Domain Registration

Tone-Deaf Chicago Tribune Op-Ed Says Hurricane Katrina Was Good For New Orleans

  • August 14, 2015
  • Chicago

The Chicago Tribune apparently motionless a coming 10th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina was a good offshoot for an op-ed extolling a clarification and physic virtues of a healthy disaster that left 1,833 people dead.

“In Chicago, Wishing For A Hurricane Katrina,”drew evident recoil online. though a strange content and title can be review here. 

McQueary compared a domestic corruption, financial trouble and incriminating propagandize complement of pre-Katrina New Orleans to present-day Chicago

I find myself wishing for a charge in Chicago — an unpredictable, haughty, harmful whirl of fury. A thespian wharf break. Geysers ripping by manhole covers. A sleeping city, forced onto a rooftops.

That’s what it took to strike a reset symbol in New Orleans. Chaos. Tragedy. Heartbreak. 

It would be tough to call a city that survived Katrina lucky, though McQueary insists that a whirly “gave a good American city a rebirth.”

The mainstay naively assesses a city’s gains as a outcome of a hurricane: a “overthrow” of a hurtful government, a smaller city budget, forced delinquent furloughs, cut positions, “detonated labor contracts” and a propagandize complement unburdened by teachers kinship demands. 

Today, New Orleans rates 14th in a republic for domestic corruptionpushed a weight elsewherethe post-Katrina propagandize complement is still in flux. are in improved shape

Based on readers’ reactions on amicable media, a op-ed was not really persuasive:

If we review a piece, it’s about finances and government. we would never lessen a tragedy of thousands of lives lost.

August 13, 2015

Those lives are partial of a difficulty that a editorial says enabled New Orleans to “hit a reset button” — nonetheless they go probably unmentioned.

The “thousands of lives lost” were overwhelmingly among New Orleans’ many vulnerable. Residents but entrance to a automobile — mostly a bad and elderlyroughly one in 3 residents from a hardest-hit areas was black. 

The many disgusting thoroughfare — that was after altered on a wily — was generally out-of-touch with a real-life tellurian fee of Katrina. Per a op-ed: 

That’s because we find myself praying for a genuine storm. It’s because we can relate, metaphorically, to a residents of New Orleans climbing onto their rooftops and vagrant for assistance and fluttering their arms and lurching toward rescue helicopters.

As a reminder, here are some images of what tangible residents of New Orleans gifted during Katrina: 

AFP around Getty Images Share on Pinterest MCT around Getty Images Share on Pinterest ASSOCIATED PRESS Share on Pinterest ASSOCIATED PRESS Share on Pinterest Bloomberg around Getty Images Share on Pinterest ASSOCIATED PRESS Share on Pinterest

This story has been updated with additional info about a demographics of Hurricane Katrina victims. 

Article source: http://feeds.huffingtonpost.com/c/35496/f/677503/s/48f8de9c/sc/24/l/0L0Shuffingtonpost0N0C20A150C0A80C130Cchicago0Etribune0Ekatrina0In0I79859620Bhtml0Dutm0Ihp0Iref0Fchicago0Gir0FChicago/story01.htm

Related News

Search

Find best hotel offers