Hurricane Katrina was considered as one natural disaster. But in reality it was two disasters. The initial disaster was a natural disaster which ripped the coastlands of Louisiana and Mississippi to shreds and left New Orleans a wasteland. The second disaster was the lack of communication and response that took place between federal, regional, state, and local relief agencies and efforts after the hurricane. The two disasters combined have caused a lot of damages to a vast human population. The consequence of Katrina includes a record number of death tolls, injuries, refugees and expenses as well as the rebuilding of approximately 1,300,000 million people.…
The scale that this “man-made” disaster was at seemed unacceptable and disgraceful, as shown through Dave Egger’s harrowing story of Zeitoun. The mass destruction that Hurricane Katrina caused will forever go down as one of the worst natural disasters in American history in which the government unfortunately had a role in. The insufficiency and corruption conducted in that disaster will forever be a reminder of the darkness of government, so a catastrophe will never happen like that in the next phenomenon that…
In “Dark Rain” on page 65 frame four, Simon Gane shows how compacted and hectic the Convention Center was and how horrible the conduction there were. His depiction of the Convention Center was spot on with the description Tom Piazza a native New Orleansen writes about the Convention Center in his piece titled “From Why New Orleans Matters”. Tom Piazza writes, “ …the preparations were inadequate and quickly overwhelmed; at the Convention Center, they were nonexistent. Corpses of neighbors, friends, family members, black and white, were scattered on sidewalks; people had no sanitary facilities, no medical car, and the weakest were easy pickings for the predators among them.” This sense is something that has American fight to prevent. We even go to other countries to try to prevent them from going through events like Katrina. So why is it happening here, did the government local and feudal have a plan, and were where the government assents?…
The social disorganization theory can be used to explain looting in New Orleans because all of the details of the theory play a part in some communities in New Orleans. A lot of those communities are near the central business district. Just like in Chicago, this zone was not a desirable location for residents and homes, but was close to work so the less fortunate lived their because of lack of transportation and jobs where easier to get being so close. As Shaw and Mckay stated in chapter 4, this was a zone of transition. The community changed a lot because people moved in and out constantly. When they were fortunate to be able to move to better areas, more of the less fortunate moved in. This began to trigger social conflict between the residences. With social conflict came a lot of other behaviors and with this process happening over and over a pattern starts. Cultural transmission theory comes in to play here. Adolescents grow up in and environment where drugs, violence, poverty, and broken homes are all they see. They are more likely to fall victim to the environment they live in because that is all they know. After this happens for decades and decades, perception sets in and we don’t view them as individuals but as a certain type of person. During hurricane Katrina all the people that lived in those areas of poverty had no means of transportation to leave. They stayed hoping and praying they could survive the storm. When it came they were flooded, trapped on the roofs of houses and buildings for days with no water or shelter and no signs that help was coming soon. They soon started to do what was already happening in their community. It was almost like instinct set in. For years and years they saw their peers commit crimes to survive. So they started to loot, taking the things they need to survive. They were also taking things they didn’t need like weapons. These weapons were used to protect themselves from each other and corrupt police officers. It…
Hurricanes are not abnormal for the people of Louisiana. Thus, there are plans and precautions made by the government in case a hurricane, such as Hurricane Katrina, is to happen. So why is Hurricane Katrina so disastrous? In his book Zeitoun, Dave Eggers asserts that Congress, the Bush Administration and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), and are neglectful and incompetent before, during, and following Hurricane Katrina. Due to Zeitoun’s family experiences, outside cases and broadcasts, this assertion is proven to be true.…
The intended audience for my informative paper will be teens and young adults, these seem to be the people who were involved and knew the most about Hurricane…
Hurricane Katrina started a tropical depression on August 23rd, 2005. On August 27th, President George W. Bush declared a state of emergency for the states of Louisiana, Alabama, and Mississippi. By August 28th, Katrina become a Category 5 hurricane. However, when Katrina made landfall in Louisiana on August 29th, 2005, it was a weakened Category 3 hurricane. As Katrina made landfall, the levees in the greater New Orleans area began to fail causing large amounts of water to begin flooding the city. With the flooding of the city, came the communication failures causing a lack of communication throughout the city. As Katrina passed, the failure of the levees, caused many residents who did not evacuate to become strand waiting for help.. Many…
Hurricane Katrina. It was so devastating that it was hard to believe it really happened. No one…
Hurricane Katrina swept away the gulf coast on August 25, 2009. Katrina was the most monstrous storm that has ever visited the coast and was considered an amalgam of tropical waters and dusty winds. It was the deadliest hurricane of category five causing horrendous damage and traumatizing scenes. Many lives were taken away and many lives have changed.…
Danny Glover once stated, “When Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf and the floodwaters rose and tore through New Orleans, it did not turn the region into a Third World country…it revealed one” (Glover). As the winds reached speeds of 100 to 140 miles per hour, water crashed against the levees, breaking them, and flooding 80% of Louisiana. Hurricane Katrina’s peaked at a category five, but disintegrated into a category three. The third deadliest hurricane is what Hurricane Katrina achieved. In the wake of a dark time, Hurricane Katrina proved to America how crucial preparedness is and three reasons Hurricane Katrina proved unpreparedness include; The New Orleans poorly built levee system, the prolonged displacement of hundreds of thousands…
Hurricane Katrina was a natural disaster that had never been experience in the history of the United States. Therefore, we as Americans could only hope that we had efficiently plan for the worst, and expect the best outcome. As it turns out, August 29th, 2009 the worst did in fact happen, and America as a whole was less than prepared. A Category 5, Hurricane Katrina ultimately devastated the lives of millions of Americans, costing billions of dollars in damage and changing the way we viewed our reliability on our countries disaster relief forever.…
Many hurricane's has occurred all across the United States, some worse than others. Hurricane Sandy is one that we will never forget about. Super Storm Sandy, a Category 3 storm, as known as Hurricane Sandy was a dramatic event that happened in October 2012. Sandy was a post-tropical cyclone that swept through the Caribbean and up the East Coast of the United States. Hurricane Sandy begun as a tropical wave but it quickly aroused into a tropical storm in just 6 hours. It upgraded to a hurricane when the winds arose 74mph. Many States prepared themselves for the storm in advance. Air force and National Guard members was on standby, many flights was cancelled and many school were closed. ("Primary sandy facts" web) Sandys pure kinetic energy for storm and surge and wave destruction potential reached a 5.8 out of 6.…
Katrina left Mississippi in shambles along with New Orleans. Trees were scattered on the roads, houses were severely damaged, and it seemed as if no one was there to help. I remember as we passed by on the way home and we saw a family outside because their house had a tree that had fallen onto their house and they had no place to stay. Along with them was a very young kid that did not look a day over eight years old. It was an extremely sad sight to see. I cannot even explain the amount of damage that was before me. All I could do is look in despair and hope that I never have to live through such a catastrophe…
Many parts of this disaster are common to Hurricanes. Many people had died during this terrible disaster. More than 280 people had died mostly from drowning in the flooded water in their homes. About 10 or way more people died in each city. So many people were left without homes after this hurricane occurred.…
Hurricane Katrina was one of the deadliest hurricanes ever to hit to hit the United States. (Zimmerman, 2015). About 1,800 people died in the hurricane and the flooding that took place afterwards in late August 2005, and many people were left without a place…