Archive for the 'Activists' Category

More important than the Super Bowl

Saturday, February 13th, 2010

Yes, I know. It’s sacrilege.

But the Question of the Age - for New Orleans at least - is this:

Is the perpetuation of the inept and corrupt criminal enterprise known as the US Army Corps of Engineers more important than the physical survival of New Orleans?

The issue really is that stark.

I’ve never been prouder to stand by someone: Dr. Ivor Van Heerden.

Van Heerden continues, at great personal expense, to insist that the Corps (and their enablers at LSU) tell the truth about why New Orleans flooded in 2005.



For the full story: Ivor Van Heerden, the Corps, and LSU

Note: If you question my categorization of the Corps as a criminal enterprise, they crossed that line when they applied pressure on LSU to censor and ultimately fire Professor Van Heerden for telling the scientific and engineering truth about the New Orleans levee failures.

New Orleans sister cities relationships

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

New Orleans has a number of formal sister relationships.

Here’s the current list:

* Caracas, Venezuela;

* Holdfast Bay, Australia

* Innsbruck, Austria

* Juan-les-Pins, France

* Maracaibo, Venezuela

* Matsue, Japan

* Mérida, Mexico

* Pointe-Noire, Republic of Congo

* San Miguel de Tucumán, Argentina

* Tegucigalpa, Honduras

New Orleans Poet Chuck Perkins visits Manchester

Monday, December 14th, 2009

The plan for reviving the relationship between Manchester and New Orleans is simple.

Bring New Orleans artists, musicians, scholars etc. to Manchester and welcome Manchester folks to visit New Orleans.

Last spring, we got the ball rolling by hosting Manchester poet Grevel Lindop.

Last month, we brought a New Orleans poet Chuck Perkins to Manchester.

He’s the video of his first visit (the first one was so successful there are bound to be many more):

New Orleans poet Chuck Perkins visits Manchester

Manchester New Orleans Tony Wilson

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

From the book “24 Hour Party People” pgs 205-206 by Tony Wilson

A half-hour profile - sorry - small, cheap documentary, of the textile billionaire David Alliance, big boss of Coates Viyella, answered the question, ‘why Manchester?’ once and for all. Alliance was answering the question from Wilson the interviewer: ‘Why do you, one of Britain’s richest industrialists, keep your head office in Manchester and continue to live in Manchester?

‘I’ll tell you why.’

Forty years in England had only mellowed the delightful Middle-Eastern lilt of his speech. Alliance was a handsome, charismatic man in his mid-fifties who once tried to warn his friend the Shah of Iran, ‘You’re feeding their bellies, you’ve got to start feeding their minds.’

‘I’ll tell you why. When I had been in this country from my home in Persia no more than ten days, I was looking for my uncle’s house in Clyde Road in West Didsbury. I was sheltering from the rain under the awnings of the old Rediffusion cinema in East Didsbury. I spoke maybe ten words of English. I had the address on a piece of paper. I saw a woman pushing a pram, I showed her the address and she indicated I should follow her. We walked, perhaps a mile and a half, through the rain, and finally got to Clyde Road and got to my uncle’s house. I knocked. He opened the door and flung his arms round me, shouting, “Davoud, Davoud.” And I looked back and the woman waved and walked back the way we had come, pushing the pram.

‘I turned to my uncle and said, “She wasn’t coming this way, why did she come all this way if she wasn’t coming this way?”

“Davoud, because this is Manchester.”‘

It is this city’s hospitality to the outside that gives rise to the great truism of Manchester music: Manchester kids have the best record collections. That’s not a Wilson line, though he wishes it was. He’d been given this gem by A&R hero Dave Ambrose. Right on, Dave. They do. They have the best record collections. Open to outside influences.

Why do you think Jon Dasilve, Graeme Park and the Pick were playing house music on a Friday night? Why were the Mondays listening to it every fucking night? It was bloody foreign, wasn’t it? It was and this is the city of the foreigner, with its open arms. And hands held out, palm up.

And maybe that’s why so many of the people in this book are mysteriously devoted to the town. Its open arms inspired a return. Even down to putting everything you’ve earned and everything you’re going to earn into a designer dance hall that was now slowly approaching break-even thanks to student (urgh) night and Stella a quid a pint.

And you never give up. That was the lesson of Wilson’s next small, cheap documentary. The story of the Manchester Ship Canal.

King Cotton made us first city of the empire. Foundation stone of the Industrial Revolution. Bit like Peter Saville being responsible for Designer Britain. Good thing or bad? Maybe like Chou En-Lai said when asked the same question about the French Revolution: it’s too soon to tell.

Anyway, come the American Civil War and all this cotton stuff comes to a halt. Famously, the textile workers of England’s North-West sided with the black (Liverpool-imported, if you don’t mind) slaves and Lincoln’s Republican army, although this was precisely against their own interests, holding down jobs that relied on the plantation owners of the South. They rightly identified the African slave labour as remarkably similar to their own alienated labour.

A little bit Bradley Hardacre and a little bit Andy Warhol.

Manchester New Orleans connection - short version

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

New Orleans and Manchester have a history together that goes way back - but everyone forgets because no one on the US side of the ocean asks the question:

“Where did the cotton from New Orleans go?”

To Manchester, where textile mill workers - including children as young as five - faced conditions every bit as brutal as Delta slavery.

In spite of their own situation, Manchester workers stood in solidarity with enslaved Africans in America and called for Abolition.

Today, victimized by government corruption, incompetence and neglect on an epic scale, the people of New Orleans have been beaten, but are not bowed.

If ever there were a time for Mancunians who love the beat to turn their eyes back to New Orleans, now’s the time.

Every beat in popular music - jazz, R & B, rock and roll, funk - originated on a drum kit in New Orleans.

Chicago and Detroit? Musical nephews of the Big Uncle Big Easy. Look it up…and share the video.

Manchester loves New Orleans

Thanks to videographers Hubie Vigreaux, Ken McCarthy, and YouTubers. Edit by Matthew Lipscomb and Ken McCarthy.

Special thanks to A Guy Called Gerald.

Info about the upcoming Food Music Justice program in Manchester, UK is here:

http://www.ChuckPerkinsVoices.com

Protected: New Orleans murders: What’s going on?

Saturday, October 4th, 2008

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The battle for New Orleans continues

Monday, September 8th, 2008

Thanks for all the support our video “The Katrina Myth.”

At the moment, we’re a hair away from having had over 60,000 viewers in just 10 days.

I hope you’ll continue to spread the word about this video. It’s the only “quick read,” comprehensive source of info on levees, levee failures, and the reality of New Orleans geography.

A lot of long time residents wrote us saying they were grateful for the video because even they’d been bamboozled by the propaganda about New Orleans “doomed geography.”

New Orleans is doomed ONLY if the Army Corps of Engineers is not brought to task, reformed, and put on the job of designing and building a levee system that works.

Speaking of the Corps, finally after how many years, informed commentary about the Corps investigation of itself (sic) is appearing. Much of it confirms what levees.org has been saying since the beginning…and more critiques from more sources are in the pipeline.

It would have been great if the Corps management had copped to their errors three years ago and focused on correcting them instead of running an expensive, full-court publicity blitz obscuring the facts in an attempt to “defend” themselves.

Watch for things to heat up on this issue in the weeks and months to come. It’s not over yet.

Click here for “Corps Self-Critique Criticized”

Gustav moves “The Kartina Myth” to the top of the YouTube charts

Sunday, August 31st, 2008

The “Katrina Myth” has been the #4 top rated video in the “News and Politics” category on YouTube for the last 12 hours.

That means the levee issue is right up there on the top line with stories about the Democratic convention and McCain’s choice of Governor Palin as his running mate.

It’s also the #10 top favorite video, and the #14 top rated video in ALL categories.

YouTube’s counter, which is notoriously slow, shows 23,146 views in the last 24 hours.

Thanks to everyone who helped in this effort.

If you haven’t had a chance to support the video yet, there is still time.

The goal here is to keep the levee issue on the top of YouTube’s consciousness at least so that it might be picked up by a major news service.

That way instead of hearing how corrupt New Orleans people are, or how doomed the city is, people might learn that if the FEDERAL levees were simply built the way we all already PAID with our tax dollars for them to be built, New Orleans would be facing a hard time, but
not a second inundation by flood waters.

We’re getting a lot of international interest in the video and the comments from international viewers are all the same:

“How is it possible that the US treats its citizens this way?” They are genuinely baffled.

Anyway, if you’re in a position to (i.e. not packing up your belongings and heading out of town), keep pushing it.

Bizarrely (to me at least), this video seems to be the only source of publicly available information that lays out the levee situation in a clear, concise and comprehensive manner.

Here it is. Please let people know about it…

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wln_iq5bc8k

The Katrina Myth: Watch it now

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

After you watch the movie, please click through to YouTube and rate it, comment on it, favorite it.

And then send the link to friends, family members, and colleagues and ask them to do it too.

There will never be a better window of opportunity to get the truth out about Katrina, New Orleans and levees.

Thanks.

Click here now: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wln_iq5bc8k

UK media reviews levees.org “The Katrina Myth”

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

We’re already getting a some major press for “The Katrina Myth.”

This came as the result of the sneak preview at the Rising Tide blogging conference last weekend.

Click here for the review from the Guardian (UK):

The Guardian reviews “The Katrina Myth”

In the meantime, my heart goes out to all New Orleanians who are currently being terrorized by the weather news and the realization that the levee problems have nowhere near been corrected.

If you can make it to the premiere tonight, great. If not, I certainly understand.

Three cheers for Sandy Rosenthal of levees.org for keeping up the fight.

We didn’t have the runtime in the video to make a dedication, but if we had, we would have dedicated “The Katrina Myth” to her. No one has done more to fight against the Katrina myth and for the future of New Orleans than her.

Info on the premiere of “The Katrina Myth”