[2e8a1c89-a306-4ba9-8ecd-4b91adb267e9.jpg]
Essential California
[Send to friend](mailto:?subject=Essential California: In 1992, was it a âriot,â âuprisingâ or âcivil unrestâ?&body= | [Open in browser](
Presented by*
[LA Metro](
Good morning, and welcome to the [Essential California newsletter](. Itâs Wednesday, May 1, and Iâm writing from Los Angeles.
Twenty-seven years ago this week, a city made combustible by decades of racial and economic inequality exploded in the wake of a jury verdict that acquitted four police officers in the savage beating of Rodney King.
More than a quarter-century later, the events of April and May 1992 still loom large in the Los Angeles psyche. But were they a âriot,â an âuprisingâ or âcivil unrestâ? The answer depends upon whom you ask.
Language is a Rorschach test, and âriot,â âuprisingâ and âcivil unrestâ all occupy unique spaces in our collective lexicon. The choice to use any one of those words will convey something about your worldview, and the prism through which you view the five days that ravaged the city, leaving more than 60 people dead and thousands injured.
âRiotâ remains by far [the most frequently referenced name]( and many use it reflexively, without a thought toward potential connotations. But just because itâs ubiquitous doesnât mean that it isnât a loaded term.
According to Brenda Stevenson, a professor in UCLAâs Department of African American Studies and author of âThe Contested Murder of Latasha Harlins: Justice, Gender and the Origins of the L.A. Riots,â the word can be a political choice, because it puts the focus of what happened on the âcriminal element of the event,â rather than the perceived failure of the criminal justice system to fairly serve all people.
âRemember the coverage of the Rodney King beating,â urged USC law professor Jody David Armour, a legal scholar who specializes in the relationship between racial justice, criminal justice and the rule of law. Twenty-four-hour cable news coverage was still a relatively new phenomenon at the time, and millions watched the brutal, grainy video in 1991.
[Rodney King beating]
This March 31, 1991, image made from video shot by George Holliday shows police officers beating a man, later identified as Rodney King. The grainy video of him curled up on the ground became a national symbol of police brutality. (George Holliday / Associated Press)
âYou turn on the TV any time of day or night and you would see Rodney King getting beaten down,â Armour said. In the professorâs view, that image saturating the airwaves should have been enough to make mere hooligans act out. But instead people waited for justice.
âThe black and brown community in L.A. waited for the verdict and didnât take to the streets until the promise of justice seemed so flagrantly flouted by that Simi Valley verdict contradicting what their own eyes had seen,â Armour said. To call the explosion of anger and frustration that followed a riot would, in Armourâs view, undermine the very real justification for that anger, and all the deep, simmering injustice at play.
On the other hand, Stevenson explained, âthose who term the events âcivil unrest,â âuprising,â ârebellionâ and âsa-i-guâ speak from the position that there was a breakdown in protection under the law that had to be, was attempted to be addressed, or that was not addressed.â Sa-i-gu, which quite literally translates to 4-29 (or April 29) in Korean, is commonly used to refer to the events in L.A.âs Korean community.
âUprisingâ — and, to a lesser degree, ârebellionâ — has long been used to describe the events (particularly in less-white corners of the city), but the term pervaded the establishment in recent years.
In 2017, when numerous institutions staged exhibits and symposia to grapple with the 25th anniversary of the events, âL.A. Uprisingâ was used as a title for multiple events, and in the written materials for others. Although âriotâ remains the official style for many major newspapers (including this one), online and alternative outlets are increasingly opting for âuprisingâ in some headlines.
And somewhere between âriotâ and âuprising,â âcivil unrestâ has emerged as a more neutral, politically correct option. Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti almost always refers to the âcivil unrest of 1992â when speaking publicly, and even the Los Angeles Police Department calls the events the â1992 Civil Unrestâ [on its website](. (The LAPDâs Civil Unrest page is categorized under âinteresting factsâ in the websiteâs history section, alongside Pope John Paul IIâs 1987 visit and the 1994 Northridge earthquake).
Armour was surprised when I told him that the nationâs third-largest police department had begun opting for âcivil unrestâ on its website. âThat may be a reason to be a little suspicious of it too, when that kind of thing starts to happen,â he said, expressing concern that the tepidness of the term might âdefangâ the events they sought to categorize.
It seems there may be no neutral way to refer to what transpired in Los Angeles 27 years ago. But then again, little was neutral about the events of April 1992.
And now, hereâs whatâs happening across California:
Advertisement by LA Metro*
There’s a Movement in L.A.
We are choosing to ride together, rather than drive alone. And more and more of us are trading four wheels for two. May is Bike Month and [your chance to take that first step]( to join the movement.
* This advertiser has no control over editorial decisions or content.
End of advertisement.
TOP STORIES
The estimated cost of the 2028 Olympics has ballooned to $6.9 billion — a $700-million increase from previous estimates. Organizers attributed the increase to an adjustment for inflation after L.A., which originally bid for the 2024 Games, agreed to wait four more years. They also projected a corresponding bump in revenue due to those same economic forces. [Los Angeles Times](
Twenty-nine months after the deadly Ghost Ship fire in Oakland, the trial of two men each charged with 36 counts of involuntary manslaughter began Tuesday in an Alameda County courtroom. Some in the room sobbed during the emotionally charged proceedings. During his opening statements, a prosecutor spoke about how the three dozen people who died couldnât escape the converted warehouse because âbecause there was no notice, no time and no exits.â [KQED](
L.A. STORIES
L.A.âs first two-way bike lane has officially opened downtown, offering cyclists a protected ride in both directions along Spring Street. [Curbed LA](
Inglewood Mayor James T. Butts Jr. was behind the wheel of vehicle involved in a collision that sent his SUV into an L.A. police sergeant and his motorcycle on Tuesday morning, law enforcement sources told The Times. The sergeant was hospitalized. [Los Angeles Times](
The Obamasâ new production company has unveiled its slate of upcoming projects at Netflix, and, honestly, the descriptions sound pretty good. And in what can only be perceived as a direct contradiction to F. Scott Fitzgeraldâs dictum that there can be no second acts in American life, the former POTUS-turned-post-Peak-TV-content-creator released a statement saying that the forthcoming productions âwonât just entertain, but will educate, connect, and inspire us all.â [BuzzFeed](
POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT
Confused by Senate Bill 50, that oft-mentioned piece of legislation that aims to ease the stateâs housing crisis by increasing density around transit hubs? Check out this handy, illustrated flowchart, which might just help you make sense of it. [Curbed SF](
CRIME AND COURTS
The Terranea Resort on the Palos Verdes Peninsula has settled a class-action lawsuit filed by workers over unpaid work time. [Los Angeles Times](
[Don Pedro Reservoir]
The Don Pedro Reservoir in California’s Central Valley. The hydroelectric power plant at the dam that impounds the lake generates carbon-free electricity for the Modesto and Turlock irrigation districts. (Phil Schermeister / Corbis/VCG via Getty Images)
THE ENVIRONMENT
Californiaâs push for 100% climate-friendly electricity has revived an old fight over dams and hydropower. [Los Angeles Times](
Santa Monica Mountains mountain lion P-47 has died after ingesting rat poison. He was 3 years old. P-47 was one of two big cats sired by P-45, a legendary Los Angeles mountain lion who once killed 10 alpacas in [a single crazy Malibu weekend.]( Unfortunately, P-45 is also believed to be dead. Amid all this loss, we recommend revisiting better times with [this adorable 2016 video]( of a then-baby P-47 and his kitten sister P-46. [Los Angeles Times](
CALIFORNIA CULTURE
The median home price in the Bay Area has dropped for the first time in seven years. [San Francisco Chronicle](
The backstory on UCLAâs long, strange search for a basketball coach is a must read. [Los Angeles Times](
A pioneering female mariachi from East L.A. talks about her career path and lifeâs work, documenting female mariachi musicians, and her early start in one of Californiaâs first school-based mariachi programs. [BorderLore](
CALIFORNIA ALMANAC
Los Angeles: partly cloudy, 68. San Diego: partly cloudy, 68. San Francisco: sunny, 66. San Jose: sunny, 75. Sacramento: sunny, 81. [More weather is here.](
AND FINALLY
“When I am in California, I am not in the West, I am west of the West.”
– Theodore Roosevelt
If you have a memory or story about the Golden State, [share it with us](mailto:julia.wick@latimes.com?subject=California%20Memory). (Please keep your story to 100 words.)
Please let us know what we can do to make this newsletter more useful to you. Send comments, complaints, ideas and unrelated book recommendations to [Julia Wick](mailto:julia.wick@latimes.com). Follow her on Twitter [@Sherlyholmes](.
[Email](mailto:?subject=Essential California: In 1992, was it a âriot,â âuprisingâ or âcivil unrestâ?&body=[Twitter](
[Sign up for Newsletters]( | [Privacy Policy]( | [Unsubscribe]( | Copyright © 2019
Los Angeles Times | 2300 E. Imperial Highway, El Segundo, CA 90245. | 1-800-LA-TIMES
  Â
                             Â