Enjoy the holiday/holy day and reflect on the meaning/s of Christmas.
Ed

(Just a thought:  If you know someone who may get something
out of these mailings, just send me a name and email address.
it's easy to check for duplications and it's free, for them and me.)

http://select.nytimes.com/2006/12/25/opinion/25herbert.html?th&emc=th

The Ninth Ward Revisited

By BOB HERBERT
Published: December 25, 2006

Spike Lee, who has made a stunning six-hour documentary about New Orleans
and Hurricane Katrina, was telling me the other day about his first visit to
the city's Lower Ninth Ward, which was annihilated by the flood that
followed the storm.

After more than a year his voice was still filled with a sense of horrified
wonder. "To see it with your own eyes," he said, "and you're doing a
360-degree turn, and you see nothing but devastation .... I wasn't born
until 1957 but I automatically thought about Hiroshima or Nagasaki or Berlin
after the war.

"It looked like someone had dropped a nuclear bomb. It was all brown, and
there was the smell, the stench. It was horrible."

His words echoed the comments of a woman I had met on a recent trip to New
Orleans. She remembered standing in the Ninth Ward after the waters had
receded. "Everything was covered in brown crud," she said. "There was
nothing living. No birds. No dogs. There was no sound. And none of the
fragrance that's usually associated with New Orleans, like jasmine and
gardenias and sweet olives. It was just a ruin, all death and destruction."

Said Mr. Lee: "You couldn't believe that this was the United States of
America."

The film, which was produced by HBO and has been released in a boxed set of
DVDs, is called "When the Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts." It's Mr.
Lee's best work, an informative, infuriating and heartbreaking record of a
cataclysmic historical event - the loss of a great American city.

What boggles the mind now is the way the nation seems to be taking this loss
in stride. Much of New Orleans is still a ruin. More than half of its
population is gone and an enormous percentage of the people who are still in
town are suffering.

As Mr. Lee noted, the public face of the city is to some extent a deceptive
feel-good story. The Superdome, a chamber of horrors during the flood, has
been made new again. And the city's football team, the Saints, has turned
its fortunes around and is sprinting into the National Football League
playoffs. (They beat the Giants in New York yesterday, 30-7.)

"They spent the money on the Superdome, and you can get drunk in the French
Quarter again, and some of the conventions are coming back," Mr. Lee said,
"so people are trying to say that everything's O.K. But that's a lie.

"They need to stop this focus on downtown and the Superdome because it does
a disservice to all those people who are still in very deep trouble. They
need to get the cameras out of the French Quarter and go to New Orleans
East, or the Lower Ninth Ward. Or go to St. Bernard Parish. You'll see that
everything is not O.K. Far from it."

Vast acreages of ruined homes and staggering amounts of garbage and filth
still burden the city. Scores of thousands of people remain jobless and
homeless. The public schools that are open, for the most part, are a
scandal. And the mental health situation, for the people in New Orleans and
the evacuees scattered across the rest of the U.S., is yet another
burgeoning tragedy.

There's actually a fifth act, only recently completed, to "When the Levees
Broke," in which a number of people reflect on what has been happening since
the storm. Wynton Marsalis, ordinarily the mildest of individuals, looks
into the camera with an expression of anger and deep disgust. "What is the
government doing?" he asks. "They're trying to figure out how to hand out
contracts. How to lower the minimum wage so the subcontractors can make all
the money. Steal money from me and you, man. We're paying taxes, you
understand what I'm saying?"

For most of America, Katrina is an old story. In Mr. Lee's words, people are
suffering from "Katrina fatigue." They're not much interested in how the
levees have only been patched up to pre-Katrina levels of safety, or how the
insurance companies have ripped off thousands upon thousands of hard-working
homeowners who are now destitute, or how, as USA Today reported, "One $7.5
billion Louisiana program to help people rebuild or relocate has put money
in the hands of just 87 of the 89,403 homeowners who applied."

There are other matters vying for attention. The war in Iraq is going badly.
Donald Trump and Rosie O'Donnell are feuding. And, after all, it's
Christmas.

"You know how Americans are," Mr. Lee said. "We're on to the next thing."

***

Date: Sun, 24 Dec 2006 17:36:06 -0500 (EST)
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [NYTr] An Interview with Nina Simone

AP: You've often been called an angry performer, an angry songwriter--

NS: Let me finish what you're trying to say. I believed that at one time
it was possible to change the race problem. I believed that it was
possible for Martin Luther King to become president, for Jesse Jackson
to become president. But I don't believe that anymore. My anger was fire
and I was pushing that all that time, but I'm not angry now. I'm
philosophical, and I am happy where I am because I can't change the
world. I'm getting older and I have no business being out there
preaching like I did.


Mississippi Goddam
 (Nina Simone, 1963)

 The name of this tune is Mississippi Goddam
 And I mean every word of it

 Alabama's gotten me so upset
 Tennessee made me lose my rest
 And everybody knows about Mississippi Goddam

 Alabama's gotten me so upset
 Tennessee made me lose my rest
 And everybody knows about Mississippi Goddam

 Can't you see it
 Can't you feel it
 It's all in the air
 I can't stand the pressure much longer
 Somebody say a prayer

 Alabama's gotten me so upset
 Tennessee made me lose my rest
 And everybody knows about Mississippi Goddam

 This is a show tune
 But the show hasn't been written for it, yet

 Hound dogs on my trail
 School children sitting in jail
 Black cat cross my path
 I think every day's gonna be my last

 Lord have mercy on this land of mine
 We all gonna get it in due time
 I don't belong here
 I don't belong there
 I've even stopped believing in prayer

 Don't tell me
 I tell you
 Me and my people just about due
 I've been there so I know
 They keep on saying "Go slow!"

 But that's just the trouble
 "do it slow"
 Washing the windows
 "do it slow"
 Picking the cotton
 "do it slow"
 You're just plain rotten
 "do it slow"
 You're too damn lazy
 "do it slow"
 The thinking's crazy
 "do it slow"
 Where am I going
 What am I doing
 I don't know
 I don't know

 Just try to do your very best
 Stand up be counted with all the rest
 For everybody knows about Mississippi Goddam

 I made you thought I was kiddin' didn't we

 Picket lines
 School boycotts
 They try to say it's a communist plot
 All I want is equality
 for my sister my brother my people and me

 Yes you lied to me all these years
 You told me to wash and clean my ears
 And talk real fine just like a lady
 And you'd stop calling me Sister Sadie

 Oh but this whole country is full of lies
 You're all gonna die and die like flies
 I don't trust you any more
 You keep on saying "Go slow!"
 "Go slow!"

 But that's just the trouble
 "do it slow"
 Desegregation
 "do it slow"
 Mass participation
 "do it slow"
 Reunification
 "do it slow"
 Do things gradually
 "do it slow"
 But bring more tragedy
 "do it slow"
 Why don't you see it
 Why don't you feel it
 I don't know
 I don't know

 You don't have to live next to me
 Just give me my equality
 Everybody knows about Mississippi
 Everybody knows about Alabama
 Everybody knows about Mississippi Goddam

 That's it!

 (Nina Simone, 1963)

Bill Koehnlein
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

==
Kings had always been involving and impoverishing their people in wars,
pretending generally, if not always, that the good of the people was the
object: Abraham Lincoln

=
The statesmen will invent cheap lies, putting the blame upon the nation that
is attacked, and every man will be glad of those conscience-soothing
falsities, and will diligently study them, and refuse to examine any
refutations of them; and thus he will by and by convince himself that the
war is just, and will thank God for the better sleep he enjoys after this
process of grotesque self-deception. Mark Twain, "The Mysterious Stranger"
(1910)

=
"What kind of victory is it when someone is left defeated? What difference
does it make to the dead, the orphans, and the homeless, whether the mad
destruction is wrought under the name of totalitarianism or the holy name of
liberty and democracy. What is a war criminal? Was not war itself a crime
against God and humanity, and, therefore, were not all those who sanctioned,
engineered and conducted wars, war criminals? The weak can never forgive.
Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong. Non-cooperation with evil is a
sacred duty." Gandhi





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