September 01, 2005

silhouette3.JPG From the desk of Jane Galt:

Blogging for dollars

A friend sends this in:

Hi bloggers I know. I'm working on one small piece of this
incalculable relief effort, and I'm wondering if you can help. This
weekend I'll be in Lake Providence, Louisiana, which according to the
1990 census was actually the poorest town in America. It's right on
the river, just south of the Arkansas border, in one of the poorest
regions in America.

Lake Providence is six hours away from New Orleans, but already
dealing with a flood of evacuees (Refugees? Are we allowed to have
refugees in America?) that it doesn't really have the resources to
handle. This is the case in many small towns in Northeastern
Louisiana; the only Red Cross shelter is in Monroe, and families have
simply stopped where they ran out of gas or money and asked for
help. A hundred people are in Providence Church; this is not because
the town set aside the church as a refuge, but because people found a
church, stopped and asked if they could stay.

There is no Red Cross or FEMA money in Lake Providence or Tallulah or
Delhi or any of the other small towns taking in people; they are just
saying "Yes, stay here," and trying to come up with the resources to
help. Most immediately, the locals are trying to find money to move
evacuees to Monroe, but medium-term, many families are likely to
settle right where they are. They'll need clothes and school
supplies. And everything.

I've set up a site that explains this, and shows how to donate --
http://www.lakeprovidencehelp.com -- and I'll be taking pictures and
writing about what's going on when I'm there this weekend. This is
very much an exercise in trust; I'm administering a PayPal account
that will draw down to Providence Church. If there is a surplus of
money, it will go first to other towns in the area; if there's a
whole lot of money, it will go to other regions that are similarly
ill-equipped to provide for refugees. I'll be as transparent as I
can the website about what's coming in and where it's going.

I know there's a lot going on, and a lot of different ways to help,
but this is one small way to do a very specific and needed good
thing. I'm happy to answer any questions, and I'd be pleased if you
could pass the link on to your communities.

I can personally vouch that he's a man of high moral integrity, and knows a worthy cause when he sees one. If you haven't committed your donation dollars elsewhere, please think about helping out.

Posted by Jane Galt at September 1, 2005 04:45 PM | TrackBack | Technorati inbound links
Comments

I sent a contribution. Thank you for posting this. And even greater thanks to all of those who are assisting the victims.

Posted by: Steve on September 1, 2005 08:52 PM

Thanks for this. Red Cross, Salvation Army, etc. all do great work, but it's also nice to feel like I'm contributing to something direct and specific sometimes. I quoted this on a music message board I frequent, so hopefully some of my friends there will see fit to contribute as well...

Posted by: Rob Leder on September 2, 2005 03:35 AM

I put it up on my site. I get a few hundred American readers, so if 1% pitch in, that's a bit of help.

Posted by: Sam_S(ShenzhenRen) on September 2, 2005 09:46 AM

Hopefully Lake Providence will have clean parks and streets and many able-bodied folks entering their labor force in the next few weeks -- earning income and building their new future.

Glad to help them.

Posted by: Doug Rubin on September 2, 2005 11:27 AM

Jane Galt readers, you are GENEROUS. About a half-hour after Megan posted this, one of you donated $500. I'm stunned. Thank you.

Brendan

Posted by: Brendan on September 3, 2005 04:56 PM

From the weblog of the objectivistly-named Jane Galt, here is the worst of American reaction to the New Orleans disaster in a nutshell. Below find samplings of statements that reveal a seemingly bottomless capacity for churlish, selfish, callous, racist cruelty by self-congratulatory blog barnacles who coolly watch the NOLA tragedy play out from the comforts of their dry, food-filled, proudly right-wing homes. I believe many of them may fancy themselves a tad intellectual, and hard-nosedly so. The poverty of their arguments demonstrates otherwise. And as none of them lay claim to any sort of humanitarian compassion, you won't be surprised to find it absent here. Hold on to your lunch:


Posted by: You make me sick on September 3, 2005 10:21 PM

Yep, this one, too. Who's sicker, Jane or you, Mr. Rant-and-Paste?

Posted by: RMc on September 3, 2005 10:51 PM

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