this multiracial experiment called the United States, then heads should be rolling in the same bloodbath that these neo-cons have created in the remaining floodwaters of New Orleans.

And lets’ hear it for the Bush matriarch who aptly deserves the “Marie Antoinette Award” for calling the displaced evacuees at the Houston shelter as being better off because “you know, (they) were underprivileged anyway, so this is working very well for them.” What clearer evidence that this Bush family is completely without the faintest of clues when face to face with the poor–the other face of America that they have been shielded from in their veil of supreme wealth that is stained with more and more blood on the surface of the oil that feeds them. I imagine that this is her “compassionate conservatism” on display in polemic black and white?

And what about the “chosen” TV images that sculpted such a believable profile of a culture in electric short hand–images that criminalized African Americans even further than the norm? Even without Katrina, we are generally aware of the accepted norms that one is always suspect in this country just by being black and/or Latino, native and Middle Eastern. Repeatedly, we were treated to images that created even greater fear of African Americans in a city with a rich legacy of civil rights defenders and a black intelligentsia, premiere jazz musicians and composers, writers and artists, cultural workers and educators. But the media trance fixed its hypnotic loops over and over on images in which black people were either wanton looters or poor victims. Yes, there was certainly some truths in images of both and plenty of the city’s poorest were sequestered and abandoned in public shelters that never offered the public assistance promised by local and state officials. But where were Bush’s “armies of compassion” then?

What we certainly did not see on TV were the valiant efforts of African Americans like the middle-aged woman I met at the edge of Esplanade Avenue, in the residential end of the Quarter, trying desperately to secure safe passage out of the chaos for her eighty-year old mother. In my short exchange with her, she mentioned how she was being immediately sized-up as a “potential looter” herself, and it was difficult to get assistance and even check into a hotel for some safety. No, you did not see this face of a concerned daughter trying to do the right thing, and the invisible “armies of compassion” were not there to usher her and her mother to safety.

Never was any of this looting footage prefaced by a proclamation that what makes New Orleans attractive to the country and to world over is owed mostly to its people of color–its African heritage that has built this city with the spilling of its enslaved blood and that even under such abhorrent conditions, these historically oppressed people transformed their pain into art and music and a culture that is revered internationally. Of course not, how can we expect such historical tribute and debt to be paid to people of color on prime time TV and cable stations that are generally the most effective tools for the propagation of white supremacy? Yes, I said it!

I can only imagine how it scares you when the legacy of “white supremacy” is brought to the forefront in the analysis of such an atrocity. Well, let’s not forget that it is the most evident of the difficult civil secrets that lies just “under the skin” in this divided society, and there were no “armies of compassion” that countered this belief in the aid of the poor and abandoned.

This city that knows its respect for the ancients, this grand Madame of the South deserved an organized effort of heart and efficiency of humanity and true compassion. I remain deeply disturbed, perplexed and outraged as to how this great empire of capital and industry could not manage to organize its technology to mount a proper rescue for the most “precious pueblo” in its possession. By what method of madness and political design did the “armies of compassion” arrive a working week late when the city was already festering like an untreated wound in the August heat and people were dying in the plain view of national TV coverage and angered news reporters? Only, now, can I say that–finally–in the face of such tragedy it looks like the press in this country has regained its backbone–its cojones–its courage to put a camera on the brutal truths of a continuing legacy of abandonment!

What do I offer as a modest proposal of retribution or solution to these crimes? I call for more than FEMA’s Brown and his “calculated” resignation and put the “blood of these people” on boy George’s hands and the arrogance of his family privilege. This is not a time for us to be cowards and hold our flaccid tongues in silence for fear of sounding unpatriotic, because if we have any freedoms left in this Union and we are to deserve them as a free nation, then, we need to exercise these “inalienable rights” today and hold accountable a government that has played us with its recklessness and cruel indifference to working people and the poor.

This is a rogue administration whose pomposity is killing more of its citizenry, and if we remain with our tongues in our hands, then we deserve the fascist posturing it continues to flaunt while disguising itself as a “compassionate conservative” regime that calls for a “day of prayer” in the wake of its murderous bureaucracy. I will exhibit the same lack of FEMA compassion that dragged across the flooded streets of New Orleans and managed to turn my city into Baghdad in four days while it has taken three years to take that sovereign nation and turn into another “red mess” before the eyes of the world. If only the armies of compassion could have been that efficient.

-Jose Torres Tama in exile from New Orleans
September 15, 2005
Gainesville, Florida
cell # 504-232-2968
e-mail jose@torrestama.com or poetafiego@juno.com