-- Posted by ronpaul691 at 9:21 pm on Dec. 1, 2008
LA Riots 1992
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ITRnGqfsAyI
-- Posted by asia lover at 9:21 pm on Dec. 1, 2008
LOL the drug dealers here are Korean (and the rest of the city is Latino LMAO!!)
-- Posted by Baron Samedi at 9:22 pm on Dec. 1, 2008
God damn right.
-- Posted by whoisabs at 9:23 pm on Dec. 1, 2008
the koreatown bit was epic lulz
-- Posted by Latin Muscle at 9:24 pm on Dec. 1, 2008
AMAZING!!!
AND LOL tiny asians.
I have a feeling we might have another riot NATIONWIDE if the economy gets worse.
-- Posted by justin1990rm at 9:24 pm on Dec. 1, 2008
LMAO
-- Posted by Latin Muscle at 9:26 pm on Dec. 1, 2008
This is why my house contains more than 4 weapons. 2 handguns. 1 shotgun, 1 rifle.
IF the economy gets worse, SERIOUSLY expect a massive riot. A riot that can surpass the destruction of the L.A riots.
-- Posted by Deeznutz FYC at 9:28 pm on Dec. 1, 2008
Trippy as fuck
-- Posted by whoisabs at 9:31 pm on Dec. 1, 2008
it is just sad that they didn't shoot more of that scum, that and they didn't have fully automatic weapons to do it with
-- Posted by Latin Muscle at 9:35 pm on Dec. 1, 2008
Are any of you even armed??
Ever thought we might face another riot??? Anarchy at home? etc?
-- Posted by jakelong at 9:37 pm on Dec. 1, 2008
Funny how the local racialist never mention Joreans uniting with Latinos
Koreans and Latinos Rally Behind Drivers License Law
Bridges Ethnic Media Digest
NCM, News Digest, Compiled and edited by Pueng Vongs, Posted: Oct 23, 2003
Latinos aren't the only group opposing California Gov.-elect Arnold Schwarzenegger's promise to repeal the law granting drivers' licenses to undocumented immigrants. A petition is circulating in the strip malls of Los Angeles' Koreatown asking the governor to view SB 60 as a civil rights issue, not a political one, reports the Korea Times in Los Angeles.
Gi Suk Chon of the Korean Driving School Association (KDSA) in Los Angeles is among those passing the petition among Korean immigrants. "Driving is not a matter of being legal or illegal, it is a daily necessity," says Chon. Licenses are also needed to ensure safety on the road, proponents of the law say.
KDSA and Latino organizations are planning a demonstration backing the law at the Department of Motor Vehicles office in Los Angeles.
Mr. Kim, an undocumented immigrant who lost his job in Korea during the economic crisis in 1997and immigrated to the United States in the same year, is one beneficiary of the law. "The passing of SB 60 will make my life here much easier," he says.
The petition drafted by the Civil Rights Committee for the Undocumented emphasizes that Schwarzenegger, himself an immigrant, should give other immigrants an opportunity to start a new life.
-- Posted by asia lover at 9:37 pm on Dec. 1, 2008
Quote: from latin muscle at 9:35 pm on Dec. 1, 2008
Are any of you even armed??
Ever thought we might face another riot??? Anarchy at home? etc?
Well we are armed. But we do live in Pacas haha So our little pistols won't mean crap against the gangs AK-47's lol
-- Posted by Baron Samedi at 9:38 pm on Dec. 1, 2008
Quote: from latin muscle at 10:35 pm on Dec. 1, 2008
Are any of you even armed??
Ever thought we might face another riot??? Anarchy at home? etc?
My community is gated.
Should the serfs ever feel emboldened upon gaining knowledge of the written word and attempt an uprising, we'll simply crush their feeble numbers by pouring cauldrons of molten lead onto them from our guard towers.
-- Posted by whoisabs at 9:39 pm on Dec. 1, 2008
then again weren't we being threatened with similar bullshit if obama would have lost the election?
though i wouldn't mind taking out some shit like that with a wakizashi or kodachi as most of them appear unarmed, though some molotov cocktails would have been fun to throw into those idiots too...
-- Posted by Desertfoxel at 9:42 pm on Dec. 1, 2008
Koreans are freaking hilarious
-- Posted by jakelong at 9:44 pm on Dec. 1, 2008
Then again why would racialist like it when minorities get along?
At the Good Spoon's office in Annandale, with missing ceiling tiles and mismatched furniture, a large poster on the wall highlights the group's mantra: "Los Coreanos Le Aman Los Latino Americanos," or "The Koreans Love Latinos."
To spread this message, members of the religious charity take the poster to gatherings with Hispanics, such as a soccer tournament it hosted recently in Springfield for Korean and Hispanic teams.
Buy This Photo
Pastor Young Kil Cho carries the concerns of Hispanic workers to their Korean bosses and employers. (Photos By Sarah L. Voisin -- The Washington Post)
TOOLBOX Resize Text Save/Share + DiggNewsvinedel.icio.usStumble It!RedditFacebook Print This E-mail This COMMENT No comments have been posted about this item.
Comments are closed for this item. Discussion PolicyDiscussion Policy CLOSEComments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post. The group, funded by about 30 Korean churches in the Washington area, is run by Korean immigrants who had worked as missionaries in South America. They came to this area as students and to join other family members.
Three years ago, they decided to form a nonprofit to offer free meals, haircuts, Bible readings and sermons for day laborers. As more Korean-owned businesses hired Hispanic workers, the Good Spoon, with volunteers fluent in Korean and Spanish, unexpectedly found itself playing the role of workplace mediator and cultural liaison.
Its founder, Jae-Euk Kim, who spent years as a missionary in Paraguay and Venezuela, writes a weekly column in a local Korean-language newspaper, Joong-ang Ilbo, explaining Spanish expressions and Hispanic culture. The Good Spoon opened a thrift store in a predominately Hispanic area of Herndon with donations from the Korean community. Kim and pastor Young Kil Cho take complaints by Hispanic workers to Korean employers.
"We need Koreans to understand that Hispanics are our brothers and sisters and that we need them and will continue to have close relationships with them. But we also need to let Latinos know we want to help them," said Jeung-su Kim, a member of the Good Spoon.
Just kinda sad that most of lw isn't old enough to remember watching that stuff on the tv back in 92.
-- Posted by Moonscar at 9:45 pm on Dec. 1, 2008
Wow those people are really serious about protecting their small shops xD
-- Posted by jakelong at 9:48 pm on Dec. 1, 2008
And the new gen of blacks are koreans are doing way better
Korean rappers build ties with blacks
Peter Prengaman, Associated Press LOS ANGELES -- Crammed into a room on the third floor of a church, rapper DumbFounDead spits freestyle rhymes with six other emcees while about a dozen 20-somethings bob their heads to the music.
It's not just the music that makes the scene notable; it's the rappers. DumbFounDead, whose real name is Jonathan Park, is Korean- American. The others include three blacks, two Hispanics and another Korean-American.
Park is part of a thriving Korean rap scene in the city's vast Koreatown, where concerts and impromptu rap battle sessions occur in churches and cafes, and aspiring lyricists swap songs and jabs on MySpace.com.
The music is allowing young Korean rappers to build bridges with blacks half a generation after thousands of Korean businesses were torched in one of the country's worst race riots. In doing so, Korean rappers -- who dress, strut and rhyme in street-tough fashion -- are defining their own Korean-American experience in a way their parents couldn't.