
Column: We live in Mike Davis' L.A. — but not the one you think
Hellish wildfires. Whiplash weather. Destructive winds. Debris flows. Torrential rains accenting punishing droughts.
Welcome to the Los Angeles Mike Davis predicted.
The late urbanist first made waves in the 1990s for forecasting an L.A. that would be one ecological and manmade disaster after another. His work quickly made him controversial among civic boosters, who dismissed him as a negative nabob who didn't want the city to thrive.
Today, Davis is one face on the Mt. Rushmore of L.A.'s prophets, alongside Joan Didion, Carey McWilliams and Octavia Butler.
His words, more than anyone else's, have been cited by writers and pundits across the world in this annus horribilis where nothing seems to be going right and everything seems to be getting worse.
With respect to his fellow titans, none of them ever assailed the poultry industry for bragging about reaping 'profit from the influenza-driven restructuring of global chicken production.' That's exactly what Davis wrote in a 2006 book warning about the threat of avian flu, complete with a photo of a menacing white rooster on the cover.
Davis is the man of the moment, the person whose work all Angelenos should parse like a secular Talmud — but his premonitions of hellfire and brimstone aren't what we should heed most.
The rest of the nation has eagerly waited for Los Angeles to collapse into tribal warfare and anarchy the moment a mega-catastrophe happened. If ever there was a time for that, it would be now, after the Palisades and Eaton fires.
While local political leaders have mostly fumbled or squandered the moment, it's regular folks who have risen to the occasion. They have raised hundreds of millions of dollars for recovery efforts via everything from benefit concerts to donation jars at restaurants. Volunteers continue to clean up burn areas and gather supplies, with the promise to fire victims that they will not be abandoned.
Welcome to the Los Angeles Mike Davis wanted.
As someone who has read most of Davis' work and knew him personally, I can say that his writings were cris de coeur more than lamentations. He was less Jeremiah and more John the Baptist, preparing the way for who would ultimately save L.A.:
Us.
'Although I'm famous as a pessimist, I really haven't been pessimistic,' Davis told me in 2022, the last time we saw each other, months before he died of esophageal cancer at 76. 'You know, [my writing has] more been a call to action.'
To cast him as an apocalyptic wet blanket is a disservice to a writer remembered by friends and family as all heart — a man who had faith that while L.A. would eventually go up in flames, it would emerge from the ashes stronger than ever.
'Mike hated being called a 'prophet of doom,'' said Jon Wiener, a retired UC Irvine history professor who hosts the Nation's weekly podcast and was a co-author of Davis' last book, 'Set the Night on Fire: L.A. in the Sixties.' 'When he wrote about environmental disasters, he wasn't offering prophecy — he was reporting on the latest in climate science, and considering the human cost of ignoring it.'
Even while he was writing 'City of Quartz' and 'Ecology of Fear,' Davis was picking away at 'Set the Night on Fire,' which he invited Wiener to shepherd toward publication.
'He wanted to show that the young people of color of Los Angeles had played a heroic part in fighting for a more equal future for their city' as a way to teach a new generation of activists to not lose hope in even the most dire of times, Wiener said.
I asked Wiener what his longtime friend would say about post-fire L.A.
'While hundreds of millions [are] being raised to rebuild big houses in the Palisades and Altadena,' Wiener responded, Davis would remind folks not to forget 'the people who had worked there as gardeners, housekeepers, nannies and day laborers ... [who] are having trouble paying the rent and feeding their kids.'
Thankfully, Davis wouldn't have had to say that. The National Day Laborer Organizing Network, the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles and others have stepped up to help those affected, even as some of their volunteers have lost jobs and housing. Social media remains packed with fundraisers to buy new equipment for gardeners, patronize food vendors and find jobs for the unemployed.
Such efforts bring comfort to Davis' widow, Alessandra Moctezuma, and their son, James Davis. In a phone call from their home in San Diego, the two told me how they've grieved the tragedy in L.A. from afar.
Moctezuma attended Palisades High and hiked above Altadena with Davis while he was writing 'Ecology of Fear' in the mid-1990s. On social media, she saw photos of her alma mater in flames, posts from friends who lost everything in Palisades and videos of hills burned beyond recognition.
'He loved it up there,' she said, remembering that they lived in Pasadena, just seven minutes from Eaton Canyon. 'I was already feeling all the emotions from that, and that's when people started sharing Mike's articles.'
She and James are grateful that people are citing Davis as a way to cope with the calamities of the past month — but the two urge readers to go beyond his best-known quotes and works.
'The problem is a lot of people misinterpret a lot of my dad's work as schadenfreude, when it's really not,' James said. The 21-year-old feels his father was, above all, trying to warn about the dangers of unchecked development, especially in more recent writings.
In the pages of the London Review of Books and the Nation, Davis tracked how California had changed during his lifetime, from a state with a wildfire season centered mostly on wilderness areas to one where the menace of conflagrations is year-round — and everywhere.
James recalled a 2021 documentary in which a gaunt, gravelly-voiced Davis told an interviewer, 'Could Los Angeles burn? The urban fabric itself? Absolutely,' over shots of burning suburban tracts that looked eerily like what happened in Altadena and the Palisades.
'He talks about not just the possibility but inevitability about how there could be a giant fire burning down Sunset Boulevard,' James said. 'That's exactly what happened.'
With his love for Southern California and its people, Davis would 'be happy to see all the mutual aid happening,' James said. 'That's the kind of stuff he advocated for.'
Moctezuma, an artist and curator, agreed. Her students at Mesa College filled four big U-Hauls with supplies and drove to Pasadena.
'Just seeing everyone sharing, that's one of the things Mike always talked about,' Moctezuma said. 'The kindness of people and importance of organizing — and the next step is organizing ourselves to help ourselves.'
She recounted one of her late husband's favorite Irish proverbs: Under the shelter of one another, people live.
'I'm sure he'd have a lot of things to say right now,' Moctezuma continued. 'He'd probably start looking into all sorts of things — the response from firefighters and politicians, regular people. Everyone would be interviewing him.'
Then she got quiet.
'He'd be heartbroken to see everything burnt down. And if his health was good, he'd be up there helping.'

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Downtown Los Angeles vandalized after protests. ‘It's kind of the usual,' residents say
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There was egg on the exterior walls and spray-painted slogans with expletives. 'When tyranny becomes law,' one graffiti said, 'rebellion becomes duty,' The couple — who laughed about being red-state denizens in L.A. during this time — said the peaceful protesters, of which they saw many Sunday night, didn't bother them. Though 'the graffiti is tough — I appreciate the sentiment, but someone's gotta clean it up,' said Wright, a 37-year-old physical therapist. 'But a few graffiti-ists don't make the protest, right?' As dawn broke Monday, city crews had already fanned out across downtown, cleaning up the aftermath. Several yellow city street sweepers drove up and down Los Angeles Street in front of the federal courthouse, between blooming purple jacarandas and scores of police vehicles from various SoCal cities. Just before 9 a.m., two workers from C. Erwin Piper Technical Center carried planks of plywood to City Hall to board up the windows. When they were done, they told The Times, they planned to head across the street to repair the Los Angeles Police Department's headquarters. Members of the National Guard were stationed outside the federal detention center and downtown Los Angeles V.A. clinic at Alameda and Temple streets, and police cars blocked roads around the federal buildings. A person in a silver SUV — their head entirely covered by a white balaclava — drove by the barricade at Commercial and Alameda streets, window down. They flipped off the officers standing nearby. Some stores that were typically open on a Monday morning remained shuttered, including Blue Bottle Coffee. But others, including Grand Central Market, were already buzzing with customers. Octavio Gomez, a supervisor with the DTLA Alliance, quickly rolled black paint onto a wall next to Grand Central Market that had been newly covered in graffiti. 'Today's a bad day because of … last night,' Gomez said, noting his teams had been working since 5 a.m. to respond to the damage across the city. 'It's all going to come back, right? Because there's still protests.' For the couple from Knoxville, the juxtaposition between their weekend in L.A. and news coverage of the protests felt bizarre. They had an idyllic Los Angeles Sunday — a food festival, the L.A. Pride March in Hollywood, a visit to Grand Central Market. But on TV and social media, Los Angeles was portrayed as a place of total chaos. 'People back where we live are going to completely be horrified,' said Cowan-Banker, a 42-year-old personal trainer. 'I'm sure they think it's a war zone here.' But Wright said he thought people should be protesting the Trump administration: 'They're stealing people off the streets from their families,' he said, referring to the ICE raids. 'This is America. To send the National Guard was intentionally inflammatory.' 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