Tuesday, August 11, 2015

Watts Today is NOT Watts from Yesteryear's

Good Afternoon from Upper Darby!

The next article is a bait-n-switch with a misleading headline. That tries to tell you that Watts and its Black Population, which is almost GONE. Now has a BETTER RELATIONSHIP with the Nazi-Cops that have HISTORICALLY SOUGHT THEIR DESTRUCTION FOR DECADES IF NOT LONGER.

Here is the article and pay attention to the fact that, ONCE AGAIN!? Young Blacks, ESPECIALLY BLACK TEENAGE BOYS! Talk about how they are getting HARASSED! ANNNNNNNNNNNNNNND, ONCE AGAIN!? Coon-Ass Nigger-Traitors talk about how things are BETTER FOR THEM! FOR THEM. Not the REMAINING Young Black Boys or Black Kids in general, BUT FOR THEM! Here is the article, if you wanna call it that;

Watts, 50 Years On, Stands in Contrast to Today’s Conflicts


LOS ANGELES — Donny Joubert watched the boy 
round the corner  of the housing project holding what looked like a 
handgun. The barrel
 was pointed at him and the two officers from the Los Angeles Police
 Department. The boy was 10 or 11 years old, Mr. Joubert figured, and
 had more gleam than anger in his eyes. Mr. Joubert, a community 
activist who grew up in the project, shouted and lunged for the gun.
It was plastic. The police officers did not even reach for their holsters.
“Somewhere else, that kid would be dead,” Mr. Joubert said.
That interaction, Mr. Joubert said, is the best illustration of the way the 
community has changed significantly in the 50 years since the Watts
 riots broke out on the streets here for six days starting on Aug. 11, 1965.
Confrontations between African-Americans and the police are once again convulsing the country; in Ferguson, Mo., where protesters gathered over the weekend to 
commemorate the anniversary of the death of Michael Brown and
 the riots that ensued, a gunman fired at the police on Sunday night
 and was shot, and other gunfire and skirmishes broke out. But
 Watts — once a symbol of urban strife and racial tensions — 
stands as a stark contrast. There were fewer than a dozen 
homicides in the neighborhood last year, compared with 
hundreds in 1965. Community leaders like Mr. Joubert, a 
former gang leader turned peacemaker and respected mentor,
 say relations with the police have never been better.
Photo
The Watts Towers. It has been 50 years since riots broke out on the streets in Watts for six days starting on Aug. 11, 1965. CreditMonica Almeida/The New York Times
“They don’t think the kid is out to kill them; they’re not out to kill
 the kid,” Mr. Joubert said. “They walk and they know who they 
are talking to. We’ve been through this before, we’re still kind of 
recovering and saying there’s another way.”
Still, this is no utopia.
Each summer, Mr. Joubert, 54, helps run a jobs program 
for teenagers at Nickerson Gardens, the low-slung public 
housing complex where he was raised. Twice last week, the
 teenagers were summoned inside because of shootings, 
as administrators worried that a stray bullet would endanger them. 
And little of the trust Mr. Joubert has for the police has filtered to 
these teenagers.
“They harass us all the time,” said Raydon Boyce, 19.
Continue reading the main story

The Watts Riots

“Don’t matter what you do,” 
Nigel Ewers added, echoing the 
sentiment expressed by all of the
 teenage boys taking a break one
 morning last week.
This is not the same Watts their parents grew up in. While 
the area remains persistently poor, demographics have
 transformed it from an African-American enclave to a neighborhood
 that is more than 70 percent Latino. Many blacks have moved
 to the suburbs in the Inland Empire and the desert north of Los
 Angeles. Those changes have brought their own tensions; many
 black residents talk of feeling pushed out while Latinos have
 struggled to rise to political leadership.
“Sometimes we’re all against everyone,” said Steve Torres, 
17, whose sister left Watts for a small town in Virginia last year.
 Sitting across the table, an African-American teenager spoke of
 police officers “killing us off.”
“Don’t really matter who you are; we’re just labeled as bad 
people,” Mr. Torres said.
Photo
Armed National Guardsmen moved toward smoke on the horizon during the street fires of the Watts riots in Los Angeles in August 1965. CreditHulton Archive, via Getty Images
Big questions hang in the air, sometimes asked aloud: 
Could what happened in Ferguson happen here? Could Watts
 explode as it did five decades ago? Alternatively, could the
 improvements in Watts happen in Ferguson? There is a deep
 generational divide in the answers.
Last summer, when Los Angeles police officers shot and killed
 Ezell Ford, an unarmed mentally ill black man, less than a mile
 away, protesters wanted to march from downtown to Watts. 
Mr. Joubert and other leaders urged them to stay away, he said.
“There’s always a sense things can boil over,” said Nina Revoyr,
 the chief operating officer for the Children’s Institute here, which
 runs dozens of programs and offers free mental health services
 in the neighborhood. “But there’s a sense of maturity here; the
 neighborhood has been through all this before and the 
transformation has happened. There’s a true relationship — 
you see a problem, and you talk about it.”
Photo
Watts residents sell clothing outside an apartment complex; demographics have transformed the area from a black enclave to a neighborhood more than 70 percent Latino. CreditMonica Almeida/The New York Times
After the police caught a group of youngsters who had been 
stealing from the offices of the Children’s Institute, Ms. Revoyr
 worked with officers to avoid pressing charges and instead sent
 them to a diversion program where they completed hours of 
community service.
Every week for the better part of a decade, Mr. Joubert and
 other local leaders have met as part of the Watts Gang Task
 Force, exchanging information with the police and trying to
 find ways to quell tensions in the community, whether they 
stem from a gang fight or a police interaction.
In some sense, the changes in the area are evidence of the
 uniqueness of the neighborhood, which covers just more
 than two square miles. It is, as some residents put it, the 
smallest neighborhood with the biggest reputation.
The city’s Housing Authority has poured more than $10 
million into special projects there in the last several years. 
The Police Department has dedicated 10 officers and a 
sergeant to each of the housing complexes, with officers 
generally signing on for a five-year commitment to patrol 
the area by foot each day. The police officers have begun a 
football league for 9- to 11-year-olds and work as coaches on
 their days off.
Photo
Donny Joubert, a community activist who grew up in a housing project in Watts, said that relationships with the police have never been better. CreditMonica Almeida/The New York Times
There are signs, too, of enormous challenges. The perimeters
 of the sports fields at one middle school are fortified with 
mounds of dirt, meant to protect students from bullets. 
Residents celebrated a park when it opened this year on what had
 been a weed-infested lot. Now, the gate to the park is locked, 
and the slides and skateboard ramps were empty on recent 
summer afternoons.
The area remains physically isolated, crisscrossed by freeways and 
railroads (WHO BUILT ALL OF THIS BULLSHIT THROUGH 
HERE, HUH? WHO FUCKIN DESIGNED AND DECIDED TO 
BUILD ALL OF THIS BULLSHIT THROUGH HERE, HUH? 
Fuck outta here with this fluff propaganda piece). 
There is still no sit-down restaurant, but the father of the 
city’s food trucks, Roy Choi, has announced plans to open one.
 The Children’s Institute will soon unveil plans for its new
 building designed by Frank Gehry, which it hopes will function
 as a community center.
The persistent doubts remain.
“We look around at what other places have, and we just don’t 
see the opportunities here,” said Tim Watkins, who runs the Watts
 Labor Community Action Committee, which his father created 
after the 1965 uprising, as locals refer to it. “There’s still a lot of
 desperation around here, and that can lead to desperate acts at any time.”
Sgt. Emada Tingirides, who grew up in the neighborhood and 
now serves as the coordinator of the Community Safety 
Partnership program in the housing projects, said hardly 
a day goes by without talking with residents here about police
 shootings in other parts of the country.
Photo
Capt. Alfred Pasos of the Los Angeles Police Department posed for a photo with residents at a National Night Out street fair in Watts last week. CreditMonica Almeida/The New York Times
“If it happened here, we would know what to do after the fact,” 
she said. But she acknowledged change does not come easily 
and officers still face mistrust from the young men in the 
neighborhood. “This is a cultural shift that is going to take
time, not just years but decades and generations.”
She thought back to the boy who approached her with the 
toy gun about six months ago. Mr. Joubert snapped the object
 in half and then persuaded the ice cream trucks and liquor stores
 to stop selling them.
That boy, she said, might be someone who now believes the 
police are out there to protect him, or at least not out to get him.
(Pathetic. So you are all PRISONERS IN YOUR OWN WATTS SAFARI RESERVE. Tch.)

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