It is erroneous and daring to speak of a "rebirth" of the port of Acapulco when in the first hours of birth many Acapulco residents dedicated themselves to looting, with malice, with cruelty , we are not talking about food, water, but jewelry, furniture, tires, luxury wines, motorcycles, Steren circuits, crockery, telephones, televisions, dolls, toys, tools, shoes, ATMs, everything that could be taken or stolen , even gasoline.
Small and large businesses were affected: tinsmiths, tire repairers, restaurateurs, and news vendors.
Hurricane Otis devastated the city, but many Acapulco residents took the hit .
The surprise was enormous when I found out that they also looted the newsstands.
"If Acapulco residents don't read (not all of them), what did they take from their stall?" I ask a news vendor from the Golden Zone.
"Pornographic magazines, which are the most expensive, and soft drinks," she replies disconsolately, as she packs away the last of her good merchandise to indefinitely close her source of income.
Otis 's winds left his magazine stand untouched, it was plunder that stole his hope .
Another "model" behavior emerged in the days following the hurricane.
