|
Edited on Fri Sep-02-05 10:12 PM by SoCalDem
See , when they were all holed up in the poor section of New Orleans, they could be ignored (except for the election years, when re-pubes remind them to vote on the wrong day).For the most part, they stayed to themselves and managed their lives the best they could. Most were too poor to travel far from their own neighborhoods.
That has all changed now. They are going to HAVE to be dispersed to other places. The new destinations are keenly aware that to refuse to take some of them would create a nasty backlash, so places are reluctantly accepting "certain numbers", but only to group settings where they will be corralled and kept together.
Keeping them together is not for their comfort, it's to prevent them from "blending in" with the general public of their new hometown.These other cities know full well that no one is going back to New orleans anytime soon..if ever. Every town in America is stretched to the limit when it comes to social services, and once a little time passes, the feds will NOT be reimbursing these localities for the services of these new residents.
The poor people being shuttled around on the "Stadium Tour" are not homeowners...they are renters. The owners of the places they lived will certainly not rebuild with FEMA money, to house poor people. The land owners will probably not even rebuild, but will sell their newly cleared land to someone else. If and when New orleans is refashioned, the land once used by the poorest, will be elevated and "pimped up" so that top dollar can be had for the digs there. There will be no new homes or apartments built to house 100K poor people who "used to live there".
If the receiving towns can somehow keep these people corralled together they can keep them in view, and hold them apart as a separate entity..one that can be passed on to the next place willing to accept them, when their care and feeding becomes too burdensome, or when their constituents threaten to oust them from office.
It's Human Hot Potato ..pass them on..
|