Most people were upset over Katrina, but I was happy. It destroyed many of the worst parts of the city. To be honest, there are only 3 or 4 good parts of New Orleans: uptown, downtown (the French Quarter), New Orleans East (where the Vietnamese are), and mid-city. I'm from mid-city myself, around City Park, the Bayou (St. John), and Orleans Ave. I lived most of my life before Jeff Davis, but a little bit past that point, around N. White and N. Dupre, off Esplanade. I'll tell you what, if only Katrina destroyed the West Bank too, it would of been perfect. Sure, Lakeview was ok, but it was very conservative, so fuck Lakeview. Gentilly was alright, but it was somewhat corrupted by Lakeview and the St. Bernard projects. The 9th ward? This place was known as the worst ghetto in the city. If you wanted to get shot, go to the 9th ward.
People think I have a funny attitude about Haiti, but I had the same thing about New Orleans. If you live in a hurricane-zone, build appropriate structures. The hurricane's will not stop. Why allow disaster, when a simple work of science can prevent any such occurrence?
Do you think beating the shit out of Peyton Manning will work better than it did against Brett Favre? I remember a playoff game, I think it was against the Steelers, where Peyton got pressured and lost the game. He doesn't have the resilience of a Brett Favre.
People think I have a funny attitude about Haiti, but I had the same thing about New Orleans. If you live in a hurricane-zone, build appropriate structures. The hurricane's will not stop. Why allow disaster, when a simple work of science can prevent any such occurrence?
Do you think beating the shit out of Peyton Manning will work better than it did against Brett Favre? I remember a playoff game, I think it was against the Steelers, where Peyton got pressured and lost the game. He doesn't have the resilience of a Brett Favre.
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