Los Angeles declares curfew as Trump decries protests as ‘foreign invasion’

The waxing gibbous moon illuminates the sky as a police car patrols the deserted streets of Downtown Los Angeles, where a curfew remains in effect. — AFP pic
Wednesday, 11 Jun 2025 1:11 PM MYT
LOS ANGELES, June 11— A nighttime curfew was declared in Los Angeles yesterday as local officials sought to get a handle on protests that Donald Trump claimed were an invasion by a “foreign enemy.”
Looting and vandalism has scarred the heart of America’s second biggest city as largely peaceful protests over immigration arrests turned ugly after dark.
“I have declared a local emergency and issued a curfew for downtown Los Angeles to stop the vandalism, to stop the looting,” Mayor Karen Bass told reporters.
One square mile (2.5 square kilometers) of the city’s more-than-500 square mile area will be off-limits between 8pm and 6am for everyone apart from residents, journalists and emergency services, she added.
One protester told AFP the arrest of migrants in a city with large foreign-born and Latino populations was the root of the unrest.
“I think that obviously they’re doing it for safety,” she said of the curfew.
“But I don’t think that part of the problem is the peaceful protests. It’s whatever else is happening on the other side that is inciting violence.”
Small-scale and largely peaceful protests—marred by eye-catching acts of violence—began Friday in Los Angeles as anger swelled over ramped up arrests by immigration authorities.
At their largest, a few thousand people have taken to the streets, but smaller mobs have used the cover of darkness to set fires, daub graffiti and smash windows.
Overnight Monday 23 businesses were looted, police said, adding that more than 500 people had been arrested over recent days.
Protests have also sprung up in cities around the country, including New York, Atlanta, Chicago and San Francisco.
‘Provide protection’
Trump has ordered 4,000 National Guard to Los Angeles, along with 700 active-duty Marines, in what he has claimed is a necessary escalation to take back control—despite the insistence of local law enforcement that they could handle matters.
A military spokeswoman said the soldiers were expected to be on the streets later Tuesday or some time on Wednesday.
Their mission will be to guard federal facilities and to accompany “federal officers in immigration enforcement operations in order to provide protection.”
The Pentagon said the deployment would cost US taxpayers $134 million.
Photographs issued by the Marine Corps showed men in combat fatigues using riot shields to practice crowd control techniques at the Naval Weapons Station Seal Beach.
‘Behaving like a tyrant’
Two dozen miles (40 kilometers) north, the sprawling city of Los Angeles spent the day much as it usually does: tourists thronged Hollywood Boulevard, tens of thousands of children went to school and commuter traffic choked the streets.
But at a military base in North Carolina, Trump was painting a much darker picture.
“What you’re witnessing in California is a full-blown assault on peace, on public order and national sovereignty, carried out by rioters bearing foreign flags with the aim of continuing a foreign invasion of our country,” he told troops at Fort Bragg.
“This anarchy will not stand. We will not allow federal agents to be attacked, and we will not allow an American city to be invaded and conquered by a foreign enemy.”
California Governor Gavin Newsom, a Democrat who has clashed with the president before, said Trump’s shock militarization of the city was the behavior of “a tyrant, not a president.”
“Sending trained warfighters onto the streets is unprecedented and threatens the very core of our democracy,” he said.
In a filing to the US District Court in Northern California, Newsom asked for an injunction preventing the use of troops as any kind of policing force, and demanding they be confined to guarding federal buildings.
District Judge Charles Breyer scheduled a hearing on the motion—which charges Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth have violated the US Constitution—for Thursday.
‘Incredibly rare’
Trump’s use of the military is an “incredibly rare” move for a US president, Rachel VanLandingham, a professor at Southwestern Law School in Los Angeles and a former US Air Force lieutenant colonel, told AFP.
US law largely prevents the use of the military as a policing force—absent the declaration of an insurrection, which Trump again mused about on Tuesday.
Trump “is trying to use emergency declarations to justify bringing in first the National Guard and then mobilizing Marines,” said law professor Frank Bowman of the University of Missouri. — AFP
Wakakka..North America has been continuously under foreign invasion since 1620, when the Mayflower arrived to found the Plymouth Colony....
ReplyDeleteIncluding a certain immigrant named Friedrich Trump from Bavaria who slipped in on1892.
Downtown KL is similar to Downtown LA. Foreigners galore, many illegals.
ReplyDeleteThere may be a flurry of tyrant, dictator label flying about in due time, if the following is true. An attached short video remark by alleged super lawyer in the post.
ReplyDelete~~~
https://x.com/TheStormRedux/status/1932928821528871030?s=19
Panic!!! Democrat scumbag Marc Elias, who was behind most of the lawfare against President Trump, is ‘sounding the alarm’ for all the other Democrat scumbags…
“I’m here today not to tell people everything is gonna be okay, but to sound a really loud alarm! Which is that Donald Trump has turned the DOJ into his personal legal task force to go after his political opponents…
I’m telling you, we are not overreacting. We are only 5 months in! This is going to get much, much worse!”
Hahahaha! Delightful.
Hey Marc, President Trump is representing the majority of the American people and we want to see you face justice for the crimes you committed against our President. What goes around, comes around!
Best wishes,
The American People 😘
Diversionary kayfabe move or something big is coming...
ReplyDelete~~~
https://x.com/Osint613/status/1932866173592314284?s=19
Here’s what just went down — and it’s very interesting:
1. UK Maritime Trade issued a rare warning about rising tensions in the Gulf, Strait of Hormuz, and Gulf of Oman, citing potential military escalation that could directly affect shipping.
2. The US Embassy in Iraq is prepping for an ordered evacuation due to security threats.
3. The State Department is pulling nonessential staff and families from Bahrain and Kuwait.
4. U.S. military dependents in Bahrain have been cleared for temporary departure.
None of these moves came from Fleet Forces Command, meaning this likely came from the top, possibly the White House. Something serious is unfolding.
...
https://x.com/dotconnectinga/status/1932901380681031767?s=19
Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth has authorized the voluntary departure of U.S. military dependents from installations across the Middle East, following a blunt warning from Iran that American bases in the region could become targets if a wider military conflict breaks out.
.thedailydots.substack.com/p/us-begins-pu
...
https://x.com/DavidJHarrisJr/status/1932902511733878799?s=19
Something BIG is happening
https://x.com/AdameMedia/status/1932933589420716037?s=19
ReplyDeleteBREAKING: 🚨🇮🇱 🇾🇪
MAJOR Yemeni Attack on Israel’s Ben Gurion Airport.
...
https://x.com/AdameMedia/status/1932943426242449851?s=19
Source: PRESS TV
x.com/presstv/status…
On a separate note...
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/e35nsdi7-fQ?si=haaxIMcgOFvHRM9d
Inside China Business youtube channel
Top Chinese Scientists flee Boston area as Harvard, MIT fall in rankings; Silicon Valley also hit
Posted 11 June 2025
Thousands of Chinese researchers and scientists are leaving top jobs in leading US universities and companies, to take posts in China.
The Cambridge area of Massachusetts is home to Harvard, MIT, and scores of leading companies, and was the number one source of returning Chinese research and engineering talent.
In second place is the Palo Alto-Berkeley cluster, which includes Stanford, University of California, and Silicon Valley.
The migration of top scientific and engineering talent back to China is accelerating, but began nearly a decade ago. And while the political situation between China and the United States certainly is a major motivation for many scientists to return, more important is the quality of the education systems. Chinese universities are now claiming the top spots across all the hard science disciplines, while American colleges are tumbling.
Closing scene, Dongyang City, Zhejiang
Resources and links:
NBC, Blocked from Harvard, the world's star students weigh staying in Asia and Europe
https://www.nbcnews.com/world/as...
Channel News Asia, To stay or to go? Chinese students in the US mull future amid Trump’s visa crackdown
https://www.channelnewsasia.com/...
Reuters, 'Harvard refugee': Chinese students hunker down as U.S. blocks foreign enrollment
https://www.reuters.com/world/ch...
Business Standard, Eyeing US exodus, China dangles high salaries to bring scientists home
https://www.business-standard.co...
Medium, Is the Mass Departure of Top-Tier Chinese Researchers Good for the U.S.?
/ is-the-mass-departure-of-top-tie...
New York Times, China Really Wants to Attract Talented Scientists. Trump Just Helped.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/...
China leads the world in physics research as US a distant rival, Nature Index shows
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/...
SCMP, As China sweeps top spots, chemistry seems to be dying in the US. Is this a power shift?
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/...
SCMP, Prize-winning computer scientist Quan Guocong picks China post after years in US
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/...
SCMP, US research hub at heart of brain drain for scientists returning to China, study finds
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/...
SCMP, Chen Jing, award-winning computer scientist and blockchain expert, leaves US for China
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/...
Former US defence researcher Zhan Hanyu joins China’s elite aerospace university
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/...
Chinese Scientists Are Leaving the United States
https://foreignpolicy.com/2023/0...
Reverse Brain Drain? Exploring Trends among Chinese Scientists in the U.S.
https://sccei.fsi.stanford.edu/c...