Evicted
Mobile home park residents are left wondering if they will be next By Fabiola Esqueda, GNI Fellow and Carson Reporter
SP veterinarian under fire for alleged shady practices p. 3 CSUDH and Carson sign partnership agreement for clean slate p. 4
Delayed, Not Defeated By Paul Rosenberg, Senior Editor
“There was an attack carried out on Jan. 6, and a hitman sent them. I want you to get to the bottom of that.”
— Officer Harry Dunn, Capitol Police
Why signature? Because it embodied the violence, illogic, incoherence and profound disconnect from reality that defined that attack. Yet it would be a profound mistake to characterize the insurrection — and Trump’s efforts that motivated it — as a failure. It may well have been a success, after all: with an effective date of January 2024. While there’s much we still don’t know, five things are clear: 1) Trump attempted to stay in power, regardless of
August 5 - 18, 2021
“Hang Mike Pence!” That was the signature, selfdefeating cry of the Jan. 6 insurrection. Why the cry? Because Pence would not assume dictatorial power and refuse to count electoral votes that Joe Biden won in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Arizona and Georgia, which would allow the House of Representatives to declare Donald Trump president on a one-state-one-vote basis. It was self-defeating because if Pence were hung, no one else would do it in his place.
what the voters wanted. 2) Republican politicians were divided on whether to support him and how far to go. 3) Republican politicians publicly diminished their support immediately after the insurrection — as did Republican voters. 4) But support for Trump and even the insurrection itself has been resolidified since. 5) A profound threat to our democracy remains. Points 2, 3 and 4 are straightforward, confirmed by congressional votes, public statements and polling data. For example, Republican leaders vocally supported a bipartisan commission to investigate insurrection after it happened, but they’ve since blocked it and are now attacking Democrats for investigating anyway — and for including two non-Trump Republicans in the investigation committee. As for GOP voters, a CBS/ YouGov poll found that 39% of Republicans strongly disapprove of the insurrection, down from 51% in January. More ominously 55% would describe it as “defending freedom” and 51% as “patriotism,” compared to just 31% and 29% respectively in January. Mean-
Changes at Retro Row’s Vine leave it very much the same p. 9
Trump’s Insurrection:
Sergio Noyoa is exhausted after a long morning of moving out what he can before the closure of Park Granada on July 28. Photo by Fabiola Esqueda
Real People, Real News, Really Effective
Some attend protests, hoping that someone will listen; others stay home, scared that the local politicians will retaliate for speaking up against them; a few have given up the fight. Less than two months have passed since a judge ordered the indefinite closure of Park Granada Trailer Lodge Mobile, or Park Granada located at the corner of Main and Carson streets. A three-minute drive and you will find yourself across Carson Civic Center and Park Avalon, a mobile home park in danger of closure. In the opposite direction in Alondra Boulevard rests Rancho Dominguez Mobile Estates, slated to shut down in two and a half years. In recent years the City of Carson has become a new hit for big shot developers. A newer Los Angeles County city off the 405 Freeway, the City Planning Commission has hoped to shift Carson from a manufacturing city with industrial and factory structures to a modern hip location to gather. But mobile home parks are seeing the consequences. During a time where the coronavirus pandemic has claimed 24,685 lives in Los Angeles County, landlords continue to evict tenants and homeowners in land leases. Despite a federal ban to stop the displacements, Carson mobile home parks are in jeopardy. With three parks set to close and others on the verge, residents are experiencing emotional turmoil. And residents of other mobile home parks are left wondering when they will be next. [See Who’s Next, p. 4]
[See Coup, p. 15]
1