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Fighting the Theft of New Orleans

The Rhythm of Resistance

By BC publishers Glen Ford and Peter Gamble

Black Commentator Issue 167 - January 19, 2006

http://www.blackcommentator.com/167/167_cover_fighting_ no_theft.html

"I don't think it's right that you take our
properties. Over my dead body. I didn't die with
Katrina." - Lower 9th Ward resident Caroline
Parker.

"Joe Canizaro, I don't know you, but I hate you.
I'm going to suit up like I'm going to Iraq and
fight this." -  New Orleans East resident Harvey
Bender, referring to the author of the city
commission's "rebuilding" plan.

The overwhelmingly Black New Orleans diaspora is
returning in large numbers to resist relentless
efforts to bully and bulldoze them out of the
city's future. "Struggle on the ground has
intensified enormously. A number of groups are in
motion, moving against the mayor's commission,"
said Mtangulizi Sanyika, spokesman for the African
American Leadership Project (AALP). "Increasing
numbers of people are coming back into the city.
You can feel the political rhythm."

Mayor Ray Nagin's commission has presented
residents of flood-battered, mostly African
American neighborhoods with a Catch-22, carefully
crafted to preclude New Orleans from ever again
becoming the more than two- thirds Black city it
was before Hurricane Katrina breached the levees.
Authored by Nagin crony, real estate development
mogul and George Bush fundraiser Joseph Canizaro,
the plan would impose a four-month moratorium on
building in devastated neighborhoods like the
lower Ninth Ward and New Orleans East. During that
period, the neighborhoods would be required to
come up with a plan to show how they would become
"viable" by reaching an undefined "critical mass"
of residents.

But the moratorium, itself, discourages people
from rebuilding their neighborhoods - just as it
is intended to do - thus creating a fait accompli:
residents will be hard pressed to prove that a
"critical mass" of habitation can be achieved.

"It's circular reasoning," said the AALP's
Sanyika. They talk about "some level of
neighborhood viability, but no one knows what that
means. What constitutes viable plans? What kinds
of neighborhoods are viable? Everywhere you turn
people are trying to rebuild, but there is this
constraint."

The commission is empowered only to make
recommendations, but with the help of corporate
media, pretends their plan is set in stone. "They
keep pushing their recommendations as though they
are the gospel truth," said Sanyika, who along
with tens of thousands of other evacuees has been
dispersed to Houston, five hours away. "There is
confusion as to all of these recommendations,
issued as if they are policy. The Times-Picayune
contributes to that confusion. None of this is a
given."

Activists believe the way to play this situation
is for residents to forge ahead on their own.
"Trying to figure out the logic of that illogical
proposal is a wasted effort - all you're going to
do is wind up going in circles," said Sanyika. He
emphasizes that the commission's recommendations
are not binding on anyone - certainly not on the
majority Black city council, which claims
authority in city planning matters. They're not
buying the nonsense. "The city council has
[UTF-8?]rejected it. Nagin says aO~ignore it.' I
think it's dead in the water," said Sanyika.

The city council has attempted to block Nagin's
collaboration with corporate developers - a
hallmark of his tenure - voting to give itself
authority over where to place FEMA trailers. (Only
about 5,000 of a projected 25,000 trailers
arrived, say community activists.) Nagin vetoed
the bill, but the council overrode him. The
council has also endorsed equitable development of
neighborhoods, rather than shrinking the city. "We
[the African American Leadership Project] are
developing a resolution to that effect," said
Sanyika. Odds are that it will pass - but the
question is, who wields power in post-Katrina New
Orleans, where only one-third of the city's
previous population of nearly half a million has
returned?

It is in this context that one must view Mayor
Nagin's statement to a mostly Black crowd gathered
at City Hall for a Martin Luther King Day march,
on Monday: "I don't care what people will say -
uptown, or wherever they are. At the end of the
day, this city will be [UTF-8?]chocolateaO.  This
city will be a majority African American city.
It's the way God wants it to be. You can't have
New Orleans no other way. It wouldn't be New
Orleans."

Ray Nagin is probably the most disoriented person
in the country, these days - the fruit of his own
venality, sleeziness, and opportunism. A corporate
executive, sports entrepreneur and nominal
Democrat, he contributed to the Bush campaign in
2000 (Democrats dubbed him "Ray Reagan") and
endorsed a Republican candidate for governor in
2003 (see BC November 20, 2003). Now he doesn't
have a clue as to where the power lies or where
his base is centered. "Nagin is playing a game,
trying to have it both ways," says the AALP's
Sanyika - but his options are shrinking as fast as
the city envisioned by his buddy, Joe Canizaro,
with whom he habitually worked hand in hand, but
whom he now tells Blacks to "ignore."

Who's in charge in New Orleans?

Canizaro is clearly the center of gravity on the
"mayor's" commission which, although integrated,
is essentially a corporate concoction. The
commission's slogan, "Bring New Orleans Back," is
a euphemism for bringing the city "back" to the
days before Black rule by erecting multiple
barriers to the return of Black residents. Of
course, even when Black mayors hold titular office
in New Orleans, Canizaro's crowd runs the show.
His bio, posted on the commission's website, shows
Canizaro to be the major domo of the city's real
estate, development, banking, and pro-business
political machinations. Canizaro is also a Trustee
and former Chairman of the Urban Land Institute,
the planning outfit that is determined to turn
Black neighborhoods into swamp.

Since shortly after New Years, the commission has
been feverishly working to appear to be an
empowered governmental entity, tasking
subcommittees to present reports and
recommendations several days a week on Government
Effectiveness, Education, Health and Social
Services, Culture, and Infrastructure. What Black
New Orleans had been waiting for was presentation
of the Urban Planning Committee Final Report,
Wednesday, January 11. An overflow crowd at the
Sheraton Hotel hissed Mayor Nagin and booed the
hated Canizaro. Others cursed and vowed that they
would be exiled only over their dead bodies.

"Four Months to Decide" read the headline of the
Times- Picayune, on the day of the official
unveiling of the commission's recommendations, a
blueprint for the displacement of hundreds of
thousands. In the packed hotel spaces, residents
alternated between rage and deep anxiety at the
ultimatum. "I don't think four or five months is
close to enough time given all we would need to
do," said Robyn Braggs. "Families with school- age
children won't be able to even return to do the
work necessary until this summer."

Cities with 25,000 or more displaced New Orleans
residents include Dallas, Houston, Atlanta,
Memphis, and Baton Rouge. Others are scattered to
the four winds. Their children will be enrolled in
far-flung schools until the June deadline.

Former New Orleans Mayor Marc Morial, currently
president of the National Urban League, called the
commission's scheme a "massive red-lining plan
wrapped around a giant land grab." With the
situation so uncertain, and time so short,
homeowners will have difficulty settling with
their insurance companies in time. Said Morial:

"It's cruel to bar people from rebuilding. Telling
people they can't rebuild for four months is
tantamount to saying they can't ever come back.
It's telling people who have lost almost
everything that we're going to take the last
vestige of what they own."

And what about renters, who made up well over half
of residents? Such people have no place in George
Bush's "ownership society" - especially if they
are Black. Bush put his smirking stamp of approval
on the corporate plan during an oblivious visit to
New Orleans, last week. "It may be hard for you to
see, but from when I first came here to today, New
Orleans is reminding me of the city I used to
visit."

Apparently, the president doesn't read newspapers
because he is blind - except to the cravings of
his class. Bush's Gulf Opportunity Zone Act
provides billions in tax dodges for (big)
business, while the threatened permanent
depopulation of Black New Orleans would eliminate
the possibility of return for the nearly 8,000
(small) Black businesses that served the
neighborhoods.

Self-styled Black capitalists take note: this is
the nature of the beast. Bush fronts for a class
for which Katrina is not a catastrophe, but an
opportunity. They believe devoutly in "creative
chaos" - the often violent destruction of the old,
so that new profits can be squeezed from the
rubble. Through their Catch-22 ultimatums, they
are deliberately inflicting additional "creative
chaos" on the displaced people of New Orleans. The
fact that the victims are mostly Black, makes it
all the easier. Or so they assume.

The Resistance

Grassroots community groups, along with platoons
of non-native volunteers, are refusing to
acquiesce to the greatest attempted urban theft in
American history. At a conference organized by
Mtangulizi Sanyika's African American Leadership
Project and affiliated organizations, progressive
urban planners explored ways to make the new New
Orleans a better place for the people who live
there, rather than for ravenous corporations and
new populations. The experts included Dr. Ed
Blakely, of the University of Sydney, Australia;
MIT's Dr. Phil Thompson, housing aide to former
New York Mayor David Dinkins; and Abdul Rasheed,
who helped rebuild the flood ravaged Black town of
Princeville, North Carolina after a hurricane in
the Nineties.

The coalition also held a Town Hall meeting
attended by leaders of 15 national organizations,
including Dr. Ron Daniel's Institute of the Black
World, Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, and
movers and shakers from the Progressive Baptist
Convention and the National Baptist Convention
USA. National co-sponsors included the Hip Hop
Caucus, Black Voices for Peace, the Black Family
Summit of the Millions More Movement, and the
National Black Environmental Justice Network
(NBEJN).

(Dr. Robert Bullard, of the NBEJN-affiliated
Environmental Justice Resource Center at
Clark-Atlanta University, has published the grim
but very useful report: "A Twenty-Point Plan to
Destroy Black New Orleans.")

Neighborhood groups are mobilizing to confront the
racist/corporate onslaught. "Every other day some
major event is happening," said Sanyika. Various
groups held marches during MLK weekend, carrying
signs such as "We're Back," "Stop Displacement,"
and "Rebuild With People."

On February 7th, a National Mobilization of
progressive forces will descend on the U.S.
Capitol in Washington to pressure Congress to halt
the juggernaut of expulsion and give substance to
the people's Right to Return. Although there are
literally thousands of large and small
Katrina-related projects operating throughout the
nation, many of the New Orleans organizers are
handicapped by the fact of their own displacement.
A great moral and political challenge presents
itself to Black and progressive America: Will they
rise to the occasion in the face of a real,
imminent, well-defined crisis - as opposed to the
general conditions addressed by the Million Man
and Millions More rallies? February 7th will be a
test of Black political resolve and cohesion. And
there will be many more.

Meanwhile, New Orleans in some ways resembles a
poignant scene from bygone wars, when lists of the
dead were published on public walls. The "Red
Danger List" is posted in local papers,
designating properties that are "in imminent
danger of collapse" and, therefore, subject to
demolition without the consent of the owners. To
date, over 5,000 buildings have been red tagged.

The "Flood Map" is a kind of municipal schematic
of a cemetery, delineating the parts of the city
that will be caused to die. Residents on the wrong
side of the lines will be unable to get flood
insurance, which certainly means no meaningful
investment can occur in those areas. The map was
last published in 1984, and is now being updated.

You can be sure that Black folks are not in charge
of the mapping.

Katrina has shown us many things. One, is the
hollowness of the purely electoral Black strategy
(and its cousin, lobbying) that followed the
shutdown of mass movements after the death of
Martin Luther King, Jr. It is a great irony that,
while we rant at FEMA's inability (or
unwillingness) to respond to the Katrina crisis,
Black America finds itself desperately searching
for the "people power" tools to effectively
counter the post-Katrina aggression.

The citizens of New Orleans are paying the cost
for the mistakes of the late Sixties and early
Seventies, when aspiring electoral and corporate
officeholders convinced Black folks that mass
movements were no longer necessary. Progress would
trickle down from the newly acquired heights.
Popular political capital could be wisely invested
in the few, the upwardly mobile.

What we got was chicken-with-his-head-cut-off Ray
Nagin and his many counterparts in plush offices
across Black America. We must invent Black Power
all over again, under changed conditions. New
Orleans in its present state is the worst possible
place to start - but that's where we're at. ____

BC Publishers Glen Ford and Peter Gamble are
writing a book to be titled, Barack Obama and the
Crisis in Black Leadership.

Mtangulizi Sanyika, of the African American
Leadership Project, can be contacted at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
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