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September 06, 2005
We take in hundreds of thousands of his people, and this is the thanks Ray Nagin gives us?
Posted by Laurence Simon at 01:09 PM | View blog reactions | Comments (13)

Ray Nagin, the shrieking mayor of Lake New Orleans, now wants to take his cops on vacation to Las Vegas.

That's right. Vegas.

You know, this really pisses me off. Not because it's a waste of the taxpayer dollars he didn't spend on relief efforts. Not because it rewards a bunch of thugs who bugged out at first opportunity and participated in a little looting of their own instead of commandeering the school bus fleet and getting people out of town.

No, it's because it's an insult to Houston, Texas.

We've got miles and miles of strip clubs right here in Houston, Texas. Not just by the airports like other cities do - they're all over the place. And if one gets too close to a church or a school or a playground, well, we have a huge debate over it and sometimes the strip clubs wins and the church gets sent packing.

We've got our priorities straight here, darn it.

On top of that, some of them are very fine establishments. World Class, based on what I remember from my younger and wilder days. Ricks even trades on the stock market and goes talent scouting.

But apparently, Ray thinks that we're not good enough for his cops for some reason or another. The same cops that have been swindling "freebies" off of New Orleans strippers for "policeman's perks" in more ways than one.

But our town is just good enough for, say, several hundred thousand of the people who voted him into office, dumped unceremoniously into the welcoming arms of Ray's neighbors in spite of the non-existent relief efforts Ray's own cronies pretended to mount.

Ray, you've bashed our president for your own sins and failures. You've bashed your governor for your own sins and failures. But to forsake the treasures of the city that's welcomed your people in with loving arms and generocity unparalleled in this country's existence, that's just unforgivable.

Rating: 1.8/5 (2 votes cast)

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13 Responses To "We take in hundreds of thousands of his people, and this is the thanks Ray Nagin gives us?"

Nagin proves yet again that he is extremely short-sighted. He'd have Louisiana's finest go to Vegas to gamble away their money in Nevada rather than sending them to Shreveport where they could piss their money away to help their own state's economy.

Dope!

#1 - Posted by: The Real Scott on September 6, 2005 01:45 PM

Based upon my own (admittedly limited) experience, most Texas chicks look like Molly Ivins and Anne Richardson. Sending his PD to Houston's fleshpots would be like sending them back to NO...

;)

Pomoze Bog.
Tsar Lazar

#2 - Posted by: Tsar Lazar on September 6, 2005 02:03 PM

What the #$^## is Mayor Nagin thinking!!! They've only begun to pull the bodies out of 'Lake New Orleans', and his police force is 'worn out' after a week? One NOPD officer was heard to say "Damn, man, we've worked 90 hours this week! That's more then we do in a year!"

Of course it didn't help that a third of his Super Cops went AWOL. (However, he has gone on record that he expects the Force to be back up to 100% within two weeks ... when the 'lost 500' show up for their pay checks!)

#3 - Posted by: Eagle6 on September 6, 2005 02:27 PM

tsar, maybe you should gain a little experience. the real saying is more that everything's bigger in texas, not older.

#4 - Posted by: Kelly on September 6, 2005 03:07 PM

NO PODCAST STRIKE. BRING IN THE SCABS!

#5 - Posted by: motopolitico on September 6, 2005 03:18 PM

Yea well I just hear that all those buses he saved and didn't use for the evacuation of rif raf ..... are waterlogged and don't run anymore, so the cops may have to hitchhike. Not to worry about them losing money gambling as "Mudville Gazette" said .. those guys all know when to fold

#6 - Posted by: jim b on September 6, 2005 03:27 PM

Reward them for what? Scattering to the four corners and/or looting Wal-Mart?

#7 - Posted by: Dave in Texas on September 6, 2005 07:36 PM

"the real saying is more that everything's bigger in texas, not older."

Kelly, that just means there's more butt-ugliness to look at. :p

Pomoze Bog.
Tsar Lazar

#8 - Posted by: Tsar Lazar on September 6, 2005 11:30 PM

Can you imagine the cops or firefighters in NYC taking off to Atlantic City a week after 9/11? No I can't either, might explain how the ball was dropped so completely.

#9 - Posted by: PMain on September 6, 2005 11:37 PM

Pomoze (or Tsar or whatever), did you by chance mean Ann Richards? TX has many truly lovely members of the gentler sex! I met Ann Richards briefly...years ago, but she was quite attractive. I was at Ninfa's in Austin and recognized her. I'll never forget my eloquent words to her: "HI!"
Yeah, I know she's a democrat, but she at least smiled and said "HI" back.

#10 - Posted by: Brian on September 6, 2005 11:51 PM

MMMMMM....Rick's Cabaret!

#11 - Posted by: Bombtruck on September 7, 2005 03:57 PM

Ray Nagin, Mayor of New Orleans Hero of The Black Poor Not So Fast"

While berating everyone he could except himself, Ray Nagin has attempted to proffer himself as a champion of
the Afro American poor and other poor.

Mr. Mayor you record says it just ain't so.

Consider lack of experience in government and the job of Mayor. Elected to serve 2003 - that is 1.75 years
experience.

New Orleans Mayor C Ray Nagin:
By Josh Fecht, US Editor

"He(Nagin ) became the first New Orleans Mayor to rise to the post in nearly 60 years
without holding a previous elected office. "

Consider lack of support by the black electorate. Less than half.

Rod Dreher
July 31, 2002 9:00 a.m.
Big Sleazy Sobers Up
C. Ray Nagin takes New Orleans.

"Behind the dramatic headlines lies a fascinating, and indeed hopeful, sign of bedrock
political change: the emergence of the black middle class as a distinct power player in
municipal politics. New Orleans is a majority-black city, with African-Americans making up
64 percent of the electorate. Nagin was elected with 58 percent of the total vote in the April
runoff, which amounted to about 80 percent of the white vote, and 44 percent of the black
vote."

Lack of experience and political ineptitude?

http://bizneworleans.com/70+M538503905ee.html
Lonely at the Top
May 1, 2004 01:31 PM
by Kathy Finn

"On the surface his supporters see the same striking image that helped sweep Nagin into
office — the polished look, confident manner and
slightly aloof air that prompt some to call him “cool.”

In the past year, however, the city has seen its mayor gradually forced into a defensive
posture. After his administration’s early salvos against
corrupt practices in and outside of City Hall, questions arose as to how thorough a cleanup
the mayor intends to carry out.

As local jobs have continued to drain away, even as new ones were added, rumblings have
grown about a lack of specifics in Nagin’s
economic development plans. Personnel changes in the mayor’s “inner
circle” raised questions about his hiring choices and management style.

In the view of some observers, and by Nagin’s own
assessment, public relations has been a weakness of his administration. He says he hasn’t
done a good enough job of communicating with the public either about his
administration’s achievements or about public concerns

Susan Howell, director of the University of New Orleans Survey Research Center, agrees.
“He’s been more of a corporate-style mayor
as opposed to what I would call an activist-style mayor,” she says. “He’s
working on education, working on cleaning up the city, improving technology
— he’s doing a lot of good things, but he may not be getting enough credit
for it because he’s not out effectively communicating
what he’s doing.”

One person familiar with those relationships, who spoke on condition of anonymity,
believes that the mayor relies too heavily on the handful of people with whom he works
most closely, thus isolating himself from valuable information and ideas coming from
others who are not members of the circle.

The comments echo, to a degree, charges leveled by Nagin’s former
chief administrative officer, Kimberly Williamson, who was asked to resign last year.
Williamson recently filed a lawsuit against Nagin, claiming among other things that she was
discriminated against by the mayor and several staff members who operated in a
“cliquish” manner. An
earlier, similar claim filed by Williamson with the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission was dismissed as unfounded.

Some observers believe these types of issues, too, may be a product of
Nagin’s political naiveté.

Property tax fairness has become a focal point of the Nagin administration, but many voters
are hoping for more. They recall the “wish
list” Nagin touted during his campaign — including airport privatization, a
new City Hall complex, funding to upgrade public school buildings and a beefed up police
force, among other major items — and they wonder if
these were just imaginative proposals left in the dust after election day.

No, says the mayor; he chalks this, too, up to his shortage of political skills.

“One of my biggest challenges is that I see things so clearly and so fast
… and I’m not necessarily doing the leg work to help people to see what
I’m seeing so that we can all rush the fence together,” he says. “I just
look around the city, and I see so many opportunities that it just drives me nuts.” "

2002 mayor race - never before
New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin's 'Honeymoon' May be Over
By Glynn Wilson

NEW ORLEANS, La., Dec. 6

" People are going to start asking questions," he said. "It's about time when people are going
to want results."

The Times-Picayune newspaper, which endorsed Mr. Nagin in his race for mayor on its
front page last spring, recently carried a story giving credence to the accusation that he may
have used his official position for politics in a way that could be unethical.

Marlin Gusman, a New Orleans city councilman and former right-hand man to Nagin's
predecessor Marc Morial, portrayed locally as Mr. Nagin's chief adversary, said he has
doubts about Mr. Nagin's ability to lead now.

Sometimes I think Mayor Nagin does things just to be different," he said, campaigning
along with U.S. Sen. Mary Landrieu for Kathleen Babineaux Blanco, a 60-year-old Cajun
grandmother, barnstorming the state on election day in a Winnebago

I certainly don't think when you count all the votes that a majority of the people in this
community are going to be following behind him," Mr. Gusman said. "A leader has to lead
his people

He proved the claim he was making all through his political life that he's not a real
politician," Dr. Hirsch said of Mr. Nagin, only partly in jest.

He didn't do terribly well with that," he said. "It was done in an inexpert way, which
confirms his outsider status."

Whether that will damage the relationship between the governor's mansion and city hall in
New Orleans and negatively affect the business climate is probably minimized, he said, by
the city's clout in the legislature

He got a big public relations boost from the local media, and then things seemed to calm
down and he almost disappeared from public view," Dr. Hirsch said. "I kept waiting for the
second shoe to fall, and it seemingly never did." "

www.bestofneworleans.com/ dispatch/2004-12-28

"Nagin's Trials and Triumph -- If there's such a thing as a Midas Touch in Reverse, Mayor
Ray Nagin has it. Once again, he showed that he has no coattails in a citywide election
when Deputy Police Chief Warren Riley lost to Marlin Gusman in the race for criminal
sheriff. That came right after a huge flap over the future of the New Orleans Recreation
Department, which drove a wedge between the mayor and City Council. The mayor
recovered in time to strike a compromise bond issue with the council, and he ended the
political season on a high note when voters approved the largest bond issue in city history.
That may have said more about Nagin's chances of re-election than Riley's defeat, because
it showed that voters like and trust this mayor enough to tax themselves and let him spend
the money. "

Not quite the heroic supporter of Afro American and the poor he wishes to
portray on CNN etc.


Rod Dreher
July 31, 2002 9:00 a.m.
Big Sleazy Sobers Up
C. Ray Nagin takes New Orleans.

" Not everybody in New Orleans is pleased. Nearly all of those arrested in last week's sweep
are black. Some are grumbling that Nagin, who is himself African American, is picking on
poor black folks to score points with his white supporters, particularly in the business
community. Even Nagin backers are saying that to be truly credible, the mayor has to go
after bigger fish than a bunch of taxicab drivers. "


June 6, 2005
Save Louisiana Wetlands Inc.(SOWL)
Post Office Box 73447
Metairie, LA 70033

" Mayor Ray Nagin, who is a corporate mouthpiece for Wal-Mart and other corporate
privatieers, presented an environmental award to Shell Oil Company. Shell Oil Company
donated monies to a small insignificant “green washing” Green Project located off St.
Claude Ave. down by the railroad tracks. Mayor Ray Nagin is notorious for tearing down
public housing to make way for Lester Kabencoff’s corporate
development expansion plans

Mayor Ray Nagin presently has plans to displace the poor Afro-Americans living in the
Iberville public housing project to make way for another Lester Kabencoff private corporate
development scheme, similar to the displacement of the poor Afro-Americans that were
once living in the public housing St. Thomas projects now Wal-Mart. The old Krauss
building adjacent to the Iberville public housing project on North Rampart St. is presently
being yuppiefied into swank condominiums.

In the meantime, New Orleans under Mayor Ray Nagin acquires no new public parks.
Whatever municipal public parks exist in New Orleans under Mayor Ray Nagin they are
permitted to deteriorate. The rich are able to use the facilities of their private institutions.
The poor swelter in their poverty cesspools while being arrested shot and harassed by
Mayor Ray Nagins New Orleans police department. Mayor Ray NaginÆs solution to the
New Orleans poverty problem is to displace the poor out of New Orleans centralized public
housing, and move them to New Orleans East.

Mayor Ray Nagin has single handedly destroyed the unique and distinct character of the
historic Vieux Carre (French Quarter) of New Orleans by placing hundreds of trash cans,
bearing corporate logos on the streets of New Orleans. Mayor Nagin has also recently in
violation of public bid laws and without approval of the Vieux Carre Commission placed
hundreds of illegal parking meter structures in the historic French Quarter of New Orleans

Mayor Ray Nagin is standing quietly to the side while attempts are being made to privatize
New Orleans Charity hospital. Mayor Ray Nagin is fighting hard for the rich and elitist.
Under Mayor Ray NaginÆs administration the public school system is being dismantled.
The New Orleans public school system is divided between rich-elitist-private versus
poor-black public. It will only be a question of time before New Orleans public schools will
be funded by such corporations as Coca Cola-McDonaldÆs-Shell Oil Comp

Mayor Ray Nagin does not represent the hundreds of thousands of poor Afro-Americans
residing in New Orleans. Mayor Ray Nagin stands idle while antiquated drug laws and
poverty are causing hundreds and hundreds of shooting deaths of young Afro-Americans.
Under Mayor Ray Nagin the rich get richer. The poor get poorer. And Shell Oil Company
is given an environmental award at Mayor Ray Nagin’s environmental breakfast
on May 30th 2005 "

Staff writer Frank Donze contributed to this story.
Gordon Russell can be reached at grussell@timespicayune.com or
Saturday, August 27, 2005

" I would think that would be the way that people would advise a candidate to try to make
(crime) the issue," he said. "He can't run on job creation, economics, neighborhood
revitalization, wages going up. They can't run on any of that stuff.

The only thing they can run on is the murder rate. A series of ads creating
this whole hype about murder."

But Ed Renwick of Loyola University's Institute of Politics was less receptive, saying a tax
proposal could invite a strong challenge and that a loss at the polls for such a proposal
could weaken Nagin's standing even if he's re-elected.

Taxes are always controversial and this could draw support away from you," Renwick said.
"Taxes are always a hard sell, and with gas prices through the roof and property taxes going
up in the New Orleans area, it would make it more difficult than it ordinarily would be" to
pass a new tax

But the mayor made clear that he is strongly considering it, saying he has become
increasingly frustrated with the city's rising murder rate. Nearly 200 murders have been
recorded in 2005, putting the city on pace for about 300 murders for the year, an
unfortunate threshold the city hasn't reached since 1996

Nagin said he doesn't know how much money would be required, but he said ballpark
estimates ranging from $20 million to $50 million are not out of line. The mayor also said
he has not set his sights on a particular type of tax, but he seems to be leaning toward a
property tax rather than alternatives such as a sales tax. "

http://bizneworleans.com/70+M538503905ee.html
Lonely at the Top
May 1, 2004 01:31 PM
by Kathy Finn

" And most recently, a coalition of African-American ministers, claiming to represent as
many as 150,000 local citizens, hurled biting personal criticisms at Nagin based on
changes he’s made in the way the city
awards contracts and disburses certain funds

Complaining that they’ve been wronged, economically, the
politically powerful ministers also attempted to hold Nagin responsible for actions taken in
February by federal agents against Jacques Morial, the brother of the former mayor. After
FBI agents broke down Morial’s front door with
a battering ram in a morning raid to seize documents from his home, the ministers pointed
fingers at Nagin and charged that he had enlisted the feds in a political assault on the
Morial family.

Nagin’s protestations that he had nothing to do with the raid and that
the Justice Department’s investigation of the previous administration
began well before he took office largely fell on deaf ears. The ministers accused Nagin of
turning on the African-American community. Bishop Paul S. Morton Sr., of Greater St.
Stephen Full Gospel Baptist Church, publicly referred to Nagin as “a white man in
black skin.”

It could just be possible that some of the lack of communication still stays
with Nagin during an emergency.

It is very possible that some communication breakdown could be the result
of political differences Nagin has with Govenor.

Jindal's heritage touches nerve
The Associated Press
Posted on November 10, 2003

"Continuing his bid to siphon Democratic support from Kathleen Blanco in the
gubernatorial race, Republican Bobby Jindal unveiled a new TV commercial Thursday that
features New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin asking viewers to ignore Jindal's party affiliation.

This year, it can't matter whether we're Democrats or Republicans," said Nagin, a Democrat
who crossed party lines to endorse Jindal last week. "We've got to do what's right for
Louisiana."

Without mentioning Blanco by name, the 30-second spot suggests the lieutenant governor
is a product of the old political machine. "Old politics says what's in it for me," Nagin said.
"New leadership says what's best for all of us."

By Ela Dutt
September 05, 2005

"Republican Bobby Jindal, the 32-year-old former Bush appointee, chucked his career in
Washington to enter the quagmire of Louisiana politics and analysts there said this was the
first time in the history of that state that the candidates vying for the runoff, Jindal and
Democrat Lt. Gov. Kathleen Blanco, were not smeared by dirty dealings, and especially
Jindal was largely free of the baggage of past politics

Even though exact numbers are coming in the week after the election, Jindal’s 48 percent
and Blanco’s 52 percent are being sliced up in different configurations by political analysts.

He fought on a platform of getting out the old and bringing in the new brand of politics,
focusing on economic development of a state that was losing jobs and business to
surrounding states, losing its youth and showing poor education results. Even after his
defeat, New Orleans’ Democratic Mayor Ray Nagin, who had switched parties to endorse
Jindal, said he was still not convinced about whether Blanco would be as good for his
city’s economy as Jindal would have been."

It does seem unreasonable that a neophyte with minimal experience, a noted inability to communicate, and a
lack of interest in the poor could jump into the fray with a clear direction and decisive leadership. Well
point of fact is Nagin did none of this. Nagin will be famous for a childishly profane tirade during a
national crisis that required calm collected leadership - not Nagin's forte. Well, if Nagin is reelected it will
probably have to be by proxy of the poor blacks that say they are not going back to New Orleans.

Certainly there is enough blame to go around. But we don't see the decisive leader Nagin
stepping up to his part of it. But he did step up to the race card real quickly although many
of his black constituency wonder what race he is trying to win? Is it mayor, governor, higher?

Bryan Hamaker
Birmingham Alabama

#12 - Posted by: bryan on September 8, 2005 10:23 AM

Bryan, posts that long really ought to go on a blog/website of your own and then link over here. See here.

Nagin wants to send 'em here? OK. Keep 'em coming so I don't have to pay state income tax. Yippee!

#13 - Posted by: SeanS on September 9, 2005 06:58 AM
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