Hurricane Katrina Disaster Evaluation Review the Final Essay

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Hurricane Katrina Disaster Evaluation

Review the Final Paper instructions in Week 5. Develop a thesis statement and outline, and identify at least five sources you intend to use for the Final Paper.

Develop a thesis statement. The thesis statement will be the point or claim you argue or prove in your paper.

9/11 and Hurricane Katrina Disaster Evaluation

9/11 and Hurricane Katrina Disaster Evaluation

Hurricane Katrina and the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks should never be forgotten, nor should the victims that were involved in these tragedies. Katrina, the storm that smashed into the city of New Orleans in August 2005, became to be known as one of the deadliest hurricanes in United States history. There were around 1,836 mortalities from the killer storm. The Sept. 11 campaign was the most dangerous terrorist incident in the history of the United States beside Pearl Harbor in 1941. Up until this day, 24 people are still documented as missing, with 2,973 death tolls. Sept. 11 is the outcome of an attack of terror and Hurricane Katrina was a natural disaster, which of course brands them totally different. Together Hurricane Katrina and 9/11 still are calamities that have a profound effect on the people of this nation. The two tragic events have some likenesses. They both could have been conceivably evaded and conducted in a different way, and in both tragic incidents, there were high numbers of deaths.

9/11: The Day of Terror

On September 11, 2001, America was assaulted by a group of Muslim radicals who had a passionate belief in a Holy War, named Jihad, in which they have been trained that they want to establish the "evil" American Christians so that they could please Allah, their God. They make sure that their young boys are all geared up to serve their god and nominate themselves as sacrifices to finally make it to a place called paradise. They chose to attack America by sending nineteen young Arab men through the airports with unlawful sprays of chemicals, box cutters, and miniature knives that would later help them to seize the planes that they had earlier picked. At this instant, in our nation, America was missing in national security. The Federal Aviation Administration had a list that said "no fly" but it had very few names on it. The state also had a list of individuals to keep an eye on, but the airlines had no clue about the list. One of the only protections done by the airlines was the indiscriminate investigation that was done on people. At least nine of the hijackers were put under a random search, and their baggage was put on the airplane after they had lodged, with purposes of retaining a customer from exploding a bomb on them. Little did airport safekeeping know, the purposes and plans of these men were to kill themselves by suicide bombings that would also carry out thousands of innocent Americans? It took this class seven years to develop and organize this out. In 1998, Osama Bin Laden screamed Jihad in opposition to Jews and Crusaders.

Four planes were overhauled that time by the young men. Two of the planes hit the Twin Towers and made them reverberate to the ground. A third plane hit the pentagon. The passengers on board the fourth plane, made a bold decision to recapture the plane from the hostage taker and collide into an area in Pennsylvania. Even though the consequences of this period were obviously miserable and unpleasant, America still chose to come together as a nation, to not only recuperate from this appalling disaster, but to challenge against this violence. President George W. Bush said, "Our nation, this generation, will lift the dark threat of violence from our people and our future. We will recover the world to this cause by our efforts, by our courage. We will not tire, we will not hesitate and we will not fail." (America's Heroes 146).

Hurricane Katrina: Day of Confusion

September 29, 2005 appeared like a complete, beautiful day but this was the day that the world observed a catastrophe that would have lasting consequences on our economic system. People sat fastened to their television monitors as Hurricane Katrina tore through three states taking with it the households and lives of millions of people. In the aftereffects of this overwhelming hurricane, the people of the United States understood how appreciated their families, lives, and the market was to them. Something that we took for granted every day. As the days went by after that terrible September day, the economy plunged to an all-time low because of the oil factories that were torn through by mighty winds.
The gas prices went up like crazy and hit a record $5.00 per gallon in a lot of states, which made it difficult for inhabitants of a rich people to move to their place of employment. It pushed individuals to use other methods of transport. At one time there had been some kind of a shock of running out of fuel which made trucking places shut down up until a substitute fuel source could be controlled.

Apart from the fuel shortage, there were also intensified wrong percentages in rural regions devastated by Katrina. A lot of people tore into stores and stole supplies for their loved ones, while looters took advantage of the situation and broke into places to get bourgeois substances for their desire. These offenders, when challenged by authorities, unlocked fire and killed a lot of officers. Because of the flood waters, several people got deadly diseases and expired because they were not able to use the correct prescription needed. A lot of people were left drifting and months later they still were not able to get there family members.

Psychological Problems after 9/11

What is it that we do now know regarding the mental health consequences of the happenings of September 11, 2001? The best proof challenges early entitlements that these occasions had enduring undesirable effects or that inspecting the proceedings on television imposed an effective trauma on the American people. Previous claims were overstated and could have been shown to be uncertain even at the time they were done. Imprecise evidence now shows to the resiliency of the American people.

Post Traumatic Stress Disorder

Numerous people have studied if there is a relationship among PTSD and 9/11. Most people will not forget the events of September 11, 2001. Whether straight or indirectly uncovered to the September 11th (9/11) terrorist attacks, several people were influenced by the events on that horrible day. Purposely, studies have found that right after 9/11, a lot of people were feeling signs of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and the closer people had been to the World Trade Center, the more they developed their risk for PTSD. In the interior of six months, though, the harshness of those PTSD symptoms was discovered to reduce significantly for many people. Not much is known, however, concerning the enduring effect of exposure to the 9/11 rebel assaults on the World Trade Center.

Substance Abuse Disorder

Survey results show that smoking and alcohol and marijuana usage amplified among people of Manhattan during the 5-8 weeks after the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center. Nearly one-third of the nearly 1000 persons questioned described an amplified use of alcohol, marijuana, or cigarettes after the September 11th attacks. Alcohol was the largest increase. Around one-fourth of the people admitted that they were gulping down more alcohol in the weeks after September 11; about 12% described a growth in smoking, and 3.2% admitted they had boosted their use of marijuana.

People who resided more closer to the World Trade Center had a bigger opportunity to increase their cigarette smoking, but other issues such as being relocated from home, losing properties during the attacks, or being tangled in the rescue exertions were not steadily related with enlarged substance abuse. Indications of panic attack were connected with an increase in the usage of all substances. A rise in substance abuse did not vary substantially between men and women or between ethnic or racial groups. Demographic influences such as age, marital status, and income appeared to play a more critical affair in regulating if the actions of September 11th guided to an escalation in substance use.

Acute Stress Disorder

The comparatively new introduction of ASD as a diagnostic group happened as a means of enabling identification of those persons most at peril for emerging longer term PTSD succeeding admission to a shocking stressor (Koopman, Classen, & Spiegel, 1994). Acute stress disorder defines posttraumatic stress responses that occur between 2 days and 4 weeks succeeding exposure to a stressful event and therefore varies from PTSD in conditions of programming and in its heavier influence on the growth of dissociative symptoms. The extrapolative power of this determination is uncommon. Researchers state, for instance, that 78% of torture survivors who meet standards for ASD suffer PTSD 6 months following the pain, and 60% of those who exhibit sharp….....

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