"Post-disaster myths are amazingly durable in the face of countervailing evidence," writes Jonathan Katz, who covered the Haitian earthquake for the AP. Falsely convinced that violence would spike in the aftermath of the quake, the authorities "shifted priorities unnecessarily":
UN peacekeepers, whose ranks also swelled after the quake, organized food distributions with a defensive posture, herding thousands of Haitians into open squares under the sun's apogee, then standing in front of food with riot shields, clubs and rifles at the ready, pepper-spraying and beating people as they came to get the food, with no clear provocation. News accounts often referred to these scenes as "riots."…
The command-and-control organizational structure of the military meant that responders often stayed close to base, overly centralizing efforts and leaving parts of the quake zone unattended for days. Search-and-rescue teams deployed into the field were forced to return to base on vague reports of civil unrest. Haitians were left to wonder, as former Haitian defense minister Patrick Elie did, why so much focus had been [put] on bringing soldiers instead of humanitarians. "The foreign countries that came to our aid fell victim to their own propaganda," Elie told me in 2010. "They were afraid of a monster that never existed except in their own fantasies…that Haitians are bloodthirsty savages."…
In the aftermath of the quake, life in Haiti went on. Sometimes that meant crime, or violent attempts at preserving order. Sometimes Haitians feared that violence might come from another neighborhood, or a different part of the country. But as in New York and New Orleans, most Haitians who lived in the quake zone remembered above all the compassion and community that arose after the disaster: families sharing meager supplies of food and water, people risking injury to save others from the rubble, acquaintances embracing like long-lost siblings each time they met. As a Haitian friend in the quake zone once put it, "Everyone was uniting, everyone was participating, everyone was collaborating." In the hours after the quake, long before the first responders could arrive, I recall Haitians on a downtown road waiting patiently for plates of cooked food for sale under the flicker of a generator-powered light. Everyone standing there knew the days ahead would be difficult, and that they only way to get through them was together.
By the way, those UN peacekeepers probably started a cholera epidemic.
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In the hours after the quake, long before the first responders could arrive, I recall Haitians on a downtown road waiting patiently for plates of cooked food for sale under the flicker of a generator-powered light.
Selling food? Profiting during a disaster? That's unconscionable! I hope the authorities put a stop to that! Fucking market capitalists! Despicable!
From the sound of things authorities did put an end to it, and much else besides. Thank God, too; Haiti finally has a chance to thrive as a bastion of economic freedom in the Caribbean.
You have to remember how fundamentally racist the media, the UN and the US government bureaucracy are. They all assume that any brown person will immediately go insane and start looting the moment after a disaster. So security and bringing in armed guys to keep the angry, scary natives in line is always the top priority.
During Katrina, the people of New Orleans, beyond doing some first rate whining for the cameras were great. There were not any rapes or assaults in the Super Dome. That is all a myth. The only people breaking the law and terrorizing people were New Orleans cops. But the media, because they are primarily made up of proper ivy league, benevolent white supremacists believed any and every story they could find about the scary black people going crazy because the evil Bush left them without proper government supervision.
Selling food? Profiting during a disaster? That's unconscionable! I hope the authorities put a stop to that! Fucking market capitalists! Despicable!
From the sound of things authorities did put an end to it, and much else besides. Thank God, too; Haiti finally has a chance to thrive as a bastion of economic freedom in the Caribbean.
You have to remember how fundamentally racist the media, the UN and the US government bureaucracy are. They all assume that any brown person will immediately go insane and start looting the moment after a disaster. So security and bringing in armed guys to keep the angry, scary natives in line is always the top priority.
During Katrina, the people of New Orleans, beyond doing some first rate whining for the cameras were great. There were not any rapes or assaults in the Super Dome. That is all a myth. The only people breaking the law and terrorizing people were New Orleans cops. But the media, because they are primarily made up of proper ivy league, benevolent white supremacists believed any and every story they could find about the scary black people going crazy because the evil Bush left them without proper government supervision.
Mishandled? Many of the people who helped Haiti made out quite well.
That term, first responder, is so ingrained now, that they don't even notice when it makes no sense, which is most of the time.
"herding thousands of Haitians into open squares under the sun's apogee"
I assume this was done to celebrate the solstice. Or perhaps, on that sad day, blessed Ra traveled very far from us