The Effects Of Looting On The United States

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The word “looting” entered into European languages centuries ago is referring to the plundering of your things by an invading army. It was not until the 1950s where the U.S. military sponsored a social science study of looting topic in detail. Military was concerned that American would resort to that in the event of an Atomic bombing with the nearing Cold War (National Hazards Observer, 2007). Almost all of the natural disaster has experienced little to limited looting in the United States except for two instances one on St. Croix in US Virgin Islands after Hurricane Hugo in 1985 and second on Hurricane Katrina in 2005. The myth of looting was been thought about for decades but since hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans in 2005 it has reached its peak. Police reports from 1965 show that after hurricane Betsy burglary rate was9.0 per 100,000; however, a month after Katrina police reports show burglary rate as high as 245.9 per 100,000. The people that were involved in the acts tried to justify in in many different ways some saying that they were doing it for survival and other that seeme...

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