One of the biggest injustices ever done
to the Bush Administration was the claim that the federal government
abandoned the people of New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane
Katrina.
You know the narrative by now: angry liberals who have a
contemptuous view of President Bush like to spin a yarn of a White
House completely indifferent to the pain and loss of all those people
left in Katrina’s wake. The more radical the storyteller, the more evil
the behavior at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. becomes. New Orleans is a
Democratic town, some say, so Bush was glad to have those folks wiped
out. Or an even more asinine claim is that since so many Blacks live in
New Orleans, the feds just didn’t care to save them.
But now, in October of 2007, comes a pretty extraordinary request from
the Police Superintendent there, a guy named Warren Riley. It seems Mr.
Riley appreciates the presence of hundreds of National Guard troops who
have been patrolling the streets of the city since Katrina so much that
he wants to keep them there – indefinitely.
Evidently, the Guard patrols the less populated areas of New
Orleans so that the actual police officers can spend more time in the
busier parts of the city. But in mid-January of 2008, the National
Guard is finally scheduled to leave. Riley said, “I would like to see
them stay, at least long enough for us to get one more group through
the (Police) Academy,” he said.
Frankly, I had no idea that the National Guard has been
functioning as an auxiliary police department in New Orleans for the
past two years, did you?
But the fascinating part of this whole issue is the way the
news media tries to connect the skyrocketing murder rates in New
Orleans with a kind of post-Katrina syndrome. This week, the Associated
Press reported that the city earned the title of murder capital of the
nation in 2006 when 162 people were killed. Already this year, that
number has been exceeded.
The truth of the matter is that Hurricane Katrina doesn’t have
anything to do with the crime rate in New Orleans. Just like libs like
to blame even the arrival of a hurricane on a Republican president (as
if George Bush conjures up the weather from a mystical weather room
near the Oval Office), the media is in love with trying to pin
everything bad in New Orleans today on the 2005 hurricane.
It’s time for a reality check.
If you do a Google search for “New Orleans Crime Rate,” the
first news story that will appear is an Associated Press story from
August 18, 2005, entitled “New Orleans Murder Rate on the Rise Again.”
This story, which ran 11 days before Katrina, reported on the
eye-popping 265 murders committed in 2004. The article also pointed out
that in 1994 the city experienced 421 homicides.
I didn’t do very well in math, but 265 and 421 sound like a
higher number of killings than last year’s 162. Or even this year’s
163.
The hard truth is that New Orleans has always been
crime-infested. There is no connection between Hurricane Katrina and
crime. That’s just part of a touchy-feely narrative that is supposed to
make us think that anything wrong with New Orleans has to be as a
result of Hurricane Katrina. It’s an extension of the bald-faced lie
that the Bush Administration purposefully ignored the plight of the
city after the floodwaters hit.
If anything, many of the criminals who called New Orleans home
have invaded other parts of the country after evacuating and are now
perpetrating felonies on unsuspecting victims in Texas, Florida,
Oklahoma, and all over the United States.
Ann Coulter likes to expose the liberals’ “doctrine of
infallibility,” where certain sympathetic figures (9/11 victims, war
heroes) can become activists and no one is allowed to challenge or
criticize them because of their victimhood. The same thing is happening
with New Orleans. We’re expected to keep National Guard troops there to
help the police officers do their jobs as if Hurricane Katrina turned a
paradise like New Orleans into a crime-ridden cesspool.
I hate to burst the bubble of people who like to romanticize
New Orleans. But the decadence, danger and filth in New Orleans were
there well before Hurricane Katrina ever came ashore.
Media Dishonesty in New Orleans
By Mike Gallagher
Friday, October 19, 2007
i'am black and wasn't in NO 12hrs and was a victim of theft and robbery. the police know who this repeat offender is. he dropped his wallet while robbing me. i have yet to hear anything as far as this criminal being caught. he was even filmed on surveillance camera doing the crime. my feelings have turned for them type of people there is NO order in new orleans i was robbed right across the street from the police station. i want justice and the man in jail but was told this type of crime isn't a priority. if i have to write the gen atty and the govenor i want this prosecuted and my civil rights protected. mr. mayor and city of new orlaens
Posted by: richard | October 20, 2007 at 10:55 AM