Posts tagged crime-wave

Mail Call

January 16th, 2007 by Loki

I would like to share a piece of mail I received today. It was forwarded to me by my editor Nathan Morrison and I think it is indicative of the questions being asked in other parts of the country. After all, there is not much beyond soundbites and highly condensed (and usually ill informed) mainstream media on the subject.

This is probably the way that most people outside of NOLA see the situation. I hope I have done some justice to these questions. The original author’s name has been removed along with the headers.

Ok, Nathan, I watched the video documentary you said all should see. My question is…why?

T______, Loki here, hopefully able to provide sufficient answer to your questions (which are good ones, by the way). I am cc-ing Nathan Morrison on this and cross posting it on my column as well since these are common questions. I hope you do not mind. Let’s take it point by point.

I have read some bloggs by people in NO and realize that the situation there is not what the media has lead us to believe. What I am not clear on is how this situation has been blamed on Katrina. Some of the incidents that the people interviewed referred to were 10 years old. Are they blaming the city, state and federal governments and their lack of action in regard to Katrina, for incidents that happened so long ago?

I refer you to Bart Everson’s speech at City Hall, “This is NOT a Katrina problem.” The lack of leadership from our elected officials has allowed it to expand to disturbing proportions in the wake of the Storm. The March occured because the deaths of two particular members of the community, Dick Shavers and Helen Hill, galvanized both the black and white poulace to anger over the ridiculous body count in the city. Shavers was a member of the Hot 8 Brass Band, a coach and a teacher who was highly respected. Helen Hill was a local film maker and has been involved in working with the disadvantaged here for many years. They were only two of ten, but the esteem in which they were held was a catalyst to action for many.

I thought that the crime issues that these people are enduring were the result of the local and federal governments failure to take care of the people after the hurricane.

That contributes to the situation, yes. 80% of the city is still uninhabitable wreckage, and the much vaunted federal monies have not reached the people they were supposedly intended to help. The Road Home Program for instance has issued only about a hundred checks. Anderson Cooper did some decent work on his 360 program the other night that included this very topic.

It sounds to me as if this state has been out of control for much longer than Post Katrina. Also, I would like to know why the government is being blamed for it’s citizens and their lack of respect for people and their property?

The government is being blamed for lack of leadership and lack of action. If you look at the text of the speeches made you will fid that they address both community AND governmental accountability. The last straw was Warren Riley, our Superintendant of Police, sating that crime had dropped by almost twenty per cent in his New Years address to the media. This was not just simple spin, but a blatant lie as the actual per capita numbers reveal a 60% increase in violent crime in NOLA.

The blame should be placed on the criminals. Or is it believed that it is not the criminals fault that they do not obey the law? Is it the governments fault that these people were not educated enough to know what the laws are and how to live within them?

That is not the simplistic issue it would seem at first glance. There are many generations of economic and cultural issues that have created the culture of violence we see here today. Bottom line though is that our friends and neighbors are dying in unprecedented numbers and we all share the blame, leaders and community alike.

So, what is this video really about? What are they protesting? Has the government really failed them or are they failing themselves by not teaching their children to obey the law and respect others and their property? Is this the previous generations problem for raising a generation of delinquents? What can a local government really do with people that believe they are above the law. Ok, tell me what you think about my rantings and tell me how off base I am. I can take it. Let me have it. T______

T________, I am not going to “let you have it,” These are valid questions from someone who is unfamiliar with the situation and has little data to work with. The video Dambala made was an attemtp to document an historic event. Getting 5000 people in NOLA, across racial boundaries, unified and mtivated for something like this is a first in our city’s annals (be that for good or ill). The failures you ask about are our own, both government and community. As to what the local government can do, they can start by doing their jobs.
Yes, there is violence and corruption aplenty. (Sounds a bit like DC when you frame it that way, doesn’t it?) The problem is that the system here is broken and has been for awhile. The criminal justice system does not work, look at our 7% conviction rate to see that.I would like to invite you to check out the Media Roundup that my fellow blogger Maitri has compiled at http://vatul.net/blog/index.php/1152/ I think you will find a lot of food for thought. Please also feel free to contact me either through the comment box on my page at Powers and Morrison, my own blog at http://humidcity.com, or via email humidcity (at) gmail (dot) com with any further thoughts or questions.

-George “Loki” Williams
New Orleans Correspondant, Powers & Morrison

ADDENDUM: This speaks succinctly to the broken state of the criminal justice system in NOLA, please give it a read.

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On The Air Again

January 15th, 2007 by Loki

Once more I have been invited to be a guest on BBC Radio Five’s Pods and Blogs show this evening to speak about the subject of our recent ills. I will post a link to the particular show once I have one.

EDIT: The interview will be at 8:30 pm CST and I will be joined by Maitri, if you get Radio Five give it a listen. If not it will be accessible from the link above  soon afeterwards.

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Post March Interlude

January 11th, 2007 by Loki

There is little I can say as I sit and listen to the sirens (7 since returning home now) so I will be brief.

Bart and Karen are my new heroes, brilliant job giving them what for.

I will leave it to someone far more talented than I to state:

Marvin Gaye: What’s Going On

Mother, mother
There’s too many of you crying
Brother, brother, brother
There’s far too many of you dying
You know we’ve got to find a way
To bring some lovin’ here today

Father, father
We don’t need to escalate
You see, war is not the answer
For only love can conquer hate
You know we’ve got to find a way
To bring some lovin’ here today

Picket lines and picket signs
Don’t punish me with brutality
Talk to me, so you can see
Oh, what’s going on
What’s going on
Yeah, what’s going on
Ah, what’s going on

(lyric courtesy of bifemmefatale, former HumidCity writer)

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beating around the bush?

January 10th, 2007 by PH Fred

as i drove home from another therapeutic tete a tete, the radio mumbled with the latest presidential prescription for the best medicine. phrases stuck in my head: “our safety here at home, the consequences of failure, conducting patrols and setting up checkpoints, economic assistance, defending its territorial integrity and stabilizing the region, intention to destroy our way of life… ”

i imagined a war torn state with military convoys, secret missions, sirens, flashing lights, gunfire, danger… as i exited the interstate i saw several police cars, a few hummers, military and police officers, a young criminal in handcuffs… i wondered if the radio was talking about there or here… or was i just dreaming again … imagine that and BLOG THIS!

p.h. fred
notthat.com

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Quandry

January 9th, 2007 by Loki

Elegantly stated:

Metroblogging New Orleans: Pondering and proximity
I love my city. I no longer have small children I feel I need to protect. Even if I entertain thoughts of leaving, where would I go? I could sell the house and (using an honest assessment and not some pie-in-the-sky numbers) do a little better than breaking even, but then what? What’s the freaking answer here? If you’ve read any of my stuff before (including the last entry), then you know I’m a big supporter of block-by-block neighborhood action and unity. But what do you do when the bad guys start blowing out windshields across the street? These are seriously bad dudes who really, really, REALLY don’t care if they die or go to prison. Pragmatism says to load the artillery, wait outside until they do something again and then just kill them. But you know how this works — then one of their homeboys will decide to get even and, before long, it’s me or TBK or my son who gets blown away while going out to our car to get something. It’s our own mini-me version of what’s been going on in the MIddle East for thousands of years and what’s been going on in Central City for several decades. Vigilantism is its own tragic trap.

This is happening in AMERICA, for god’s sake! No wonder everyone I know is on anti-depressants or self medicating! We truly are the lost and forgotten. And to think that my father spent two years in a prison camp to defend this country …

EDIT: Just got an email that makes me aware clarification of my meaning is needed here. I am not saying the rest of the country should do something about the crime here, that is purely due to local incompetence and culpability. What I am trying to state is that it is bitter to think that these conditions exist in the nation that is the self-proclaimed leader of the free world. These circumstances are the result of decades of missteps by the local government and community combined with the chaos and lack of infrastructure created by the Federal Flood. We have created a generation without remorse and given them a Mad Max style wasteland to live out their Lord of the Flies fantasies in.

If any further clarification is needed, leave a comment.

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