The Huffington Post ,Truthout.org and SFgate
Moments after the 1992 not guilty verdict came down in the
Rodney King trial, the first violence I witnessed at the
That night, we’d planned on using CNN’s van to transmit live
shots from the streets of
The CNN crew got spooked, slammed the doors on their “live van” and left us for dead with the crowd. We stayed with the angry mob for 48 hours and saw firsthand that, although the riots may have been sparked by the verdict in the Rodney King trial, King’s memory was little more than a dying ember in a bonfire of misdirected anger and unrequited rage.
The LA riots were about racism double square to the third
power—no doubt about it. The melting pot
was boiling over. White police, Black
police, White people, Black people, Korean people, Chinese people, Mexican
people, Vietnamese…all the people seemed to have as many grudges as guns. The black and white racism of Blacks and
Whites, stoked by a long history of police brutality, faded to gray during the
hours of chaos that followed. People of
different races became targets of arson and random violence. Economic fault lines rumbled as it became
clear other dramas were moving to center stage. A hatred-soaked environment of
poverty laid the foundation of anger long before the verdict. The
The racism blew me away, but it was the legion of television and police helicopters overhead that, quite literally, whipped it all up into a frenzy. If there was an organizing force to this chaos…a single element egging on the rioters…it was the half dozen noisy helicopters following the roving mobs’ every move. Like a competent cattle herding dog, the helicopters gathered the crowd and propelled it into a larger and meaner force of nature.
When people on the ground cannot hear themselves think, forget about them reasoning with one another. The war zone feeling of mayhem created by the helicopters practically dares people to become more reckless. The noise drowns out their voices…giving the impression that authority is forcing them to shut up. What is a person without voice? There’s no greater sign of disrespect than to take a voice away.
Imagine helicopters so loud your ears ring. Imagine lights so bright it hurts to look up. Imagine helicopter blades swirling so fast they fan the flames of discontent…herding and goading young people with reality TV culture mentalities to do just about anything to get on camera.
Are you getting the picture?
Bay Area, let’s be smart after this Mehserle verdict.
If local television stokes anger with uncontextualized images, turn off that station forever. Those who run it care more about profit than the communities they promised to inform.
Get experienced reporters on the ground. Keep the over bearing, loud, chaos provoking
helicopters out of the sky. At least we can do that for our beloved
Without all that noise, we might even hear the voices of our future leaders.



