There were very few bodies after 9/11. The only ones I saw were firemen being carried off by their comrades. No civilians.jannuncutt said:Does anyone remember whether or not they showed those types of pictures of September 11th?
There were very few bodies after 9/11. The only ones I saw were firemen being carried off by their comrades. No civilians.jannuncutt said:Does anyone remember whether or not they showed those types of pictures of September 11th?
Casshew said:I don't think people should be gawking at the photos out of morbid curiosity, but I feel everyone should see photos so they can grasp the scope of this disaster.
I don't think people appreciate the destruction & human toll. A number is just a number, but a photo puts it in perspective.
Yeah, 9/11 you either were perfectly fine, or you were dust. Very few people left bodies, very few injuries. The blood banks at that time got an outpouring of donations that they had to outpour down the sink when they expired, because there was actually too much to use (BTW: don't let this stop you from donating, that was a one in a million occurrence - we've usually got quite a blood shortage in this country, one that sometimes does cost lives, and there are plenty of survivors of Katrina who will drain that shallow supply even further ((can you tell I feel guilty about not being able to give this time...))).Ntegrity said:There were very few bodies after 9/11. The only ones I saw were firemen being carried off by their comrades. No civilians.
Quite true. After 9/11, a similar question arose, and it arose immediately and continues. That first night, most stations weren't showing graphic images. I was scanning channels and caught on CBS a video of two people holding hands and falling to their deaths, after jumping. They are alive, but it's got to affect a loved one. I can still see it. There was a debate about showing those videos, and airing phone messages and 911 calls, etc. As I recall, some loved ones want them made public, some don't.Details said:Yeah, 9/11 you either were perfectly fine, or you were dust. Very few people left bodies, very few injuries. The blood banks at that time got an outpouring of donations that they had to outpour down the sink when they expired, because there was actually too much to use (BTW: don't let this stop you from donating, that was a one in a million occurrence - we've usually got quite a blood shortage in this country, one that sometimes does cost lives, and there are plenty of survivors of Katrina who will drain that shallow supply even further ((can you tell I feel guilty about not being able to give this time...))).
Good work! It's a great form of charity - doesn't require you to be rich, nor to have much in the line of spare time. If all you've got is your health, you can help.bakerprune64 said:I'll make my one gallon mark in November.
Beyond Belief said:NEW ORLEANS Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco (search) seemed at odds with New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin (search ) Wednesday, hours after the mayor ordered the mandatory evacuation of the crippled Crescent City by force if necessary.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,168644,00.html
Sounds like they're in a pure CYA mode.FEMA has set up a temporary morgue in the town of St. Gabriel, about 70 miles west of New Orleans. Officials at St. Gabriel would not disclose how many bodies they had handled so far.
Jeana (DP) said:Can you imagine if you're holding up in your home trying to save what you can and you don't want to leave and then you hear first that you're going to be physically forced out of your home, then you hear, nope, the mayor got trumped by the governor - no one knows what the hell is going on!!!! Someone who knows what they're doing needs to step in and tell them all to shut the hell up until some FINAL DECISIONS have been made!!!!!!!!~!
kgeaux said:It's all politics. Nagin is a deomocrat on paper, but he supported Bobby Jindal for governor, not Kathleen Blanco. And of course, disaster continues to compound while Ms. Blanco engages in a face-off with Bush and Nagin. Shame on them! They need to get together in a room and finally decide to put the people of New Orleans first.
PrayersForMaura said:It nice to see some clamness...
It appears one Mississippi official isn't blaming anyone... I found this in a CNN article:
He said search and rescue efforts were not "as fast as we wanted," but he attributed that to the scope of the devastation.
Praise the Lord, someone with some common sense.![]()
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Mississippi authorities blame Hurricane Katrina for 154 deaths in the state, and the toll is expected to rise, the state's governor told a House committee Wednesday
Appearing by video from the state capital in Jackson, Gov. Haley Barbour told the House Energy and Commerce Committee in Washington that authorities in his state have rescued about 5,000 people from the rubble.
Some Mississippians -- including Hattiesburg Mayor Johnnie Dupree -- have complained that FEMA's bureaucracy prevented some needed supplies from reaching their destinations.
By Wednesday, the coastal area was firmly under the control of the National Guard.
http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/09/07/katrina.impact/index.html