Sunday, August 31, 2008

Shouldn't have tried to rebuild....



So with Obama's speech the other day, we're still talking about the need to rebuild the city of New Orleans, a swamp. Why? Simply for the sake of human arrogance? after the last hurricane, people should have realized that, 'o.k., this is actually not the best place for city.', instead of, 'fuck nature, we will conquer all!!!!'. here's a good article from the Washington Post supporting this with consideration of the hurricane tomorrow, that only 3 years after the last, may devastate the area far worse than ever before. and it will only get more intense until people learn they cannot live there..... 

Nobody can deny New Orleans' cultural primacy or its historical importance. But before we refloat the sunken city, before we think of spending billions of dollars rebuilding levees that may not hold back the next storm, before we contemplate reconstructing the thousands of homes now disintegrating in the toxic tang of the flood, let's investigate what sort of place Katrina destroyed.

The city's romance is not the reality for most who live there. It's a poor place, with about 27 percent of the population of 484,000 living under the poverty line, and it's a black place, where 67 percent are African-American. In 65 percent of families living in poverty, no husband is present. When you overlap this New York Times map, which illustrates how the hurricane's floodwaters inundated 80 percent of the city, with this demographic map from the Greater New Orleans Community Data Center, which shows where the black population lives, and this one that shows where the poverty cases live, it's transparent whom Katrina hit the hardest.

New Orleans' public schools, which are 93 percent black, have failed their citizens. The state of Louisiana rates 47 percent of New Orleans schools as "Academically Unacceptable" and another 26 percent are under "Academic Warning." About 25 percent of adults have no high-school diploma.


The police inspire so little trust that witnesses often refuse to testify in court. University researchers enlisted the police in anexperiment last year, having them fire 700 blank gun rounds in a New Orleans neighborhood one afternoon. Nobody picked up the phone to report the shootings. Little wonder the city's homicide rate stands at 10 times the national average.

This city counts 188,000 occupied dwellings, with about half occupied by renters and half by owners. The housing stock is much older than the national average, with 43 percent built in 1949 or earlier (compared with 22 percent for the United States) and only 11 percent of them built since 1980 (compared with 35 for the United States). As we've observed, many of the flooded homes are modest to Spartan to ramshackle and will have to be demolished if toxic mold or fire don't take them first.

New Orleans puts the "D" into dysfunctional. Only a sadist would insist on resurrecting this concentration of poverty, crime, and deplorable schools. Yet that's what New Orleans' cheerleaders—both natives and beignet-eating tourists—are advocating. They predict that once they drain the water and scrub the city clean, they'll restore New Orleans to its former "glory."

Only one politician, Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert, dared question the wisdom of rebuilding New Orleans as it was, where it was. On Wednesday, Aug. 31, while meeting with the editorial board of the Daily Herald of Arlington Heights, Ill., he cited the geographical insanity of rebuilding New Orleans. "That doesn't make sense to me. … And it's a question that certainly we should ask."

"It looks like a lot of that place could be bulldozed," Hastert added.

For his candor and wisdom, Hastert was shouted down. Sen. Mary L. Landrieu, D-La., and others interpreted his remarks as evidence of the Republican appetite for destruction when it comes to disaster victims. But if you read the entire interview—reproduced here courtesy of the Daily Herald—you might conclude that Hastert was speaking heresy, but he wasn't saying anything ugly or even Swiftian. Klaus Jacob seconded Hastert yesterday (Sept. 6) in a Washington Post op-ed. A geophysicist by training, he noted that Katrina wasn't even a worst-case scenario. Had the storm passed a little west of New Orleans rather than a little east, the "city would have flooded faster, and the loss of life would have been greater."

Nobody disputes the geographical and oceanographic odds against New Orleans: that the Gulf of Mexico is a perfect breeding ground for hurricanes; that re-engineering the Mississippi River to control flooding has made New Orleans more vulnerable by denying it the deposits of sediment it needs to keep its head above water; that the aggressive extraction of oil and gas from the area has undermined the stability of its land.

"New Orleans naturally wants to be a lake," St. Louis University professor of earth and atmospheric sciences Timothy Kusky toldTime this week. "A city should never have been built there in the first place," he said to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Why was it? Settlers built the original city on a curve of high flood land that the Mississippi River had deposited over eons, hence the nickname "Crescent City." But starting in the late 1800s and continuing into the early 20th century, developers began clearing and draining swamps behind the crescent, even dumping landfill into Lake Pontchartrain to extend the city.

To chart the aggressive reclamation, compare this map from1798 with this one from 1908. Many of New Orleans' lower-lying neighborhoods, such as Navarre, the Lower Ninth Ward, Lake Terrace, and Pontchartrain Park, were rescued from the low-lying muck. The Lower Ninth Ward, clobbered by Katrina, started out as a cypress swamp, and by 1950 it was only half developed, according to the Greater New Orleans Community Data Center. Even such "high" land as City Park suffered from flooding before the engineers intervened. By the historical standards of the 400-year-old city, many of the heavily flooded neighborhoods are fresh off the boat.

The call to rebuild New Orleans' levee system may be mooted if its evacuated residents decide not to return. The federal government, which runs the flood-insurance business, sold only85,000 residential and commercial policies—this in a city of 188,000 occupied dwellings. Coverage is limited to $250,000 for building property and $100,000 for personal property. Because the insured can use the money elsewhere, there is no guarantee they'll choose to rebuild in New Orleans, which will remain extra-vulnerable until the levees are rebuilt.

Few uninsured landlords and poor home owners have the wherewithal to rebuild—or the desire. And how many of the city's well-off and wealthy workers—the folks who provide the city's tax base—will return? Will the doctors, lawyers, accountants, and professors have jobs to return to? According to the Wall Street Journal, many businesses are expected to relocate completely. Unless the federal government adopts New Orleans as its ward and pays all its bills for the next 20 years—an unlikely to absurd proposition—the place won't be rebuilt.

Barbara Bush will be denounced as being insensitive and condescending for saying yesterday that many of the evacuees she met in the Astrodome would prefer to stay in Texas. But she probably got it right. The destruction wrought by Katrina may turn out to be "creative destruction," to crib from Joseph Schumpeter, for many of New Orleans' displaced and dispossessed. Unless the government works mightily to reverse migration, a positive side-effect of the uprooting of thousands of lives will to be to deconcentrate one of the worst pockets of ghetto poverty in the United States.

Page One of today's New York Times illustrates better than I can how the economic calculations of individuals battered by Katrina may contribute to the city's ultimate doom:

In her 19 years, all spent living in downtown New Orleans, Chavon Allen had never ventured farther than her bus fare would allow, and that was one trip last year to Baton Rouge. But now that she has seen Houston, she is planning to stay.

"This is a whole new beginning, a whole new start. I mean, why pass up a good opportunity, to go back to something that you know has problems?" asked Ms. Allen, who had been earning $5.15 an hour serving chicken in a Popeyes restaurant.

New Orleans won't disappear overnight, of course. The French Quarter, the Garden District, West Riverside, Black Pearl, and other elevated parts of the city will survive until the ultimate storm takes them out—and maybe even thrive as tourist destinations and places to live the good life. But it would be a mistake to raise the American Atlantis. It's gone.

Thursday, August 28, 2008

Resemblance



RELATIVES?!

Sunday, August 24, 2008

What I think of Today


More Football. Go Ducks






EUGENE – The University of Oregon football team worked through its final scrimmage of the preseason on Friday afternoon at Autzen Stadium, running upwards of 80 plays and a host of situational and special teams drills.

“We still have some work to do heading into the Washington game, but overall I’ve been very pleased with our team’s mindset and composure during this Fall Camp,” said head coach Mike Bellotti.

Quarterback Justin Roper got the practice game off to an explosive start, leading the first string on an 80-yard touchdown drive. The redshirt sophomore completed 3-of-4 passes for 51 yards and capped the drive with a 25-yard rushing touchdown.

Senior Terence Scott caught two of Roper’s strikes for 44 yards before a seven-yard reception by Jeff Maehl set up the scoring run. That was the end of the day for Roper and the bulk of the first unit.

While Roper was efficient through the air, newcomer LeGarrette Blount was nearly unstoppable on the ground. The junior’s first two touches totaled 85 yards, including a 29-yard TD run.

“Am I impressed? Yes,” Bellotti said of his powerful back. “He had some pretty big holes to run through, but proved how difficult he is going to be to bring down in the open field.”

The Ducks were missing at least three potential starters on both sides of the ball as they nursed various injuries, but that allowed plenty of playing time for newcomers and others trying to fight their way up the depth chart.

Transfer Ellis Krout led all receivers with five catches and 49 yards, and true freshman quarterback Chris Harper was second only to Blount with 10 carries for 52 yards. Harper’s long run was a 25-yard touchdown, but he may have broken off a few longer rushes if plays had not been whistled dead early as a precaution.

True freshman defensive back Scott Grady was the standout on defense, blocking a field goal and returning an interception 100 yards for a score. He also had three tackles.

Redshirt frosh Matt Simms was the leading tackler with five, including two sacks and four tackles for a loss totaling negative 21 yards.

The Ducks will participate in the athletic department’s annual Fan Day tomorrow from 10 a.m. to noon in the Moshofsky Center before resuming their practice schedule later in the afternoon.

Sat, Aug 30 Washington * Eugene, Ore. 7 p.m. PT FSN
Sat, Sep 06 Utah State Eugene, Ore. 12:30 p.m. PT OSN
Sat, Sep 13 Purdue at West Lafayette, Ind. 12:30 p.m. PT ABC
Sat, Sep 20 Boise State Eugene, Ore. 12:30 p.m. PT OSN
Sat, Sep 27 Washington State * at Pullman, Wash. 3:15 p.m. PT FSN Northwest
Sat, Oct 04 USC * at Los Angeles, Calif. 5 p.m. PT ABC/ESPN
OSN
Sat, Oct 11 UCLA * Eugene, Ore. TBA
Sat, Oct 25 Arizona State * at Tempe, Ariz. TBA
Sat, Nov 01 California * at Berkeley, Calif. TBA
Sat, Nov 08 Stanford * Eugene, Ore. TBA
Sat, Nov 15 Arizona * Eugene, Ore. TBA
Sat, Nov 29 Oregon State * at Corvallis, Ore. 4 p.m. PT VERSUS
* Conference Games

portland oregon doin it beeg


YACHT - Summer Song from Jona Bechtolt on Vimeo.

I Love Steroids in the NFL

Shawne Merriman

SAN DIEGO -- Chargers Pro Bowl linebackerShawne Merriman said Saturday he has two torn ligaments in his left knee and has been told by doctors that he could suffer a possible career-ending injury if he attempts to play without having surgery.

Merriman said he has tears in both the posterior cruciate and lateral collateral ligaments. He said doctors agree that he needs surgery to repair the damage.

"It could be career-threatening if I did [play]," Merriman said. "It's a possibility. That possibility is still open."

A course of action has not been decided. Merriman, who will consult with a doctor in Miami early next week before making a decision, has been told reconstructive surgery would keep him out for the 2008 season. Another option is a less-invasive surgery that would allow him to play at some point in the season.

"They've all said the same things about the injury," Merriman said. "[They're] kind of surprised that I've been playing with it up to this point."

The Chargers open the regular season Sept. 7 against the Carolina Panthers. Merriman wants to play this season.

"That's first and foremost," Merriman said. "That's what I want to do. That's why this decision is even out there still and not already made, because I want to play, period. The question is what should I do? How long should I play with it?

"It's a thousand different options at this point and I'm just trying to make the best one."

Merriman left the team Tuesday to seek opinions from other doctors, a trek that included a visit with renowned surgeon James Andrews on Wednesday in Birmingham, Ala. He said he is seeking as many opinions as he can for a reason.

"I'm just trying to make the best decision possible for the team and for my career," Merriman said.

Coach Norv Turner has remained optimistic all week that Merriman will be able to play this season. He again expressed that hope Saturday.

"Right now, in talking to him, his mind-set is he's doing everything he can to get ready for Carolina, our opener," Turner said. "He just wants to get a little bit more information on his knee."

Merriman has made the Pro Bowl in each of his three NFL seasons. He has 39½ sacks in that span, more than any other NFL player.

Saturday, August 23, 2008

OMG



XOXOXOXOXOXOXOXOXO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!;}

New Hampshire by Sonic Youth


TRACE PAPER FLY ONWARD
TRACE PAPER FLY ONWARD

Friday, August 22, 2008

This Niga Betta win. even though the economy will crash even harder, give america the full black experience- fuck it

"The Senator," center, with the JV team at Punahou School, Hawaii, 1977.

Windmillin like Dominique Wilkins back in New York




Young Kate cat on the scene since 5-18-08

The New Interview






Margiela Speaks this Issue...... +curiously familiar format?? 

_OH YAH WE ARE STILL AT WAR

Harlem_54


Scram_3b

Scramble_4

Thursday, August 21, 2008

AMERICA


  1. AMERICA_
you are in deep trouble
you must convince your
CEOs Presidents and BoardMembers
to retire,
lay down arms,
give it up,
jump in a lake

  1. AMERICA_
dont you know the youth has answers for all of this?!
grant us power to lead
grant us an ear
grant us paychecks and royalties and pensions and savings
grant us insurance and memberships and entrance
for we still care about you

  1. AMERICA_
tell them to pass the torch
they are too old
they are too analog
they are trying too hard
they are asking us for help
but wont let us push the buttons

  1. AMERICA_
give them nice cars
and a nice house
and a nice bed to lay in
and peace of mind
and


  1. AMERICA,
we will give you CPR
our hands will hold your hand
we will raise your slumping chin
and lift you from the pavement

BIRK

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

amazing that espn published this/ its about time


and from a mainstream source??!! thank you rick reilly from espn.com for this article.

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Iron Mike



A continuing inspiration

Saturday, August 16, 2008

Svanska





















Tuesday, August 12, 2008

WILL HISTORY REPEAT ITSELF ON THIS GRAND SCALE???

alexander puts er in check. F.A.B. since 2k3BC
premier paper-pilers of the old milleni. Puttin it in park for papyrus pimpin
 
Paying the cost to be the boss. Thats yo life.
tre chic modelo. Supreme status. Eatin rice cakes and lettuce leaves.


no one did it BIGR b4, no one's done it BIGR since...

...what kind of legacy are you leaving?

-~B!RD

pUt tHAT On My Mom

thisthis is just how i feel right now. enjoy ya life. get that cheese. Get an early retirement. Free the HUS . All that shit. Git-g-git-gittin it. stupid windmillin like the hills of livermore, just got back cross country drivin in sweden right now you feelME

Monday, August 11, 2008

Meanwhile, Beijing Continues To Steal Spotlight




War continues to rage in Georgia. I read a figure stating that the Georgian troops were hugely overmatched, tallying roughly 21,000 troops compared to an oppressive 400,000 Russian troops (along with about 7,000 "militarized vehicles" or tanks). 
Georgian soldiers : Russian tanks :: 3 : 1

ERSTWHILE

The world press spotlight continues to shine superficially bright on the 2008 BEIJNG OLYMPICS, one of the most egregious displays of hypocrisy in the history of the modern hominid. For real. China has consistently and unabashedly committed some of /if not/ THE most atrocious human rights violations ever, and we are giving them a pavlovian treat; effectively handing them the pole position as a world power. We all know that this is part of a trend, that only undernourished India can compete with China's huge, globally irresponsible population spike, but now our media networks are lauding them, confirming the passing of the torch. 

And they built walls in front of all things that did not meet the aesthetic quota. Holy Shit. Its the old 'spit-the-broccoli-into-the-napkin-during-dinner' trick. And we are buying every cent of it.

As long as the untapped markets in china are soon (or now) to be exploited by our top 1%, all the logistics just dont matter. Lets all get sickeningly deplorably rich and say "fuck it" to the idea of our grandchildren enjoying paper products, the beauty of the wilderness, and fresh air...Because now the ugly impotent glib top-of-one-percenters will all now know how it feels to be the cool guy who can get girls the old fashioned way. 

There are bigger fish to fry than these negligibly important athletic feats, and while we are crazed by the idea that Mike Phelps might outswim Andrew Spitz, poor europeans and iraqis and AMERICANS are being bombed into oblivion for unjust reasons; News hardly worth of page 19...

...GET IT TOGETHER GUYS!

images courtesy of new york times and bbc

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Just touched down in Stockholm, feels like home

So the representable crew just touched down in Stockholm Sweden for some much needed r & r before beginning a few astronomic projects.  this is the much needed calm before the storm. I am sitting here lakeside in a small aristocratic suburb about 20 minutes out of the city center enjoying the sound of kids playing. A rusty bicycle comes up the hill, and a lone old grasshopper plays. Houses look old and well built but are painted in bright inviting colors, a testament to the cheery welcoming of the Swedes. The vegetation has been very interesting to me, as the whole area is largely dripping in green from big deciduous trees, to thick bramble underbrush, to large wet grass meadows. It is AMAZING to truly be able to hear my own thoughts for the first time in months! . I feel at home here among the trees and the people and the tradition, which as a Norwegian, feels very similar to the imagined place that would have harbored and nurtured my ancestors. Tomorrow I will explore the urban center!

Pictures and stories later

Love from Stockholm, 
B!RD

Monday, August 4, 2008

...

..............................criminal

Sunday, August 3, 2008

Into The Arms Of America



  1. a=b
  1. b=c
  1. a=c

Italian Marie Claire. Vahina Giocante


 that stars and stripes Chanel-thing-thing go too
ph. Francois Rother

*Tremendo Pound* in the Studio nOW. Know about it- This Shit Go.


Sorry For the ad Bird, but THIS SHIT GO.


FREE HUSALINO

Beast Mode Tavi








Love This Girl

early, Bird Spread













Jacques' got options










Friday, August 1, 2008

Beast Mode in the Town


Marshawn reppin how we Do