Most of the responses in this thread absolutely disgust me. Like you can't even begin to believe.
Now that that's out of the way...
In the aftermath of a natural disaster, is looting a crime of such contempt that a home or business owner may have more moral authority to take the law into his or her own hands?I'd like to take this opportunity to ask where exactly you intended this debate to lead by first writing a paragraph that relates to the blatantly racist coverage the victims of Hurricane Katrina are receiving, to the apparently race-neutral questions. What does being a poor minority have to do with whether law enforcement should turn a blind eye to looting of food? Most of the well off (and white) residents of New Orleans had the means to flee and did so. So naturally, you are left with the citizens who could not. Yes, they are mostly poor, and yes, they are mostly black. Which, coincidentally, makes it a hell of a lot easier for people to feel unsympathetic for them and to lead to them thinking of them as animals instead of people, and worthy of killing for stealing a TV. I have the nagging suspicion that if images of these looters showed people who looked like your parents, your siblings, your children, your cousins, you (and by "you" I mean anyone in this thread who has responded that lethal force for the looting situations is justifiable) would not be so eager to impose a capital punishment on mostly misdemeanor crimes. Then again, according to the media the white people are not
"looting," they are
"finding" things.

Makes it a lot easier to justify not killing them, while justifying killing the people of color who are stealing, doesn't it?
Are people who are looting electronics and other expensive (but useless) goods dumb? Yes.
Is stealing a TV worthy of death?
NO IT IS NOT. We are not the Taliban or North Korea or some other equally restrictive equivalent. This is freaking America the last time I checked. If a cop could not justifiably use lethal force on someone who walked out of a Wal-Mart with a boombox without paying for it before, why is it okay to do so now?
Should law enforcement or business owners turn a blind eye at the looting of food and water and simply attempt to stop the robbery of luxury consumer items? See, here's the thing that gets me. Who am I, who are you, who is anyone to decide what people "need" and what they "don't need" in a state of emergency like the one Katrina has caused? People generically state "but food and water... but food and water." Really now? What about diapers? What about tampons? What about batteries? Hell, what about radios/boomboxes? If the cell phone service isn't working down there, and people can't use TVs, what better way to know what's going on and where to go for help? Radios are "electronics" but can be battery operated... but I guess since they don't absolutely, positively
need to know what the hell's going on, it's okay to kill them if they take it.
Hey, we can go even further with this. People don't
need to take more bottles of water than they need for their family. Else, they're hoarding, right? People don't
need to take pastries, bread, and other perishables from the stores. They should just stick to the things that can give them maximum sustenance. How are you going to determine what a "luxury consumer item" is? And more importantly, why in the hell does it even matter if they take a TV? It's not like people are going to be going back to their stores and doing inventory any time soon, and in any case they're going to write it all off to their insurance as lost.
From
this Yahoo! (whom I am VERY upset with right now) article:
QUOTE
Four days after Hurricane Katrina roared in with a devastating blow that inflicted potentially thousands of deaths, the frustration and anger mounted, despite the promise of 1,400 National Guardsmen a day to stop the looting, plans for a $10 billion recovery bill in Congress and a government relief effort President Bush called the biggest in U.S. history.
... the hell? The utmost priority, the best possible use of the National Guard right now is not collecting dead bodies and decreasing the avenues for the spread of disease, it's not getting food and water to survivors, it's not getting survivors stranded on building roofs to relative safety, it's not focusing on getting care to the elderly and the very young... it's
stopping the looting.Glad to know the President has his priorities straight.

Know what that message says to me, loud and clear?
"Let the n*ggers starve and die, just make sure they don't take any of our stuff."
Law enforcement should not be ignoring the looters of food/water and "focusing" on those stealing electronics. It should be
ignoring the looting altogether. Why the hell anyone would think it more productive to use law enforcers on the looting of perishable and, for all intents and purposes, "lost" things anyway than oh, say, preventing mass rape and murder is way beyond me.
Can stealing food from these stores really be called "looting" anyway? There is literally no other place to get food. They can't go home and whip up a grilled cheese sandwich and cup of tomato soup.
In your opinion, what is the impetus that would cause a presumably law abiding citizen to become a looter? I ask this because surely not all of those portrayed on news footage are typical criminals. Um, well. I guess survival would be the number one impetus, IMHO. It's kind of hard to live without food and clean water. Baby stuff, personal feminine products, and yes, clothes (I don't think walking around in sewage-soaked clothing for days on end is healthy), etc. I include under "survival" as well. For the feared plasma screen TV bandit, I'm assuming the overwhelming majority of those looters are simply crime of opportunities with a good dash of mob mentality thrown in for good measure. To be honest, if I were in that situation I would be stealing with no moral qualms what-so-freaking-ever. I would take bottled water, food like beanie weenies/tuna cans (anything that can't get easily wet or perished), a radio and batteries, try to get a change of clothing, and whatever weapon I could get my hands on (to protect myself against rape/assault). I'd probably try to find other single women so we could move together.
And then, the National Guard would come down and kill me for stealing Tampax, with what seems like a majority of Americans' approval.