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Crackdown on looting
New Orleans police ordered to stop saving lives and start
saving property
By Patrick Martin
1 September 2005
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New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin ordered nearly the entire active
police force in the flood-ravaged city to abandon rescue operations
Wednesday night and focus on efforts to halt looting. The decision
came in response to mounting pressure from sensationalized media
coverage which is increasingly placing emphasis on the property
damage done by looters, suggesting that it has become nearly as
significant a social problem as the virtual destruction of the
city by Hurricane Katrina.
Nagin said that looters are starting to get closer to
heavily populated areashotels, hospitals, and were
going to stop it right now. He assigned 1,500 police to
anti-looting duty. The Associated Press reported, The number
of officers called off the search-and-rescue mission amounts to
virtually the entire police force in New Orleans.
The order came only hours after Nagin warned that the death
toll in New Orleans might rise to the thousands once
the bodies of those trapped in their homes by the flood waters
begin to be recovered. Thousands of people have been rescued from
rooftops and attics over the past two days, but efforts to save
other survivors will be drastically curtailed as a result of the
new focus on saving property.
Louisiana Governor Kathleen Blanco said she would order National
Guardsmen redeployed to stop looters as soon as federal emergency
personnel were on scene to take over evacuations and rescues.
We will restore law and order, the Democratic governor
declared. What angers me the most is that disasters like
this often bring out the worst in people. I will not tolerate
this kind of behavior.
The media focus on the looting escalated throughout Wednesday,
with the cable television networks, in particular, broadcasting
and rebroadcasting the same footage of looters, mainly young black
people, emerging from flood-damaged stores, goods in hand.
There is a definite social significance to such coverage, which
grossly distorts the reality of the worst natural disaster in
American history. It demonstrates that under the profit system,
private property counts for far more than human life.
The sensationalized press coverage has an obvious political
purpose: to demonize the victims of Hurricane Katrina and whip
up the basest sentiments, including racism. In this way, the media
helps justify the policy already decided on by the American ruling
class and the Bush administrationto carry out only the most
perfunctory recovery efforts and leave the vast majority of working
class victims of the catastrophe to fend for themselves.
It is noteworthy that only 12 hours before he ordered the police
mobilization, Mayor Nagin brusquely rejected a question about
looting from Matt Lauer, host of NBCs Today program,
telling him the media was grossly exaggerating the significance
of a relative handful of people taking television sets and other
electronic goods. The bulk of the theft, he pointed
out, was desperate people taking food, bottled water and clothing
to meet their immediate needs.
In a subsequent press interview, Nagin said, Its
really difficult because my opinion of the looting is it started
with people running out of food, and you cant really argue
with that too much. Then it escalated to this kind of mass chaos
where people are taking electronic stuff and all that.
A report in Wednesdays New York Times confirmed
this account, describing the scene at the Super Wal-Mart on Tchoupitoulas
Street in the Lower Garden District of New Orleans, where dozens
of people were taking goods from the store with the tacit consent
of both the store management and local police and firefighters.
The store initially opened its doors to supply food to the rescue
workers, but was then invaded by local residents, most of them
in search of food and clothing.
One woman, accompanied by her teenage daughter, told the Times,
Aint nobody stealing anything. They said, Take
what you need, because the levee is a-busting. Its
about to flood and everything is going to be ruined anyway.
A young man told the newspaper, We need clothes and food.
The police are letting everybody go in and get what they need.
Theyre not letting you get TVs and stuff, but the
people are overpowering them.
Like all such events, the hurricane disaster has an enormous
social component, revealing what American society is made of.
Contrary to Governor Blanco, however, the worst in people
is shown in the lack of preparation by the authorities and their
relative indifference to the suffering inflicted on several million
people by the high winds, storm surge and flooding.
When it comes to theft, the looting of consumer goods from
a few retail stores in impoverished New Orleans can hardly compare
with the profiteering already under way on the part of big business.
The price-gouging on gasoline sales alonethe retail price
has jumped $1 a gallon in some areashas robbed billions
of dollars from working people all over the United States. But
no oil company executives or gasoline distributors are being vilified
on the media, let alone hunted down by police and National Guardsmen.
See Also:
Bush rules out significant federal aid
to hurricane victims
[1 September 2005]
Hurricane Katrina: a calamity
compounded by poverty and neglect
[31 August 2005]
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