How large are the Los Angeles-area immigration protests?
How large are the Los Angeles-area immigration protests?
On his Truth Social social media network earlier this week, President Donald Trump claimed that “If we didn’t send out the National Guard — Los Angeles would be burning right now!”
In fact, the scale of the immigration-related protests that started June 6 in Paramount has been relatively small:
RELATED: Here’s how current protests compare with those in the past
If all of Paramount was involved in the protest, that would be 1% of the area of the separate city of Los Angeles and one-tenth of 1% of Los Angeles County.
The related protests in downtown Los Angeles have taken place in about a five-block area — about 25 acres or less in a city of more than 300,000 acres.
In contrast, the widespread unrest that followed the 1992 Rodney King verdict took place in about a 40-block area, or about 200 acres. That’s more than eight times the size of the current protests in Los Angeles.
Although the current protests are growing in number and scope, they’re mostly clustered around downtown Los Angeles. They haven’t yet approached what was seen in June 2020, after the murder of Minneapolis resident George Floyd. Then, there were protests across Los Angeles County, including in Altadena, Burbank, Covina, Culver City, Diamond Bar, Downey, downtown Los Angeles, Glendora, Hollywood, La Puente, La Verne, Manhattan Beach, Palos Verdes Estates, Pomona, Redondo Beach, San Dimas, Sierra Madre, Walnut, West Covina, Westwood and elsewhere.
Just as today, the California National Guard was deployed to Los Angeles in 1992. That was at the request of then-Gov. Pete Wilson, though, rather than over the objections of local leaders, as is the case now.
As of Thursday morning, the Los Angeles Police Department had arrested more than 270 people as a result of recent protests, including dozens Wednesday night. About 12,000 people were arrested in connection with the unrest following the Rodney King verdict in 1992.
On Tuesday night, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass instituted a curfew aimed at calming tensions in the city. The curfew is specifically for downtown Los Angeles. According to Bass, it covers an area of less than one square mile or about 640 acres. That’s one-fifth of 1% of the total city of Los Angeles. In contrast, Tom Bradley, Los Angeles’ mayor in 1992, instituted a city-wide curfew that lasted six days.
With Beyoncé's Grammy Wins, Black Women in Country Are Finally Getting Their Due
February 17, 2025Bad Bunny's "Debí Tirar Más Fotos" Tells Puerto Rico's History
February 17, 2025
Comments 0