Thursday, July 17, 2008

One Big World

Written by Jackson Wyrick

What in the world could South Central Los Angeles have in common with Northern Ireland and the Palestinian Authority? A funny question I know, but hang with me. These three far apart places might seem completely different at first glance, but there is more to it.

South Central, the P.A., and Northern Ireland are all prime examples of how a lack of trust in law enforcement leads to a breaking point. In South Central, there were the Watts Riots in August of 1965 and more notably the L.A. Riots of 1992. Northern Ireland saw Catholic resentment towards the Royal Ulster Constabulary boil over in the Battle of the Bogside and Bloody Sunday. In the P.A., Palestinian, rose up against Israel in the first and second Intifadas.

Although all three situations are unique in their own rights, there are central themes that can be drawn out. The first is that these uprisings don't spring up overnight. They are breaking points that follow long periods of perceived human or civil rights abuses. Second, uprisings of this nature are only made when the oppressed group feels that progress is not being made in politics or other important arenas.

Let me also underscore some key words in that last paragraph. "Perceived" human or civil rights abuses is important because it is not always indisputable that abuses are occuring. Whether or not abuses are in fact occurring, though, is not important in explaining these breaking points. What is important is that a group of people feels they are being wronged. I'm not trying to justify the Intifadas or the L.A. Riots, just trying to understand why they happened.

In all three places discussed, a group of people felt, or still feels, that the judicial system was not there to look out for them. In protest, they resisted, first against the RUC, then the L.A.P.D., and now the Israeli army. According to Freud, people submit to the authority of groups and governments because they provide them with a sense of security. In the absence of protection from the government, other groups spring up for protection. The IRA, and later the Provisional IRA, would not have had support if it had not been for injustices against Catholics in Northern Ireland. We think of gangs nowadays as all bad, but long before the Crips and the Bloods, Blacks moving into South Central in the late 1940's were subject to abuse from white gangs, so gangs like the Businessmen sprang up to protect themselves and their communities. Indeed, the Economist reports that the majority of Palestinians who voted for Hamas in the last election did so because Fatah was so corrupt and had failed them.

While South Central Los Angeles, Northern Ireland, and the Palestinian Authority are geographically so far, there are common elements that all three areas share. What you might draw from those ties is a matter of opinion, but it seems clear that people, when it comes down to it, aren't so different after all.

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