← Autodidact Archive · Original Dissent · Blond Knight
Thread ID: 20001 | Posts: 14 | Started: 2005-09-04
2005-09-04 15:54 | User Profile
Do Gooders + egalitarian multiculturism = Destruction of White America.
Remember, when you mix clean water with dirt, you end up with mud or dirty water, not clean dirt.
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[url]http://www.desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050904/NEWS08/509040353[/url]
Vilsak: Iowa may be hosting evacuees by midweek
States near Louisiana will be the first to receive displaced storm victims.
By JASON CLAYWORTH REGISTER STAFF WRITER September 4, 2005
States and cities far removed from the devastated Gulf Coast received mixed messages Saturday about their offers to house thousands of residents evacuated from hurricane-damaged Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama. [B] Federal officials early in the day said that no evacuees would come to Iowa, although the state had offered to accommodate up to 5,000. By Saturday evening, however, the message had changed in what Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack said was poor communication that is "a bit frustrating" but "understandable, given all the difficulties."[/B]
"This process is clearly evolving over time, and we need to be flexible," he said.
Vilsack said he believes that evacuees will arrive in Iowa by midweek.
"In a situation like this, America becomes a giant community," he said.
[B]Amid images of starving and desperate Gulf Coast residents languishing without food or water days after Hurricane Katrina struck, offers of temporary housing poured out from leaders in Iowa, Minnesota, Indiana, Pennsylvania, South Carolina and elsewhere late last week.[/B]
But Federal Emergency Management Agency officials declined the offer early Saturday, saying the government would focus on relocating hurricane evacuees to states near Louisiana . The offers from Iowa or other distant states will not be taken up unless absolutely needed, federal officials told state leaders Saturday.
[B]The announcement came one day after Vilsack said the state would take in as many as 5,000 people. Officials from Minnesota and Pennsylvania worked on similar plans.[/B]
Federal officials will first relocate people to surrounding states and then, as needed, move outward to states such as Iowa, Vilsack said late Saturday. He said he could not give an estimate of the cost.
"I don't know if finances and cost is the critical issue at this point," he said, adding that the disaster is a "human crisis that calls out for action."
Meanwhile, state and relief officials warned individuals offering to take in displaced hurricane victims that opening up their homes to complete strangers carries great dangers.
[B]People who open their homes often do not know about a prospective tenant's criminal history or mental and medical conditions. [/B]The need for shelter will probably span months instead of a few days, experts noted.
State officials suggested people refrain from offering their homes and instead give money or volunteer to help.
Iowa Red Cross chapters need volunteers to answer phones and collect donations.
People with more time may volunteer for three-week terms working hands-on with victims in the devastated area. The need for three-week volunteers will last for months, Red Cross officials said.
"I've got the time and the desire," said Ron Novak, 64, a retired Cedar Rapids man. Novak was among about 40 people who volunteered Saturday at the Red Cross' central Iowa chapter to work three weeks in the hardest-hit areas.
Red Cross trainer Donna Payne told Novak's group that they'll probably sleep on floors, go long periods without showers, work 16-hour days and be emotionally and physically drained by the time they finish. She told them, "It's the hardest work you're ever going to do and not get paid, but it's also the most rewarding."
The warnings didn't stop Novak.
"I'm frustrated, and I want to help," Novak said. "People have been down there without food and water for four and five days."
3000 or more "refugees" heading to Minnnesota. (In addition to the 60,000+ Hmongs, 60,000+ Somalians.....)
[url]http://www.startribune.com/stories/462/5595500.html[/url]
Minnesota's Camp Ripley in line for 3,000 evacuees Kevin Duchschere, Star Tribune September 4, 2005 MINN0904
As early as this week, Minnesota will put out the welcome mat for 3,000 Gulf Coast region residents who lost their homes to Hurricane Katrina. And it looks like they'll be here long enough to need caps and gloves.
As part of a national plan developed by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to find long-term quarters for evacuees, Gov. Tim Pawlenty said Saturday that within the next two weeks Minnesota will house hurricane victims temporarily at Camp Ripley, a National Guard training facility in central Minnesota near Little Falls. From there, they will be moved to cities and towns around the state that can provide long-term accommodations, perhaps in private homes or vacant apartments.
[B]Pawlenty fully expects that some of the displaced people will stay in Minnesota -- even though it is on the opposite, and chillier, end of the Mississippi River from where most of them live. He hopes that some may even bolster communities with sagging populations and stunted job growth.[/B]
"We know when people come to Minnesota, they like it," he said.
He called upon citizens to help welcome the evacuees with contributions of fall and winter clothing for all sizes and ages.
People who want to help, Pawlenty said, should call either the new state hot line this weekend or dial 211, the United Way help line that he said will serve as a clearinghouse for hurricane-related inquiries.
[B]3,000 vs. 5,000
State officials began scrambling to prepare for the evacuees Friday night, when FEMA asked Minnesota to relocate up to 5,000 hurricane victims. hurricane katrina[/B]
[B] Other states got similar requests. In the next few days four -- Arizona, Arkansas, Georgia and Utah -- will receive 35,000 from Louisiana. Michigan has offered to house 10,000 refugees, and West Virginia will receive as many as 3,000 in the next few days.[/B]
Pawlenty, surrounded by state agency heads, leaders of volunteer agencies and Mayors Randy Kelly of St. Paul and R.T. Rybak of Minneapolis, announced the relocation plan at a midafternoon news conference at the State Capitol. Specifics were being developed, and Pawlenty said more details would be provided Tuesday.
[B]Although FEMA asked Minnesota to make room for up to 5,000 evacuees, Pawlenty said federal officials were satisfied with the state's initial plan to accommodate 3,000 at Camp Ripley. The facility can house 3,500 people in winterized quarters, and it has its own kitchens and medical facility[/B].
FEMA would fly the evacuees to the Twin Cities, St. Cloud or Brainerd, where they would board state vehicles for the camp. There they would start having their health, educational and economic needs assessed. Several state agencies would be involved.
It's estimated that most of the displaced would stay at Ripley for 30 to 45 days, although Pawlenty said that period could be shorter. If more evacuees arrive and space is tight, some could be assigned instead to local National Guard armories.
Pawlenty also said he would sign an executive order waiving state residency requirements for welfare and medical programs.
In the meantime, a committee of mayors assigned by Pawlenty -- Kelly of St. Paul, Gene Winstead of Bloomington and Jeff Pelowski of Roseau -- will enlist communities around the state to settle the evacuees, find them jobs and enroll their children in school.
[B] Pawlenty said he hopes the federal government will eventually reimburse the state for part of the cost, which he said "won't be insignificant." [/B]But he said that if it were Minnesota in trouble, he hoped other states would rally to help.
"I don't know what the price tag will be," he said. "But it's the right thing to do. It's in the Minnesota tradition to do it."
Mary Gray and Steve Doyle, members of a Wayzata law firm who are developing a website -- [url]www.minnesotahelpers.com[/url] -- to place evacuees in private homes, welcomed the state's plans but expressed concerns that the red tape will further complicate matters.
"We want them out of the domes. Let's get them into homes. These are fellow Americans," Doyle said.
Earlier Saturday, the state activated a hot line phone service to help victims find relatives and friends or register for assistance.
The hot line will be staffed through Monday at the State Emergency Operations Center in downtown St. Paul. As with the Sept. 11 attacks and the 1997 Red River valley flood, the center will coordinate the disaster response among a host of state agencies and volunteer groups, said Kevin Smith, spokesman for the Minnesota Department of Public Safety.
"It's a clearinghouse location where we get representatives from all agencies in one room with phones and computers, and we can all talk to each other in one spot as we work through the issues," he said.
The State Emergency Operations Center is separate from the state's Emergency Management Assistance Compact (EMAC) regional center in New Brighton, which was activated Thursday. EMAC is a national network designed to help states communicate with each other and provide mutual aid in emergencies.
Minnesota is helping with disaster relief in other ways. Thirteen military police officers from the Minnesota Air National Guard's 148th Fighter Wing in Duluth have been activated to help keep order in the Gulf region. Guard members used a C-130 cargo plane to pick up pumping equipment in Wisconsin and fly it to Gulfport, Miss.
Five Department of Natural Resources employees joined a federal crew Wednesday headed for Mississippi to clear debris left by Katrina, and three DNR chainsaw crews were made available to help if needed.
2005-09-04 19:26 | User Profile
In addition to being bled dry by the latrino invasion, Arizona taxpayers will have to pony up some more of their hard earned $ to help those who won't help themselves.
[url]http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/0904refugees-ON-CR.html[/url]
Hurricane refugees begin arriving in Phoenix
Jacques Billeaud Associated Press Sept. 4, 2005 12:01 PM
[B]The first group of Hurricane Katrina refugees who will take shelter in Arizona arrived Sunday at Sky Harbor International Airport. The state is prepared to welcome around 2,000 people, though itââ¬â¢s unclear how many will be brought in.[/B]
About 150 people from the New Orleans area were aboard the first plane to arrive in the Phoenix area, said airport spokeswoman Julie Rodriguez.
They were greeted by Phoenix Mayor Phil Gordon, Red Cross officials and other local officials. advertisement
Several could be seen being helped off the plane and down a stairway to the airport tarmac. Flip-flops in pink, yellow, teal and black were set out for them.
Weââ¬â¢ll take care of them,ââ¬Â Gordon told reporters moments before the plane arrived. ââ¬ÅWeââ¬â¢ll make sure they know that the city cares.ââ¬Â
The evacuees were evaluated at the airport, with some being put on buses that would take them to the Veterans Memorial Coliseum, which was set up to hold about 1,000 people. Those too ill to go to a shelter were to be taken to a hospital, said Capt. Paul Aguirre, a spokeswoman for the Arizona National Guard.
Aguirre said most of the evacuees were in a good mood. ââ¬ÅOne person told me, ââ¬ËWeââ¬â¢re just happy to be on dry ground,ââ¬â¢ ââ¬Å said Aguirre.
Estimates on the number of Gulf Coast refugees who could be brought to shelters in Arizona range from 500 to 2,500, said Jeanine Lââ¬â¢Ecuyer, spokeswoman for Gov. Janet Napolitano.
The state has options to accommodate the high end of the estimates if the need arises, Lââ¬â¢Ecuyer said.
Napolitano said she had expected about 500 refugees to be here by Sunday night.
If Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Phoenix reaches its capacity of 1,000 refugees, the Tucson Convention Center was prepared to welcome another 1,000, Lââ¬â¢Ecuyer said.
ââ¬ÅWe will do everything to make them comfortable and help them rebuild their lives,ââ¬Â Lââ¬â¢Ecuyer said, noting that relief workers will offer refugees food and water and tend to their medical and mental health needs.
Napolitano said she didnââ¬â¢t know how long people would stay in the coliseum. ââ¬ÅItââ¬â¢s not possible to give a precise timeline,ââ¬Â the governor said.
Relief workers set up cots and blankets Saturday at the Phoenix coliseum, the first shelter expected to receive refugees.
State officials were unable to say how long the displaced people would remain in shelters, but said they planned to help find longer-term housing for refugees.
The state was prepared to help address the needs of refugees, including making arrangements for health care, assistance in seeking federal welfare benefits and placing children in schools, Lââ¬â¢Ecuyer said.
The Red Cross will oversee the care of the evacuees. Officials discouraged people from bringing food and clothes to the coliseum, because relief workers wonââ¬â¢t be in a position to accept the assistance.
ââ¬âââ¬âââ¬â
Associated Press Writer Joy Hepp contributed to this report.
2005-09-05 03:51 | User Profile
I think we should annex Mexico and send them all down there.
2005-09-05 03:57 | User Profile
They are dumping them in my city too...
2005-09-05 04:16 | User Profile
The white race is the only race on this planet possessing this peculiar self-immolative altruism. Buddhism sprang from a Scythian Aryan prince who taught universal empathy transcending caste and racial lines. We have a susceptibility to become antinatural in our idealistic excesses, and the more nature-bound colored races of the world know it and hope to capitalize on it. Commust China laughs at our mawkish unrealism. The Jews have no illusions like Westerners concerning caste and race. Only debased proletarian Jews or cynical Jews manipulating their gentile host societies promote systematic liberalism.
It seems the most laudable trait of the whites will also spell their eventual fall.
2005-09-05 05:11 | User Profile
Esoterist,
Great Post! Yes you are very right altruism is part of our basic nature, we can not get rid of it. It is part of what makes us what we are. Gautama was a fair blue-eyed Hindu warrior. But I did not know he was a Scythian, but looked it up and found it after reading your post. We need to learn to control our nature and follow a middle path in life. Those who try to deny the altruism of our folk are as doomed as those who follow it blindly.
[QUOTE]The Shakya (or Sakya)(Scythians) were a (Group of people related by blood or marriage) clan of (A person who adheres to Hinduism) Hindu (A member of the royal or warrior Hindu caste) kshatriyas. The Shakyas lived near the foothills of the (A mountain range extending 1500 miles on the border between India and Tibet; this range contains the world's highest mountain) Himalayas. Many modern Indian ethnic groups such as Rajputs, Gujarathis and Marathas are of partly Shakya or Scythian descent.
[url]http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/s/sh/shakya.htm[/url][/QUOTE]
[QUOTE]The Buddha had an elongated, lengthy body with long appendices His hair was fine, dark and with soft, long curls. His eyes were wide, and strongly blue or bluish. His body was light-colored and golden, with a pinkish color under the nails.
[url]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gautama_Buddha[/url][/QUOTE]
2005-09-05 08:08 | User Profile
[QUOTE=Esoterist]The white race is the only race on this planet possessing this peculiar self-immolative altruism. Buddhism sprang from a Scythian Aryan prince who taught universal empathy transcending caste and racial lines. We have a susceptibility to become antinatural in our idealistic excesses, and the more nature-bound colored races of the world know it and hope to capitalize on it. Commust China laughs at our mawkish unrealism. The Jews have no illusions like Westerners concerning caste and race. Only debased proletarian Jews or cynical Jews manipulating their gentile host societies promote systematic liberalism.
It seems the most laudable trait of the whites will also spell their eventual fall.[/QUOTE]Yes, good post.
I still think of altruism as a positive trait, and a society where everyone is disposed to practicing such is stronger for it. I don't even oppose altruism toward non-whites. The problem is that too many whites take altruism to an extreme. They're willing to starve themselves to feed their enemies.
2005-09-05 16:50 | User Profile
A perfect example of misplaced altuism: [url]http://www.startribune.com/stories/462/5597001.html[/url]
2005-09-05 17:17 | User Profile
While searching for info for this thread, I stumbled across this story in Pravda on the head of the lake.
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[url]http://www.duluthsuperior.com/mld/duluthsuperior/news/12563881.htm[/url]
Posted on Mon, Sep. 05, 2005
Sierra Leone entrepreneurs bring African frozen entrees to Minn.
LEE EGERSTROM
Associated Press
ST. PAUL - Thomas and Violet Rose held strong opinions about good West African cuisine long before their Zodiac Restaurant and Nightclub in Freetown, Sierra Leone, was firebombed, an uncle was killed, and a parent was shot and wounded in that nation's civil war.
Now, 15 years later, they are converting those opinions into frozen dinner entrees they manufacture in their St. Paul industrial kitchen and sell through several Twin Cities, Texas and East Coast supermarkets.
The Rose family appears to have hit on a genuine niche market in the $450 billion food manufacturing business sector, based on a check of business directories and Internet search engines. No other North American company apparently offers frozen entrees featuring popular dishes from the region that includes Senegal, Gambia, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Ghana, Ivory Coast and Nigeria.
The Rose family, along with Thomas' brother Jonathan, created Nice LLC two years ago and now sells a variety of entree dishes under the West African Cuisine brand. The company name is an acronym for "new immigrant culture and economy."
"It's what we are about," said Thomas Rose, the chief executive officer. "Everything we do involves educating people about who we are and West African food."
The first pupils were the bankers needed to finance the family operated business. Then came supermarket managers and buyers who needed to be convinced there just might be a market for the tangy flavors from the Roses' native Sierra Leone and its African neighbors.
Then came their own internal education involving food scientists from the University of Minnesota who began helping the company in 2003 to get U.S. Department of Agriculture approval for food licenses.
They also had to learn about designing food packages. Though the foods are natural, some outside consultants worried that American consumers might want to see a long list of chemicals on the label, not just "chicken," "peas," "carrots," "peanuts" and "rice."
"The food is cooked and flash-frozen," Thomas Rose said. "We don't need all those preservatives."
Violet Rose is the chief operating officer, is in charge of the company's kitchen and has "the final word on recipes," said her husband, who overseas business deals outside the kitchen.
Ultimately, marketing the dishes requires educating consumers. Rose family members and employees occasionally offer samples at supermarkets.
"Some people say, 'Hey, that's like Grandma used to make,' and it is," said Theodore Rose, Thomas and Violet's son, who is beginning a graduate program in cultural anthropology this fall at the University of Chicago. He is not an owner of the family company but helps maintain the Web site.
"Most Americans don't understand the diversity of people in West Africa," said Thomas Rose. The Roses have English names because they were part of the 10 percent of Sierra Leone's Creole, or Krio, population that returned from Jamaica in the 18th century after slavery ended in the Caribbean.
[B]Most African newcomers to Minnesota are originally from the eastern part of the continent, and have different cuisine and traditions from their western counterparts. But East and West Africans share common reasons for coming to the Upper Midwest.[/B]
[B]Most are escaping violence and civil wars at home, said Thomas Rose. And most chose Minnesota because someone in their family or from their community settled here.[/B]
The Roses' food products offer hints of the diversity found along Africa's North Atlantic Coast. Some seem similar to Southern U.S. and Caribbean specialties. The beef kebe and rice entree shows the influence of Arab traders who had trade routes stretching across most parts of central and eastern Asia and northern regions of Africa.
Though it's an Arab dish, the Nice LLC kitchen cannot make halal-certified foods special for the Muslim community at this time. "That's something for the future," Thomas Rose said.
Other products include joffof rice, the company's current top-seller; groundnut stew, a chicken and peanut sauce-stew similar to a popular dish widely served in the Carolinas; goat pepper soup and stew greens, a stew using collard greens and fish. Thomas Rose doesn't know why, but the latter dish is popular with customers in certain Texas communities, and in Brooklyn Park and Brooklyn Center.
A snack product is under development at the Roses' kitchen and will likely reach the stores later this year. Some of the products already in supermarkets carry a second brand name, Balogun Omolara Cuisine, but that is being replaced by the less-ethnic West African Cuisine logo on packaging.
Lunds, Byerly's, Kowalski's, Mississippi Market, Old Grand Market, A-Z African Mart, Tropicworld Food and Big Stop Foods are among the area supermarkets carrying the products. Cub Foods soon will test-market the products at certain stores.
2005-09-05 17:21 | User Profile
[QUOTE=BlueBonnet]I think we should annex Mexico and send them all down there.[/QUOTE]
Or how about Africa? The rescue crews can tell them they are heading to Minnesota, but they could instead be dropped off in western Africa. Nobody needs to know and they would probably be served as dinner there shortly after being captured by the local tribes.
I heard someone interviewed who previously took pride in calling themselves "African-Americans" make the switch to we are all "Americans" in this situation.
2005-09-05 18:14 | User Profile
One can expect a propaganda campaign via the televitz, to pound into Whitey's head that he "owes" the blacks.
Look for back to back broadcasting of such Hollyvitz swill like "Guess Who's Coming To Dinner", "To Kill A Mockingbird" & "In The Heat of the Night" to be replayed endlessly in the coming weeks.
[B] A Racial Program for the Twentieth Century
"We must realize that our party's most powerful weapon is racial tensions. By propounding into the consciousness of the dark races that for centuries they have been oppressed by whites, we can mold them to the program of the Communist Party. In America we will aim for subtle victory. While inflaming the Negro minority against the whites, we will endeavor to instill in the whites a guilt complex for their exploitation of the Negroes. We will aid the Negroes to rise in prominence in every walk of life, in the professions and in the world of sports and entertainment. With this prestige, the Negro will be able to intermarry with the whites and begin a process which will deliver America to our cause."
Israel Cohen, A Racial Program for the Twentieth Century, 1912.[/B] Also in the Congressional Record, Vol. 103, p. 8559, June 7, 1957
2005-09-06 03:15 | User Profile
I saw on the local news here in Dallas today where the news crews were interviewing our new wards. One black woman said " I love Texas, I won't ever go back to Louisiana, I'm staying right here." Great, one more piglet at the teet, move over Jose.
2005-09-06 04:22 | User Profile
BlueBonnet,
Yes this is bad. I saw this article on the New Nation News site:
[QUOTE]Katrina could prompt new black "great migration"
HOUSTON (Reuters) - If refugees end up building new lives away from New Orleans, Hurricane Katrina may prompt the largest U.S. black resettlement since the 20th century's Great Migration lured southern blacks to the North in a search for jobs and better lives. Between 1940 and 1970 economic changes prompted 5 million blacks to quit the south for cities across the North including Chicago, Detroit and New York, marking one of the nation's largest internal migrations. "It could have potentially that kind of effect," said Obama, whose father immigrated from Kenya
[url]http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20050905/us_nm/migration_dc[/url]
NNN [url]http://www.newnation.org/[/url]
[/QUOTE]
2005-09-06 16:58 | User Profile
[QUOTE=Faust]BlueBonnet,
Yes this is bad. I saw this article on the New Nation News site:[/QUOTE]The rest of the Midwest gets to try and get right what Detroit got wrong. I wish them luck.
AE