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Is the media forgetting about Mississippi?

redguru

New member
Also why aren't there large reports of looting in Biloxi, Pascagoula, Gulfport or Mobile, AL?

From Breitbart.com

Mississippians' Suffering Overshadowed
Sep 03 11:49 PM US/Eastern


By EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS
Associated Press Writer


JACKSON, Miss.


Mississippi hurricane survivors looked around Saturday and wondered just how long it would take to get food, clean water and shelter. And they were more than angry at the federal government and the national news media.

Richard Gibbs was disgusted by reports of looting in New Orleans and upset at the lack of attention hurricane victims in his state were getting.

"I say burn the bridges and let 'em all rot there," he said. "We're suffering over here too, but we're not killing each other. We've got to help each other. We need gas and food and water and medical supplies."

Gibbs and his wife, Holly, have been stuck at their flooded home in Gulfport just off the Biloxi River. Water comes up to the second floor, they are out of gasoline, and food supplies are running perilously low.

Until recently, they also had Holly's 75-year-old father, who has a pacemaker and severe diabetes, with them. Finally they got an ambulance to take him to the airport so he could be airlifted to Lafayette, La., for medical help.

In poverty-stricken north Gulfport, Grover Chapman was angry at the lack of aid.

"Something should've been on this corner three days ago," Chapman, 60, said Saturday as he whipped up dinner for his neighbors.

He used wood from his demolished produce stand to cook fish, rabbit, okra and butter beans he'd been keeping in his freezer. Although many houses here, about five miles inland, are still standing, they are severely damaged. Corrugated tin roofs lie scattered on the ground.

"I'm just doing what I can do," Chapman said. "These people support me with my produce stand every day. Now it's time to pay them back."

One neighbor, 78-year-old Georgia Smylie, knew little about what's happening elsewhere. She was too worried about her own situation.

"My medicine is running out. I need high blood pressure medicine, medicine for my heart," she said.

Larry Sabato, a University of Virginia political scientist, said he's been watching hours of Katrina coverage every day and most of the national media attention has focused on the devastation and looting in New Orleans.

"Mississippi needs more coverage," Sabato said. "Until people see it on TV, they don't think it's real."

Along the battered Mississippi Gulf Coast, crews started searching boats for corpses on Saturday. Several shrimpers are believed to have died as they tried to ride out the storm aboard their boats on the Intracoastal Waterway.

President Bush toured ravaged areas of the Mississippi coast on Friday with Gov. Haley Barbour and other state officials. They also flew over flooded New Orleans.

"I'm going to tell you, Mississippi got hit much harder than they did, but what happened in the aftermath _ it makes your stomach hurt to go miles and miles and miles and the houses are all under water up to the roof," Barbour said.

Keisha Moran has been living in a tent in a department store parking lot in Bay St. Louis with her boyfriend and three young children since the hurricane struck. She said National Guardsmen have brought her water but no other aid so far, and she was furious that it took Bush several days before he came to see the damage in Mississippi.

"It's how many days later? How many people are dead?" Moran said.

Mississippi's death toll from Hurricane Katrina stood at 144 on Saturday, according to confirmed reports from coroners and the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency. Barbour had said Friday the total was 147, but he didn't provide a county-by-county breakdown.

In a strongly worded editorial, The Sun Herald of Biloxi-Gulfport pleaded for help and questioned why a massive National Guard presence wasn't already visible.

"We understand that New Orleans also was devastated by Hurricane Katrina, but surely this nation has the resources to rescue both that metropolitan (area) and ours," the newspaper editorialized, saying survival basics like ice, gasoline and medicine have been too slow to arrive.

"We are not calling on the nation and the state to make life more comfortable in South Mississippi, we are calling on the nation and the state to make life here possible," the paper wrote.

____

Associated Press reporter David Royse and Brian Skoloff in Gulfport and Jay Reeves in Bay St. Louis contributed to this report.
 
redguru said:
"I say burn the bridges and let 'em all rot there," he said.
I've been saying that about New Orleans waaaaay before the hurricane, but did anyone listen? No. Nobody listens to Ohashi until it's too fucking late.
 
i agree
they said that looting isnt bad in mississippi like it is in NO. I guess they think they are ok????
thats just sad, those people eat too, they are just being more human
 
I was thinking the same thing. from the video I've seen MISS got it the worst. shit is just plain gone. but she got her people out and MISS isn't high up on the economic scale either
 
I just read that story on MSNBC wedsite. It is truly a sad dismal outlook for these people.

Many, many thousands have died in the entire affected region.

We will not know how many for many months to come.
 
4everhung said:
I was thinking the same thing. from the video I've seen MISS got it the worst. shit is just plain gone. but she got her people out and MISS isn't high up on the economic scale either


I'm really afraid she didn't get a lot of them out. Some elected to stay. Entire towns are nowhere to be found. They are underwater and are not coming back.
 
jacked clown said:
Holy shit thats amazing I totally forgot that the hurricane hit anywhere else...Damn Im in my own little world

same here...you hear so much about NO and the problems there that you forget the huge hurricane did any other damage :rolleyes: :worried:
 
Incredible local story about a Mississippi man from the Pensacola News-Journal

After 150-mile trek, man finds family in Milton
Angela [email protected]

Among the countless accounts of tragedy emerging from the ravaged Gulf Coast, one story of triumph found its way Thursday to West Florida Hospital.

After weathering Hurricane Katrina’s winds from a flooding restaurant window, Curtis Quate, 43, of Bay St. Louis, Miss., walked and hitchhiked about 150 miles to Pensacola in search of his family, who had evacuated in their motor home.

He was dehydrated, sunburned and sleep-deprived when he finally collapsed inside a Pensacola restaurant and was taken to a hospital for treatment.

He was discharged later in the day and again set out on foot. Paula Dixon, a West Florida Hospital nurse, followed him.

Dixon took Quate back inside and began calling recreational-vehicle parks from Pensacola to Tallahassee.

The two found Quate’s family at Milton/Gulf Pines KOA in Milton.

Quate said Dixon’s kindness was the first true sign of humanity he had seen in days.

“The further I got from the devastation, the more angry and hostile the people were,” he said. “If it wasn’t for her, I’d still be walking.”

Dixon said she was relieved to have the chance to help a hurricane victim on a personal level. She said acts of kindness were more difficult during Hurricane Ivan.

“When you are the one in the hurricane, it’s not possible to help other people like this,” she said. “For the first time, there was a victim who needed help, and I could do something about it.”

Quate said he never will go a day without thinking of Dixon.

“I know every single person has stories,” he said. “I’m just so fortunate to have this one.”
 
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