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"Concrete" evidence?   Message List  
Reply Message #5546 of 16787 |
[Yes, it is quite possible that the New Orleans' levees were sabotaged
to accomplish the complete destruction of the city that Hurricane
Katrina HAD NOT DONE.Experts would be able to know if the levee had
been blasted. It is even possible that explosives were embedded into
the CONCRETE levee when it was being constructed to be exploded at the
proper time.Just like Murrah and WTC.There are Army engineers out
there who MUST know.]
==============
http://www.stewwebb.com/BreakingNews.html

Breaking News September 1, 2005 Second Battle of New Orleans
Commences. Witnesses saw Levy Sabotaged by Bushes (FEMA) Federal
Emergency Management Agency. American French Alliance (AFA) protecting
Poor Black Witnesses who saw Bush-FEMA Blow the Levy's that flooded
New Orleans. The American Revolution Continues.



==================
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/1125442964217_7

New Orleans: When the levee breaks

Bill Doskoch, CTV.ca News

If you drive into New Orleans from the west, you travel on elevated
expressways built on concrete pilings that tower above the swamps and
bayous below.

New Orleans is sandwiched between Lake Pontchartrain to the north and
the Mississippi River, about 160 kilometres north of where the river
joins the Gulf of Mexico, one of the world's most fertile hurricane zones.

The city's location was chosen in part because it was the only patch
of relatively high ground along that part of the river, and because of
the narrow portage, favoured by the native Indians of the area,
between the river and the lake.

New Orleans is home to 485,000 people -- about 160,000 less than
Winnipeg, a city that also has some familiarity with flooding --
although the area population is 1.3 million.

While living in Winnipeg is like living on a tabletop, living in New
Orleans is more like being in a sunken soup bowl.

The majority of the city is an average of 1.9 metres below sea level
-- with the lowest point six metres below sea level and the highest
ground still 0.3 metres lower than the sea.

Almost half of New Orleans' 907-square-kilometre surface area is
comprised of water, not land.

Since the area is naturally flood-prone, engineers have worked to
build an intricate system of canals, pumps and elevated embankments
called levees, which form the bowl, to protect the city.

As little as 2.5 centimetres of rain can trigger some degree of local
flooding. With its semi-tropical climate, the city gets an average of
90 cm per year.

That reality helps explain one colourful aspect of New Orleans and
southern Louisiana -- people are buried in aboveground crypts, not
underground graves.

A history of near misses

Levees exist up and down the Mississippi River valley.

The earliest levees were erected soon after the city's founding in
1718 and the system has been expanded and strengthened ever since.

Breaches, and the damage and heartbreak that follows, are ingrained in
southern folklore.

For example, "When the Levee Breaks" is the name of a 1929 blues tune
by Memphis Minnie, made famous by Led Zeppelin.

"Now, cryin' won't help you, prayin' won't do you no good, When the
levee breaks, mama, you got to move," the lyrics warn.

IN 1965, WHEN HURRICANE BETSY STRUCK THE COAST NEAR NEW ORLEANS, THE
LEVEES ENCIRCLING THE CITY AND OUTLYING PARISHES WERE RAISED TO
HEIGHTS RANGING UP TO ABOUT SEVEN METRES.

SINCE THEN, THE BIG EASY HAS HAD NOTHING BUT NEAR MISSES AS HURRICANE
AFTER HURRICANE WREAKED HAVOC ELSEWHERE ALONG THE GULF COAST.

IN 1988, HURRICANE GEORGES HEADED STRAIGHT FOR NEW ORLEANS, THEN
VEERED AT THE LAST MINUTE TO STRIKE MISSISSIPPI AND ALABAMA.

HURRICANE LILI BLEW HERSELF OUT AT THE MOUTH OF THE MISSISSIPPI IN 2002.

AND LAST YEAR'S HURRICANE IVAN SWERVED TO THE EAST AS IT CAME ASHORE,
BARELY GRAZING THE CITY.

NEVERTHELESS, EXPERTS REPEATEDLY CAUTIONED THAT THE LEVEE SYSTEM WAS
UNLIKELY TO PROTECT THE CITY AGAINST A CATEGORY 4 OR 5 STORM.

"We're talking about an incredible environmental disaster," Marine
scientist Ivor van Heerden of Louisiana State University, who has
developed flooding models for New Orleans, said before the storm arrived.

He predicted that floodwaters would overcome the levee system, fill
the low-lying areas of the city and remain trapped there.

So when meteorologists forecasted that Hurricane Katrina was bearing
down on the city, city officials ordered a mass evacuation, fearing
the worst.

"We are facing a storm that most of us have long feared," New Orleans'
Mayor Ray Nagin said Sunday as he issued a mandatory evacuation order.

"The storm surge will most likely topple our levee system."

Experts have long warned the network of earthen, steel and concrete
barriers protecting the city were inadequate.

When the levee breaks

The 560 kilometre-long hurricane levee system, mostly along Lake
Pontchartrain to the north and the Mississippi River on the south --
was designed to withstand a fast-moving Category 3 hurricane, which
carries with it a storm surge of up to 5.5 metres.

As it crossed the Gulf of Mexico after pummeling south Florida,
Katrina was rated a rare Category 5 hurricane, with winds of 280
kilometres per hour and a predicted storm surge of 8.5 metres.
Meteorologists thought the storm would bring 38 centimetres of rain too.

WHEN KATRINA HIT EARLY MONDAY MORNING, IT HAD BEEN DOWNGRADED TO A
STILL-DANGEROUS CATEGORY 4 STORM. AS WELL, IT VEERED TO THE EAST WHEN
IT CAME ASHORE, SPARING NEW ORLEANS A DIRECT HIT.

BUT PEAK WINDS STILL HIT 160 KM/H AS KATRINA LASHED NEW ORLEANS FOR
EIGHT HOURS.

ON MONDAY NIGHT, RESIDENTS BELIEVED THEY HAD ESCAPED MAJOR DAMAGE.
THEY WERE WRONG.

AS WATER LEVELS IN LAKE PONTCHARTRAIN ROSE IN THE CITY'S NORTH, THE
LEVEE SYSTEM BUCKLED UNDER THE STRAIN.

THERE WAS ONE LEVEE BREAK REPORTED AT THE EAST END OF TOWN, BUT ONLY
LOCALIZED FLOODING RESULTED.

HOWEVER, THERE WAS A FAILURE OF A LARGE SECTION OF THE VITAL 17TH
STREET CANAL LEVEE WHERE IT CONNECTS TO THE OLD HAMMOND HIGHWAY BRIDGE.

THE GAP -- FIRST REPORTED TO BE ABOUT 60 METRES WIDE, BUT NOW ABOUT
150 METRES -- ALLOWED MILLIONS OF LITRES OF WATER FROM LAKE
PONTCHARTRAIN TO FLOOD NEW ORLEANS, TURNING IT INTO AN URBAN SWAMP.

ACCORDING TO THE NEW YORK TIMES, THIS BREACH WAS ON A SPOT THAT HAD
RECEIVED MORE ATTENTION THAN OTHER AREAS IN THE REGION.

SHEA PENLAND, DIRECTOR OF THE PONTCHARTRAIN INSTITUTE FOR
ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES AT THE UNIVERSITY OF NEW ORLEANS, SAID THAT
BREACH WAS PARTICULARLY SURPRISING BECAUSE IT OCCURRED "ALONG A
SECTION THAT WAS JUST UPGRADED."

"IT DID NOT HAVE AN EARTHEN LEVEE," PENLAND TOLD THE NEWSPAPER.

"IT HAD A VERTICAL CONCRETE WALL SEVERAL FEEL THICK."

BY LATE AFTERNOON TUESDAY, MAYOR NAGIN REPORTED THAT 80 PER CENT OF
HIS CITY WAS NOW UNDERWATER.

ENGINEERS BELIEVE HIGH WINDS PUSHED WATER OVER THE LEVEES' TOP AND
ERODED THEM FROM BEHIND.

OTHER EXPERTS STUDYING FLOOD PREVENTION SPECULATED THAT ANY DIP IN THE
RETAINING LEVEE SYSTEM MIGHT HAVE ALLOWED WATER TO SLOSH OVER,
TRIGGERING THE COLLAPSE.

To make matters worse, it appeared that the breaches in the levees
would not be fixed quickly and may in fact take days to repair.

Plugging the breaches

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers had hoped to plug the breaches by
dropping 1,360-kilogram sand bags from twin-rotored CH-53 helicopters.

Another plan was to use shipping containers filled with gravel.

But neither option has gone well so far.

"The challenge is an engineering nightmare," Louisiana Gov. Kathleen
Blanco of Louisiana told ABC's Good Morning America on Wednesday.

"The National Guard has been dropping sandbags into it, but it's like
dropping it into a black hole."

In addition, there was a report of a pump failure Tuesday night.

On Wednesday morning, Blanco called for the complete evacuation of New
Orleans.

LATER THAT DAY, EXPERTS FROM THE ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS ARRIVED ON
THE SCENE, ASSESSING WAYS TO REPAIR THE BREACHES.

"We're attempting to contract for materials, such as rock, super sand
bags, cranes, and also for modes of transportation like barges and
helicopters, to close the gap and stop the flow of water," said Walter
Baumy, the Corps' manager for the project.

According to reports on Thursday, the Army Corps of Engineers said it
was having trouble getting the sandbags to the affected site because
the waterways were blocked by boats, debris, and loose barges.
The Corps is expected to drive corrugated vertical steel plates into
the mud near where the canal meets the lake, sealing it off so that
the large breach farther in, can be tackled more systematically.

The decision was made after futile efforts to determine how to drop
concrete highway barriers or huge sandbags into the torrent.

Even after the breaches are plugged, electricity will still have to be
restored and the pumps repaired before the long process of pumping the
water out of New Orleans can begin.

The broken levees allowed the water to fill the city's streets, but
dozens of barriers that remained intact are keeping the floodwater
from receding.

To help matters; however, the army considered creating an opening in a
south levee to allow water to drain out.

"That way, gravity would work for us," corps spokesman Jim Pogue told
Reuters on Tuesday.

And once the flooding is over, Michael Brown, head of the U.S. Federal
Emergency Management Agency, told one U.S. network on Tuesday it could
be weeks before people could return to their homes.

That's because the floodwaters have turned New Orleans into a toxic
soup bowl, with chemicals, human waste and rotting animal carcasses
and human corpses all mixing together to make the trapped water highly
polluted.

When the city is dried out and roads are restored, people could return
to survey their homes, not necessarily live in them, Blanco said at a
news conference.

"It's hard to say how many homes may be structurally salvageable," she
said.

The push is on now to find temporary housing for hundreds of thousands
of people who will likely need it for months, not days or weeks.

As the song laments: "When the levee breaks, I'll have no place to
stay. Mean old levee, taught me to weep and moan."








Sat Sep 3, 2005 3:50 am

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Message #5546 of 16787 |
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[Yes, it is quite possible that the New Orleans' levees were sabotaged to accomplish the complete destruction of the city that Hurricane Katrina HAD NOT...
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Sep 3, 2005
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New Orleans: Police kill army contractors.Silencing those who would know? http://www.news24.com/News24/World/Hurricane_Katrina/0,,2-10-1942_1765151,00.html New...
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Sep 5, 2005
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