This narrative provides a profound ethnographic look at how shared socio-economic hardship can supersede racial boundaries in the formation of urban tribal identities. It serves as a compelling case study on the complex sociological structures of the American carceral system and gang culture.
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Lil' Earl Loc | White Crip from the Projects (Dodge City Crip / San Pedro, CA)追加:
When I got to the pen, I had [ __ ] that didn't want me in their cell. It's a lot of It's a lot of blacks that love that [ __ ] Yeah, and then I had people like, "Oh man, you know, scared to have me in their cell cuz the repercussions."
You know, then then you got the COs that look at you different, then you got, you know, dudes that that other Crips that look at you like, "Oh, he ain't black." You know, it's it's it's it's a little hard, but you got other dudes that love it.
Compton was was They used to come to our hood when the crack era came out. They They were the ones that brought the crack era to our to our projects. Like the the Santana Blocks project.
They brought the the era that that era to our projects.
Yeah, that's the end of it, bro. A mad man I see.
A man that go kill with this is really mad.
It will kill.
You better watch out. This is the M1 carbine. 32 rounds.
I can go tap Louis Park with this.
I can kill about 32 people if I hit them all. Well, is that Was it Santana by people who started up Dodge City or no?
Was that it's only Okay.
You know what it was? I think my my homies start Crippin when they was in YA cuz all all my big homies was locked up when I started hanging out. Then they start coming out.
Yeah, then they start, you know, they start What I heard was they my my the group the age above me, they started Second Street Mob. Right.
And and my homies came out the pen, they was like, "Nah, we got You can't be Second Street Mob because all all the mob all the mob was a Blood hood. Like Louis Park Mob, you know, so they might get us mixed up with This is what I'm I I heard some homies let's just start, you know, Dodge City and like the Wild Wild West. That's how our hood was in the Wild Wild West.
>> [laughter] >> We never got along We never got along with nobody. And you was the third generation of that?
Yeah, I was the third gen. Oh, wow, okay.
Me and my big homie Quick, rest in peace, and all them, then it was the the the Second Street Mobs was they made them stop the mob and just claim Dodge City.
And then it was us. The Dodge City kind of low.
I I really didn't didn't hear about other like there's where I felt which I really got to prison.
I guess cuz we was going to juvenile hall in in young age. So we Plus my homies was going to juvenile hall in YA.
So they was putting our hood on the map, my big homies. You know what I'm saying?
Did you do YA or did you have to go through all that or I never did YA. I went to camp straight to prison.
I did LP, Central, Sylmar camp.
Then I got out and I went to the pen.
Yeah.
I did YA. I went Right, right. Now well so yeah, so in prison when you heard about it, were you like Like what was your reaction to that? What were you thinking?
I I was just like, "That [ __ ] crazy."
Yeah, all kind of different hoods like Yeah, so I had moved to I had moved to Sacramento for like a couple months.
Then I started school with a lot of dudes from 29th Street. You heard of 29th Street Garden Block?
I went to school with a couple like four or five. I forgot their name though.
This was like '87. Yeah.
Like I said, when you go to jail, you hear a lot of hoods you never heard of like you know, like like AJ Gangsters in different different counties and [ __ ] I'm like, "Damn." You know, or Hoovers up north. I'm like, "Oh, [ __ ] crazy."
Like Like if you Google like later on if you ain't got nothing to do, you Google uh Phil Jefferson.
Uh that's my homie that from our hood that went to Denver like in the '80s.
And it was him and two of his homies that started Crippin out there, but he I guess they didn't want to He didn't want to him to claim Dodge, so they started like What is it? San Diego? I mean uh Rolling 40s out there or something?
Well, if you Google Phil Jefferson, it that probably the whole story with like him Phil Jefferson with my hood. He gave me my my hood name.
At issue this week, Colorado gangs.
Those in the know say gangs are not just a metro problem anymore, and this week the state got involved. House Bill 1335 would fund a war on gangs to the tune of $2.3 million.
It won committee approval this week with the help of police chief from outside metro Denver.
Last summer, Launte Carolina, a Northeast Denver high school student, was killed in a drive-by shooting. He was one of three boys killed recently during the war between the Crips and the Bloods.
I listen, you know, I I respect I respect gangbanging everywhere.
Yeah, especially like in the '80s and '90s and like the maybe the early 2000s. You know what I'm saying? That era.
You feel what I'm saying? That was the era of the last. You know what I'm saying? Cuz I know a lot of good [ __ ] from a lot of good hoods.
There's a lot of good [ __ ] You know what I'm saying? You know what I'm saying? It's just like it's It was survival back then. You know what I'm saying?
When I got to the pen, I had [ __ ] that didn't want me in their cell.
Then I got [ __ ] that got mad at the people that didn't want me in their cell. I'm like, "Come on, you know what I'm saying?"
But then I had [ __ ] that like, "Man, he can come in my cell." You know, it's a lot of It's a lot of blacks that love that [ __ ] Like, "Damn, this [ __ ] Crippin." You know what I'm saying?
You know, then I had Yeah, and then I had people like, "Oh man, you know, scared to have me in their cell cuz the repercussions."
Right. All my cellies was, you know, they had my back 100%. Every cellie I had had my back 100%.
You know, then then you got the COs that look at you different, then you got, you know, dudes that that other Crips that look at you like, "Oh, he ain't black." You know, it's it's it's it's a little hard, but you got other dudes that love it. Like everybody from from the Harbor area like Insane 20s, Mac Mafia, all them, they they had my back 100% on Harbor City. You know what I'm saying? Oh, that's love. Yeah.
Like Like when I when I got to reception, they was trying to put me in a cell with a a dude from Hoover, and he was like, "I don't want cuz in my I don't want him in my cell. I don't want no problems."
But the dude I came I came on the bus with He was from IE. He was like, "Cuz, put him in my cell with me, cuz."
You know, but the dude from Hoover like, "Nah, he can't come in my cell."
Now Now would that cause static?
I think the dude What happened was the homie from Compton talked to the dude from Hoover, and he was like, "Cuz, come in my cell.
I ain't trippin."
You know, my hardest time was in the county jail.
When I hit the yard in prison, it's like a lot of I was on the yard with a lot of respectable [ __ ] that that didn't mind Oh, they didn't mind fighting. So when I got to the yard, it was like they showed me they embraced me. You know what I'm saying? They was just like, "We going to talk to, you know, they people, and we you know, if anything happen, just take off then.
And we'll take off right behind you."
I think it was more fights. It was more fighting because you're enclosed. You know, you ain't going nowhere. Right. At least in prison, you get to walk the yard.
[ __ ] In the county jail, you might be in a cell with [ __ ] one black and six Mexicans.
Cuz Cuz my brother from my neighborhood in in He had a hard time in the county, but not in the pen.
From From Mexicans. Okay. But they would just push up on me and be like, "Hey, we Where you from?" Right. You know, it wasn't too many white boys on on on the yard. It was probably a handful, and they didn't You know, I don't think they wanted no problems. You know what I'm saying?
Right. But you know, I I would You know, a couple white boy Crips rolled up while I was there like like the homie from Santana Block and uh this white boy from Insane, but I don't think the white boys really wanted no problems. What What white boy from Santana Block? Which one?
Man, I forgot his name. He was like He was a country white boy.
>> [laughter] >> He was my cellie. I forgot his name, but he was my cellie for a couple months.
The white boys never pushed up on us.
Never said nothing to us. Never spoke to us. Nothing. No, but I'm talking about like the the fellow the other white locs that you met. Nah, the white boy from Santana Block, you know, we we moved in a cell together. He was He was We chilled. We chilled. We was cellies for like 8 9 months. nice. You know, yeah, we never I forgot his name, man, but it was cool. The Santanas, you know, they didn't embrace them. Right. And but you know, we chilled for like 8 months, and I moved out the cell and moved in the cell with this OG from AJ Gangsters, and I did my rest of my time with him.
>> I heard of Snow Rock. People said things about Snow Rock. His name was Raymond.
I seen I follow Super Cuzz on Instagram.
You know what? I'm glad that they're they're getting their uh their props. You know what I'm saying?
Because you know, they're doing they're doing [ __ ] they're doing stuff where a lot of [ __ ] folded. You know what I'm saying?
>> Yeah.
A lot of people that that try to walk this you know Our hood was what a lot of hoods where I stayed was like the the Watts from Imperial Rose.
They were they had Mexicans in their hood and a lot of them went to the county jail and folded. Yeah. You know, a lot of people I grew up with folded.
You know what I'm saying? There's maybe a handful that that that that that made it. You know what I'm saying?
When I was in reception, I seen a uh I don't know if he was white or Mexican, but he was from Downey. And I don't know where he was from. He was a club. Right.
One of his homies came in and seen him and was like, "What's up, homie?" But he had already folded. Oh. Like he didn't know.
I mean, I look at it like if you fold, you're going to have problems everywhere you go. You're going to run into somebody. You're going to run into an enemy in in any prison. Like if if it's somebody if it's a ex- a Mexican female that you you beefed with in your hood or a white boy you beefed with in your hood, you're going to end up running into somebody in prison. So if if if if you if you switch up, they're going to you ain't going to have no backup.
You're just going to be left to the wolves.
But but I think Snow Rock and them I think they went to the era when it was like racial. You know what Oh, yeah.
Yeah. Yeah.
Uh you know what I'm saying? You know, especially at a time when they was going to jail. They was going to jail in the '80s. Yeah.
And that's Yeah, that's when it was on and cracking.
My mom was my mom was one of them moms where I love my son right or wrong, whatever you doing.
You know what I'm saying? And and like I said when I grew up in the projects, it was dominantly black.
You you know, so we all go to each other's house. My homies would come to my house. We'll go to my homie's house. We'll go to his grandma's house.
So my my mom had love for my homies just like my homies' moms had love for us.
Right.
>> You know, that's where we learned our family values. Right.
You know, when they say what's that thing it takes a village to raise a child or however that thing go.
>> Right. Right. Right. Yeah. Yeah. Our hood was like a village.
You know what I'm saying?
>> Exactly.
You know, you got people's grandma that that would take us in if we were on the street after 10. If the police got us, they'll come outside and be like, "That's my nephew." Right.
>> "What's the fuss?" Police like, "Oh, that's your nephew?"
You know what I'm saying? Hell, yeah.
You know.
That's how it was. So our families didn't look at each other like, "Oh, he's hanging around blacks or he's Cripping."
Now now, would cops [ __ ] around with you? Like, "What you hanging around with them for? What are you doing out here?"
The police used to do that [ __ ] Yeah, they used to take me down and whoop my ass.
Come and get me whenever and everything.
No, this new generation is like, "Where do we find these motherfuckers?"
You know, it ain't it ain't like, "Oh, let's go down in the projects. They're there." No, it's not like that no more.
It's like, "Where Where are these [ __ ] Who's house these [ __ ] sitting in?"
>> Exactly.
But nowadays, this new age you got to go look for a [ __ ] You know what I'm saying? So they got it they got it easy, you know?
Right. So it's like it's like when we was gangbanging, it was loyalty. Now there's loyalty is a word right now.
Yeah, we You know, you fight one of our homies, you got to fight us all. You shoot one of our homies, you know, that's how we was. You know what I'm saying? We used to have to we used to have to we used to have to go to school with a pistol in our backpack. Exactly.
in our backpack. You know what I'm saying? Nowadays, you really ain't got to do that [ __ ] If we go down the street if we go down the street in Compton, [ __ ] going to be standing outside up in You're going to catch somebody slipping. Nowadays, it's not like that. It's like you might catch a [ __ ] on the fluke somewhere or or or you might you run into a [ __ ] It it's not the same. You know what I'm saying? That's why when people talk about that [ __ ] I'm just like it it's not the same. It's like you know I say like it got easier after 2003, 2004. It got way easier.
You know, it's just you know, back in the day you you know, your homie could be like, "Man, I'm finna go to Burger King. You want something?" He might not not make it back. Like get gunned down at Burger King. Like my boy I'm like my boy I'm in the picture with him, my best friend.
Got killed at Taco Bell.
You know, that was devastating. You know what I'm saying? That was like one of my you know, that that [ __ ] hurt.
Yeah, gas station, whatever you know, wherever you at in the hood you got to keep your you got to keep on your feet. You know what I'm saying?
I lost I lost I lost a lot of good friends in the '80s.
A lot.
Yeah, and it's crazy it it's sick to say now like it was fun.
Yeah, you know, it's it's sick to say that that [ __ ] was fun and we was making money and and we was we was doing what we was doing, you know what I'm saying?
>> [music] [music] >> Brian Little >> [music] >> Rare Breed unfortunately doesn't make any money off these videos. Any and every tip is appreciated. Thank you.
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