The Boondocks by Aaron McGruder for April 29, 2013
April 28, 2013
April 30, 2013
Transcript:
Man: And all I keep hearin' in the news is New Orleans, New Orleans, New Orleans... You wanna talk about tragedy? Did you know Gilligan died?
Girl: Was he in the superdome,too?
As one of the cities that got some the first of the Katrina refugees, things have changed. Not all returned home after that disaster. Traffic has become worse. The crime rate has had an increase. However, this is probably due a more rapid increase in population that the infrastructure could handle. For some, Katrina was a mixed blessing. For those that were living in a high crime area and no means to leave the area prior to the storm, life improved after the initial hard re-adjustment. Better housing, better schools, and a chance to remove their children from the violent, criminal influence that existed in their neighborhoods was the result of Katrina. Further west though, things were worse. The refugees that made it to Texas were the last to leave the Crescent City. Most of those were of the more lawless element who apparently saw the evacuated city as a means to enrich themselves from the deserted businesses and homes. They did not leave until it was obvious that New Orleans during Katrina was a death trap and the nearby cities were at capacity in terms of emergency shelter.
krys723 over 11 years ago
Poor girl…she doesn’t know Ruckus like I do
kaecispopX over 11 years ago
As one of the cities that got some the first of the Katrina refugees, things have changed. Not all returned home after that disaster. Traffic has become worse. The crime rate has had an increase. However, this is probably due a more rapid increase in population that the infrastructure could handle. For some, Katrina was a mixed blessing. For those that were living in a high crime area and no means to leave the area prior to the storm, life improved after the initial hard re-adjustment. Better housing, better schools, and a chance to remove their children from the violent, criminal influence that existed in their neighborhoods was the result of Katrina. Further west though, things were worse. The refugees that made it to Texas were the last to leave the Crescent City. Most of those were of the more lawless element who apparently saw the evacuated city as a means to enrich themselves from the deserted businesses and homes. They did not leave until it was obvious that New Orleans during Katrina was a death trap and the nearby cities were at capacity in terms of emergency shelter.