Rebecca Solnit, Tomdispatch.com. December 22, 2008. Getting to the bottom of criminal and racist that acts were no secret in New Orleans -- yet never became part of the official story.
Liliana Segura, AlterNet. December 20, 2008. A.C. Thompson discusses his Nation report on the men who roamed New Orleans shooting African Americans. (With full text of Thompson's article).
Patrik Jonsson, Christian Science Monitor. August 31, 2008. As Gustav bears down, the greatest threat is the potential for a 20-foot storm surge that could overtop the region's vast fortifications.
Bill Quigley, CounterPunch. August 29, 2008. The United States' economic crisis and simultaneous wars have left New Orleans as an afterthought. This is what the city looks like today.
Naomi Klein, Huffington Post. December 22, 2007. The shameless exploitation of poor New Orleans residents to privatize public infrastructure is being enforced by violence and tasers.
Amy Goodman, King Features Syndicate. September 5, 2007. Bush flew from the bayou to Baghdad as a People's Hurricane tribunal in New Orleans put every level of government on trial. What was the verdict?
Earl Ofari Hutchinson, New America Media. August 29, 2007. The naked face of poverty that shocked the world two years ago remains just as naked and shameful two years later. And Bush and the Democrats are to blame for it.
Robert Greenwald, Brave New Films. August 29, 2007. Tens of thousands of families in the Gulf Coast region are still without homes, and there is something very specific you can do to help.
Brian Beutler, Media Consortium. July 16, 2007. After Hurricane Katrina pummeled the Gulf Coast, construction companies have squeezed billions out of federal contracts with few labor regulations and almost no oversight, allowing outrageous worker abuses to occur.
Amanda Spake, The Nation. February 15, 2007. FEMA-supplied trailers for displaced Gulf Coast residents have been found to emit formaldehyde vapors, causing serious health problems.
The Progress Report. August 30, 2006. The financial, emotional, and human costs of Hurricane Katrina have been absolutely staggering -- and they aren't subsiding yet.
Adolph L. Reed Jr., The Progressive. August 29, 2006. Public policies designed to serve the narrow interests of business and the affluent are the ultimate cause of New Orleans' devastation.
Earl Ofari Hutchinson, AlterNet. August 28, 2006. A crushing majority of blacks still blame Bush's bungled Katrina response not on incompetence, but on racism.
Mia White, AlterNet. May 19, 2006. On the eve of New Orleans' mayoral runoff, we must ensure that the area's displaced retain a voice in who will be their city's next leader.
Mason Gaffney, Dollars and Sense. April 18, 2006. How is it possible that San Francisco survived after the 1906 earthquake and fire, when a top economist says New Orleans cannot?
Mike Davis, The Nation. April 4, 2006. Despite promises of a substantive debate on urban poverty, plans to reconstruct New Orleans are falling into the hands of a white elite.
Toby Barlow, Huffington Post. March 3, 2006. There's President Bush, on video for the world to see, offering hollow assurances that we were prepared for Hurricane Katrina.
Billie Mizell, AlterNet. March 2, 2006. In Katrina's aftermath in New Orleans, an unlikely group of four men -- white and black, old and young -- came together to form a relief collective unlike any other.
Fatima Shaik, In These Times. February 28, 2006. On the first post-Katrina Mardi Gras, the festivities just disguise the fact that New Orleans is a hollower, whiter, and richer place than it was a year ago.
Kristina Rizga, WireTap. February 27, 2006. Six months after Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast, some resident-writers look back on the good, the bad and everything in between.
Ashley Nelson, Ebony Bolding, WireTap. February 27, 2006. A new series of books, written by young people in some of New Orleans' poorest neighborhoods, chronicles life in the Big Easy prior to Hurricane Katrina.
Maria Luisa Tucker, AlterNet. February 6, 2006. Passionate opposition to New Orleans' proposed rebuilding plan has hundreds of survivors trekking to D.C. to voice their objections.
Dani McClain, WireTap. February 4, 2006. An uprooted family from the Gulf region tries to make sense of New York and cope with the emotional and psychological effects of forced migration.
Alive in Truth. January 28, 2006. Two evacuated New Orleans residents, now living in Austin, Texas, remember the horror of Katrina and its nightmarish after-effects.