Why isn't New Orleans Mother's Day parade shooting a 'national tragedy'?
Why isn't New Orleans Mother's Day parade shooting a 'national tragedy'?
The media seems to forget about New Orleans and any place that the middle class can't easily relate to
David Dennis
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 15 May 2013 12.51 EDT
On 3 September 2005 less than a week after Hurricane Katrina devastated the Gulf Coast I began to understand that America cared little about what was happening in New Orleans.
I was an undergraduate at Davidson College in North Carolina at the time, worried out of my mind because my family in Mississippi was still without electricity and friends and family in New Orleans and the Mississippi Gulf Coast were still missing. The images of families stranded on rooftops were trickling in via news outlets, but it was obvious that the response from the government would be slow.
But it really hit me on 3 September. I was driving around and noticed all the American flags at half-mast. Because Supreme court chief justice William Rehnquist died.
At the time, the Gulf Coast death toll was rumored to be in the thousands with nobody knowing for sure. But flags stayed at full mast until a chief justice died. To me, this was a slap in the face to what was going on in New Orleans and a sign that the city just didn't matter to the overall fabric of the country.
More:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2013/may/15/new-orleans-shooting-not-national-news
liberal N proud
(60,339 posts)The Stranger
(11,297 posts)Then, at that point, it becomes an entirely different sociological phenomenon.
The fear centers in the brain are activated, cities are shut down, suspects picked up and arrested, sometimes "detained" for a decade.
TalkingDog
(9,001 posts)TL;DR: People aren't outraged over N.O. because Boston is full of middle class white people.
kona808
(41 posts)The President, Michelle or the VP would have been winging their way on down in a heartbeat.
NOLA?
Not even a mention or an official statement.