Nearly a month into the ICE sweeps that have upended immigrant life in Southern California, I found myself rummaging through some boxes in my garage, searching for understanding. I pulled out dusty copies of T.C. Boyle's "Tortilla Curtain" and Luis J. Rodriguez's "Always Running," two classics I read years ago that left me with a lasting impression of the L.A. immigrant experience. |
I placed them on my nightstand. But every time I reached for one of the books, I grabbed my phone instead and cycled through the latest videos of immigration raids — on TikTok, Instagram and Facebook. |
At this moment, words just can't compete with what I see in the images that course relentlessly through my feeds. |
I am not talking about burning Waymos or TV chopper footage of violent clashes played over and over during the first few days of the siege. I am obsessed with the average Joes who see those white-and-green Border Patrol trucks and turn on their cameras. These videos are choppy, the action often out of frame, frequently taken by bystanders in cars or in the middle of shopping. But what they lack in professional flair they make up for in raw emotion. |
|
Screenshot from a video of officers running, captured by a witness filming what he characterized as an immigration raid at the Wilshire/Union Home Depot in Los Angeles on June 6. (Mario Rodas) |
An up-close view of immigration raids |
Consider some scene from just the last few days: |
- "Bitches," one woman whispers as she records agents making arrests at a La Puente Home Depot.
- "What's wrong with you?!" a woman screams while filming the ICE arrest of a street vendor selling tacos in Ladera Heights.
- "You don't have to talk! You don't have to talk! Tell me your name and I will get you help," someone tells an elderly man as he is escorted in handcuffs into an unmarked SUV.
- "You can't treat him like this," a woman screams as agents surround and tackle a man in Cypress Park.
- A symphony of horns rings out as a warning when Border Patrol trucks roll into a Pico Rivera parking lot.
- A construction worker several stories above Figueroa Street calmly explains how many Mexican and Guatemalan members of his crew fled the job site when Border Patrol trucks drove by.
- A Border Patrol truck, siren blaring, gives chase through a foggy strawberry farm in the city of Oxnard.
|
This looks familiar, but ... |
These images hold such power because they are both familiar and foreign. I know that corner in Koreatown. I've bought groceries at that Walmart. I used to drive by that shopping center in Santa Ana every morning. |
The locations are recognizable, even comforting, yet the vibes are anything but. A row of camouflage Humvees on the 105 Freeway. Abandoned work sites, food trucks, fruit vending carts, and even lawn mowers left running after the gardeners were arrested. |
The images are so incongruous they bring to mind those early pandemic views of L.A.'s empty freeways. Or the CGI-generated destruction of the downtown skyline in the final act of a disaster movie. Or the disoriented expressions on the faces of people after the shaking of an earthquake finally subsides. |
I know this place, but what has happened to it? |
Videos show a new community forming |
"Tortilla Curtain" was published in 1995 during one of California's anti-immigrant waves. The year before, voters had approved Proposition 187, which barred undocumented immigrants in California from receiving many public services. |
Boyle's novel captured those times and won acclaim for its uncomfortably biting satire of white fear and brown exploitation in one of those "perfect" L.A. suburbs that those with means regard as an escape hatch. The undocumented workers in his book are treated with unrelenting, almost comic cruelty. They have no allies. |
And that is where 2025 is different from 1995, at least according to my algorithm. |
It's remarkable how often strangers come to the defense of those swept up, even risking arrest by getting into it with agents. Consider: |
I was scrolling my phone Monday night when I stopped on one reel. I know that intersection! That's 7th Street right around Cal State Long Beach. A traffic nightmare. In the median, one man is selling fruit and another is selling flowers. The person holding the camera screams from across the street "La Migra!" and urges them to leave. After a bit of confusion, they take his advice and pack their things. |
Another video starts with the sounds of a woman wailing behind a truck in West L.A. "My father was on his way to work. They must have pulled him out by force," she is heard crying in Spanish. "Oh, Father, he's an elderly man … He couldn't do anything to them." The camera finally reveals her on the ground. But she is not alone. Four seeming strangers are at her side, comforting her. |
Here's more from our coverage of the ICE raids and arrests: |
|
The week's biggest stories |
|
(Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Times) |
Inside the L.A. Zoo's messy $50-million breakup |
- The city's contract with the Greater Los Angeles Zoo Assn., which governs fundraising, special events and more, ended on Tuesday, leaving the zoo in a precarious place, with no firm plan for how to proceed.
- At stake in the messy divorce is a nearly $50-million endowment that each side claims is theirs and that funds much of the zoo's special projects, capital improvements and exhibit construction.
- The 59-year-old zoo, which occupies 133 acres in the northeast corner of Griffith Park, has become increasingly dilapidated and is struggling to maintain its national accreditation.
|
Why a Central Valley legislator voted for Trump's megabill |
- Central Valley Rep. David Valadao put his political future in deeper peril this week by voting in favor of legislation that slashes Medicaid coverage essential to more than a half-million of his constituents — the most of any district in the state.
- Valadao said he voted to support the bill because of concessions he helped negotiate that will help his district, including funds for rural hospitals and water infrastructure.
- Democrats have vowed to use Valadao's vote to oust him from office in the 2026 election.
|
Paramount agrees to pay $16 million to settle Trump's CBS '60 Minutes' lawsuit |
|
|
More big stories |
|
|
This week's must-reads |
| The Pike in Long Beach and the Pacific Ocean Park in Santa Monica had distinct personality: One was a bit naughty and coarse and the other was wholesome and futuristic. Competition from that crowded Anaheim theme park and the effects of sea air took a toll on both. | | | |
More great reads |
|
Keep up with California | Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. Subscribe to the Los Angeles Times. | | | | |
For your weekend |
|
The strawberry matcha latte from Ondo Coffee Co. (Shelby Moore / For The Times) |
Going out |
|
Staying in |
|
L.A. Timeless |
A selection of the very best reads from The Times' 143-year archive. |
| Musician Nathaniel Ayers' chance encounter with L.A. Times columnist Steve Lopez 20 years ago changed the lives of both men. | | | |
Have a great day, from the Essential California team |
Kevinisha Walker, multiplatform editor Andrew Campa, Sunday writer Karim Doumar, head of newsletters |
How can we make this newsletter more useful? Send comments to essentialcalifornia@latimes.com. Check our top stories, topics and the latest articles on latimes.com. |