9/10
The Big Uneasy review
23 October 2013
Warning: Spoilers
The Big Uneasy is a documentary that kept me very interested the whole time. The host of the documentary kept the watcher very interested and up to par with what was going on in the film. I really like how the film showed multiple cases of the problems that the US corps had done wrong in ensuring the safety of Louisiana. The low quality of the levee's durability actually surprised me and disturbed because the Corps task was to ensure the safety of the city. Since that was not done, many more people lost their homes and even their lives. The investigation team did a really good job of cracking the codes and helping the community to ensure the safety for the next time. I was shocked that the team said that Katrina was not a natural disaster. The disaster was the Corps fault for not correctly using their funds for the safety of the community. What also kept me interested was as to why the Corps thought it was okay to not fund the pumping system and the levee walls accordingly. It is saddening that a city was damaged so much when it did not need to be. Overall, I really enjoyed the story behind the hurricane. I never knew how serious the problems were behind the catastrophe.

To elaborate more on the main problem with Katrina. The Corps had much to blame for the damage caused by what mother nature had done. Funding was not appropriately appointed to by the Corps and nothing was done about it until it was too late. The team of investigators got down to the core of the problem and appointed why the Corps was wrong in what they did. The Corps spent their funding money on a pointless system that was not as effective as the other system that would have prevented a lot of damage. The team of investigators had other plans to prevent damage from hitting the city. The Corps used their hierarchy to their advantage and did not fund accordingly to keep the safety of the public in their control.

The damage of the city was way worse than it should of been according to the team of investigators. Pumping systems and levy walls failed very quickly causing much more damage than expected. The ground that the levees were constructed on did not have the support needed to keep the water from breaching into to the land. This is the first problem because the walls were constructed to prevent water from over taking it. The ground where the walls failed was very sandy underneath. Sand underneath a constructed wall does not take on the support needed to prevent water from breaching. When water levels rose, the water seeped through the sand and loosened up the ground, leading to a collapse of the wall and breach of the water into the public infested land. The second problem in the damage done was the failing water pumps. The pumps were built to pump excess water out. The pumps failed and water rushed into the land. The Corps had funding to make sure these pumps worked, and when they failed, the city of Louisiana was crushed and destroyed by what was supposed to be prevented. The city thought they were protected by these systems and in reality they were not. It is a shame that the Corps, with such responsibility and trust, could not care for the people of their city and protect them appropriately with the equipment needed. Especially when the Corps had the funding to do so.

The investigation team really put their effort into cutting into this problem. They went to local businesses to get their interpretation of the problem, they took the Corps to court and appointed all their mistakes, and they went to major sites where the damage was clear and studied what had gone wrong with the operating systems. Many people had the back of the investigative team and wanted the Corps to be put to blame for a lot of the damage. Some people lost their jobs for not taking the Corps side and were looked at in the wrong as if they had caused the damages. The team kept pushing and eventually got the Corps to spend their funding efficiently and construct new systems to prevent another disaster like that again.

With some justice and faith, a group of people attended the problem and solved it and "The Big Uneasy" showed exactly how it was done. The film showed who was in the wrong, why they wanted justice, and how the problem was fixed and justice was served. The film did a great job of appointing the situation and getting a conclusion.
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