Archive for the ‘Los Angeles Riots’ Category

9-11 and Remembrance

September 11, 2007

Have we forgotten, as Anna Quindlen charges

I don’t think so.  Even on the most superficial level, 9-11 has become a “where were you on” day like the Challenger explosion of February 1986, President Kennedy’s assassination in 1963, and for an older generation, Pearl Harbor in 1941 and VE and VJ (victory in Europe/Japan) days in 1945. 

And in terms of how many Americans (and people worldwide) remember what they saw that day, the absolute numbers of those who remember are probably bigger than any of the other ‘anniversary’ days.

9-11 isn’t just a ‘media anniversary’, like two years since Katrina or 15 years since the LA Riots.  Even if the media didn’t remind us, we’d remember.

But memories do fade.  We saw that with the 10th anniversary of Princess Diana’s death–I remember quite well it was the summer of 1997, probably August, but I’d be hard-pressed to say what day.  (August 31, 1997, for the record; I had to look it up.)  And already, many challenge her legacy.

But artists are starting to make 9-11 their own, like Don DeLillo with Falling Man and Paul Greengrass’s absorbing United 93.  This is an encouraging development for continuing and expanding memory, even if they run the risk of trivializing 9-11, as with the Holocaust. 

The challenge is continue to honor the 9-11 dead and their families, find ways to memorialize them going forward, and learn how to say “never again” and make it mean something.  One size doesn’t fit all here, and soundbites about ’sacrifice’, ‘helplessness’, ‘revenge’ and ‘justice’ don’t say much more.

Quotes to Consider

May 2, 2007

“‘Why did you hit me? I’m a reporter,’” said KPCC radio reporter Patricia Nazario, hit in the back and ribs with a baton. “And he hit me again, harder that time, and I fell on the dirt and my phone flew like 12 feet in front of me.”

“Quite frankly, I was disturbed at what I saw,” LA Police Chief William Bratton told KNX-AM. “Some of the officers’ action … were inappropriate in terms of use of batons and possible use of nonlethal rounds fired.”

“We’ve got boys here who should be working in the stockyards,” policeman to Phillip Marlowe, The Big Sleep, by Raymond Chandler.

LA Riots: Deja Vu All Over Again?

May 2, 2007

A tip of the hat to both LAObserved and Alert the Bear, who mentioned our LA Riots Remembered post.  As K.M. Johnson notes, there hasn’t been much ‘anniversary’ coverage of the Riots, but unfortunately, I’m thinking that what’s old is new again. 

This unnerving Fox footage of the LAPD firing rubber bullets at the May Day immigration demonstrators in MacArthur Park brings up the spectre of Rodney King like the ghost of Christmas past.  Local Fox 11 news reporter Christina Gonzalez who was roughed up along with her camerawoman, quoted the police as saying “Doubletime it’s tussle time.”

Our house is in the flight path from Van Nuys Airport.  The police ‘ghetto birds’ immortalized by an earlier Ice Cube kept flying overhead last night.  I couldn’t sleep and flicked the channels, looking for news.  Only infomercials, so I was left wondering if it was on again.

Los Angeles Riots Remembered, 15 Years On

April 30, 2007

The media loves ‘celebrating’ anniversaries, but there was surprisingly little coverage on the LA Riots this year.  What coverage there was talked about how South Central (now South) Los Angeles remains a tinderbox .  Worse, the Yuppies are coming. 

The Los Angeles Riots began on April 29, 1992, at around 6:45PM.  The not-guilty verdict in the trial of four LAPD officers charged with the beating of Rodney King came down around 3:15PM in Simi Valley, a northern (white) suburb of Los Angeles.  By 4:30PM, crowds were gathering at Florence and Normandie Avenues in South Central  LA.  By 6:45PM, a division of LA Police officers had ‘redeployed’,  never to return,.  The  crowd grew violent, pulling (white) truckdriver Reginald Denny out of his truck and beating him.

In the same way many can remember where they were when President Kennedy was assassinated, I remember where I was April 29: arriving at a Los Angeles Lakers playoff game against the Portland Trailblazers.  Leaving our two year old with a babysitter, we had driven south from West Hollywood down La Cienega Boulevard to the Great Western Forum.  Listening to Chick’s pre-game analysis, we probably missed radio news reports about the just-beginning troubles by minutes.  We also just missed the rioting which had spread to Inglewood between 7 and 9PM. 

The game, which took place long before the cell phone/mobile Web era, was an engrossing thriller.  Few had any idea what was going on outside.  The Lakers, staggered early that season by the HIV-related retirement of Magic Johnson, won in overtime in what would be their only playoff win that year.

Late in the game, a message flashed on the square scoreboard above center court.  ”Inglewood Police Control: Exit to the North and West only.”  The crowd had been psyched–until we stepped out into the darkness and fire.  A friend’s Honda had the windshield smashed.  Our inconspicuous 1987 Chevy Cavalier was unharmed.  All the streetlights were out.  People threw rocks as we drove through deep puddles where firemen had tried to stop the burning.  We raced north on LaBrea, looking into every car as they looked at us, wondering if the people inside were angry enough to kill. 

We made it home and sent the babysitter away.  The next day, I carried my two-year-old on my shoulders to my office at Larry Flynt Publications.  Our child care provider couldn’t make it to work from the devastated area.   A curfew was declared, schools and businesses were closed, and we went home and watched TV.  Our neighborhood was relatively safe, patrolled by the Los Angeles Sheriffs department rather than the embattled LAPD.  Still, opportunistic thieves smashed their way into a Gap store two blocks away.  Much of the rest of the city was burned or looted in what the politically correct called “the uprising.”  The California National Guard stood with their M-16s guarding streetcorners near our house.

On Monday, May 4,  1992, schools and businesses reopened. The toll: more than 50 killed, over four thousand injured, 12,000 arrested, and $1 billion in property damage.

To this day, my wife tells me I should have known better.  I can only hang my head, knowing we had driven into the inferno.  The good news: we are still together, Magic Johnson is still alive and going strong  and so is Los Angeles.