Race-based attacks on Boyle Heights businesses prompt this LA assemblyman to take sides

Los Angeles City Councilman Jose Huizar spoke out Friday opposite a desolation and race-based strategy being used opposite art galleries and a coffee emporium in Boyle Heights amid gentrification concerns, observant a actions were “unacceptable” and would not be tolerated.

Huizar pronounced he common concerns about banishment and rising costs of housing in Boyle Heights, that activists contend has been occurring since of gentrification in a heavily Latino Eastside neighborhood. But he pronounced he yet did not like a strategy some activists have been regulating to voice those concerns.

Huizar’s matter comes after Weird Wave Coffee was vandalized a second time. The coffee emporium has been during a core of mixed anti-gentrification protests, identical to a ones hold opposite art galleries in a neighborhood.

“We all have a right to demonstrate a 1st Amendment-protected opinions — that is not in dispute,” Huizar wrote in a matter expelled Friday afternoon. “But when that turns into destroying skill or assault of any kind, or targeting people only formed on race, that goes opposite all Boyle Heights stands for.”