Summary:
LA Is Worth Saving (Gotham West) – Earth's Lost History
They sold us out for a seat at the table. Now the streets are a war zone the law can't disable.
One year after the Palisades and Eaton Fires burned 16,000 structures to ash, Los Angeles has rebuilt fewer than ten homes. Ten. While families live in trailers on their own burned lots, the same government that can't issue a rebuild permit finds billions for new pronouns, free surgeries for illegal migrants, and a $126 billion high‑speed rail that hasn't laid a single track.
Spencer Pratt—reality TV villain turned fire victim—lived in a rented trailer on his own property. His AI‑generated Batman ad mocking Mayor Bass, Gavin Newsom, and Kamala Harris went viral. Because it wasn't funny. It was true.
The system isn't broken. It's making a choice. And it's choosing symbolic gestures over concrete homes.
In LA Is Worth Saving (Gotham West), Earth's Lost History breaks down the lies, the neglect, and the betrayal line by line. From the snail‑and‑cricket environmental lawsuits that block housing to the parking tickets issued to fire victims still living in disaster zones—this is the history they don't want you to read.
Read the full article. Watch the breakdown. Then decide who really let LA burn.
๐ Click here to read on Substack
The river only flows one way… until it doesn't.
LA Is Worth Saving: The Viral AI Video That Exposed California's Betrayal
This is Earth's Lost History.
In January 2025, the Palisades and Eaton Fires destroyed over 16,000 structures and killed 31 people. Among the victims: Spencer Pratt, former reality TV star, now living in a rented trailer on the ashes of his burned home.
One year later, while politicians celebrated "recovery," Pratt recorded a raw message that shattered the official narrative:
"This is where I live now."
No spin. No script. Just fury.
The Unforgivable Truth
A year after the fires, fewer than ten homes had been fully rebuilt. Thousands remained displaced.
But here's what cuts deepest:
Derrick Collins, an Altadena fire victim, said it perfectly:
"They're trying to make us move, but I keep saying, 'Where do you want us to go?'"
The AI Ad That Broke the Internet
Then filmmaker Charles Curran turned Spencer Pratt into Gotham West's Batman—and the political elite into villains:
- Mayor Karen Bass as the Joker
- Governor Gavin Newsom eating cake like Marie Antoinette
- Kamala Harris swigging vodka
The most cutting line: elites offering everything to favored groups while telling fire victims "Sorry, not enough time".
๐บ The video hit 12 million views almost overnight. Jeb Bush and Joe Rogan both shared it.
Because it wasn't just funny. It was true.
The Pattern We Keep Documenting
This is the same machinery Earth's Lost History has exposed again and again:
- Governments that move glacially on rebuilding permits but instantly on ideological priorities
- Systems that find billions for new programs but "no money" for fire recovery
- A high-speed rail project that went from $33 billion to $126+ billion with not a single mile of track laid after 18 years
Spencer Pratt didn't become a hero because he had all the answers.
He became a symbol because he was willing to hold up a mirror to a city sold out by its own leaders.
A man in a trailer. A viral AI Batman. A howl of pure rage.
The elites are terrified.
Want the Full Story?
This is just the beginning. The complete article includes:
- ✅ Full lyrics breakdown — what each line of the viral song really means
- ✅ The bureaucratic nightmare — how California turned recovery into a war on its own citizens
- ✅ The Collins family story — ticketed for living on their own burned property
- ✅ The high-speed rail disaster — where $126 billion disappeared
- ✅ The unforgivable contrast — why the state prioritizes pronouns over permits
๐ Read the full story on Earth's Lost History
*Replace the # with your actual article link before publishing.
Originally published by Earth's Lost History. No spin. No script. Just truth.
