by DrillBites » Mon 04 Aug 2008, 23:13:26
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('DrillBites', ' ') Any people able to flee the rioting areas will do so and this will cause a collapse of the supply of goods and services into cities, as well as increasing pressures in non-urban areas.
Is anyone "fleeing" from the present food riots? What I guess I'm asking is - is there any evidence people will leave urban areas during hardship? I have not seen any evidence they will do so except in situations of actual war. So any examples from history or present times would be appreciated.
I think what is needed here is a better understanding of what a riot actually entails. To do this I will borrow from information sources online concerning a recent riot in American history.
In 1992 in the city of Los Angeles there was a riot which lasted six days. During this riot thousands of people rioted causing widespread looting, assault, arson and murder, with property damage totals estimated at one billion dollars. As many as 2000 people were injured and 53 people killed, along with no less than 3,600 fires set destroying 1,100 buildings This riot started at approximately 6:45 PM on April 29th at the intersection of Florence and Normandy Blvds in south central LA., after police were ordered to withdraw, for their own safety, from a growing crowd of protesters. By 7:30 PM that intersection had been totally looted and burned. By the end of the riot Federal troops and US Marines had to be called in to end the violence. The street gangs and criminal elements of the population also used the riot for their own benefit and an opportunity to ‘settle scores’ with each other, and engaged the police and military with gunfire as well. By the time the riot had been stopped over 10,000 people had been arrested. It took several days of military control before businesses and schools were reopened due to people refusing to enter the effected areas.
Now I don’t know about you, but if I saw even a small riot happening in my area, I would do my best to avoid it, up to and including ‘fleeing’.
If you want to more know about the effects of a social disruptions, including riots, on populations look up Hurricane Katrina/New Orleans. Also Ethnic Cleansing in Kosovo and Darfur, follow that up with a quick study of the forced depopulation and social engineering of the Khmer Rouge. In World War 2 the US embarked on a urban bombing campaign intended to cause catastrophic social collapse in German cities and this makes an excellent example of how populations act under pressure from conflict or political pressures. Last, but in no way least, look into the Great Plagues of Europe, beginning in Crimea in 1347 and is considered to have ended in 1711 in Stockholm, Sweden, in which one third of the population perished.
It is my opinion that during episodes of severe pressures on human populations those who can leave the effected area will leave the area. This is based on very simple logic and has been proven time and again in history. As energy becomes increasingly scarce in the upcoming socio-economic collapse populations will move to centralized urban locations exacerbating the demands for food, water, shelter and energy. When those demands can no longer be met there will be segments of the population which will quickly revolt. When this disruption begins those who can flee, will flee. To me it sounds pretty simple.