Opinion

L.A. gang tours promoting vice

For all you West coast students out there and anyone going on vacation in the Los Angeles-area over winter or spring break, there’s a new zoo moving to the area. It’s located in L.A.’s inner city, and you don’t even have to walk through its notoriously rough neighborhoods. Instead, you’re driven through this zoo on a coach bus. The “zoo:” inner city L.A. The “animals:” gangsters. The “zoo attendees:” those riding on the coach buses of the “LA Gang Tours.”

At first glance, the whole thing seemed like some kind of joke or parody. Tours of “the hood?” Hollywood, yes — but inner-city L.A.? After all, this is the birthplace of some of America’s most violent gangs, including the Bloods and the Crips.

On its website, LA Gang Tours says it desires “to provide an unforgettable historical experience for [its] customers with a customized high-end specialty tour … provid[ing] [them] with a true first-hand encounter of the history and origin of high profile gang areas and the top crime scene locations in … Los Angeles. The objective is to create jobs … to give profits from the tours back to these areas for economic growth and development, [to] provide job/entrepreneur training … and to educat[e] people from around the world about the Los Angeles inner city lifestyle, gang involvement and solutions.”

In English: most people have never been, nor will ever go, to the “hoods” of L.A. to see gangs and gang-related violence firsthand. Most people spend their lives sheltered from what occurs in these rough neighborhoods, never even reading about the issues. Plus, these neighborhoods need some serious economic help. But, this isn’t the whole story.

The late Tupac Shakur, in his famous song “Changes.” rapped, “Cops [don’t] give a damn about a negro … Give ‘em guns, step back, watch ‘em kill each other.” Replace the word “cops” with “the average American citizen”, and this sentiment by Tupac is and always has been equally true.

Sadly, one thing looks certain: Most people who decide to take these tours won’t give a damn about the plight of inner city L.A. They just want to watch firsthand the people in these neighborhoods trapped in a brutal cycle of poverty and violence.

This isn’t about helping solve America’s racial and gang problems. Instead, it is trivializing a serious American societal issue by glorifying it into a voyeuristic journey around the shittiest areas of L.A. to observe what most bus-riders will treat as a freak show, all for the outrageously high price of $65. It’s about profiteering off of the continuation of racism, segregation and gang violence.

The proof is in the pudding. On a section of its website titled “Where We Go,” LA Gang tours boasts about the different aspects of the tour and how awesome they are. One of the pit stops: the L.A. County Jail. LA Gang Tours touts it is “the unofficial jail to over 120,000 gang members! There are over 20,000 inmates housed in the world’s largest jail at any given time.” LA Gang Tours does not view this as the serious societal problem of over-crowded prisons, but rather something to be happy about because it will make the tour more sadistically entertaining. This is about entertainment, not enlightenment.

Another pit stop: the Metropolitan Detention Center. LA Gang Tours exclaims, “Los Angeles is the bank robbery capital of the world. Visit the infamous Metropolitan Detention Center, which houses the many convicted bank robbers…” Again, another example of the glorification of crime and punishment, rather than promoting in-depth discussion about the root causes of a societal epidemic like bank robbery.

To his credit, Alfred Lomas, the founder of LA Gang Tours, who will lead tours at first, “plans to talk about important chapters in the development of the city’s core, such as how racist housing restrictions shaped ethnic enclaves and the formation of gangs” (“Giving Tourists a Look at Gang Culture,” Los Angeles Times, Dec. 5).

But this is not enough. The tour is not advertised as a chance to learn and have intimate discussions about inner-city America, but rather as a chance to sadistically lionize the plight of Americans who have always gotten the shit end of the stick by the American government from time immemorial.

Attorney General Eric Holder controversially said in February, “[I]n things racial we have always been and continue to be, in too many ways, essentially a nation of cowards. … [W]e average Americans, simply do not talk enough with each other about race.”

We must, as decent Americans, sit down and talk about issues like the LA Gang Tours. Frank, honest discussions about the root causes of gang life and gang-related violence, instead of turning the situation into a freak show, is the only answer to some of America’s biggest, unresolved problems: racism, segregation and gang violence.

Steve Horn ([email protected]) is a junior majoring in political science and legal studies.

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11 older comments

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The people that live in these areas need to pull themselves up by their own bootstraps instead of blaming the white man for all of their problems.

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This has nothing to do with blaming anyone for their problems. This is a way of trying to come up with real solutions for problems they face. While the author disagrees with this solution, it’s better than your solution of allowing the status quo to continue. SOMETHING needs to be done. There are far too many socio-historical-economic forces working against them to say simply they should “pull themselves up by their bootstraps.”

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I don’t think discussion among sheltered academics is the best way to combat social ills. As Sudhir Venkatesh (author of Gang Leader for a Day) found, it wasn’t until he actually spent time observing gang culture that he was able to really understand that situation. Though some people on the tour may treat it like a Victorian freak show, if even a couple people take the tour and are inspired to take action to combat the ills they see, I think the tour does more good than harm.

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that book sucks

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we’ve been giving these people money and services for years and it hasn’t worked. It’s made them more complacent. Throwing money at the problem isn’t the solution, they have to want to get a better life. These people really havent shown that they want to.

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Bullshit, you think people like living in poverty? Its not as simple as ”throwing money” at them.

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If the bus tour idea works out, they should try a theme park next. Tinseltown ain’t dead yet!

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I went on the first tour on November 28th. The tour did exactly the opposite for me.

It educated me on everything I never knew about this area and the people that live there. It also got me excited and inspired to get involved and help Alfred and his mission.

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Yo 8:08. E-mail me at [email protected] That is awesome. I want to hear about your experiences/meet up to talk about it sometime. Good stuff. Hopefully you check this.

-Steve

I love this article.

don�t think discussion among sheltered academics is the best way to combat social ills. As Sudhir Venkatesh (author of Gang Leader for a Day) found, it wasn�t until he actually spent time observing gang culture that he was able to really understand that situation. Though some people on the tour may treat it like a Victorian freak show, if even a couple people take the tour and are inspired to take action to combat the ills they see, I think the tour does more good than harm

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