Learning the Wrong Lessons From the Eminent Domain Legacy at Chavez Ravine
Progressives are trying to fix the errors of the past, but they're ignoring the best solution: More robust property rights.

In their efforts to protect the downtrodden, progressives typically forget perhaps the most important defense the poor and powerless have against discrimination and government abuse: property rights. A nation that protects property rights also protects human rights.
"The poorest man may in his cottage bid defiance to all the forces of the Crown," 18th century British Prime Minister William Pitt explained. "It may be frail, its roof may shake, the wind may blow through it, the storm may enter, the rain may enter, but the King of England cannot enter; all his force dares not cross the threshold of the ruined tenement!"
Now imagine that level of freedom, where a private property owner (or leaseholder) can defy kings, presidents, governors, and mayors. That of course explains why most leftists (and some conservatives, too) are fundamentally hostile to strict property protections. Those who want government to achieve grandiose objectives don't want to hamstring officials' ability to achieve their envisioned uplifting.
In 2004, I included that Pitt quotation in my book ( Go figure, but these agencies typically targeted the homes and businesses of the powerless. Yet the state's Democratic leadership and progressive activists were mostly hostile to the movement to rein in the "tool" of eminent domain. In 2005, the U.S. Supreme Court gave its imprimatur (Kelo v. City of New London) to this troubling process, with the most progressive justices siding with the government's claim of expansive eminent domain rationales. But 20 years later, perhaps progressives are learning their lesson. Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoed Assembly Bill 1950, which would have created a task force to study the effects of one of California's best-known examples of eminent domain and also propose compensation. The compensation element of a 1950s-era taking was a reasonable sticking point, but I'm heartened Assembly Bill 1950 received overwhelming support in our Democratic-controlled Legislature. The specific taking is known as Chavez Ravine, which is best known as the spot where the Los Angeles Dodgers have played since the 1960s. It refers to three neighborhoods that were home to 3,800 Mexican-American residents, many of whom were legally restricted from living elsewhere. The city considered the area blighted, but as the bill explains, "these neighborhoods were, in fact, vibrant and cohesive communities, serving as a hub for homeownership and economic development and growth for people of color." One of the city's most outrageous complaints was the area's lack of infrastructure, which wasn't the residents' fault, but the fault of city officials who refused to provide that "shantytown" with the same services provided elsewhere. You can find online myriad stunning and deeply disturbing photographs of Los Angeles officials forcibly removing people from their homes—and bulldozing the nicely kept bungalows. What a travesty. But progressives often gloss over a key point. Unlike redevelopment-era takings that bulldozed neighborhoods to make way for shopping malls and corporate headquarters, Chavez Ravine (referred to by many as "The Poor Man's Shangri-La") was bulldozed to make way for a progressive policy at the time: federal public housing projects. Residents initially were promised new "homes" in the 13 soulless high rises planned for the spot, but the project collapsed after the city's voters—amid concerns about socialist-style housing projects in the thick of the Cold War—qualified a referendum and rejected the project at the ballot. The new mayor opposed the project, which the city ultimately scrapped. It traded the vacant land to the owner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, in a package to bring the team to Los Angeles. A private stadium wasn't a public use, but the city included a large park as part of the project to get around that restraint. Voters narrowly approved the stadium deal. Kelo has unfortunately allowed governments to use eminent domain for anything deemed a "public benefit" rather than the more restrained "public use." This is the second time in recent years that California lawmakers discovered the unjust results of eminent domain. Newsom signed a bill in 2022 to return Bruce's Beach to its owners' descendants. A Black couple owned the Manhattan Beach property in the 1920s and operated a resort that catered to Black families, who had few legal places to swim. For discriminatory reasons, the city used eminent domain to take the property and turn it into a park, although it then sat vacant for years. Progressives have brought needed attention to these examples, although they've focused on their discriminatory aspects. That's fair, but the lack of property rights is the key problem, as every new generation of government planner has its rationale. Instead of passing symbolic bills expressing horror at decades-old outrages, the Legislature should get busy protecting everyone's property rights now. This column was first published in The Orange County Register.
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Kamala thinks it’s a good idea that cops could enter your house to check for guns.
Mr. Greenhut, sir, with all due respect, you don't know what you're talking about.
You've fallen for that lefty slogan, "Human rights, not property rights", which implies property has rights. But "property rights" is the same shorthand for "human rights include owning property" as is "gun rights".
Self-ownership is the most basic right, and implies "property" right in itself, in its own name. It's what makes slavery immoral. If you steal from someone, you retroactively made them a slave for whatever time they worked to create or buy whatever you stole, no different than if you enslaved them for the same time to make one.
Some people like to say "property" is the basic right, and having property implies having an owner, but that's just a lawyeresque quibble.
JD Vance is wrong: the Padres will win the NL pennant.
Lets fix that.
"In their efforts to ?protect? the downtrodden, progressives will have to TAKE-MORE (steal) from the people so more of you can qualify as being 'downtroddened'."
The self-destruction 'plan' of progressives is as plain as day if anyone cared to pay attention beyond their own selfish cries to get away with armed-theft.
Maybe the only human asset a monopoly of Gun-Force (Gov-Guns) can offer is to ensure Individual Liberty and Justice for all.
Progressives are trying to fix the errors of the past, but they're ignoring the best solution: More robust property rights.
Um, they don't believe in property rights, so why would they?
^THIS^ – The very philosophy of Communism/Socialism doesn’t recognize people *earn* and *own* things. Taking away every human motivation to be an asset to society; leaving only enslavement in its path to survive.
In their efforts to protect the downtrodden, progressives typically forget perhaps the most important defense the poor and powerless have against discrimination and government abuse: property rights.
Are people at Reason really this stupid?
Progressives don't want to protect the downtrodden, they want power. And one of the best ways to get it is to make everyone beholden to you.
By being the sole source of everything. Utilities, education, entertainment, food, and, of course, housing.
Their mantras, 'su casa es mi casa' and 'you will own nothing and you will be happy' say it all.
Getting rid of property rights, ANY property rights, even to oneself, isn't an oversight --it's the program.
A nation that protects property rights also protects human rights.
Yes, and that's why the left, since it's inception, has been trying to destroy them.
As long as the government can seize real estate for failure to pay
property taxestribute to the crown,citizenspeasants do not own real estate.Back in the seventies when I was in the USMC I was stationed at Chavez Ravine in an Arty/Recon unit about where the new stadium is now if I recall correctly. Sorta sucked back then and probably sucks now even with the stadium.
Dodger Stadium has been there since the early sixties.
Yeah the Naval and Marine Training Center was next door. I never actually went to the stadium. In passing, it looked sorta crappy as did the training center. Maybe they were simply in the process of refurbishing the stadium when I saw it. In fact, four or five years after I had been there I understand the training center or at least a major part of it burnt down. Apparently it was rebuilt too after a few years and reopened. I wasn’t there long before I transferred to Camp Elliot in San Diego.
Although Camp Elliot was a shithole too, the general area it was in (Miramar, Mira Mesa, Tierrasanta) was a lot nicer if you didn’t mind the occasional leftover live ordinance from WWll still laying around the boonies. Chavez Ravine in caparison though sucked.
Chavez Ravine (referred to by many as “The Poor Man’s Shangri-La”) was bulldozed to make way for a progressive policy at the time: federal public housing projects.
Chavez Ravine was bulldozed to make sure a crony deal could be made to move the Dodgers from Brooklyn to LA. Most ‘urban renewal’ was done to build highways and the seeds had been sown 20 years before with redlining. In Chavez Ravine’s case, the redlining occurred in the 1930’s. The coalition of interests back then was banks, R pols, developers. Calling it ‘progressive’ is the sort of blind ideological stupidity that is, well, expected for this shitrag.
That whole history from redlining to ‘urban renewal’ and the crony deals – from fearmongering (the northern KKK was R in the 1920’s) to create ‘white flight’ to ultimately losing the voting base because of white flight – is why R’s lost the ability to compete in elections in every city where ‘urban renewal’ was a thing.
The deal that Walter O'Malley (owner of the Brooklyn Dodgers) orchestrated with Mayor Poulson was - 200 years free of all taxes on the property
Some of the documentation related to that land deal between the city and O'Malley
During the Roosevelt administration the National Housing Act of 1934 which established the Federal Housing Administration (FHA)[2] and the Housing Act of 1937 were signed into law, the latter of which directed the federal government to subsidize local public housing agencies.[3] On April 12, 1945, Vice President Harry Truman became president on the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt. Truman campaigned for a second term in the 1948 presidential election with a platform promising to provide for slum clearance and low-rent housing projects.[4] Truman was elected to a full term in 1948 with the Democrats also reclaiming the House of Representatives and the Senate.[5]
Carried out under the National Housing Act of 1949 signed into law by FDR/Truman [D].
It was very much-so an action by 'progressives'.
You self-projection "needle in the haystack" propaganda doesn't dismiss that.
>vibrant ... communities
Uh huh. That's what progressives always say about favelas. Homeless encampments are highly vibrant. Downtown Santa Ana is vibrant. You know, all the energy and excitement that comes from stepping around the steaming lumps of fecal material on the sidewalks.