A Manufactured Crisis: How A Few Hooligans In LA Became The Pretext For Military Rule
from the propaganda-at-work dept
Today we need to examine something that reveals the machinery of authoritarian propaganda with surgical precision: how a handful of violent incidents across a few city blocks in Los Angeles was transformed into a “crisis” justifying the deployment of federal troops against American citizens. And how easily that transformation succeeded.
I write this from Los Angeles, where I’ve lived long enough to witness actual citywide chaos. I was here during the widespread unrest following George Floyd’s murder. I was here during the rioting after the Dodgers won the World Series. I’ve seen what it looks like when a city of four million people truly erupts in violence.
What happened this past weekend wasn’t that. Not even close.
Yet somehow, a few isolated incidents of vandalism and confrontation—contained within a handful of city blocks—became the justification for deploying Marines against American protesters. More disturbing still, this manufactured crisis worked exactly as intended. Millions of Americans now believe that military force was not just justified but necessary to restore order in a city that was never actually in disorder.
Two plus two equals four. There are twenty-four hours in a day. And what we witnessed was not urban chaos but the deliberate manufacture of consent for military rule through carefully orchestrated propaganda.
The anatomy of this deception reveals the terrifying efficiency of post-truth manipulation. It begins with the amplification of isolated incidents into the appearance of widespread mayhem. A broken window here, a confrontation there, perhaps a small fire somewhere else—all genuine incidents, but scattered across a metropolitan area larger than many states. In the hands of propagandists, these become “Los Angeles in flames” or “chaos consuming the city.”
This isn’t to minimize the genuine violence that occurred. Videos of protesters hurling chunks of concrete torn from infrastructure at police officers are genuinely shocking. Such attacks represent serious criminal behavior that deserves prosecution. But here’s what the propaganda deliberately obscures: the number of people engaging in this violence could be counted on two hands. The geographic area where these incidents occurred spans perhaps a few city blocks in a metropolitan area of over 500 square miles.
Most importantly, the system worked exactly as it’s supposed to. Many of these individuals have already been apprehended. Social media footage is being used to identify and arrest those who haven’t been caught yet. Local law enforcement, supported by existing legal frameworks, is handling the situation through normal investigative and prosecutorial channels.
This is precisely what makes the propaganda so insidious—it takes genuine criminal behavior by a handful of individuals and transforms it into justification for military deployment against an entire city. The concrete-throwing incidents become “widespread violence.” The few blocks where confrontations occurred become “chaos consuming Los Angeles.” The handful of criminals become representative of all protesters.
The propagandists understand that dramatic images of real violence are far more effective than fabricated ones. A video of someone hurling concrete at police is genuinely disturbing and naturally generates strong emotional responses. But that same video, stripped of context about scale and containment, repeated endlessly across multiple platforms, creates the impression of systematic breakdown rather than isolated criminal behavior being addressed through normal legal processes.
The crucial element is decontextualization. Videos of specific incidents circulate without time stamps, location markers, or scale indicators. A thirty-second clip of one intersection becomes representative of an entire city. Social media algorithms, designed to maximize engagement, naturally boost content that triggers fear and outrage while burying anything that might provide proportion or context.
Mainstream media, trapped in its own engagement-driven incentives, amplifies rather than clarifies. Headlines speak of “widespread unrest” and “violence erupting across Los Angeles” without mentioning that we’re talking about incidents covering perhaps twenty square blocks in a city spanning over 500 square miles. The scale of the actual disturbances gets lost in the imperative to make everything sound dramatic and urgent.
The result is a population that believes they’re witnessing something far more serious than reality warrants. Americans in other states, consuming this curated content, develop the impression that Los Angeles is in the grip of systematic breakdown requiring extraordinary intervention. The manufactured crisis becomes indistinguishable from a real one in the minds of people who have no baseline for comparison.
This sets the stage for the propaganda’s true purpose: convincing Americans that military force is necessary to restore order. Once the impression of chaos has been established, military deployment becomes not just reasonable but obviously required. “Local law enforcement can’t handle it” becomes the refrain, even though local law enforcement was never actually overwhelmed and never requested federal assistance.
The genius of this propaganda operation lies in how it reframes the debate entirely. The question is no longer whether military deployment against civilians is constitutional or appropriate. The question becomes whether you support “law and order” or you support “chaos and violence.” Anyone questioning the use of federal troops gets cast as someone who doesn’t care about public safety or who actively supports destruction.
This false binary eliminates the possibility of reasonable middle ground. You cannot argue that the incidents were isolated without being accused of minimizing violence. You cannot question military deployment without being labeled an enemy of order itself. The propaganda creates a rhetorical trap where any opposition to extraordinary measures becomes evidence of extremism.
What makes this particularly insidious is how it exploits genuine human psychology. People naturally extrapolate from limited information, especially when that information triggers fear responses. A few dramatic images repeated endlessly create the impression of systematic breakdown even when the reality is far more contained. The mind fills in gaps with assumptions, and those assumptions become indistinguishable from observed fact.
The propagandists understand this perfectly. They know that context kills crisis, so they systematically strip away anything that might provide scale or proportion. They know that repetition creates reality, so they flood information channels with the same decontextualized clips. They know that fear overwhelms reason, so they frame everything in terms of immediate threat requiring immediate response.
Most Americans consuming this content have no direct experience of actual urban warfare or citywide riots. They have no baseline for distinguishing between genuine crisis and manufactured emergency. When they see curated clips of violence repeated endlessly across multiple platforms, their natural assumption is that this represents the broader reality rather than isolated incidents being amplified for political effect.
This psychological vulnerability becomes a political weapon. Once Americans believe they’re witnessing systematic breakdown, military deployment seems not just reasonable but obviously necessary. The idea that federal troops shouldn’t be deployed against civilians—a principle that was considered sacred just a few years ago—suddenly seems naive or even dangerous in the face of manufactured emergency.
The success of this operation should terrify anyone who understands how democracies die. We’re not just witnessing media manipulation or political spin—we’re watching the real-time manufacture of consent for military rule through carefully curated chaos. Each successful deployment makes the next one easier to justify. Each manufactured crisis normalizes extraordinary measures as ordinary responses.
This is exactly how authoritarian consolidation works in practice. You don’t announce that you’re ending civilian control over the military—you create conditions where military control seems like the only reasonable response to ongoing emergencies. You don’t eliminate constitutional protections in one dramatic gesture—you erode them gradually through crisis management that becomes permanent.
The precedent established in Los Angeles will not remain confined to Los Angeles. Once Americans accept that federal troops can be deployed against protesters whenever local incidents can be framed as widespread chaos, every future demonstration becomes a potential justification for military intervention. The threshold for extraordinary measures gets lower with each successful deployment.
Consider how this dynamic will operate in the future. Any protest that produces even isolated incidents of vandalism or confrontation can now be framed as requiring federal military response. The mere possibility of violence becomes sufficient justification for preemptive deployment. The distinction between peaceful demonstration and dangerous riot becomes whatever federal authorities claim it to be.
This represents a fundamental transformation in how power operates in American society. We’re moving from a system where military deployment against civilians requires extraordinary justification to one where such deployment becomes a routine response to political dissent. The change isn’t happening through constitutional amendment or legislative action—it’s happening through the gradual normalization of what was previously unthinkable.
The media’s role in this transformation cannot be understated. By treating manufactured crisis as genuine emergency, by amplifying decontextualized images without providing scale or proportion, by framing military deployment as reasonable response rather than constitutional violation, mainstream outlets become unwitting accomplices in their own irrelevance. When reporters present authoritarian power grabs as ordinary policy disagreements, they help normalize what should be shocking.
Perhaps most disturbing is how effectively this propaganda has convinced ordinary Americans to support what amounts to the militarization of domestic law enforcement. People who consider themselves patriots now applaud the deployment of Marines against American citizens. People who claim to defend constitutional principles now support the violation of fundamental restrictions on military power. The propaganda has made authoritarianism seem patriotic.
This cognitive dissonance reveals the true power of manufactured crisis. When people believe they’re facing genuine emergency, they willingly surrender protections they would normally defend. The Constitution becomes less important than immediate security. Constitutional principles become luxuries we can’t afford during times of crisis. The fact that the crisis is largely manufactured becomes irrelevant once the psychological impact takes hold.
We are witnessing the live construction of an authoritarian consensus through carefully orchestrated deception. A few broken windows and isolated acts of violence in Los Angeles became the justification for crossing a constitutional line that previous generations would have died to defend. And it worked precisely because most Americans have lost the ability to distinguish between genuine emergency and manufactured crisis.
The implications extend far beyond immigration enforcement or protest suppression. Once the principle is established that federal troops can be deployed whenever authorities claim local breakdown, there are no meaningful constraints on military power over civilian life. Every future crisis—economic, political, social—becomes a potential justification for extraordinary measures that gradually become ordinary.
Two plus two equals four. There are twenty-four hours in a day. And when a few isolated incidents can be transformed into justification for military deployment through propaganda alone, you’re no longer living in a constitutional republic—you’re living in a system where perception matters more than reality and manufactured crisis justifies unlimited power.
The center cannot hold when truth becomes whatever serves authority and crisis becomes whatever power claims it to be. We have crossed a line that will be very difficult to uncross, not because the precedent is legally binding but because the psychological transformation it represents may be irreversible.
The manufactured crisis succeeded. Americans now accept military deployment against civilians as normal and necessary. What comes next will be worse, because the machinery of deception has proven its effectiveness and the appetite for resistance has been systematically eroded through careful manipulation of fear.
The propaganda worked. And that should terrify every American who understands what we’ve just surrendered.
Mike Brock is a former tech exec who was on the leadership team at Block. Originally published at his Notes From the Circus.
Filed Under: crisis, los angeles, marines, military, national guard, propaganda, protests, riots


Comments on “A Manufactured Crisis: How A Few Hooligans In LA Became The Pretext For Military Rule”
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That's Not A Knife
Los Angeles: where we have become accustomed to riots so much more destructive, that a 4 day riot seems small and inconsequential! And we will blame Trump for ending it before it could spiral further out of control.
Re: It's a commentator with credibility issues
Come on man, this is low effort even for you
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Give me a break. Any number of college towns – looking at you, Columbus! – regularly experience worse violence than this after major sportsball losses. You’re just salivating for the jackboots to deliver beatdowns, warranted or not.
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Piss off you Nazi loving bootlicker and crawl back into that husk you call a home
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At this point, I have this to say to you, Koby:
Fuck off, Fascist Bootlicker.
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God, just fuck off already, you weirdo.
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Not a riot.
Try again.
Re: 1 shotr from any military or even police
Could ignite How many persons bringing out there own weapons? And the Small amount of military will find that 100/1 odds is NOT a good thing.
90% of this is to SIT around and watch, only interject AS NEEDED and very little force.
Do something/Fix something then Go back and SIT.
Take pictures, Identify persons and DEAL with it AFTER.
Because it wont MATTER which side Shoots first.
WRONG PLACE WRONG TIME.
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What’s wrong bro? Not enough brown people get hurt for you to jerk off too?
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And we will blame Trump for ending it before it could spiral further out of control.
Yeah, he ended a problem he created before it got out of control. What’s next? Crash farmer livelihoods, and then bail them out with taxpayer funded welfare?
By now people know what to expect with Trunt and are acting accordingly. That’s the problem when you publicly announce and demonstrate what fucking assholes you are.
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That’s not quite right. The problem is out of control because Trump made it that way.
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What Democrats are unwilling to understand is that this “propaganda” is effective precisely because no one believes that Democrats are willing to stop left-wing rioting and disorder and thievery. Whether it’s supporting illegal aliens, Palestinian terrorists, stinking bums, or outright thieves, the Democrats always minimize – it’s isolated incidents, it’s not serious, it’s only happening in a couple of places, it’s restorative justice. Then when order is forcefully imposed from the outside, they act shocked and horrified. Too bad.
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Where was the Republican president when order needed to be restored on the 6th of January 2021? Why din’t he ask the military to intervene in a riot-turned-insurrection (which he helped instigate) that legitimately threatened the safety and security of members of Congress?
You want to whine about Democrats, but your actual problem with them is that they’re not willing to use the cops to bust the heads of “communists” or “antifa” or whoever-the-hell you perceive as “the enemy” if people are protesting peacefully. Of course Democrats denounce violence and such—which is more than I can say for a lot of Republicans, who still refuse to denounce the insurrection (or its instigator). What you don’t like is how Democrats aren’t silencing dissent and establishing a strict “order” through state-sanctioned violence.
Shit, I’m surprised you didn’t also say they were actually funding and planning the violence. Right-wing weirdos love to do that “our enemies are both weaker than wet paper and stronger than any force short of God simultaneously” shit.
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Also, while I’m thinking about it:
Hyman, did you break your promise to leave forever? You’re the only anonymous commenter I know who referred to homeless people with this kind of language.
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Re: Re: Re:
The Air India crash today resonates with this topic. After each such incident, we are always told, correctly, that air travel remains an incredibly safe affair, with millions of passengers going millions of miles without trouble. Yet, you would never say that the occasional air crash is not important, or an isolated incident. Instead, all systems involved are held to account, investigated, and necessary corrections are mandated. The same should be true for crime and violence; broken-windows policing is the equivalent of detailed airline safety inspections and procedures. If you let standards drop, if you do not take all precautions in advance, fatalities are inevitable.
Re: Re: Re:2
Your AI slop is are stupid are you are bro.
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He’s so fucking bad at hiding his true self. Last time he got caught he tried pretending that he “was just stopping by.”
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TBF, he could be from the UK where most citizens call butts bums instead, and butts do tend to stink, especially those of adults.
Re: Re: Re:2
No, it’s definitely Hyman. The language he uses sticks out like a sore thumb.
Re: Re: Re:3
*whooooooooosh!*
Re: Re: Re:4
Someone jumped through a lot of hoops to say that a phrase used in a comment above that many of us have seen used before in reference to homeless people somehow wasn’t used that way despite the context of the post. That poster had their misconceptions corrected in a succinct and accurate way. What was there to get that you think we didn’t, such that you’re trying to bring back a stupid ’90s catchphrase?
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So the next time someone in your town shoots up a black church we can hold your kids at gun point?
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Millions in US expected to protest against Trump in ‘No Kings’ protests on 6-14-2025. We take to the streets to protest fucking trump and his fascist regime. Stay home loser, we don’t need traitors like you…
Who started it?
Who started these incidents? I mean beside Trump, Miller, and ICE?
I don’t know, and I won’t claim, it was people directed by Trumps people to get this rolling. But I feel that it is 50/50 that there was somebody onsite to make sure tensions escalated. Isn’t that what they always claim? J6 was Antifa! without any evidence. It was very likely regular people, not exactly on either ‘side’, but pushed too far. But I won’t discount the possibility that there was somebody there to make sure the temperature got a lot hotter.
It seems that these ICE raids are designed to inflame the public to justify bringing out increased force to shut it down. And LA is the perfect place to do it. A lot of immigrants, a lot of them undocumented, but generally just going about their life. Working, taking care of their family. But they’re too brown so they have to go.
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The cops. 99 times out of 100, the presence of the police at an otherwise peaceful protest escalates tension that can only end when the police have an excuse to commit acts of violence.
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It’s really wild to me how few people seem to understand this. It’s incredibly obvious if you’ve ever been to a protest or even just watched some videos. Police SOP is to treat protesters (well, unless they’re right-wing) like something between violent criminals and dangerous animals. They like to arbitrarily decide free speech is over and charge in and attack people. It’s like their whole thing. Clearly more Americans need to go to a protest.
In 1933 they at least needed a large parliamentary building set ablaze, to go full steam ahead towards dictatorship. For Trump, just 3 burning cars and a shopping cart will do.
One of the other things which allows many people to accept this stuff – most generally, but not limited to, the pro-authoritarian sorts i these situations – is that they know US history, law, and the Constitution im a similar manner to which, e.g., Christians know their Bible. Which is to say, they have a dogma, a belief system, in their heads which has not a lot to do with the recorded and established words – in fact, they will twist or ignore the words they don’t like just this minute while pointing to the words they do like in the next sentence as if this is proof of something, if they are the sort to bother to read at all. Most just fantasize out of whole cloth or with the yarn their favorite narrators feed them. (Which, in one sector, the police, is totally condoned by case law, as long as one can imagine the merest sliver of “good faith” behind their ridiculous and dangerous beliefs.)
Cops in general and the LAPD in particular are effectively an occupying army already. People fighting them deserve support, not prosecution.
'Yes I suppose the police deliberately shot a reporter, but look, burning shopping cart!'
The media’s role in this transformation cannot be understated. By treating manufactured crisis as genuine emergency, by amplifying decontextualized images without providing scale or proportion, by framing military deployment as reasonable response rather than constitutional violation, mainstream outlets become unwitting accomplices in their own irrelevance.
I agree with the rest of the article but on this point I’m going to have to push back. The media knew damn well what they were doing when they framed a few isolated incidents as a widespread issue, when they focus on what the protestors might have done and ignore what the police and military are doing.
The media are not ‘unwitting accomplices’ in this power-grab, they are very much willing accomplices and deserve to be called out and described as such.
This is the bottom of the slippery slope
I’m old enough to remember when we were making these same arguments about the patriot act and all the things people were willing to give up in the name of security in the days and weeks after 9/11. This feels like the logical end point. I can’t say I’m hopeful for our future as a country at this point.
Trump’s Brownshirts are setting the stage the same as Hitler’s did nearly 100 years ago–same tactics, same results.