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excon
May 19, 2011, 06:54 AM
Hello:

Now, I don't know about you, but if I built my house where it was safe, and the government decided to flood MY house instead those built where it was UNSAFE, simply because they had more MONEY or there were MORE of them, would really PISS me off. In fact, I think I'd try to stop them.

What legal justification do they have for doing these things??

excon

smoothy
May 19, 2011, 07:32 AM
I don't know either, but I'm with your there. I'd be mighty pissed off too.

Its not all about money.. its political connections. If you think its not... think again...
New Orleans... their entitlement mentality... Current President watching out for his homies. Don't know the demographics of Baton Rouge and to tell you the truth I don't feel like looking them up.

Its all about pronouncing... someones going to bend over and take it... and I'd rather do it to the people that work hardest but are fairly quiet... than the people that don't but complain the most.

excon
May 19, 2011, 08:13 AM
New Orleans...their entitlement mentality... Current President watching out for his homies. Hello again, smoothy:

Your racism never ceases to amaze me.

excon

smoothy
May 19, 2011, 08:28 AM
Hello again, smoothy:

Your racism never ceases to amaze me.

excon


Really... then what did YOU call Mayor Nagan's very public comments about a CHOCOLATE New Orleans? If a white mayor had commented about HIS majority white town remaining a VANILLA city... that wouldn't have been racist?

And the Fact Mississippi was harder hit... but they didn't sit on their butts expecting it ALL to be done for them like New Orleans did, and still is.


Laziness and entitlement mentalities know no racial boundaries. Political ones... YES... racial ones... no.

excon
May 19, 2011, 08:33 AM
Really....then what did YOU call Mayor Nagan's very public comments about a CHOCOLATE New Orleans? Hello again, smoothy:

I didn't say you were the ONLY racist around.

excon

smoothy
May 19, 2011, 08:42 AM
Hello again, smoothy:

I didn't say you were the ONLY racist around.

excon

Might want to look in a mirror then. Because you are likely more of a racist than I am.

I hate lazy people that whine about being entitled to everything but won't get off their duffs to do anything. What color they are means nothing to me.

Synnen
May 19, 2011, 08:47 AM
Are you talking about the blasted levees? Or about the opened floodgates?

There is a HUGE difference between the two, Excon.

excon
May 19, 2011, 08:52 AM
Might want to look in a mirror then. Because you are likely more of a racist than I am. Hello again, smoothy:

I don't doubt race played a part. But, when you TELL me instead of SHOW me, I know the answer comes from your racist heart, instead of your analytical brain.

excon

PS> Are you now DENYING that you're a racist?? It's only LAZY people who WHINE that you dislike?? Then who are the HOMIES you were referring to?? Dude! At least the Aryan Nation ADMITS they're racist. What's holding you back?

excon
May 19, 2011, 08:55 AM
Are you talking about the blasted levees? Or about the opened floodgates? There is a HUGE difference between the two,Hello Synn:

I'm talking about the decision by the government to open the floodgates. If the government blasted the levees, then I'm talking about that too.

Tell me what I'm missing.

excon

tomder55
May 19, 2011, 08:57 AM
They had no choice . Yeah it sucks but there are worse things than some farms getting washed out . There are many refineries in the path of a flooded Mississippi that they could not allow to get innundated with flood waters... and yes it would be unacceptable to have New Orleans flood again.

Here's a tangent... what do you think is worse for the Gulf... the BP spill which the Gulf seems to be self cleaning of very nicely... or the toxic stew of industrial and agricultural chemicals about to be washed into the Gulf from the Mississippi River ?

smoothy
May 19, 2011, 09:00 AM
Are you talking about the blasted levees? Or about the opened floodgates?

There is a HUGE difference between the two, excon.

I am assuming the opened floodgates from my own perspective. I understand the reasoning on the blasted levi part at least. There breach is imminent... and picking where the breach happens can limit damage locally.

The floodgates are purely screwing one group to the benefit of another.

Synnen
May 19, 2011, 09:04 AM
The blasting:

Mississippi River flooding: After levee blast, threat shifts to Memphis - CSMonitor.com (http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/2011/0503/Mississippi-River-flooding-After-levee-blast-threat-shifts-to-Memphis)

The floodgates:

New Flood Gates Open In Louisiana, River Cresting In Vicksburg, Mississippi : The Two-Way : NPR (http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2011/05/19/136456623/new-flood-gates-open-in-louisiana-river-cresting-in-vicksburg-mississippi)

Here's the thing: Where it was blasted, I would be upset and talking to a lawyer. Suing the government will be pretty tough, though.

Where they opened the gates--those people have KNOWN, for THIRTY EIGHT YEARS, that their property has the potential of being flooded. They got letters from the Army Corps of Engineers reminding them of it, too. Those people have ALWAYS known that they could be flooded at any time to alleviate pressure on the river. To hell with those people whining. They have NO REASON to whine. They have the Same whine as the people that built lower than sea level in Nawlins and cried because they flooded. If you live on a flood plain--whether normal or directed--you can't whine when you're flooded.

smoothy
May 19, 2011, 09:06 AM
Hello again, smoothy:

I don't doubt race played a part. But, when you TELL me instead of SHOW me, I know the answer comes from your racist heart, instead of your analytical brain.

excon

PS> Are you now DENYING that you're a racist??? It's only LAZY people who WHINE that you dislike??? Then who are the HOMIES you were referring to??? Dude! At least the Aryan Nation ADMITS they're racist. What's holding you back?

Lazy people aren't a race. If they were they would be extinct.

When YOU hear lazy... you assume Blacks right away. When I hear lazy... I think white trash in trailers with couches on the front porch waiting for the welfare check to go buy more beer as a first thought.

Obama has been playing the race card as well as class warfare since he entered the political arena. Not even the Democrats deny that.

And the Obama Administration has systematically punished those who don't kiss their feet. And they got caught again recently barring a Boston Newspaper from press conferences because they gave Mitt Romney a more prominent headline.

smoothy
May 19, 2011, 09:15 AM
The blasting:

Mississippi River flooding: After levee blast, threat shifts to Memphis - CSMonitor.com (http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/2011/0503/Mississippi-River-flooding-After-levee-blast-threat-shifts-to-Memphis)

The floodgates:

New Flood Gates Open In Louisiana, River Cresting In Vicksburg, Mississippi : The Two-Way : NPR (http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2011/05/19/136456623/new-flood-gates-open-in-louisiana-river-cresting-in-vicksburg-mississippi)

Here's the thing: Where it was blasted, I would be upset and talking to a lawyer. Suing the government will be pretty tough, though.

Where they opened the gates--those people have KNOWN, for THIRTY EIGHT YEARS, that their property has the potential of being flooded. They got letters from the Army Corps of Engineers reminding them of it, too. Those people have ALWAYS known that they could be flooded at any time to alleviate pressure on the river. To hell with those people whining. They have NO REASON to whine. They have the EXACT same whine as the people that built lower than sea level in Nawlins and cried because they flooded. If you live on a flood plain--whether normal or directed--you can't whine when you're flooded.

I agree except the fact... that is part of the bread basket... and its all pretty flat down there. It's not like there are a lot of hills you can put everything on. And you can't drive hundreds of miles a day to tend a farm.

But its like... we flood thousands of acres of rural peoples homes businesses and farms to save a few square miles of city dwellers apartments and businesses.


Seems pretty lopsided and politically driven to me. BUT yeah... now matter how you slice it... someone is getting screwed. There is no everybody wins choice that could be made. And making no choice still means someone gets screwed.

excon
May 19, 2011, 09:20 AM
They had no choice . Yeah it sucks but there are worse things than some farms getting washed out . Hello tom:

I don't doubt the decision was made for the "greater good". But, it sounds so damn socialistic - especially coming from somebody like you. You DID want the banks to fail, didn't you?

I'll bet you'd be singing a different tune if it was YOUR house.

excon

tomder55
May 19, 2011, 09:40 AM
I would not build a house on a flood plain. Nothing socialistic about this .Governments have to make decisions for the common defense all the time.

NeedKarma
May 19, 2011, 09:55 AM
Governments have to make decisions for the common defense all the time.I like how you omitted "greater good" and replaced it with 'defense'. ;)

Synnen
May 19, 2011, 10:04 AM
/shrug---that was the whole POINT of the floodgates.

This way, a couple hundred people are in a disaster zone rather than a couple thousand.

Makes sense to me. Especially since they already KNEW that that was the choice that would be made, via those letters they were sent every year.

tomder55
May 19, 2011, 10:07 AM
I like how you omitted "greater good" and replaced it with 'defense'. ;)

Yes it was intentional because the common defense is in the Constitution.

excon
May 19, 2011, 10:09 AM
Makes sense to me. Hello again, Synn:

Ok, I'm convinced...

excon

Wondergirl
May 19, 2011, 10:09 AM
Does the Constitution also cover onslaughts from Mother Nature and how we defend ourselves from her?

tomder55
May 19, 2011, 10:10 AM
/shrug---that was the whole POINT of the floodgates.

This way, a couple hundred people are in a disaster zone rather than a couple thousand.

Makes sense to me. Especially since they already KNEW that that was the choice that would be made, via those letters they were sent every year.

Basically there is only so much humans can do to control nature. I just read this in Forbes and did not realize the natural flow of the river was severely disrupted by all these grand engineering schemes . Evidently the river is trying to right things by flowing where it wants to go.
Is This The Year The Atchafalaya River 'Captures' The Mississippi? - Christopher Helman - Fuel - Forbes (http://blogs.forbes.com/christopherhelman/2011/05/16/is-this-the-year-the-atchafalaya-river-captures-the-mississippi/)

tomder55
May 19, 2011, 10:12 AM
Does the Constitution also cover onslaughts from Mother Nature and how we defend ourselves from her?

Yes that is part of the common defense. That is why the levees were built by the Federal Government in the 1st place .

Wondergirl
May 19, 2011, 10:24 AM
But the defense isn't "common."

tomder55
May 19, 2011, 10:52 AM
But the defense isn't "common."

You mean the rapper ? No it isn't.. :cool:

The press is portraying this area as farmland... Well yes there are some farms... but it's mostly swamp land... the logical place to open floodgates into. When they constructed I 10 through the area they needed 18 miles of bridgework through the swamplands.

The link I provided indicates that there has been almost 40 years of engineering attempting to keep the flow of the river on it's current course. It looks to be a failure. The river wants to flow through the Atchafalaya Basin and it looks like sooner or later it will.

"Ten thousand river commissions, with the mines of the world at their back, cannot tame that lawless stream, cannot curb it or confine it, cannot say to it, 'Go here,' or 'Go there,' and make it obey. These West Point engineers cannot succeed in caging the beast. They imagine that they can fetter and handcuff that river and boss him. They might as well bully the comets in their courses and undertake to make them behave, as try to bully the Mississippi into right and reasonable conduct."
Mark Twain

Synnen
May 19, 2011, 12:28 PM
But the defense isn't "common."

Do you mean "common" as in it's for "everyone"?

Because really--there's a LOT that the US Army Corps of Engineers does that doesn't benefit me in the least. Same with the Army Reservists.

Frankly, how does "rebuilding New Orleans after they were idiotic enough to use their federal funds provided for that purpose to NOT rebuild the levees and still let people live below sea level" work for the "common defense" of the rest of the United States?

These people built on flood plains that they KNEW could be flooded. They were reminded every single year that their land was on a flood plain, and that the USACoE could open those floodgates in order to alleviate flooding downriver.

Frankly, I'd rather use my tax dollars to open the floodgates than to rebuild refineries--or NOT rebuild them and have gas prices rise even higher.

I'm sorry that those people will have damaged homes--but they DID get warning and DID have time to move their possessions, so it's not as if they lost everything. I'm NOT sorry we opened the floodgates.

PS--I live less than 1/2 mile from the mighty Mississippi, though granted I am a LOT upriver from all of this. When you live near the river, you know what you are risking.

Wondergirl
May 19, 2011, 12:36 PM
PS--I live less than 1/2 mile from the mighty Mississippi, though granted I am a LOT upriver from all of this. When you live near the river, you know what you are risking.
My bil is on a bluff overlooking it in the Quad Cities area. And yes, it's stupid to live in a floodplain, on a delta, but the land was cheap and fertile.

speechlesstx
May 19, 2011, 01:50 PM
This is why those along the Mississippi should be aware of where they're living and the inherent risks:

http://whale.wheelock.edu/watersheds/mississippi/MISS.JPEG

Even the rivers and streams in my area along with the sediment they carry dump into the Mississippi.

tomder55
May 19, 2011, 05:14 PM
This is more crucial than the Army Corp building jetty to save billionaires homes on the beach.I don't think it can be compared to the government picking winners and losers.

The Mississippi has historically been the commercial highway of the nation since the territory was purchased . Of course the maintenance of the Mississippi a big part of the common defense. During the Civil War... When the South couldn't contol it anymore their fate was sealed .
While it was in flood stage barge traffic was halted . Those refineries down river are critical to the economy... like it or not. This move was the logical one to prevent larger hardship .

paraclete
May 19, 2011, 07:40 PM
Hello:

Now, I dunno about you, but if I built my house where it was safe, and the government decided to flood MY house instead those built where it was UNSAFE, simply because they had more MONEY or there were MORE of them, would really PISS me off. In fact, I think I'd try to stop them.

What legal justification do they have for doing these things???

excon

Hi ex. I am sympathetic to the plight of people in the path of flood waters, however, once again we have decisions made on the principle of the lesser evil. It was a lesser evil to assassinate OBL last week and it is a lesser evil to permit flooding of low level land particularly as the system was designed to flood this land in the event of catastrophy. Yes those who mistakenly though it could never happen again have a right to say why aren't we protected, but the protection should have been that they weren't allowed to build there in the first place. Who do you blame? Those who want the system to work or the corrupt officials who benefited from sale of flood prone land

Fr_Chuck
May 19, 2011, 07:41 PM
Let me see a property that has not flooded since the levy was build, and has seen monster floods over years and years.

I have a commercial building in that wonderful area. Guess what, insurance won't pay ( or refuse at this point) since this was not a natural flood, but caused because of the actions of the Government.

I will most likely living in a nursing home before there is ever a settlement on this.

And that is if and when one can ever ( if we ever) can get to the property, since bridges under maybe 20 feet of river may not ever be safe to use and who knows if they will ever rebuild a dozen small bridges to allow people back in. And if they do, how many years.

So who should be paying me for my loss ?

paraclete
May 19, 2011, 07:48 PM
So who should be paying me for my loss ?

Chuck I suggest you send your bill to the government, but I expect there will be some sort of joint civil case or class action mounted by people such as yourself, since it is unlikely you are alone, who knows it may even set a precident

tomder55
May 20, 2011, 02:19 AM
Who's to blame ? Maybe the local governements up river who developed along the waterfront and built barriers to prevent flooding there ? Blame St Louis ?
Maybe blame the residence living on the Arkansas River in Kansas who sandbagged to prevented that river from cresting over it's bank.
Come on... this was the logical remedy to what would've been a bigger disaster .

paraclete
May 20, 2011, 06:11 AM
Who's to blame ? Maybe the local governements up river who developed along the waterfront and built barriers to prevent flooding there ? Blame St Louis ?
Maybe blame the residence living on the Arkansas River in Kansas who sandbagged to prevented that river from cresting over it's bank.
Come on ...this was the logical remedy to what would've been a bigger disaster .

The disaster Tom is that large populations are allowed to live on flood plains. You had better start building bigger levies over there because climate change is going to give you bigger snow fall and bigger melts. I would say abandon New Orleans now, what was acceptable last century isn't acceptable now, how many communities will you destroy for what; a few decrept buildings and swamp neighbourhoods

tomder55
May 20, 2011, 06:41 AM
Then again... population needs to live somewhere. We have made bargains with water before the Dutch started taming the low lands of Europe.

Synnen
May 20, 2011, 07:46 AM
Let me see a property that has not flooded since the levy was build, and has seen monster floods over years and years.

I have a commercial building in that wonderful area. Guess what, insurance won't pay ( or refuse at this point) since this was not a natural flood, but caused because of the actions of the Government.

I will most likely living in a nursing home before there is ever a settlement on this.

And that is if and when one can ever ( if we ever) can get to the property, since bridges under maybe 20 feet of river may not ever be safe to use and who knows if they will ever rebuild a dozen small bridges to allow people back in. And if they do, how many years.

So who should be paying me for my loss ?

What were you advised by your insurance company when you bought property in an area that was KNOWN to be a flood plain if the flood gates were opened? What about that letter you got every year that told you that the ACoE would be opening those gates if necessary to alleviate the amount of water in the Mississippi?

Or am I misreading you, and your property is in the area of the blasted levees, and not the area of the flood gates?

tomder55
May 20, 2011, 08:59 AM
Some home owners took matters into their own hand

Mississippi River flooding: Residents build homemade dams to saves houses | Mail Online (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1388660/Mississippi-River-flooding-Residents-build-homemade-dams-saves-houses.html)

paraclete
May 20, 2011, 03:58 PM
then again ...population needs to live somewhere. We have made bargains with water before the Dutch started taming the low lands of Europe.

Rubbish, population needs to be controlled for its own good. You were building high rise before everybodyelse too. The Dutch will find their decision was unwise too, at least they are working with a "constant" whereas you were working on supposition, you still might not have seen the thousand year flood.

tomder55
May 20, 2011, 04:08 PM
Rubbish, population needs to be controlled for its own good.
You never cease to amaze me with your Malthusian
Tendencies.

smoothy
May 20, 2011, 05:27 PM
I seem to remember mother nature attempting to do just that in the lower lying regions in your neck of the woods recently.

paraclete
May 20, 2011, 06:04 PM
I seem to remember mother nature attempting to do just that in the lower lying regions in your neck of the woods recently.

No that was just a fifty year flood and a lot of foolish stuffing about with dams, like yourselves we haven't seen a thousand year flood yet. I say that because the Darling used to be navigable like the Missipp two hundred years ago but not today, you can hardly get a row boat up it even in flood. We have however moved to stop people living in flood plains and actively remove buildings

paraclete
May 30, 2011, 06:56 PM
Very odd, haven't heard much about the outcome of all of this, was it a non event, a media beatup on a slow day, or has just it been eclipsed by a more spectacular disaster? And a much better photo op for someone seeking reelection?

Fr_Chuck
May 30, 2011, 07:14 PM
The storms in the midwest took over. And of course our government flooding peoples homes and businesses and farms are not news since it help protect other areas.

I am still having a real issue on this, our tax money built the levies, and then our tax money was used to blow up the levies to flood land that was protected, so that areas that did not pay for or have levies would not be flooded.

And not a word when the government will pay me for all of the losses, since insurance says it was not a natural caused since man blew the levies.

paraclete
May 30, 2011, 07:21 PM
Good luck with all of that Chuck seems a lot of people would be affected