Even driving through town is unremarkable – the ruins all blend together. It’s no longer shocking. It is sad. The whole situation down here is completely beyond the pale.
There is an entire generation being left behind, in this state. How will the children of Mississippi grow up, seeing all they know washed away? How will they grow up, knowing that even years later, not much has improved? Please do not tell me I am sensationalizing. Truth be told, I am not. I spent a full work day sifting through files -- everyone here is suffering, and the poor, the minorities, and the disabled are all facing enormous hurdles to reconstructing their shattered lives.
Katrina is not the ultimate cause of many of the problems these people face – Katrina merely forced these problems out into the open, and amplified them, so that the poor are poorer. Treating the problems seen in the post-Katrina Gulf Coast will mean that we, as a society, need to address the deeper issues of poverty, poor education, government bureaucracy, racial discrimination, among other things – so that this will not happen again.
Even if the ongoing crisis of this disaster does not move you, then think of this – what will happen when the Hayward Fault goes? Will we be still picking up the rubble, two and a half years later? Will Oakland and Berkeley be barren wastelands?
Katrina was terrible, but Katrina was nature. Contractor fraud and formaldehyde poisoning – these tragedies are human in origin. While we can’t control nature, we can control the aftermath.


