New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin must be smoking a crack pipe as he suggests the black population in New Orleans has not returned and a conspiracy exists to keep it that way.
Nagin stated in a Martin Luther King Jr. Day speech in 2006 that, despite the evacuation of thousands of black people in the wake of Katrina, New Orleans would once again become a “chocolate city.”
The troubled racist mayor suggested to the National Newspaper Publishers Association (a trade group for newspapers that target black readers.) ”Ladies and gentlemen, what happened in New Orleans could happen anywhere.”
“They are studying this model of natural disasters, dispersing the community and changing the electoral process in that community.”
The pathetic Nagin failed to describe the “they” in his speech and suggests his “chocolate city” comments have made him a political target.
“Everybody in America started to wake up and say: ‘Wait a minute. What is he doing? What is he saying? We have to make sure that this man doesn’t go any further,” declared Nagin.
Is it possible the public wondered why Nagin policy stranded thousands of New Orleans residents while he was finding housing for himself and his family in Dallas, Texas?
Racist Nagin referred to his last white mayoral opponent as “the golden boy” and at the time suggested, his chance at reelection in the mayoral race had seemed slim because…
”they dispersed all of our people across 44 states with one-way tickets.”
Mayor Nagin remains non-specific with his continued use of the word “they” to describe the “abductors” or “kidnappers” or possibly the removal of New Orleans citizens by a group aboard a flying saucer. Was Nagin referring to all New Orleans citizens or just black citizens?
Nagin placed his family in Dallas during the Katrina crisis but finds a “conspiracy” when people left the area to find housing and jobs in other parts of the country. Settling in new communities was appealing to thousands and Nagin should reflect on this fact.
In the mean time, Nagin will suggest racism and a “white-wing” conspiracy may exist; only in Mayor Nagin’s racist mind. We’re sure Mulder and Scully are on the job.

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March 18th, 2007 at 10:59 pm
Nobody here believes Mayor Nagin’s comments about the runoff election against Mitch Landrieu because Landrieu (Senator Mary Landrieu’s sister and former New Orleans Mayor Moon Landrieu’s son) is perceived as “blacker” than Nagin, so the conservative voters tended to vote for Nagin over Landrieu in the runoff, and many blacks supported Landrieu over Nagin. With these comments, Nagin is pandering to the national audience and the media that is eager for a story that fits their black/white view of the world.