The 1965 Watts Rebellion — six days of uprising following the police beating of Marquette Frye — was both a symptom and a catalyst. South Central Los Angeles had been shaped by the same forces documented in the redlining thread: federal mortgage policy that excluded Black families from suburban homeownership, concentrated poverty in specific zip codes, and a Los Angeles Police Department under Chief William Parker that operated in Black neighborhoods as an occupying force. Parker publicly compared his department's approach to Watts to a military counterinsurgency operation.
After Watts, the McCone Commission identified the root causes: unemployment, inadequate housing, poor schools, police brutality. Its recommendations — job programs, school investment, police reform — were largely ignored. What grew instead in the late 1960s was a Black political infrastructure: the Black Panther Party established a Southern California chapter in 1968, running free breakfast programs for children, free health clinics, and political education classes. Ron Karenga's US Organization operated parallel community programs. These were not peripheral activities — they were filling the gap left by government divestment with a functioning alternative infrastructure.
The Black Panther Party's 10-Point Program demanded full employment, decent housing, an end to police brutality, and community control of institutions. FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover called the Panthers "the greatest threat to the internal security of the country." His response was not to address the conditions they were organizing around. It was to destroy them.