little baghdad

DOGS THAT BARK

Registered User
Forum Member
Jul 13, 1999
19,515
211
63
Bowling Green Ky
161 dead with with 200,000 population?
Should we pull out :)


New Orleans Residents March to Demand Action Against Violent Crime Spree

Friday , January 12, 2007




NEW ORLEANS ? More than 1,000 people marched on City Hall on Thursday, seeking an end to the violence that has claimed nine lives in this struggling city since New Year's Day.

Members of the city's popular Hot 8 Brass Band ? whose drummer, Dinerral Shavers, was shot and killed in front of his family Dec. 28 ? led the march, chanting "We Shall Overcome" as they carried a banner that read "March For Survival, Walk With Us."

Mayor Ray Nagin's office said the mayor would address the crowd after it completed the short trip from historic Canal Street.

Several marchers held signs reading "Silence is Violence." One said the signs were a reference to police complaints that witnesses to some killings are not coming forward.

"Seeing a crime, seeing criminal activity and not saying something is a crime. Tell somebody, even if they tell someone who can speak on your behalf. Get the word out," said Amy Brown, 35, who said she is rebuilding a home in the Central City neighborhood, home to some of the worst violence.

"Everybody that comes back is struggling, so to have this happen is so wrong," said Pauline Patterson, 40, a bar owner who lives in the neighborhood where independent filmmaker Helen Hill was shot to death last week. "I know that City Hall's hands are tied, and they need more police officers, but something has to be done."

On Wednesday, Gov. Kathleen Blanco endorsed a plan announced earlier this week to increase patrols and use checkpoints to crack down on criminals. State police and the National Guard have been supplementing police patrols since June.

New Orleans had 161 homicides last year, the lowest total in 60 years. But the population was way down from its pre-Katrina total of 455,000, and is still only about 200,000.
 

StevieD

Registered User
Forum Member
Jun 18, 2002
9,509
44
48
72
Boston
Yes, another one of Bush's shinning moments wasn't it. Too bad those people are still having so much trouble down there. Maybe federal funds to get more cops on the street would help, kind of like a "Surge." :shrug:
 

The Sponge

Registered User
Forum Member
Aug 24, 2006
17,263
97
0
Why don't they send 20,000 troops to New Orleans or Baltimore?

Don't be rediculous dan. You know very well that our people when it comes to Republicans will always be last on the list. Bush did send some help right after he crushed the Davis Bacon act in New Orleans so the workers could get paid piss and his buddies would make a lot more money. Probably why its still a disgrace over there. I think once again their was no open bidding. These guys are just wonderful people. Especially when it comes to our people.
 

StevieD

Registered User
Forum Member
Jun 18, 2002
9,509
44
48
72
Boston
This is the twisted Neocon way of sleeping with the deaths in Iraq. Because people die in NO it is supposed to be ok for our soldiers to die in Iraq. This illustrates what we are up against.
 

Nick Douglas

Registered User
Forum Member
Oct 31, 2000
3,688
15
0
48
Los Angeles, CA, USA
Inter-community violence is almost always the result of a poor economy. This isn't a poor economy judged by financial markets and other macro indicators, but if you look at the percentage of money going to wages in the upper/middle, middle and lower classes, we're doing terrible.
 
Bet on MyBookie
Top