Tuesday, August 29, 2006

Bunch of Sickos.

1000

You know Frankenstein, you and Anderson have sunk your own boat. You made a scandal of the Ramsey case and now you've been proven to be the worst news agency possible. What did you all think you were doing? First you tell the public there is a murderer found and now it's a bunch of hocum. The American cable media is nothing but inflammatory troublemakers. There is NOTHING truthful about this exploitation. NOTHING. It's all tabloid press. Who needs it !

You know, Anderson, you did it this time. As far as I am conccerned this is the 'confrontational' emotional environment that 'derails' the legitimacy of the news business. I am assuming the DNA evidence wasn't 'fudged' by Boulder and they acted in 'good faith.' Now, the 'plug into the public hook' Anderson Cooper 360 news team IS THE PROBLEM and NOT the answer !!! It's all spin and only spin. Now the 'proof' is under scrutiny.

This is a nothing show and doesn't come close to the definition of news worthy subjects with credible information. The damage done to this country. They all need to be shut down. They aren't credible.

NEXT !

1002

C. Ray Nagin doesn't need Anderson Cooper to keep him honest. Try looking at Bush for a change. How is the blow dryer, bud?

Hope for a brighter future is enough to keep us going

http://www.neworleanscitybusiness.com/viewStory.cfm?recID=16565
Looking forward is so much more fun than looking back today one year after Hurricane Katrina blew us all off our life’s courses.
But it’s impossible not to look back this week. It’s also useful to gain perspective on how far we’ve come and continue to gauge how long this recovery will take.
That’s the question I was asked more than any other during the first months following Katrina’s passage. As editor of CityBusiness, I guess I was expected to have a better grasp on a recovery timetable than most but who really knew?

http://www.neworleanscitybusiness.com/viewStory.cfm?recID=16565

Flood protection plans lacking
Changed standards mean new strategies
Monday, August 28, 2006
By Mark Schleifstein


http://www.nola.com/news/t-p/frontpage/index.ssf?/base/news-6/115674455612300.xml&coll=1

Although the Army Corps of Engineers has spent more than $352 million to bring levees, floodwalls and drainage systems in the New Orleans area back to where they were before Hurricane Katrina hit a year ago, crucial improvements aimed at upgrading the system to the level long ago authorized by Congress are barely past the planning stages.

At a mid-August open house attended by more than 500 building contractors, corps managers Tom Podany and Rick Kendrick unveiled dozens of levee, levee wall and pump station projects that will begin construction during the next four years. The projects will eat up a considerable chunk of the $5.7 billion already appropriated by Congress for levee and pump repairs.

But even as it puts major projects out to bid, the corps is struggling to identify the increased level of protection needed to meet the congressional requirement that the New Orleans area be protected from the effects of a "100-year hurricane" by 2010.

You want to know where the real story of New Orleans is? To know the fear that still exists in the minds of these people !!! This is from "The Times Picayune."

The radio broadcast monitoring the storm can be found on this newspapers website. They trust no one in the federal government and neither do I


http://www.nola.com/ (Click on for 'Launch Desktop Alert' just to the right of the main page picture.)

Ernesto nears northern Cuban coast
At 7:00 p.m. the center of Tropical Storm Ernesto was still located inland over Cuba. Ernesto has weakened since moving over Cuba, however tropical storm warnings have been issued for coastal parts of Forida. Threats of flooding and heavy rains persist.A tropical storm warning and a hurricane watch remains in effect for Florida from Vero Beach southward on the east coast, from Chokoloskee southward on the west, as well as Lake Okeechobee and all of the Florida Keys from Ocean Reef to the Dry TortugasAs of 7:00 p.m. CDT, the center of Ernesto is located at latitude 21.4 north, longitude 77.4 west, over southeastern Cuba, and is moving to the west-northwest near 11 mph. Tropical storm force winds extend outward up to 105 miles from the center. A more northwestward motion is expected to resume later tonight when Ernesto may emerge off the coast of Cuba. Maximum sustained winds have dropped to 40 mph, with higher gusts. The estimated minimum central pressure ios 1007 mb. Ernesto could dump 5 to 10 inches of rain across southern and eastern Florida through Wednesday.

http://www.nola.com/newslogs/weather/index.ssf?/mtlogs/nola_weatheralert/archives/2006_08.html#176633

enough !!!!!