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"To this day I believe
we are here on the
planet Earth to live,
grow up and do what
we can to make this
world a better place
for all people to enjoy
freedom."
--Mrs. Rosa Parks--















Rosa Parks
February 4, 1913
October 24, 2005
god bless you Rosa.





    ISHMAEL MUHAMMAD: The purpose of the People's
    Hurricane Relief Fund and Mississippi Disaster Relief Coalition
    is to insure that those who have suffered the most before,
    during and after Katrina, and whose voices have been
    historically disregarded, are empowered to be heard and take
    charge of the monies being raised in their names, the
    reconstruction of their communities, and the repairing of their
    lives. Therefore, the testimony that I'm going to give today, on
    behalf of the legal work that we're doing and on behalf of the
    People's Hurricane Relief Fund and the Mississippi Disaster
    Relief Coalition, will be from those voices. And we urge all of
    you to seek out those voices that we cannot bring you today.

    Denise, a 42-year-old black woman from New Orleans, interned
    in the Convention Center, reports, “I thought I was in hell. I was
    there for two days with no water, no food and no shelter, with
    my 63-year-old mother, 21-year-old niece and two-year-old
    grandniece and thousands of others. Police would not come
    out of their cars. National Guard trucks rolled by, completely
    empty, with soldiers with guns cocked and aiming at us. Nobody
    stopped to drop off water. A helicopter dropped a load of water,
    but all of the bottles exploded on impact. Many people were
    delirious from lack of water and food, completely dehydrated.
    Inside the Convention Center, conditions were horrible. The
    floors were black and slick with feces. Outside wasn't much
    better, between the heat, the humidity, the lack of water, and
    old and very young dying from dehydration. There were young
    men with guns there, who organized the crowd and got food
    and water for the old people and babies, because nobody had
    eaten in days. When buses came, it was those men who got
    the crowd in order. Old people in front, women and children
    next, men in the back. Many people decided to walk across the
    bridge to the west bank, but armed police ordered them to turn
    around at the top of the bridge. The first day, four people died
    next to me, the second day, six. Make sure you tell everybody,”
    she said, “that they left us there to die.”

    Nicole, a young black woman from New Orleans, who was
    interned in the Superdome, states, "We survived despite being
    abandoned by federal, state and local government. Black
    families with children and no money were the majority in the
    Superdome. I noticed only 5% of people were not black and
    they were mostly unfortunate white and Asian tourists. While
    waiting in line behind a barricade for 18 hours to board a bus
    away from the Superdome, I noticed a group of tourists, three
    white and two Asian people, rushed quietly out one side of the
    barricade that held thousands of exhausted, financially
    underprivileged black families with babies. The looting was
    people's main rebellion, because it was hotter than Satan's
    oven in the Dome and people wanted cold drinks, ice, anything
    cold. The National Guard did not serve or protect. They were
    constantly threatening us and herding us by machine guns like
    cows. I saw a teenage boy beaten up by a National Guard
    officer in front of a crowd of thousands of people. The National
    Guard was disorganized. They did not try to instill order to the
    chaos of ration distribution. Nobody ever knew when or where
    food was given out, and people stood in line for hours. I was
    alone and female. Many of the older men and women were
    protective of me in the Superdome. Nobody really laid a hand
    on me, except for a white police officer, Officer Hall, badge 185
    or 158 (I wish I could remember). He grabbed my booty in
    Texas during a 3:00 a.m. bus search, while we were on the way
    to Dallas. The U.S. is the richest country in the world. I don't
    understand why so many people would have to die in Hurricane
    Katrina. The U.S. has the money to evacuate people in a
    disaster, especially one that has been awaited for a number of
    years.”

    Shelly, a 31-year-old who was trapped in the Superdome,
    adds, "When buses came to take us from the Superdome, they
    were taking tourists first. White people, they were just picking
    them out of the crowd. I don't know why we were treated the
    way we were. But it was like they didn't care.”

    Alva, a 51-year-old grandmother from New Orleans East,
    remembers, “When we were taken to the higher ground in
    Jefferson Parish, what did we have to greet us? A line of
    military police with M-16 rifles. They watched us, caged us,
    laughed at us, took pictures of us with their camera-phones. I
    saw a young man get down on his knees and beg for water for
    his little baby, and I saw the child die right there on the
    concrete. This was murder. They wanted us dead. They just
    didn't think so many of us would survive."

    Tammy, a black woman in her mid-30s, complains, “I was trying
    to evacuate with my two daughters by car, when we were
    stopped by police, made to get out and told, ‘Lie down on the
    ground, you black monkey bitch.’ I was arrested and thrown in
    jail with my daughters and could not get out for several weeks.”

    John, a New Orleans resident displaced at the Houston
    Astrodome, says, “I was in the Astrodome and told to move
    from the bleachers to the field on the lower area, but I refused
    because I had seen dead bodies down there and I was with
    some of my 12 children in the upstairs area. There were just
    too many unsafe issues down there. I was forced to leave the
    stadium. Me and my family were taken out at rifle-point.”

    Agnes, a 70-something-year-old Creole woman who was a
    resident of Iberville Public Housing Development; Maybell, a
    woman in her late-70s, a longtime resident of St. Bernard
    Public Housing Development; Joseph and Cynthia, who are
    residents of B.W. Cooper Public Housing Development; and
    Alberta, who is a resident of Lafitte Public Housing
    Development, have all been displaced, and all are wondering
    why they have to be locked out of their public housing
    residence when their homes have received little to no flooding
    and are habitable.

    These stories illustrate that these are the people who need to
    be heard, because their stories illustrate the failures of the
    government on every level

    Read more     Listen/Watch  @  Democracy Now. org
Pat Robertson makes
racist statments
about  Muslims being
'satanic'
online blackjack
partypoker
Racism is a negative force tearing democracy and freedom apart.
Awareness, understanding and education are important tools in
fighting racism and bigotry.
"Ronnie Lobello"
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