In her best-selling book Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster  Capitalism,  Naomi Klein argues that economists from the University of  Chicago (a  Rockefeller-funded university) have created a model of  capitalism that  fully exploits natural and man-made disasters.
Large  corporations have no real incentive to prevent bad things from   happening to other people. 
In fact large corporations may profit enormously, both   economically and politically, when bad things happen, because disasters   create "inelastic demand curves."  During a disaster, like the sinking  of the Titanic, people panic and they are willing to pay almost any   price to get news, information, food, clothing, shelter, weapons, military protection or medical  care. 
Rather than solve the "life boat ethics" problem presented on the  Titanic, which carried too few lifeboats to serve everyone on board, U.S. corporations have maintained a policy of under-service and deliberate  neglect that exactly parallels the failure of the owners of Titanic to  provide an adequate number of lifeboats.
Corporations do so for two reasons: First, they save money by not splurging on  safety (they take short cuts, just as the Titanic owners did).  Second,  if an unforeseen accident does happen, they can still bank on phony  "just for show"investigations, a phalanx of lawyers stubbornly denying responsibility  on a legal technicality, and creative blame assignment that is heavily  sold to the press.
If anything, corporate control of the press has increased, and the art  of public relations or creatively distracting the public from issues of  corporate negligence have been substantially approved during the past  100 years. Corporations have really learned how to "Wag the Dog."
The result is a long-standing culture of  corporate negligence.  To make  matters worse, we now have a commercialized field of "disaster  response" contractors who make their money by swooping into  "red zones"  during emergencies and feeding off desperate people.  They pretend to  be helping, but in fact they fully exploit the misery and suffering of  people in a panic  for personal profit.
It has become very obvious,  after Hurricane Katrina and similar  disasters, that some of the  wealthiest sectors of society have ceased  entirely to provide any charitable service to people who suffer   disasters. Quite to the contrary, they have begun to respond to  disasters in the most  exploitative manner possible.
Klein argues that this is the natural outgrowth of a competitive,  non-cooperative business model  that refuses to recognize any real  obligation on the part of the state  to serve the public, even during  disasters.  When private corporations  take over traditional state roles  of public service, they turn state  agencies into "hollow  corporations."  That is, a few well-paid people at the top supply  minimal  staffing (staff who are underpaid, under-trained and  under-equipped) and then they apply business models based on cost  minimization and  self-serving profit maximization.  The result can be  shockingly poor  service or no service at all to people who are in  desperate need.
In some cases one even finds outrageous  examples of corrupt modern-day  governments back-stabbing victims of hurricanes and  tsunamis by  offering to sell the "vacant" beaches where the victims once lived to  luxury hotel owners, completely ignoring prior ownership and usage  rights.
Under  these new economic conditions, we see no real improvement on the  scanty help  and service that was given to Titanic survivors one hundred  years ago.   Those who are rescued  from disasters are often given  little or no help.
To confirm this, one only need watch Spike Lee's documentary "When the  Levees Broke" or Michael Moore's documentary "Sicko" in which he begs  staff at Guantanamo Bay prison to provide as much free health care to  "911 heroes" (New Yorkers who suffered lung damage while voluntarily  clearing 911 building wreckage) as the U.S. military have provided to  their al Qaeda prisoners.
When Moore and the 911 wreckage workers are turned away by the U.S.  government, they go down the street to a nearby clinic in Cuba where  medicare is socialized and provided for free. The 911 heroes are quickly  and generously offered lung medications that are painfully expensive  and difficult to obtain in the U.S. 
Moore's point:  If the U.S. government denies veterans or 911 heroes the  right to free public or state-sponsored medical care, then it is  treating terrorist prisoners better than it is treating 911 heroes, and  it has done a good job of  making medical care in Cuba look better than  medical care in the U.S.  The communists in Cuba actually do a kinder  and better job of looking after victims of disaster!
It's a shame, but it is true.  When asked to help 911 heroes and  veterans, no one in the U.S. steps forward or volunteers.  Because there  is no profit in it.
Apparently the age of Robber Barons who ruthlessly exploit "other  people" and "other people's money" has not ended -- not at all.
DISASTER FILM GENRE
Wikipedia "Disaster Film"
A LIST OF DISASTER MOVIES
Airplane Accidents
Airport (1970)
The Hindenburg (1975)
Asteroids
Meteor (1976)
Deep Impact (1998)
Armaggedon: The Perfect Storm (2000)
Shipwrecks
A Night to Remember (1958) 
Poseidon Adventure (1972)
Titanic (1997)
Earthquakes 
San Francisco (1936)
Earthquake (1974)
Fires 
In Old Chicago (1937)
Towering Inferno (1974)
Nuclear Accidents and Wars
On The Beach
The Day After
Doctor Strangelove
Red Dawn
Solar Flares
Knowing (2009)
Tidal Waves
Deluge (1933)
Volcanic Eruptions
The Last Days of Pompeii (1936)
Volcano (1997)
Dante's Peak (1997) 
End of the World
Armageddon
2012
