Thursday, September 15, 2005

An Update on the Condition of Some of the Crescent City's Gems:

Tipitina's club survives! Shows cancelled during recovery period.

Other than a downed tree near the loading door, the uptown club seems to have escaped the hurricane unscathed. Shows at the club are cancelled until further notice while Tipitina's operations focus on relief for displaced New Orleans artists. Once authorities permit residents to return to New Orleans, the club will be used as an outreach center to help artists get back on their feet. Stayed tuned for more details!

 K-Paul’s Louisiana Kitchen
Initial reports indicate that the restaurant sustained minor flooding and/or damage. We are hopeful that these reports are correct. As soon as city officials give us approval to re-enter we will begin to start up operations.

THE LOUISIANA MUSIC FACTORY IS STILL STANDING

We are down but not out! We appreciate the website orders and  we will try to resume business as  soon as its safe to return to the city. Although the store and inventory were not damaged, access to the inventory is severely limited and it will take extra time to get orders shipped out. Please be patient and be assured that we are doing the very best we can under extremely difficult conditions. No credit cards will be charged until we are able to ship the orders. THANKS FOR SUPPORTING OUR STORE. If you're trying to find out about New Orleans musicians there is a list of known survivors at http://www.wwoz.org/  If you know of any surviving musicians not included in this list please send email to WWOZ Thanks for your help during this very difficult time.

WWOZ-FM

To donate to WWOZ's recovery effort, click here.

Jazz Fest Tipped To Return In 2006

By Ray Waddell, Billboard.com

New Orleans' premiere music event, the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival (Jazz Fest), will return next year, according to Randy Phillips of AEG Live, co-producers of  Jazz Fest with Festival Productions Inc. (FPI).

"We are going to do a Jazz Fest in '06," Phillips tells Billboard.com. "Where, how, with what infrastructure, will all be worked out." Phillips says the event may take place in New Orleans, depending on the progress of recovery efforts in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, or in a nearby market such as Baton Rouge.


4:47:55 PM    comment []  



"Laissez les bons temps rouler!"

 

Parts of New Orleans to Open Next Week

By BRETT MARTEL, Associated Press Writer 36 minutes ago

Mayor Ray Nagin announced Thursday that large sections of the city will reopen next week, and the historic French Quarter the week after that. "The city of New Orleans ... will start to breathe again," he said.

The announcement came amid progress in restoring electricity and water service and the day after the release of government tests showing that the floodwaters contain dangerous bacteria and industrial chemicals but that the air is safe to breathe.

The first section to reopen to residents will be Algiers, across the Mississippi River from the French Quarter, on Monday, the mayor said. The city's Uptown area — which includes Tulane University and the Garden District, a leafy neighborhood of antebellum mansions — will be reopened in stages next Wednesday and Friday, he said.

The French Quarter — an exuberant and often bawdy neighborhood of Napoleonic-era buildings that serves as the capital of Mardi Gras and is the very heart and soul of the city's rollicking tourism industry — will follow on Sept. 26.

"The French Quarter is high and dry, and we feel as though it has good electricity capabilities," the mayor said, "but since it's so historic, we want to double- and triple-check before we fire up all electricity in there to make sure that, because every building is so close, that if a fire breaks out, we won't lose a significant amount of what we cherish in this city."

The mayor also said business people will be allowed into the central business district on Saturday and Sunday. But he did not address whether that section would be reopened.

The reopened areas generally suffered little or no flooding and were among the least-damaged parts of New Orleans. They represent 182,000 residents out of a city of nearly half a million.

"We will have life. We will have commerce. We will have people getting into their normal modes of operations, and the normal rhythm of the city of New Orleans that is so unique," the mayor said. He added: "It's a good day in New Orleans. The sun is shining. ... We're going to bring this city back."

Nagin said there should be power in most areas where people will be allowed back. But the water in some places will be good only for flushing toilets, not for drinking and bathing, he said.

The mayor said major retailers will use the city's Convention Center to supply returning residents with food, wood and other things they will need.

The return of New Orleans' residents next week will mark the start of what the mayor said will probably be the biggest urban reconstruction project in U.S. history.

"My gut feeling right now is that we'll settle in at 250,000 people over the next three to six months, and then we'll start to ramp up over time to the half- million we had before and maybe exceed," he said. "I imagine building a city so original, so unique, that everybody's going to want to come."

The death toll in Louisiana climbed to 474 on Wednesday, and is expected to rise further as state and federal officials go about the monumental task of collecting the bloated and decayed corpses and identifying them through DNA. The overall death toll in five states reached 710.

Government tests released Wednesday found dangerous amounts of sewage-related bacteria in the floodwaters, along with lead from unknown sources and high levels of industrial chemicals such as arsenic. But tests of the city's foul-smelling air found no significant health risks.

In the hard-hit Ninth Ward, National Guard Col. Michael Thompson said his troops have also seen the bodies of several people who had been murdered.

"I've got a lot of police officers on my staff and they recognize the signs of it. You'd see the entry wound of the bullet and the exit wound," Thompson said. "So it was obvious that something had taken place other than natural death."

He said the two biggest challenges facing his troops were aggressive dogs and poor sanitation. He said pit bulls left behind by evacuating residents have formed packs and were attacking soldiers. One soldier was forced to shoot a dog that attacked him, he said.

Meanwhile, the Army Corps of Engineers said Thursday it is getting water pumped out of eastern New Orleans and nearby parishes faster than expected, and most of the area should be dry by the end of this month, or about a week earlier than previously estimated.

Col. Duane Gapinski, commander of the project to drain the city, said the Corps is still estimating Oct. 2 as the date the rest of New Orleans will be dry. "There are a couple of key pump stations that we're not able to get online," he said.

The deepest water remaining in New Orleans is along Lake Pontchartrain, at 6 to 8 feet in places, down from 10 to 16 feet after the levees gave way, he said.

About 40 percent to 50 percent of the city was still flooded, down from 80 percent after Katrina hit, as pumps worked to siphon off 8 billion gallons a day.


4:09:28 PM    comment []  


No More of That "Elitist" Bullshit. . .

Progressive Populism is the Future of the Democratic Party, and This Guy is its Poster Boy.

 

Putting the Big Sky In a Populist Frame

Montana's Rookie Democratic Governor Shows Party What It Takes in Red State

story.brian.schweitzer.jpg

Gov. Brian Schweitzer (D-MT)

By Blaine Harden
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, September 5, 2005; Page A03

BUTTE, Mont. -- The Democratic governor of this red state was discussing his "God-given" political gifts while seated in his gubernatorial aircraft.

"You know, if John Kerry could do what I do, he'd be president," said Gov. Brian Schweitzer, who was a mint farmer until last November and is now being talked about as the kind of brassy populist the Democrats need to win back the White House.

 

Schweitzer, broad of shoulder, red of face and sure of self, was barnstorming in Big Sky country -- four towns in 11 hours, sweet-talking local Republicans, praising random Montanans for the excellence of their dogs and slapping backs in barrooms. He was advertising all that he has done for the 917,000 people of his state since they elected him as their first Democratic governor in 16 years. Schweitzer won by four percentage points, while Kerry lost here to President Bush by 20 points.

In the airplane between the mining town of Butte and the ranching town of Dillon, Schweitzer raised the altitude of his pronouncements and diagnosed the Big Picture: how Democrats could change their losing ways, seize the levers of power and be, well, like him.

"Be likable, be self-deprecating, don't be a know-it-all using a lot of big words," said Schweitzer, 50, who mixes plain speaking with ranch dressing: blue jeans, a bolo tie, cowboy boots and, always somewhere nearby, a border collie named Jag.

"In politics, it doesn't matter what the facts are," he said. "It matters what the perceptions are. It is the way you frame it."

In Montana, he continued, the best way to frame an issue is to get horses and guns into the picture. Schweitzer arrived at this epiphany, he said, after getting beaten in 2000 in a race against Sen. Conrad Burns (R-Mont.).

That was Schweitzer's first go at elective politics and, in the wound-licking that followed, he found that men in Montana were 11 percent less likely to vote for him than were women. For his gubernatorial campaign, Schweitzer hired focus groups to find out why.

He learned that a significant percentage of Montana men are mule-headed, unwilling to change their minds on issues, even when presented with information showing that their views are not supported by facts.

"So, I started doing my ads while I was sitting on a horse or holding a gun," Schweitzer said. "I spoke to men visually and showed them I am like them. Hell, I can be on a horse and talk about health care.

"Ninety percent of them don't ride horses and many of them don't shoot a gun, but my ads said visually that I understand Montana. My gender gap disappeared. I think I have just summed up why Democrats lose elections."

Schweitzer had something else to add about Kerry, who had visited him here in Montana just the week before.


"When he goes out to meet people, he doesn't come off real," Schweitzer said. "It is like you can see the price tag on the barrel," he said of television appearances Kerry made last year with a shotgun in his hand.

There is more to Schweitzer, of course, than good visuals and bottomless self-regard.

 

Bills he pushed through the legislature this spring -- more money for education, assistance for workers without health insurance, cheaper prescription drugs for the elderly -- have secured solid job-approval numbers.

Relentless travel across the state, together with his media-savvy populism, has padded those numbers. When a couple in a car collided with his unmarked Montana Highway Patrol car in a newspaper parking lot in Missoula, the governor got out and issued his first pardon. When a legendary Montana bar, the M&M in Butte, reopened for business after a much-lamented closure, Schweitzer showed up to hand-deliver the new liquor license and tossed back two shots of Jameson's whiskey.

Behind the lawmaking and the image-crafting, many Montanans -- including some of the governor's harshest critics -- see a natural-born populist whose gift of gab is matched by his work ethic.

David Berg, a conservative Republican who hosts the only syndicated radio talk show based in Montana, derides Schweitzer as "overly ambitious." But Berg said the governor was "a likable person, a helluva campaigner, and he has never stopped working to romance certain segments of the population."

The romancing has not stayed within state borders. Schweitzer makes speeches around the country and is often mentioned, along with a handful of other Democratic governors, including Bill Richardson of New Mexico and Janet Napolitano of Arizona, as part of a promising crop of New West politicians who are invigorating the Democratic Party.

"There is a lot of focus on governors in Democratic circles, and Schweitzer is a big, bold thinker with boundless energy," said B.J. Thornberry, the former executive director of the Democratic Governors' Association.

Schweitzer playfully plays down ambitions outside Montana: "I am just a Montana farmer. I don't know if what I say or do is exportable. It is a long way from Little League to playing for the Yankees."

What he has on his plate in this red state is hard enough for a Democrat, he said. When his plane landed in Dillon, he had a chance to demonstrate -- at a meeting with Beaverhead County commissioners about roads on federal land.

Bush, in overturning a Clinton-era order that made almost 60 million acres of national forest off-limits to road-building, has asked governors to identify areas where roads should not be built. The commissioners in Beaverhead County, where beef rules and resentment of Washington runs high, are eager to open up vast stretches of roadless federal land.

Gingerly, Schweitzer explained why that might not work. First, he said, the Bush administration has no money to maintain the roads it has already built, let alone build new ones. Second -- and this was the tricky part in a room full of Republican ranchers -- Schweitzer said that Montana was no longer a state dominated by ranchers, miners and timber companies.

He never once uttered the word "environmentalism" -- the closest he came to that was mentioning the need to protect land for "huntin' and fishin.' " Nor did he unleash statistics about how retirement and investment income from newcomers has come to dominate the state economy.

"I'm an aggie," said Schweitzer, who has a master's degree in soil science from Montana State University and who worked in Saudi Arabia for seven years helping the royal family build a dairy farm. "Agriculture will continue to be a large part of who we are in Montana. But growth depends on access to public land and quality of life."

Back on the gubernatorial airplane, Schweitzer noted that he had explained the new facts of life in Montana "without scaring anybody."

"Look, if I stand in front of voters and tell them, 'Everything you thought you knew about Montana's economy is wrong,' then who in the hell is going to vote for someone like that?" he said.

"Didn't we learn anything from Al Gore?"


11:52:11 AM    comment []  


The President of the United States Writes an Urgent Note to His Secretary of State During a Security Council Meeting at the 2005 World Summit and 60th General Assembly of the United Nations in New York September 14, 2005.

 

 

PhotoPhoto

What does he want her to do, hold his dick for him?


10:39:28 AM    comment []  


Quote(s) of the Day

"When I ponder our country and its greatness, its weaknesses, its potential, my heart aches for less divisiveness, less polarization, less finger-pointing, less bitterness, less mindless partisanship, which at times sounds almost hateful to the ears of the American people."

--an emotional Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK), at the Roberts confirmation hearing, 9/13/05

"The gay community. . .is the greatest threat to our freedom that we face today."

--Oklahoma Senate candidate Tom Coburn, Spring 2004  

"I favor the death penalty for abortionists."

--Oklahoma Senate candidate Tom Coburn, July 9, 2004

"Still, you can't deny Tom Coburn's passion for these hearings, unless you tuned in earlier when TV cameras captured Coburn doing a crossword puzzle during the hearing."

--Jon Stewart, The Daily Show, 9/13/05   


10:27:06 AM    comment []  


Another All-Time Low!

If the Wall Street Journal can't fudge those numbers up, nobody can.

Katrina Erodes Support
In U.S. for Iraq War

Bush's Rating as Crisis Manager
Declines in Poll as Pessimism
About the Economy Grows

By JOHN HARWOOD
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
September 15, 2005; Page A4

WASHINGTON -- Hurricane Katrina has accelerated the erosion in public support for the Iraq war as President Bush's core of supporters dwindles and economic pessimism turns Americans' attention inward.

A new Wall Street Journal/NBC News Poll shows that cutting spending on Iraq is Americans' top choice for financing the recovery from Katrina. Shaken by high gas prices and bracing for further jolts, Americans have turned negative about Mr. Bush across the board -- on handling the economy, foreign policy, and even the war on terrorism.

[WSJ/NBC News Poll]

View complete results of the Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll. (Adobe Acrobat required.)

The president's overall approval has fallen to a record-low for Mr. Bush of 40%, reflecting a shrunken core of base supporters. That promises to have repercussions for his domestic agenda on issues like Social Security, taxes and immigration, and leaves Mr. Bush with a steeper challenge on his most significant second-term priority: using American power and resources to transform Iraq and the broader Middle East.

A plurality of Americans has favored reducing troop levels in Iraq for most of the year. Now, 55% favor bringing soldiers home, while just 36% back Mr. Bush's position that current levels should be maintained to help secure peace and stability.

"His standing to prosecute that case has been made more difficult," says Republican pollster Bill McInturff, who helps conduct the Journal/NBC Poll. Adds Democratic counterpart Peter Hart: It's "going to be very hard to just move straight forward" on Iraq.

To be sure, the survey contains some bright spots for Mr. Bush. Federal appeals court Judge John Roberts, his nominee to succeed the late William Rehnquist as chief justice of the Supreme Court, has drawn respectable support and little intense opposition. Some 38% say they support Judge Roberts for that post, while just 20% oppose him and 41% don't know enough to say.

HARRIS POLL
[Harris Poll]
Nearly half of U.S. adults say President Bush has done a poor job in handling the Hurricane Katrina relief efforts, according to a recent Harris poll. And almost half expect the hurricane will have a great impact on the U.S. economy.

And while Senate Democrats press Judge Roberts in Judiciary Committee hearings to state his views on key issues, 57% of Americans say the nominee shouldn't be required to spell them out since those issues may come before the court. Democrats enjoy firmer support in public opinion for their demand for more documents about Judge Roberts's previous government service; 41% say the White House should make additional documents public, outpacing the 31% who say Democrats already have enough information.

Yet the poll's findings about Americans' priorities show the work facing Mr. Bush, who is scheduled to deliver a nationally televised address tonight on the recovery from Katrina. Some 60% say rebuilding the Gulf Coast should be a higher national priority than establishing democracy in Iraq; 5% say Iraq, while 34% say the two are equally important.

The White House says the administration can handle both at once, but by 51%-37% Americans say the Iraq war wasn't worth its human and financial costs.

The proportion of Republicans disapproving of Mr. Bush's job performance has doubled to 15% from 7% in January, with pronounced defections among moderates within Mr. Bush's party.

Katrina has contributed to that decline in support. By a 58%-38% margin, Americans say they are dissatisfied with the Bush administration's response to the catastrophe. Reflecting the absence of the traditional rally behind the commander in chief during national emergencies, just 48% approve of the president's handling of the matter; 80% approved of how he handled the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, while 64% backed the actions of his father, President George H.W. Bush, following Hurricane Andrew in 1992. The survey of 1,013 adults, conducted Sept. 9-12, has a margin for error of 3.1 percentage points.

In particular, Katrina appears to have shaken public regard on two attributes that sustained Mr. Bush through earlier political challenges. The public now splits evenly, 41%-41%, on assessments of Mr. Bush's ability to handle a crisis; at the outset of his second term in January, he received positive marks for crisis-management ability by a 56%-28% margin. A bare 43%-40% plurality rates him positively for having "strong leadership qualities," down from 52%-30% in January.

The crisis along the Gulf Coast may have also damaged the long-term effort by Mr. Bush's strategists to expand Republican support among members of minority groups. Fully 70% of African-Americans say the Bush administration would have reacted to Katrina with greater urgency had the affected areas been mostly white suburbs rather than mostly black inner-city neighborhoods. Nearly seven in 10 whites reject that assertion.

Hispanics are divided evenly on the question. But the president's overall rating among Hispanics, who were split on his job performance in January, is now negative by a two-to-one margin.

Mr. Bush's signature domestic priority, overhauling the Social Security system with private investment accounts, was already in political trouble before the hurricane. Assessments of the administration's handling of Social Security -- 28% say they are satisfied while 60% aren't -- are more negative than assessments of how it handled the response to Katrina.

Beyond Social Security, the domestic political landscape has been buffeted in a way that complicates challenges facing the White House and Republicans in the 2006 midterm elections. Following the gas-price spikes immediately after the hurricane, six in 10 Americans now expect pump prices to continue rising.

In fact, the public now ranks gas prices as the country's top economic issue. Just 6% assign top importance to federal taxes, the issue that Mr. Bush and Republicans planned to elevate next year through a yet-unspecified overhaul of the tax system.

Of particular concern to lawmakers facing voters next year, Americans have turned pessimistic on the outlook for the economy. Some 49% expect the economy to get worse over the next 12 months, triple the 16% who expect it to improve. In January, those numbers were essentially reversed.

At the same time, Katrina may have left the public feeling slightly more nervous about security at home. Fully 75% of Americans now say the U.S. isn't adequately prepared for a nuclear, biological or chemical attack, up from 66% who expressed that concern in 2002.

The net effect may be increased pressure on members of the Republican majority to strike an independent course on a range of issues, resisting appeals for party discipline that have been effective for most of Mr. Bush's presidency. Those pressures will be greatest in the Northeast and Midwest, where Mr. Bush's approval rating stands at 32% and 36%, respectively.

"All these [results] suggest unstable daydesrs ahead in the Republican caucus," says Mr. McInturff, whose firm advises many Republican lawmakers.

Write to John Harwood at john.harwood@wsj.com


10:01:14 AM    comment []