Jesse
Jackson's Excellent New Orleans Adventure
by
Humberto Fontova
by Humberto Fontova
Last
month Jesse Jackson equated New Orleans' evacuation centers to the
"hull of a slaveship!" which was mild, actually, compared
to Geraldo Rivera, who weeping in front of Fox News's cameras while
on location in New Orleans, described the scenes as "worse
than Dante's inferno!"
You'll
recall how on prime time TV in 1986 the famous archeologist, Rivera,
hosted and narrated the excavation of Al Capone's secret tomb.
During the show's lengthy foreplay, the panting host hinted that
among a stash of many other fascinating curiosities
Capone's crypt contained: "the bones of those who annoyed
him!"
In
fact, while digging through all the dirt they found more dirt. They
found nothing related to Capone. The show was a gaffe from start
to finish. Geraldo handled it masterfully. His tap-dance shamed
Ashley Simpson's on Saturday Night Live. "A silly high-concept
stunt that failed to deliver on its titillating promise," Rivera
himself described it in his autobiography. This being America, the
show earned the highest ratings for a syndicated special in TV history
and catapulted Rivera to media stardom beyond the wildest dreams
of even Donald Trump. Ashley Simpson take note.
But
we were talking about Jesse "Castro is the most honest and
courageous politician I've ever met! Viva Fidel!" Jackson.
After the (mostly black) New Orleans refugees were evacuated from
those "slaveship hulls," Reverend Jesse Jackson quickly
rummaged up another angle. "Katrina destroyed its victims'
homes," he wrote in the Chicago Sun-Times, "we
shouldn't let the administration make them exiles from their own
city!"
Jackson
now implied that the crafty and racist Bush administration was busing
these people into: "permanent exile." For the first month
after the storm, we'd heard that not evacuating people from New
Orleans was a racist plot. Then it turned out that the evacuation
itself was a racist plot a vast white-wing conspiracy to ethnically
cleanse New Orleans, to turn it white again.
"Karl
Rove is a political reconstructionist who wants to change the character
of Louisiana politics." Jackson declared. "When Bush promised
to remove the legacy of racism in New Orleans, he meant he'd remove
the poor who were victims of that racism. Bush isn't planning urban
renewal, he's planning urban removal. The administration has given
the victims of Katrina a one-way ticket out with no plan for their
return."
Apparently,
when those racist Republicans finally caught on, they devised an
ingenious scheme to return New Orleans to the historic role Mick
Jagger celebrated in Brown Sugar (Gold coast slaveship bound for
cotton fields, sold in the market down in New Orleans.) But ah!
You've got to wake up pretty early in the morning to put something
over on Jesse Jackson and his Rainbow/Push operatives. They're not
falling for it. So they quickly mobilized to foil this Republican
villainy.
"They're trapped in those rescue camps," Jackson explained
his humanitarian campaign to the media. "They (the New Orleans
refugees) should have the right to return and priority in jobs and
housing." And so he led over 200 of these "trapped New
Orleanians" in a five-bus caravan that started in Chicago wound
through St Louis, Memphis, Mobile and Jackson and finally pulled
up to New Orleans on October 11th.
"Their
accents don't sound right for New Orleanians," noted New Orleans
natives Shantell and Woodrow Arnold after they boarded one of the
Rainbow/Push buses in Jackson Ms. The buses landed amidst much fanfare
and the local TV and radio stations were on hand to interview the
multitude of returning "New Orleanians."
But
the accents didn't sound right to the media people holding the mics
either. They went from one returnee to the other, frantically seeking
an actual New Orleanian. Turned out, exactly 14 of the 200 people
were from New Orleans. And when the rest of the bus riders discovered
the state of local conditions 75 per cent of them promptly boarded
the buses and fled back to their homes in Memphis, Chicago, Mobile,
etc. "It was hard to convince displaced residents to return
home," finally admitted Denise Dixon, national field organizer
for the Rainbow/PUSH coalition.
But
nary a peep issued from Reverend Jackson regarding the discrepancy,
nary a hint that something other than a racist Republican plot to
ethnically cleanse New Orleans was at work.
One
of the precious few New Orleanians on a returning bus did have a
comment for the local media. "One person can change their community!"
declared Travis Houston to the local Times Picayune."
One community can change a city! One city can change a nation
and one nation can change the world!"
Jesse
himself could not have put it any better. But that's where the resemblance
ends. According to local media, Mr. Travis signed on with a clean
up crew and toils daily, which is to say: he works for a living.
November
1, 2005
Humberto
Fontova [send him mail]
holds an M.A. in History from Tulane University. He’s the author
of the newly-published Fidel;
Hollywood's Favorite Tyrant, as well as The
Hellpig Hunt: A Hunting Adventure in the Wild Wetlands at the Mouth
of the Mississippi River by Middle-Aged Lunatics Who Refuse to Grow
Up and Helldiver’s
Rodeo described as "Highly entertaining!" by Publisher’s
Weekly, as "Terrific!" by Salon.com, and as "Just
what the doctor ordered!" by Ted Nugent.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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