In His Name Jesus

People Helping People - Good information on Current Events-People, Products and Companies.

Monday, September 05, 2005

California Rocks The Best Story yet

THIS MAN AMONG MEN RENTED
A LEAR JET TO HELP GET PEOPLE OUT
AMAZING NOW THIS IS WHAT
DERLESU CALLS "SHOCK AND AWE"
THERE AREN'T ENOUGH WORDS TO
EXPRESS THIS AWESOME EXPRESION
OF THIS MAN'S ANGER AND RAGE
AND DISSAPOINTMENT IN OUR
GOVERNMENT . DAVID FOR "CHIEF
HOMELAND SECURITY OFFICER".



David gets our vote for the best
"GOOD SAMARITAN AWARD"
Awesome MAN
David Perez has spent $200,000 rescuing victims of
Hurricane Katrina.
He said saving just one life is
"worth a million dollars."










Fed up with what he says is the government's slow
response in rescuing residents along the hurricane-ravaged
Gulf Coast, a California businessman is taking action.
Over the weekend, David Perez launched an effort to
evacuate New Orleans — on his own. Using $200,000,
Perez chartered a Boeing 737. Upon landing in Louisiana,
he unloaded much-needed supplies he had purchased
at a local Costco and later reloaded the plane with 86 weary hurricane victims.

"These people need to have their kids in school and get their feet back on the ground," Perez said. "They have gone through devastation."
The group headed to San Diego, where Perez has organized a contingent of local families to open up their hearts and homes as temporary shelters.
Welcome Relief
Perez's efforts are greatly appreciated by those who have lost everything. "I don't have nowhere else to go," said hurricane victim Norman Chatman. "I'm looking for a new start, a new beginning."
Perez said he's just doing what the government failed to do to help victims of Hurricane Katrina. "It's a joke," he said. "Everyone took a vacation from this disaster."
Perez was there for every step of the journey, handing out boarding passes and helping with luggage. When the plane touched down in San Diego, tears of devastation finally turned to tears of joy.
As chairman and chief operating officer of Carmel Valley-based Surge Global Energy, Perez said he's counting on one of the company's drilling operations to pay his credit card bills for the relief effort — or else he will have to take out a second mortgage on his San Diego home. If all goes well, he might arrange for additional evacuation flights.
"If I save one life — just one life — and I make one person's life better on this trip," he said, "it's worth a million dollars to me."

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