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Covering Haiti: When the Media Is the Disaster
Soon after almost every disaster the crimes begin: ruthless, selfish, indifferent to human suffering, and generating far more suffering. The perpetrators go unpunished and live to commit further crimes against humanity. They care less for human life than for property. They act without regard for consequences.
I'm talking, of course, about those members of the mass media whose misrepresentation of what goes on in disaster often abets and justifies a second wave of disaster. I'm talking about the treatment of sufferers as criminals, both on the ground and in the news, and the endorsement of a shift of resources from rescue to property patrol. They still have blood on their hands from Hurricane Katrina, and they are staining themselves anew in Haiti.
Within days of the Haitian earthquake, for example, the Los Angeles Times ran a series of photographs with captions that kept deploying the word "looting." One was of a man lying face down on the ground with this caption: "A Haitian police officer ties up a suspected looter who was carrying a bag of evaporated milk." The man's sweaty face looks up at the camera, beseeching, anguished.
Another photo was labeled: "Looting continued in Haiti on the third day after the earthquake, although there were more police in downtown Port-au-Prince." It showed a somber crowd wandering amid shattered piles of concrete in a landscape where, visibly, there could be little worth taking anyway.
A third image was captioned: "A looter makes off with rolls of fabric from an earthquake-wrecked store." Yet another: "The body of a police officer lies in a Port-au-Prince street. He was accidentally shot by fellow police who mistook him for a looter."
People were then still trapped alive in the rubble. A translator for Australian TV dug out a toddler who'd survived 68 hours without food or water, orphaned but claimed by an uncle who had lost his pregnant wife. Others were hideously wounded and awaiting medical attention that wasn't arriving. Hundreds of thousands, maybe millions, needed, and still need, water, food, shelter, and first aid. The media in disaster bifurcates. Some step out of their usual "objective" roles to respond with kindness and practical aid. Others bring out the arsenal of clichés and pernicious myths and begin to assault the survivors all over again.
The "looter" in the first photo might well have been taking that milk to starving children and babies, but for the news media that wasn't the most urgent problem. The "looter" stooped under the weight of two big bolts of fabric might well have been bringing it to now homeless people trying to shelter from a fierce tropical sun under improvised tents.
The pictures do convey desperation, but they don't convey crime. Except perhaps for that shooting of a fellow police officer -- his colleagues were so focused on property that they were reckless when it came to human life, and a man died for no good reason in a landscape already saturated with death.
In recent days, there have been scattered accounts of confrontations involving weapons, and these may be a different matter. But the man with the powdered milk? Is he really a criminal? There may be more to know, but with what I've seen I'm not convinced.
What Would You Do?
Imagine, reader, that your city is shattered by a disaster. Your home no longer exists, and you spent what cash was in your pockets days ago. Your credit cards are meaningless because there is no longer any power to run credit-card charges. Actually, there are no longer any storekeepers, any banks, any commerce, or much of anything to buy. The economy has ceased to exist.
By day three, you're pretty hungry and the water you grabbed on your way out of your house is gone. The thirst is far worse than the hunger. You can go for many days without food, but not water. And in the improvised encampment you settle in, there is an old man near you who seems on the edge of death. He no longer responds when you try to reassure him that this ordeal will surely end. Toddlers are now crying constantly, and their mothers infinitely stressed and distressed.
So
you go out to see if any relief organization has finally arrived to
distribute anything, only to realize that there are a million others
like you stranded with nothing, and there isn't likely to be anywhere
near enough aid anytime soon. The guy with the corner store has already
given away all his goods to the neighbors. That supply's long gone by
now. No wonder, when you see the chain pharmacy with the shattered
windows or the supermarket, you don't think twice before grabbing a box
of PowerBars and a few gallons of water that might keep you alive and
help you save a few lives as well.
The old man might not die, the babies might stop their squalling, and the mothers might lose that look on their faces. Other people are calmly wandering in and helping themselves, too. Maybe they're people like you, and that gallon of milk the fellow near you has taken is going to spoil soon anyway. You haven't shoplifted since you were 14, and you have plenty of money to your name. But it doesn't mean anything now.
If you grab that stuff are you a criminal? Should you end up lying in the dirt on your stomach with a cop tying your hands behind your back? Should you end up labeled a looter in the international media? Should you be shot down in the street, since the overreaction in disaster, almost any disaster, often includes the imposition of the death penalty without benefit of trial for suspected minor property crimes?
Or are you a rescuer? Is the survival of disaster victims more important than the preservation of everyday property relations? Is that chain pharmacy more vulnerable, more a victim, more in need of help from the National Guard than you are, or those crying kids, or the thousands still trapped in buildings and soon to die?
It's pretty obvious what my answers to these questions are, but it isn't obvious to the mass media. And in disaster after disaster, at least since the San Francisco earthquake of 1906, those in power, those with guns and the force of law behind them, are too often more concerned for property than human life. In an emergency, people can, and do, die from those priorities. Or they get gunned down for minor thefts or imagined thefts. The media not only endorses such outcomes, but regularly, repeatedly, helps prepare the way for, and then eggs on, such a reaction.
If Words Could Kill
We need to banish the word "looting" from the English language. It incites madness and obscures realities.
"Loot," the noun and the verb, is a word of Hindi origin meaning the spoils of war or other goods seized roughly. As historian Peter Linebaugh points out, "At one time loot was the soldier's pay." It entered the English language as a good deal of loot from India entered the English economy, both in soldiers' pockets and as imperial seizures.
After years of interviewing survivors of disasters, and reading first-hand accounts and sociological studies from such disasters as the London Blitz and the Mexico City earthquake of 1985, I don't believe in looting. Two things go on in disasters. The great majority of what happens you could call emergency requisitioning. Someone who could be you, someone in the kind of desperate circumstances I outlined above, takes necessary supplies to sustain human life in the absence of any alternative. Not only would I not call that looting, I wouldn't even call that theft.
Necessity is a defense for breaking the law in the United States and other countries, though it's usually applied more to, say, confiscating the car keys of a drunk driver than feeding hungry children. Taking things you don't need is theft under any circumstances. It is, says the disaster sociologist Enrico Quarantelli, who has been studying the subject for more than half a century, vanishingly rare in most disasters.
Personal gain is the last thing most people are thinking about in the aftermath of a disaster. In that phase, the survivors are almost invariably more altruistic and less attached to their own property, less concerned with the long-term questions of acquisition, status, wealth, and security, than just about anyone not in such situations imagines possible. (The best accounts from Haiti of how people with next to nothing have patiently tried to share the little they have and support those in even worse shape than them only emphasize this disaster reality.) Crime often drops in the wake of a disaster.
The media are another matter. They tend to arrive obsessed with property (and the headlines that assaults on property can make). Media outlets often call everything looting and thereby incite hostility toward the sufferers as well as a hysterical overreaction on the part of the armed authorities. Or sometimes the journalists on the ground do a good job and the editors back in their safe offices cook up the crazy photo captions and the wrongheaded interpretations and emphases.
They also deploy the word panic wrongly. Panic among ordinary people in crisis is profoundly uncommon. The media will call a crowd of people running from certain death a panicking mob, even though running is the only sensible thing to do. In Haiti, they continue to report that food is being withheld from distribution for fear of "stampedes." Do they think Haitians are cattle?
The belief that people in disaster (particularly poor and nonwhite people) are cattle or animals or just crazy and untrustworthy regularly justifies spending far too much energy and far too many resources on control -- the American military calls it "security" -- rather than relief. A British-accented voiceover on CNN calls people sprinting to where supplies are being dumped from a helicopter a "stampede" and adds that this delivery "risks sparking chaos." The chaos already exists, and you can't blame it on these people desperate for food and water. Or you can, and in doing so help convince your audience that they're unworthy and untrustworthy.
Back to looting: of course you can consider Haiti's dire poverty and failed institutions a long-term disaster that changes the rules of the game. There might be people who are not only interested in taking the things they need to survive in the next few days, but things they've never been entitled to own or things they may need next month. Technically that's theft, but I'm not particularly surprised or distressed by it; the distressing thing is that even before the terrible quake they led lives of deprivation and desperation.
In ordinary times, minor theft is often considered a misdemeanor. No one is harmed. Unchecked, minor thefts could perhaps lead to an environment in which there were more thefts and so forth, and a good argument can be made that, in such a case, the tide needs to be stemmed. But it's not particularly significant in a landscape of terrible suffering and mass death.
A number of radio hosts and other media personnel are still upset that people apparently took TVs after Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans in August 2005. Since I started thinking about, and talking to people about, disaster aftermaths I've heard a lot about those damned TVs. Now, which matters more to you, televisions or human life? People were dying on rooftops and in overheated attics and freeway overpasses, they were stranded in all kinds of hideous circumstances on the Gulf Coast in 2005 when the mainstream media began to obsess about looting, and the mayor of New Orleans and the governor of Louisiana made the decision to focus on protecting property, not human life.
A gang of white men on the other side of the river from New Orleans got so worked up about property crimes that they decided to take the law into their own hands and began shooting. They seem to have considered all black men criminals and thieves and shot a number of them. Some apparently died; there were bodies bloating in the September sun far from the region of the floods; one good man trying to evacuate the ruined city barely survived; and the media looked away. It took me months of nagging to even get the story covered. This vigilante gang claimed to be protecting property, though its members never demonstrated that their property was threatened. They boasted of killing black men. And they shared values with the mainstream media and the Louisiana powers that be.
Somehow, when the Bush administration subcontracted emergency services -- like providing evacuation buses in Hurricane Katrina -- to cronies who profited even while providing incompetent, overpriced, and much delayed service at the moment of greatest urgency, we didn't label that looting.
Or when a lot of wealthy Wall Street brokers decide to tinker with a basic human need like housing.... Well, you catch my drift.
Woody Guthrie once sang that "some will rob you with a six-gun, and some with a fountain pen." The guys with the six guns (or machetes or sharpened sticks) make for better photographs, and the guys with the fountain pens not only don't end up in jail, they end up in McMansions with four-car garages and, sometimes, in elected -- or appointed -- office.
Learning to See in Crises
Last Christmas a priest, Father Tim Jones of York, started a ruckus in Britain when he said in a sermon that shoplifting by the desperate from chain stores might be acceptable behavior. Naturally, there was an uproar. Jones told the Associated Press: "The point I'm making is that when we shut down every socially acceptable avenue for people in need, then the only avenue left is the socially unacceptable one."
The response focused almost entirely on why shoplifting is wrong, but the claim was also repeatedly made that it doesn't help. In fact, food helps the hungry, a fact so bald it's bizarre to even have to state it. The means by which it arrives is a separate matter. The focus remained on shoplifting, rather than on why there might be people so desperate in England's green and pleasant land that shoplifting might be their only option, and whether unnecessary human suffering is itself a crime of sorts.
Right now, the point is that people in Haiti need food, and for all the publicity, the international delivery system has, so far, been a visible dud. Under such circumstances, breaking into a U.N. food warehouse -- food assumedly meant for the poor of Haiti in a catastrophic moment -- might not be "violence," or "looting," or "law-breaking." It might be logic. It might be the most effective way of meeting a desperate need.
Why were so many people in Haiti hungry before the earthquake? Why do we have a planet that produces enough food for all and a distribution system that ensures more than a billion of us don't have a decent share of that bounty? Those are not questions whose answers should be long delayed.
Even more urgently, we need compassion for the sufferers in Haiti and media that tell the truth about them. I'd like to propose alternative captions for those Los Angeles Times photographs as models for all future disasters:
Let's start with the picture of the policeman hogtying the figure whose face is so anguished: "Ignoring thousands still trapped in rubble, a policeman accosts a sufferer who took evaporated milk. No adequate food distribution exists for Haiti's starving millions."
And the guy with the bolt of fabric? "As with every disaster, ordinary people show extraordinary powers of improvisation, and fabrics such as these are being used to make sun shelters around Haiti."
For the murdered policeman: "Institutional overzealousness about protecting property leads to a gratuitous murder, as often happens in crises. Meanwhile countless people remain trapped beneath crushed buildings."
And the crowd in the rubble labeled looters? How about: "Resourceful survivors salvage the means of sustaining life from the ruins of their world."
That one might not be totally accurate, but it's likely to be more accurate than the existing label. And what is absolutely accurate, in Haiti right now, and on Earth always, is that human life matters more than property, that the survivors of a catastrophe deserve our compassion and our understanding of their plight, and that we live and die by words and ideas, and it matters desperately that we get them right.
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29 Comments so far
Show AllIn commercial media, Spiderman "catches thieves just like flies."
He's certainly no Robin Hood.
Democracy Now did a story from a hospital in Port Au Prince yesterday and interviewed the head physician.
That doctor emphatically stated that there was no security problem in Haiti. The US has tons and tons of medical supplies waiting on the tarmac at the airport and they are not delivering it because of false security threats. This is the second disaster of Haiti.
Also, Jeremy Scahill was on Rachel Maddow yesterday and stated that there are 'Blackwater' like advertisers trying to get contracts for security using fear to do so.
It would be best if the damn US military left and never returned.
It might be even better if they took Amy Goodman and Rachel Maddow with them. They project America's problems and domestic concerns onto the people and tragedy of Haiti, just like the right wing capitalist class do.
Can you give some examples? Were the doctors of Medicin's Sans Frontiers, and the Hatians that she interviewed concerned about US domestic issues?
And to put Ms. Goodman (do you know anything about her?) in the same sentence with the liberal corporate media's Maddow is an insult to Ms. Goodman. Maddow never came within an inch of death to give eyewitness reports of Indonesian massacres of Timorese.
I have been to Haiti. A more peaceful people, in spite of such poverty can hardly be found. The US has no business sending a single gun to Haiti. The soldiers need both arms free to carry food, water, medical eauipment, and injured Hatians.
One of the reasons Medicins Sans Frontieres is in Haiti right now is that the people who live there have been robbed blind by the countrymen of Ms. Goodman. Her presence there just adds insult to injury - a left-wing messiah of college radio trying to spin the Haitian story into something lucrative for her career - gravitas to allow her to stay in the spotlight for five more seconds.
Amy Goodman is like the hero of Avatar: a white messiah who enables upper middle class people to vicareously feel like they're heroes, instead of the Eichmanns they are in reality. This includes all the left-wing Eichmanns living off their family inheritance and cliquey social capital who often vet the words and wisdom of others by allowing listening to words that are spoken in ONE VOCABULARY (PC).
Why are there only a few voices that predominate left-wing media? Why these brands? And of what use are they to the people of Haiti? Or the people of our own precarious hometowns, for that matter?
Man, you are so mixed up it's hard to know where to begin. How about here:
"Why are there only a few voices that predominate left-wing media?"
Good question. Do you really think the explanation lies with
Amy Goodman's personal pecadilloes rather than the right-wing, corporate-controlled media preventing others from being heard? If so, you need your head examined.
Goodman's self-assertion is what enables her to overcome the barriers placed in the way of every progressive journalist. Blaming her for being the only person tough enough to overcome those barriers is the height of stupidity.
Okay. I would cease watching Amy's show (after all, she's a TERRIBLE interviewer. And sometimes I think my head is gonna explode when I hear her interrupt her guest, who is on a a roll, spinning and weaving a complex report, to "clarify" something painfully obvious: "U.S.A. That would be the United States of America." She does it all the time!) Anyway, I would cease and desist immediately but no station in the D.C. area carries YOUR broadcasts, qatzelok! I tried finding your archives of podcasts and videos on the 'net, but had no success. No doubt it is due to your natural humility and refusal to attain any sort of prominence that you don't attach your name or face to anything you produce. Will you, at some point far off in the future, tell us the truth about what happened in Haiti? I'm sure you're just too busy saving lives down there at the moment and, besides, what kind of image would THAT be: a Westerner in Haiti trying to get the unreported, unsanitized, uncensored news out of that catastrophe. Why, you'd look just like a, like a, I don't know, Sears Roebuck vice president.
If you are NOT a right-wing troll -- as I suspect -- than you are something worse. I have dealt with people like you since the mid-60s. Drowning in cynicism, embracing your ideological purity (YOUR version), and working to make sure the left is only and ever comprised of thousands of splintered groups of one or two people fighting each other instead of the real enemy.
"no gods, no masters" --m. sanger
Your words advertise you to be utterly ignorant and callous. You need professional attention.
Surely you are a menace to society.
In such a catastrophe, to call people taking to feed or clothe themselves "looters" and criminals is disgusting.
Does anyone reading this article need to know ANYTHING else about the values that drive the economic syatem that would designate such a starving homeless person a criminal?
Words are failing me right now that can describe the vileness of the values and priorities the capitlaist media.
I remember during Katrina a news clip showed a white couple with supplies and a comment about how "resourceful" they were. Yet another showed a black couple with, I think, a case of soda yet they were accused of "looting".
I AM SO ASHAMED OF THE THIS COUNTRY'S GOVERNMENT!!!! I make my fists and scream when I read that our soldiers are controlling their airport and preventing help from getting in. HOW SICK IS THIS????!!! They did this during Katrina! MY TAX dollars go for this suffering? WE have a very VERY SICK GOVERNMENT. We should all sit in the streets and refuse to work, buy, drive, etc. Total country shutdown. We need sane people like Dennis Kucinich, Cynthia, McKinney, and Amy Goodman in our government. Our present government is run by the devil, no doubt. Hitler is running our government from Hell.
Just remember that WE ARE the Government. We don't have just a sick government but a very sick citizenry. If the people would stop watching the crap on CNN, Fox, NBC, MSNBC, CBS, ABC and etc, ad nauseam, and started to pay attention to what goes on around them we'd all be a lot better off.
Since 1804 when Haitians drove out the French colonials they have been trying to retain their freedom from the Europeans/Americans.
There is absolutely no need for the US military in Haiti but the US corporatist government will do all it can to completely destroy the country and remake it into one big plantation....
Are the first casinos in operation? They will be soon.
Excellent critique of media in disaster.
Words do matter , images are open to interpretation.
Current state of journalism is completely opinionated. Like facebook is about telling personal stories.
Saw Katie Couric on a clip right after she accompanied the military on a road trip with relief supplies that took 5 hours to reach (would have been much less but road conditions were bad). She commented how she saw a helicopter drop supplies and the Haitians all scrambled for the supplies and how dangerous that was. Of course she pointed out that it wasn't a US military helicopter. As many Haitians are literally minutes away from dying due to lack of food and water, Katie is more worried that the process is neat and orderly, even if that takes longer and people die. If there are locations that are difficult to get to, then any means necessary (e.g., helicopter) should be used to get supplies to save some lives. As more supplies reach those locations, the people won't be so desperate.
I wonder what kind of narrative we would get if this occured in a predominantly white region. I remember one of the first reports I heard was that Haiti's main prison had been destroyed and the inmates had escaped. Just think, black criminals raging through the streets! I was waiting for the obvious response, to me, anyway, of relief that this captive population was able to escape the horror of being buried alive. Today Democracy Now devoted some time to the "escaped prisoners" and it turns out that many of them had not even been charged and many were political prisoners.
The Katrina coverage was disgusting, but this is far worse.
There's an eery similarity between what's happening post-earthquake in Haiti and what happened post-Katrina in New Orleans, especially in regards to the delivery of aid and media coverage. In each of these catastrophes the initial media coverage showed concern and compassion for the victims, but as time went by and it became apparent that little if any aid was getting through to the victims, the coverage suddenly shifted to an alleged unruliness (looting included) of increasingly desperate victims; ingrates, as it were, for not being understanding about how difficult it was for aid deliverers to get through the rubble, chaos, "mobs", bureacratic inefficiencies and lack of security. So the media's theme becomes something like Yes, thousands of people may have died because aid arrived too late, but the effort was there and that's what counts, so get off the back of the aid agencies, private & public. And hardly a word about any plans afoot in both New Orleans and Port-au-Prince to take advantage of the post-catastrophe paralysis of an otherwise intense and vital community spirit, the better to open up these cities more fully to exploitation by multinational corporations. And no consideration given whatsoever to the relationship between a possible corporate takeover of two reeling cities and the fact that in both cities the victims were predominately Blacks. Why MSMs avoidance of this subject? Was it because doing so might open a pandora's box of questions, such as, If the victims had been Whites instead of Blacks, would aid have arrived so late, or, do plans exist for restructuring other preominately Black communities (for example, East St. Louis, Newark, Detroit), should they be hit by catastrop;hes, and wouldn't the existence of such race-based policies amount to genocide? After all, it's not as if genocide is a stranger to our land.
"Necessity knows no law."
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america, raping and robbing Haiti for one hundred years; before that, the French raped and robbing Haiti all through the 19th century. Now, the Haiti people have only two fire stations for their nine million people. Imagine if the nine million people in the SF Bay Area had to get along with only two fire stations. We, the American people should end our three imperial occupations (Afghanistan, Iraq and now Haiti) and invest that 12 billion dollars each month into rebuild housing and government buildings in Haiti to modern quake-resistant standards.
'Loot' is just another word or phrase, like 'Terrorist', 'Drug Trafficker', or 'Communist', that the corporate media needs for using to stampede the dumbed out masses right into their dumbed out support for the military of this Rotten Imperialist Empire. The corporate daily press acts as Pentagon Word Brigade. It IS totally sickening!
Better would be......US OCCUPATION TROOPS OUT OF HAITI NOW...... and now more than ever. Unfortunately the US Left is so marginalized by its own incompetence to make the call. Marginalized by having fallen for the Democratic Party one year ago again.
Ah, probably those doctors without boarders are on some terrorist list (hell, I believe the founder went to some left leaning university in Canada that I also attended). From my perspective, your stooges with their weaponry and copters look like idiots period
There is a BIG difference between a person taking the necessities of survival such as food, water, clothing or medical supplies and luxury items such as televisions or furnature. The media would do well to make this distinction when showing those being detained.
Here in this country, there is still a law called 'jury nullification' which allows a jury to basically say that a law does not apply in the circumstance, or that the 'crime' was justified in the circumstance. This was used extensively during the great depression to exonorate those accused of steeling a loaf of bread in order to feed starving family members. Some judges have forbade defense council from informing juries of this during modern day drug possession trials, but it does exist. Commmon sense of course no longer does.
in an unsustainable world of steadily increasing operational scarcity, the winners win-(by any means) and the losers are allowed to die. The end of Conrad's Heart of Darkness..."the horror,..the horror..!!.
Qatzelok-
Me thinks you hate all white people. How about the Asians?
Would they be OK to distribute relief.
Or Martin Luther King? Or how about Malcolm X?
If you are Mad at all the people: How can you forgive yourself?
DARKNESS GENERATOR ---- HOW TO SPOT ONE
Darkness is a pretense of good hiding an intent to deceive, entrap and enslave in blind alley confusion. What rule by thought control is all about, so keep an eye out for:
(1) News that gives you no light as to cause or solution to the violence, instead amplifies on all the bloody effects of the violence. Goal being to blind the mind by burning the emotions.
(2) News that is the voice of god-government, “Official said... Official said... Official said...”
I totally agree with the author here. The propaganda has been ratcheted up here, and one has to ask why? "looting" is a word never associated with the US soldiers in Iraq, but it probably should be.
US soldiers were among the first to loot the Baghdad Museum of it's priceless antiquities, many lifted on special order to meet collectors demand.
And it was US Army Corps of Engineers who built a combat airport right through the ruins (and World Heritage site) of the City of Ur, utterly destroying many priceless artifacts and ruining any chance of further archaeology.
But Galen---
All those priceless artifacts at UR were Muslim, don't ya know... Besides, who cares about the past; we're making the future.
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