Ed Note: Meet Mort --
I will be filling you in with more about Mort as time goes on -- or
some may prefer to post him direct.ly. Mort Lives in Elk City, Oklahoma
and also bears a fond affection for Knox County Texas. -- Both very close
to my early home and my family's. I tihink you will find he writes super
columns about an erea that still endures not only in the hearts of those
of us who knew the plains as children but in fact today. Here is his "Katrina
coulumn" Enjoy -- wlw Rolling Plains
Ramblings - # 33 – 8 Sep 05 – 761 Words – Our Hearts
Weep
ROLLING PLAINS RAMBLINGS
By Morton Scott
Our Hearts Weep
Last week I talked to our young people about their future challenges and
opportunities. Today I talk to us ALL - me, you - ALL of us – about
challenges, opportunities, weeping hearts.
We face, this month, this day, right now, the challenge to determine whether
we, the people of the United States of America, can or should lead Earth
into the future. This challenge is named Katrina.
I know not a single person in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama. Yet as
I write this, I weep, I grieve, I am angry, I am frustrated. I am also
determined.
Katrina ithe worst natural disaster in American history. Katrina has probably
killed over 20,000 of our countrymen. Our injured and diseased may exceed
100,000, our homeless evacuees exceed 400,000. Destruction far exceeds
any other domestic disaster in our history, except the Civil War –
and rivals it.
After a week, and for months and years to come, the tragedies continue.
Horribly, as yet unrescued Americans still suffer. As I write, many die.
Survivors are injured, homeless, bewildered, shocked. Life for them has
changed completely. They feel as if they are in a deep canyon, with sheer
cliffs on either side, raging waters ahead and behind, trapped in uncertainty,
bewildered.
We will remember the man, yelling at another man laying on a New Orleans
street “Live, Man! Live!” Terrified people frantically waving
at a helicopter passing over. A daughter screaming that her mother needed
medication and was dying. An elderly man, dead, alone, sitting in his
battered wheel chair.
This week the grim task goes on of sifting through horrendous debris,
searching for week-old bodies, and more recent.
We hear charges being hurled at FEMA, at President Bush, at almost anyone
connected to Katrina. This is not the time to hurl those accusations.
That will come. Then we must carefully probe problems about Katrina. This
MUST be done, but carefully, thoroughly and calmly.
We must. Finding fault is not the most important. Most important is finding
out what went wrong and redesigning our response.
The final death count is not yet available and won’t be for a long
time. I estimate total deaths, in all three states, will be around 20,000.
Total casualties, deaths and injuries, may exceed 100,000, more than any
other week in our history.
We must find out what happened. Then we must rebuild the Coast. We need
New Orleans and the Gulf Coast. In 1802, President Thomas Jefferson heeded
the demands of our growing population along the Ohio and Tennessee rivers,
who needed to ship their produce to New Orleans. Without New Orleans,
our nation beyond the Appalachians was doomed.
Napoleon Bonaparte startled American envoys by offering to sell the entire
Louisiana territory. Without the Louisiana Purchase, we might have split
into at least two nations, one between the Appalachians and the Mississippi,
the other stretched along the East Coast. New Orleans made the United
States a nation from coast-to-coast and eventually the greatest power
in Earth’s History.
How we recover from the Katrina tragedy will decide whether the United
States of America is a great nation or a flicker in time.
In the greatest natural disaster in American history – until last
week, the Galveston hurricane in September 8, 1900 (105 years ago today),
more than 5,000 were killed and Galveston was destroyed. The American
Red Cross invented its disaster assistance program to deal with the Galveston
tragedy.
Galveston realized its government had not worked. The people of Galveston
INVENTED a NEW type of government never before used anywhere – the
professional city manager-council form, now used by thousands of cities
across the nation. Galveston rebuilt itself and is a thriving urban area
today.
We must do this. This is all we can now do for the ten or twenty thousand
who died last week. We owe it to them. If we do not, the United States
of America will fade to a few pages in history books.
It is up to us – to you and me. To those in Knox County, in Texas,
in Oklahoma, across the nation from sea to shining(?) sea.
Think about that this week, as we watch the horrifying scenes of thousands
and thousands of bodies being pulled from attics, jumbled debris, shattered
buildings, the remains of our hearts.
Contact me at >fmortonscott@aol.com<
I L B C N U
If you have questions or comments, contact me at: Mort Scott
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