I wasn't down there during the L.A. riots, thank goodness, (though I have met a woman who got raped down there when the riots went down and later fled north), and also got acquainted with an ex "rooftop Korean" who was there when the riots happened, before he headed north and opened a new business, as I mentioned over here earlier today:Natural_Born_Cynic wrote: ↑August 27th, 2023, 3:28 pmEven Koreans hate them. They rather get on the rooftop and waste those thieving bastards with a shotgun or AR-15.
A bullet is much much cheaper than extensive welfare system for those nigs.
So let's learn all about the "Rooftop Koreans" and celebrate diversity, since muh diversity is our strength here in the thriving paradise of the jewnited states, right guys?WilliamSmith wrote: ↑August 28th, 2023, 5:29 pmI've known some Koreans over the years when I was in USSA too, but I never learned much about Korean nation or culture specifically.
However, I also caught your recent post where you posted a pic of the legendary "Rooftop Koreans", and as it happens I actually knew a Korean guy from LA who got the !@#$ out of there after the LA riots and opened a new business much further north that I used to go to regularly (which is how I got to know him). Some of them had some really cool guns at that time that the ZOG later ended up banning for civilian use. I think the legendary TEC-9 was one of them.
Hey I think you inspired another separate "Rooftop Koreans" thread for later....
https://koryogroup.com/blog/who-were-th ... op-koreans
Some of what that article said was bullshit (just because of picking up obvious ziomedia tropes), but here's some excerpts:
LA is home to a big Korean population, with over hundreds of thousands calling it their home. Many of these Koreans arrived during the 1970s-1980s, in search for the ‘American Dream’ when South Korea back then wasn’t quite as it is right now.
Limited money and limited jobs pushed many of these Koreans to poorer or rougher areas of town where it was cheaper to open shops, which were predominantly black areas.
Later on in history, this leads to unrest amongst two minority groups, the Asian Americans and the African Americans - and whilst it highlights the plight between the two, it also represents the plight of racial minorities against the white majority.
The 1992 Los Angeles Riots/1992 Los Angeles Uprising
The riots that occurred in Los Angeles in April - May 1992 were a series of riots that began in South Central Los Angeles after a trial that acquitted four officers for the use of excessive force in the beating and arresting of African American Rodney King. This went viral in TV broadcasts.
This rioting quickly took a turn to arson, looting, and assault, all taking place over a 6 day period. Police who were short staffed found it hard to control these riots that seemed to be spreading further.
How did the Rooftop Korean come about?
The riots assisted in fuelling the longstanding cultural clashes between the African Americans and the Koreans in the district. These tensions had already been raised due to a Korean shop owner, Soon Ja Du, who shot a young black girl who was supposedly just stealing orange juice.
When the riots spread to ‘Koreatown’ in the beginning, the police offered little to no help to the Koreans, whose shops were being constantly looted. Out of fear that unless they did something, everything might get burned down, they took it upon themselves, probably also partially out of pride and stubbornness, to protect their own businesses and livelihoods, and take things to the roof.
And bring guns with them.
Some shop owners used fellow Koreans to guard their shop with guns, others took to the roof. However, interestingly enough, not one person was killed by the Koreans. Only warning shots were fired to chase away potential rioters and troublemakers.
How the Los Angeles Riots Ended
In the end the US military was deployed to help end the violence.
Not before 63 people had been killed, however, and a further 2000 plus had sustained injuries. Estimates on property at that time were over $1 billion, and more than 12,000 people were arrested.
The Koreans arguably suffered more damage than anyone else, with many shops being looted or destroyed; yet their community spirit remained.