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It's late September 1924 and a group of migrant workers from Mexico are sitting in
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a small neighborhood in downtown Los Angeles having a beer and listening to a tale that
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is being told by a day laborer for the Los Angeles Railway.
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His name is Jesus and he regales his buddies with the hilarious story of how he'd been
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living with a terrible stench in his house, but he had no idea where it was coming from.
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Jesus got to work, turning his house upside down, but he couldn't find anything rotten.
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Then he wondered, what about under the house.
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He soon found the cause of the awful smell.
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It was a rat…a dead, rotting rat.
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He picked the thing up and threw it in the trash can.
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One week later and people were no longer laughing…they were now crying at the death of Jesus and
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his daughter.
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Soon others in the neighborhood would drop like flies.
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Jesus had started a plague.
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His full name was Jesus Lajun and that neighborhood contained a vibrant community of people mostly
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of Latino descent.
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He lived at 700 Clara Street, which would later become known as “The Death House”,
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but as you will see, it wasn't the only death house on that street.
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Worse things would happen a few doors down.
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The neighbourhood was a bustling place back in the day, but as you all know, busy places
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are not so great when a virus breaks out.
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You see, Jesus had contracted the bubonic plague from that dead rat, and what happened
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after was the last plague epidemic in the USA.
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We're guessing a lot of you are thinking…wait a minute, isn't the bubonic plague that
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thing from the Middle Ages that wiped out good chunks of Europe…wasn't the plague
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dead and buried centuries ago?
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The answer is no…it's still here…it's been here all the time...it's still in the
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good ole USA right now, but there aren't many cases these days.
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In fact, if you look at the CDC's website you can see that in 2018 there was just one
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confirmed case of plague in the U.S.. 2015 was a bad year regarding the American
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plague, because 16 people got it that year and 4 of them died.
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One of the victims was just 16 years old.
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This wasn't called an outbreak because the cases happened in various states in the U.S.
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over the entire year, so the 1924 plague was what we now call the last outbreak of this
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pestilence.
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Ok, before we get back to Jesus and the chaos he unknowingly caused, we think you need to
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know just a little bit more about the plague.
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Here's a short plague 101 for you, just so you don't get panicked when there's
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already a panic-demic going on right now.
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Over 80 percent of plague victims come down with the bubonic form.
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The other forms of plague are Septicemic plague and Pneumonic plague.
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They relate to infections of the blood and of the lungs.
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If you get the bubonic plague, you'll feel like crap and get a fever and a headache and
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you won't have any energy.
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You will then get little bumps on your body.
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These are swollen lymph nodes and we call them buboes.
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That's kind of a cute word, fitting for a cartoon character of a cute puppy, but buboes
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are nasty things and they hurt a lot.
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The bubonic plague, as was discovered by millions of people hundreds of years ago, can be deadly.
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The bad news is, it's estimated that if it's left untreated it will kill 66% to 93%
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of its victims.
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The good news is these days we can treat it with antibiotics and the mortality rate now
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for treated people is anywhere from one to 15 percent.
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Ok, so, on the first day there was Jesus, and Jesus picked up a rat.
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That rat had fleas, and Jesus was bitten by one of them.
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That terrible flea was only doing what fleas do, and it certainly wasn't aware that it
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was carrying something called the Yersinia pestis bacteria.
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It passed this ungodly bacteria to Jesus, and on the second day, Jesus spread the word
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of his rat story to others and others later died.
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On the sixth day, Jesus was a dead man.
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So, within the rat community of this poor Los Angeles neighborhood there were fleas
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carrying the plague, and you certainly didn't want to get up close to one of them.
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By the way, when animals transmit a disease to humans we call this “zoonosis”.
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Jesus was what we called the “Index Patient”, which means he was the first reported case.
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Soon after he found the stinky dead rat he developed a painful lump in his groin and
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felt really unwell.
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The problem is, that bacteria had spread to his lungs, and so Jesus was capable of spreading
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the plague around through airborne droplets of the bacterium.
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It then turned into the more deadly pneumonic plague, which is transmissible to humans.
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His doctor didn't believe he had the plague, and said instead he had some kind of venereal
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disease and that was why he has swollen lymph nodes.
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That was a deadly mistake that doctor made, because Jesus passed the pneumonic plague
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to his daughter.
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Her name was Francisca and she experienced respiratory problems and the doctors said
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she had pneumonia, not the plague.
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A week later and she was dead.
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The cause of death was wrongly stated to have been double pneumonia, but any medical professional
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should have had plague on their mind.
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You see, in the year 1900 it's thought that a ship that landed in San Francisco which
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had come from China had a rat living on it.
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The rat, or rats, disembarked at the city and then went scurrying around, all of them
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carrying deadly fleas in their fur.
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People later started dropping dead from what certainly looked like plague, but the city
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didn't close the port and tried to convince people there was no plague on U.S. soil.
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A plague outbreak was very bad for business.
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Most of the media did the same and wrote headlines like this one, “No Genuine Plague: Sensational
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Stories Are Without Foundation.”
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The headline was wrong, and from 1900 to 1908 there were 280 plague cases and 172 deaths
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in San Francisco.
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The city did a good job of exterminating the vermin, but those fleas had a habit of jumping
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onto other animals.
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Those animals, including those dear cuties the squirrels, travelled around a bit and
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the plague eventually reached LA in 1924.
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Shortly after Francisca died, a pregnant woman who'd been taking care of her also died
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and she had the same symptoms.
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Her name was Lucena Samarano and soon her entire family of eight would all be dead.
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Her house, 742 Clara Street, was called “The Death House.”
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Lucena's cause of death was listed as “heart disease.”
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Soon her husband became ill, and died...her friend got it, and died, and eventually all
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her kids got it, and died.
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In fact, a lot of folks who went near that house got very sick and died within days.
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So really...heart disease...
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Then a Catholic priest who had given last rights to some of the deceased came down with
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the exact same symptoms.
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And guess what, he did the talking at Lucena's funeral service at 742 Clara Street, and as
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you can imagine, in that small tight-knit community a lot of folks turned up to that
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service.
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The priest died, too.
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These people had no idea what was going on and looked up to the heavens and asked God
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for answers, when they should really have been looking under their floorboards.
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The authorities should have known sooner, since one doctor that travelled to that poor
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neighborhood, a place where people lived in absolute squalor, noticed that there were
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a lot of very sick people.
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Some of them could hardly breathe, and some were deathly ill.
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A few people were taken to hospital but still the diagnosis was not plague, with different
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doctors saying it must be meningitis, or influenza, or pneumonia, or even typhus.
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Ok, so you'd think that people would have been shouting plague from the rooftops by
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now, but it wasn't until one month after Jesus kicked the bucket that a Los Angeles
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County Hospital pathologist identified the disease and announced, “Hey guys, we've
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got a plague outbreak going on here.”
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That doctor, a guy named George Manor, stepped up and said this looks like plague.
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With the help of a colleague, he looked through a microscope and what he saw was the deadly
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Yersinia pestis bacteria.
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"Beautiful but damned,” said Manor after seeing the true cause of deaths in that community.
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Meanwhile, friends and relatives of the deceased kept dying, either in hospitals or in their
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own homes.
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People panicked…they isolated themselves.
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The blame game came next, and quite a few not so intelligent people from outside the
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neighborhood started saying things such as, “This is a Mexican disease.”
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90 percent of those that died were indeed Mexican, but that didn't mean it was a Mexican
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disease.
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They had just been the unfortunate folks who had no choice but to live in squalid houses
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where there were lots of rats.
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Quarantine then began and the neighborhood where the disease had started was sectioned
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off and guarded by police and volunteers.
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No one in, no one out, was the order given, in what they called, “The Mexican District.”
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Around 1,800 to 2,500 people were confined to that district, and at the same time panic
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ensued all over the USA, especially when people read headlines like this one which was published
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in the New York Times, “Pneumonic Plague Takes Seven More Victims.”
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“How has the ancient disease gotten here in the new world,” people screamed.
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“The Black Death is on our doorstep,” others shouted.
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LA, for many outsiders, was the picture-perfect, postcard paradise of the USA.
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Health authorities soon started telling all people in the city to keep their homes clean.
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An announcement was then given.
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“Gatherings of all nature must now stop.”
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Movie houses were empty and kids were kept away from school.
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LA was in the grip of a great panic, and when trolley cars went near the damned neighborhoods
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the conductors shouted, “No one gets on and no one gets off.”
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The Los Angeles mayor, one George Cryer, called an emergency meeting.
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Present were health officials, and also anyone with big business interests in the city.
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The question was, should they shut the city down, and how much would that damage business.
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Some emergency procedures were set in place, but there was no city shutdown.
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Anyone suspected of having the plague had to be sent to a special part of the county
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hospital.
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Funeral directors were ordered not to embalm the bodies of Mexicans, or anyone else whose
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death was of undetermined causes.
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Soon five urban districts were cordoned off by rope and around them stood 400 quarantine
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guards.
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Some of those guys had fought in the First World War, so those were some tough dudes.
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No one in, no one out, and another order, “No Shooting.”
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Well, they did shoot any dogs, cats, or chickens that got too close to them.
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Charities got together and delivered essential items to those in quarantine, and brave medical
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workers visited the neighborhoods.
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Meanwhile, rumors persisted in the U.S. that hundreds of Mexicans were dying in those sectioned
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off neighborhoods.
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The cleanup started, and it was fierce.
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Houses were ripped apart; some entire shacks were burned to the ground.
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Petroleum and Sulphur were sprayed in houses and lime and rat poison were scattered everywhere.
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Within months, around 2,500 buildings had been completely destroyed, and yet, no compensation
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at all was granted to the people who had been displaced from their home.
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One LA resident later commented on what he saw from outside one of those neighborhoods.
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He said, “It was an eerie sight to see the 'sky high' flames at night and the reflections
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in the river, as well as the shadowy figures of firemen running around the quarantined
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area.”
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The neighborhoods in the “Macy Street District” and “Little Mexico,” with their ramshackle
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dwellings were pretty much burned to the ground.
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It was the best of times, and the worst of times, because some people were kind and helpful
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to those quarantined people, but others were not so nice.
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LA's Chamber of Commerce chief actually implied that the problem was Mexicans and
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how they lived.
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Some people risked their lives going into those neighborhoods to help out.
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Mexican bands turned up outside the quarantined areas and played music for the people inside.
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At the same time, others used the disease to propagate xenophobia and racism against
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Mexicans and other minorities, something that we often see in times of crises even today.
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What happened next was the great rat extermination program.
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The city spent a whopping $250,000 on finding and killing those flea carrying pests.
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That amount is close to four million in today's money.
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It wasn't only the Mexican neighborhoods that got the treatment, poor neighborhoods
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consisting mostly of Russian, Chinese and Japanese immigrants were also part of the
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program.
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In fact, a neighborhood that was back then called Chinatown was also pretty much destroyed.
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What's surprising, is that it was only when the occupants of those quarantined neighborhoods
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saw this going on that they found out that rats were the problem and that they had been
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dying of the plague.
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They'd actually been kept in the dark as to what was happening.
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In fact, the media had been told not to make a big issue of what was going one.
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Certain media urged people not to join in the hysterical gossip about a plague killing
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hundreds of people.
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One LA official had a meeting and warned the attendees, “No disease known has such an
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effect upon the business world as the plague."
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Some journalists wrote that the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce had tried to play down
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what happened because of the possibility of economic collapse and land values dropping.
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Remember that the City of Angels back then was seen as the place to be, and if it became
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the place of the plague people would leave and tourists would turn their backs on the
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city.
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The quarantine and rat extermination program worked, and in the end around 30 people lost
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their lives to the plague.
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The main problem was that it was turned into an ethnic disease and many people lost their
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homes and got nothing back.
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Now go watch this show, “What Made The Black Death (The Plague) so Deadly?” or this show,
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“Why Spanish Flu Killed Over 50 Million People - Deadliest Plague in Modern History.”