logo
Boarded up, vandalised and under curfew, LA is hardly the city of angels

Boarded up, vandalised and under curfew, LA is hardly the city of angels

Los Angeles: So much for the city of angels. As night fell on Tuesday, the inner core of America's second-largest metropolitan district looked more like a war zone readying for an air raid, with shopfronts all boarded up, traffic sparse, and the streets empty.
Just a couple of hours earlier, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass called an emergency curfew beginning at 8pm – the first night of what was likely to be several, she said.
After days of protests against President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown, opportunistic troublemakers have begun descending on this beleaguered city to smash windows, graffiti walls and loot. The Apple Store was hit, as was an Adidas shop just a few metres from my hotel. Bus shelters, storefronts, public steps – few surfaces have been spared.
Closer to the federal government buildings that have been the centre of the protests, most available walls have been spray-painted with graffiti. 'F--- ICE' is the most common refrain, referring to the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency that has begun raiding workplaces looking for illegal immigrants here in this city that is proudly built on migrants from Mexico and Central America.
'F--- Trump' is everywhere, too, as is 'ICE out of LA'. One downtown fence was tagged in giant capital letters: 'America steals ppl since 1619.'
Other American cities sometimes like to distance themselves from the union, too. New Yorkers – at least the Manhattan elite – have long styled themselves as something different to the country to which they belong.
Los Angeles, home to both the glamour of Hollywood and the grime of its maligned city centre, is now at war with Washington and the vision of America that Washington serves under Trump.
'LA is a resilient place, we're not afraid,' said Kevin Sarabia, who was protesting outside one of the federal government buildings and waving a half-Mexican, half-US flag. The child of Mexican migrants, he said that the symbolism was important to him.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump administration using AUKUS review to pressure Albanese on defence spending
Trump administration using AUKUS review to pressure Albanese on defence spending

Sky News AU

time4 hours ago

  • Sky News AU

Trump administration using AUKUS review to pressure Albanese on defence spending

Sky News host Sharri Markson has suggested the Trump administration is allegedly using the AUKUS review as leverage to pressure Prime Minister Anthony Albanese into boosting defence spending. 'The United States President and his officials are frustrated, firstly Albanese's refusal to increase defence spending,' Ms Markson said. 'Secondly, his flippant attitude that defence is an issue of sovereignty, and they're concerned about his commitment to the alliance and his refusal to robustly call out China's aggressions in our region. 'Confidential sources told me today the Trump administration is extremely serious about needing Australia to lift its game on defence spending, and this is irrespective of Jim Chalmers' budget constraints.'

‘Getting pretty close': Expert analyses Israeli potential to strike Iran
‘Getting pretty close': Expert analyses Israeli potential to strike Iran

Sky News AU

time4 hours ago

  • Sky News AU

‘Getting pretty close': Expert analyses Israeli potential to strike Iran

Strategic Analysis Australia Director Peter Jennings discusses the potential for an Israeli strike on Iran. 'I think we are getting pretty close to a time when a strike is going to happen,' Mr Jennings told Sky News host Sharri Markson. 'Trump's style here is, to give him credit, he attempted to have a negotiation with the Iranians, and there were five rounds of negotiations. 'I think Trump will realise that that was getting nowhere and will very quickly move back to what Israel has wanted to do pretty much since December. 'Strike while they still can before Iran does get nuclear weapons.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store