Ghost Metropolis: Los Angeles from Clovis to Nixon

Richard 37th: A Study of Tyranny

Story by Fax Bahr and Phil Ethington

For what shall it profit a man,
if he shall gain the whole world,
and lose his own soul? 

                                                                                  --Mark 8:36

Holding aloft the severed head of the Duke of Somerset, Richard, Duke of Gloucester--who would later become Richard III by seizing the English crown through guile and assassination--addresses that lifeless head, taunting: "Speak thou for me and tell them what I did." (Henry IV, 1.1.16, 3)  In Shakespeare's gruesome script, the speechless deed is proof.   Richard Nixon left behind a mountain of deeds as he plotted, strategized, campaigned his way to occupy the highest throne on Earth. Like Richard III, Richard Milhaus Nixon, the 37th President of the United States, outraged the Constitution with the felonious abuse of power. Both were overthrown. Both were tyrants. Los Angeles produced Richard Nixon.  Understanding tyranny requires understanding the region from which it emerges, the political system within which it is achieved, and the person who thirsts for power. 

The essays titled Richard 37th, Acts I-IV, narrate the growth of a tyranny that sprang directly from the centuries-old political culture of Southern California, and from the center of that region, Los Angeles.  Richard M. Nixon embodied and historically culminated the region's most destructive features: Militarism, a military-industrial economy, racial ideologies, authoritarian populism, censorship, propaganda, espionage, criminal practices at every scale.  

Excursus and Bibliography: in exponendis nixon

This page has paths:

  1. Narrative Paths Phil Ethington
  2. Networks Phil Ethington
  3. Ghost Metropolis: Los Angeles from the Clovis Conquest to the Nixon Tyranny Phil Ethington

Contents of this path:

  1. Richard 37th, Act I: Rise and Crash of the Angeleno, 1913-1962
  2. Richard 37th, Act II: Resurrection, Race and Reaction, 1963-1967
  3. Richard 37th, Act III: Thermidor, 1968-1974
  4. Funeral for a Tyrant, 1994
  5. Bibliography

This page is referenced by: