Great Wall Institute: The Process of the Great Wall of Los Angeles

1960s

Three important turning points that subdivide the decade, according to Mike Davis and John Wiener:

"1963 was a roller-coaster year that witnessed the first: the rise and fall of the United Civil Rights Committee, the most important attempt to integrate housing, schools and jobs in L.A. through nonviolent protest and negotiation.Only Detroit produced a larger and more ambitious civil rights united front during what contemporaries called the "Birmingham Summer". In California it brought passage of the state's first Fair Housing Act - repealed by referendum the following year in an outburst of white blacklash. 1965, of course, saw the second turning point, the so-called Watts RIots. The third was in 1969, which began as a year of hope with a strong coalition of white liberals, Blacks and newly minted Chicanos supporting Bradley for mayor. He led the polls until election eve, when Yorty counterattacked with a vicious barrage of racists and red-baiting appeals to white voters..."

Trump is an echo of Sam Yorty.

"Bradley's defeat foreclosed, at least for the foreseeable future, any concessions to the city's minorities or liberal voters. Moreover, it was immediately followed by sinister campaigns involving the FBI, the district attorney's office, and both the LAPD and LA county Sheriffs, to destroy the Panthers, Brown Berets and other radical groups." - Introduction to "Set the Night on Fire L.A. in the Sixties"

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Contents of this path: