Witness the massive padlock, tightly hugging its doors. That will tell you all you need to know about Hurricane Gustav and the federal government’s carefully orchestrated response. The padlock, roughly the size of a Frisbee, is set firmly around the doors of the Louisiana Superdome. The padlock articulates a message that would be clear to even a Bush or a Brownie: this storm will not be Katrina. By that I don’t mean, “We’ve learned a lot in the last three years” or whatever talking points the White House is putting out.
The padlock makes clear that the public relations hurricane battle has been well engaged. There will be no photo ops of 30,000 people herded into a luxury stadium that magically morphs into a homeless shelter from hell. There will be no opening up the stadium to the poor and unwashed, not after spending 185 million bucks to rebuild the dome and not with the NFL season right around the corner. There will be no one left behind, even if it means putting people on buses, taking them hundreds of miles away, and not even telling them the destination for them and their families. And, more than anything else, the padlock in all of its glistening, metallic glory, is a self-incriminating indictment. It is an admission that despite what we were told three years ago, a stadium isn’t really shelter; that the act of forcing people at gunpoint into the dome was a criminal act; and that believing any stadium could have redeeming social value as an emergency evacuation center, is a lie.
The padlock on the Superdome prevents any more ugly backdrops for “When the Levees Broke II”, and preserves the pristine field for Drew Brees, Reggie Bush, and the rest of the Saints. But it also raises more questions than answers: if people aren’t in the dome, then where are they?
Where are
Where are the 17,000 residents of greater
Where will people live when they return? Why won’t the city call for the suspension of the planned bulldozing of the city’s four largest housing projects? How will the people being bussed out, be able to move back if their homes have been flattened? If people can’t make it home, will they find their residence somewhere even more frightening than the dome?
Considering that many of the so called looters after Katrina, were fighting for their lives, and considering that the media had color-coded looters, with white residents classified as heroes, the implications of Nagin’s dictate is chilling. It’s horrifying to think that they could be laying their head in the former slave plantation known as
And what will the fate be of the hero as of now, the wetlands? The wetlands absorbed the worst of Gustav, before the hurricane slammed into the great city. As
The future of
E of S Nation: if you have the funds, and have something to give for those rebuilding after Hurricane Gustav in New Orleans, please click on the below linkhttp://www.commongroundrelief.org/taxonomy/term/12/9
[Dave Zirin is the author of the forthcoming “A People’s History of Sports in the
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