Interesting post/book review from Global Guerrillas:
http://globalguerrillas.typepad.com/globalguerrillas/2011/08/book-disaster-utopias-and-elite-panics.html
The key line from his post:
Rebecca shows in her book, A Paradise Built in Hell, that people don't typically panic when they find themselves at the ground zero of a disaster (after the immediate danger is over). Through the use of detailed research on a number of extreme disasters, she shows that in most cases people are very practical when confronting disaster. Better yet, they are often more courteous and much more likely to help each other when things fall apart than they are normally. They come together to survive.
In contrast to the people on the ground, she shows that the only people that actually do panic during disasters are the elites -- from those with wealth to those running the government's response (I'm not talking about the first responders actually on the ground doing good work). They panic over the loss of control a disaster brings. This often results in extreme actions that only serve to make things worse: from martial law authorized to use deadly force against looters (often just people trying to survive the situation) to arbitrarily herding people into locations that aren't able to support large groups of people.
What This Means
The lesson here is that during an extreme disaster, the people you may most need to fear are those in charge, particularly if their motives are focused on protecting elite interests put at risk by the disaster.
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Those of you who know my feelings about our recent leadership, from the Greenspan/Summers/Rubin disaster to Bernanke/Paulson/Bush to Obama's re-incarnation of the worst of both of the preceding two teams, know that I agree that the thing we have to fear is our leadership, and the great American plutocracy and military industrial complex.
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