How to leave New Orleans

I would not like to be in Mississippi right now. I’ve never been even remotely near any sort of large storm, having always lived in rather temperate climates, but I feel for the people stuck in the path of the hurricane. I especially think of those tourists who can’t get out of the area because all major transportation networks (planes, trains, busses) have either shut down or already left. You go on vacation and end up battered by 150 mile per hour winds. Harsh… and terrifying.

The mayor ordered an immediate evacuation Sunday for all of New Orleans, a city sitting below sea level with 485,000 inhabitants, as Hurricane Katrina bore down with wind revving up to nearly 175 mph and threats of a massive storm surge.

Rain started falling on extreme southeastern Louisiana by midday Sunday as the storm moved across the Gulf of Mexico toward land. Highways in Mississippi and Louisiana were jammed as people headed away from Katrina’s expected landfall. All lanes were limited to northbound traffic on Interstates 55 and 59 in the two states.

“We cannot stress enough the danger this hurricane poses to Gulf Coast communities,” Bush told reporters on his ranch in Crawford, Texas.

AP: Hurricane Katrina Packing Wind of Nearly 175 Mph

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Catching Homosexuality before it gets too late…

Helping Boys Become Men, and Girls Become Women: Is My Child Becoming Homosexual?

via The Huffington Post

UPDATE:

I only really put this link up on here because I was intrigued by the story carried by the Boston Globe which looks at the differences between two identical twins aged just 7 years old, one of whom is almost certainly going to identify himself as gay, the other straight. This is interesting because it implies a non-genetic pressure on the boys, though they had very clearly different personalities and interests from the very beginning, despite being raised about as similarly as possible.

When the twins were 2, Patrick found his mother’s shoes. He liked wearing them. Thomas tried on his father’s once but didn’t see the point.

When they were 3, Thomas blurted out that toy guns were his favorite things. Patrick piped up that his were the Barbie dolls he discovered at day care.

When the twins were 5, Thomas announced he was going to be a monster for Halloween. Patrick said he was going to be a princess. Thomas said he couldn’t do that, because other kids would laugh at him. Patrick seemed puzzled. “Then I’ll be Batman,” he said.

Their mother – intelligent, warm, and open-minded – found herself conflicted. She wanted Patrick – whose playmates have always been girls, never boys – to be himself, but she worried his feminine behavior would expose him to ridicule and pain. She decided to allow him free expression at home while setting some limits in public. That worked until last year, when a school official called to say Patrick was making his classmates uncomfortable. He kept insisting that he was a girl.

Patrick exhibits behavior called childhood gender nonconformity, or CGN. This doesn’t describe a boy who has a doll somewhere in his toy collection or tried on his sister’s Snow White outfit once, but rather one who consistently exhibits a host of strongly feminine traits and interests while avoiding boy-typical behavior like rough-and-tumble play. There’s been considerable research into this phenomenon, particularly in males, including a study that followed boys from an early age into early adulthood. The data suggest there is a very good chance Patrick will grow up to be homosexual. Not all homosexual men show this extremely feminine behavior as young boys. But the research indicates that, of the boys who do exhibit CGN, about 75 percent of them – perhaps more – turn out to be gay or bisexual.

Patrick’s mother says, ”I can now imagine him being completely straight, which I couldn’t a year ago,” she says. “I can imagine him being gay, which seems to be statistically most likely.”

She says she’s fine with either outcome, just as long as he’s happy and free from harm. She takes heart in how much more accepting today’s society is. “By the time my boys are 20, the world will have changed even more.”

Boston Post: What Makes People Gay?

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