black elk speaks wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:black elk speaks wrote:this is a city that is on the Gulf Coast, at 5 feet below sea level. its time to cut the losses and move inland.
can anyone say Nunu Orleans?
Except that New Orleans is one of the oldest cities in the country, and has survived quite a few hurricanes quite well. The problem is that it was allowed to expand beyond its safe borders and blacks (some whites) were actively encouraged or (in the case of blacks) forced to move onto the flood plains with promises of Corps of Engineer protection.
That said... no one deserved what happened last time. I only hope folks get treated well this time.
PS "hillbillie" refers to folks in West Virginia, Northern Geoargia, etc where there are hills.
okay, the fact that Ray Naggin is quoted as saying "this is the mother of all storms" and "get your butts out of N.O." should tell you something. my prediction is that the city will not survive this hurricane. also, i think that it should not. with sea levels rising and hurricanes seemingly worse than years past, people should consider a life away from the cost if it means that they are living below sea level.
Again, you have to distinguish between historic and greater New Orleans. But, I do agree that New Orleans needs to change to accommodate new weather/sea level conditions.
now, hillbilly was originally as you say, but since people actually migrate, those folks from the hills did not leave there title behind them as they moved away from the hills. for the record, i wouldn't consider all of N.O. residents to be hill billies, in fact i wouldn't consider them hillbillies at all, except for those of them that actually moved there from the hills of WV.
Except there has never been a serious migration of people from the hills to New Orleans. New Orleans is its OWN historic mixture of Creole, Cajun, Mulatto, ETC. groups. They look to Canada, Spain, France, Africa, the Caribbean and Native Americans. Lumping them ... or any other part of the south with "hill billies" is just plain wrong. The coast has always been quite different from the inland south. Historically, you approached the far south by sea, the overland routes were very, very difficult and treacherous. Contact was little, so the cultures were quite different. About the only similarity between Cajun bayou culture, Gulf Coast culture and hill country culture is that they have all been dominated by poverty. But those hill folk would often have more in common with folks from Upper New York or the Midwest than the Bayou or coast.