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WILL THE NOLA NEGROES BELIEVE THE WEATHER REPORT THIS TIME?
Topic Started: Aug 26 2012, 11:12 PM (817 Views)
kennyinbmore
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Blaq
Aug 27 2012, 03:33 PM
I actually have a contract for NOLA coming up.

Kenny, you're wasting your time. While I do blame some people, Black or otherwise, for their own demise in staying in NOLA during Katrina the poorest of people had nowhere to go and nothing to take them there if they did. Some people only see one side, some see the other. Rarely do people tend to see both sides of the coin.
That's why I said UTB needs to watch any documentary where they interviewed people who were stuck there. I recommend this one

http://www.troublethewaterfilm.com/content/pages/more_videos/

It's on Netflix for those that have it
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n.W.o.
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UTB's bullshit attack on Blacks (again) aside, even if more people could be evacuated from NOLA, hell, everyone in the hurricane's way for that matter, the damage to property from the storm would be devastating. The company I work for is still finding leaks daily in New Orleans due to Katrina. It has nowhere near fully recovered yet.
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kennyinbmore
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when you consider how much water there was, I'm not at all surprised
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UTB

Guess what? The NOLA Negroes have learned how to swim! Like I told you before, some of those Negroes was not going to leave!
The Negroes will try to loot, and get killed, which is good!


http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-201_162-57502825/isaac-weakens-but-parts-of-louisiana-are-underwater/

Posted Image

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(CBS/AP) NEW ORLEANS - Isaac was losing some of its strength Wednesday afternoon and had been downgraded to a tropical storm as it rained down on Louisiana. The slow-moving storm, however, has caused severe flooding in many parts of lower Louisiana and coastal Mississippi.

According to a 4 p.m. ET National Weather Service advisory, Isaac had top sustained winds of 70 mph, just below the hurricane threshold of 74 mph, and the storm was about 50 miles west of New Orleans. Thus far, more than 700,000 area residents had lost power due to the storm, and officials say the outages could last for days.

City officials imposed a dusk-to-dawn curfew in New Orleans - as are most of the surrounding local governments - beginning Wednesday because of the downed power lines and generally unsafe conditions.

Forecasters are warning there are still life-threatening hazards from the storm surge and inland flooding.

isaac, levee, plaquemines parish

The highlighted red area is the rough border of the levee district in Plaquemines Parish that Louisiana officials are considering flooding to relieve the pressure put on the area by Tropical Storm Isaac's rain and storm surge.


Louisiana officials said Wednesday they may have to intentionally breach a levee in a flooded area Isaac as made a slow, drenching slog inland.

Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal said officials may cut a hole in a levee on the east bank of Plaquemines Parish to relieve pressure on the structure. At an afternoon news conference in Baton Rouge, Jindal said there was no estimate on when that might occur.

The levee officials are considering breaching is on the east bank of the Mississippi River in Plaquemines, reports NOLA.com. That levee runs dozens of miles along the river, and holds it back for a few thousand scattered and mostly poorer residents of the parish.

Jindal said as many as 40 people are reportedly in need of rescue in the area. CBS affiliate WWL-TV reports that 75 people were rescued from flooded homes and rooftops from Braithwaite, La., and that dozens people were still reportedly awaiting rescue on the parish's east bank on rooftops and in attics.



Plaquemines Parish has also ordered a mandatory evacuation for the west bank of the Mississippi River below Belle Chasse, worried about a storm surge. The order affects about 3,000 people in the area, including a nursing home with 112 residents.
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n.W.o.
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Now, for some shit that isn't cut and pasted from someone else's blog site, my business travel is currently on lock due to this damn storm. It's moving extremely slow and dropping buckets of duckets of water on everything. One of the damn leevees in a Parish (forgot which one) broke. So, now the real issue is water damage and flooding instead of wind blowing everything over in sight.
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UTB

Blaq
Aug 30 2012, 10:13 AM
Now, for some shit that isn't cut and pasted from someone else's blog site, my business travel is currently on lock due to this damn storm. It's moving extremely slow and dropping buckets of duckets of water on everything. One of the damn leevees in a Parish (forgot which one) broke. So, now the real issue is water damage and flooding instead of wind blowing everything over in sight.
Well, maybe Farracoon will say the federal blasted the levees again! :D
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Zechariah
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Zechariah
Watch out UTB, for the rice an soybean crops. Hell is coming.
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UTB

They replayed it last night on PBS.
So.............
What?
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Zechariah
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Zechariah
UTB
Aug 30 2012, 11:03 AM
They replayed it last night on PBS.
So.............
What?
So what? It's what it is.........devastation.
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cisslybee2012
The REBEL
All of us are likely to be hit real hard by the end of the year.

So there's really no place to run.
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