Category Archives: Politics of Race

On the Oakland Shooting + Friday Muse-Sick Fix

Oakland Shooting / One Goh

One Goh Oakland shooting

This past Monday, a former student at Oakland’s Oikos University shot and killed seven people and wounded three others. According to Reuters, “the attack was the deadliest gun violence at a U.S. college since a Virginia Tech University student killed 32 people and wounded 25 others before taking his own life in 2007.”

For all involved, and for everyone watching, the shooting is a tragedy. Unfortunately, it’s also an opportunity for the media and netizens alike to speculate on possible motives and complicated factors like race, mental health and gun control. For the Asian American community, it’s a bitter reminder of past tragedies that we’d sooner forget–a looming specter of angst, shame, self-reflection, fatigue and other shitty feelings.

Because yes, like at VT the shooter is Asian. Korean, to be specific. And because we’re not living in a post-racial America that one fact means a helluva lot more than it should. Yes, One Goh was bullied and othered–which is HORRIBLE AND SHOULD NEVER HAPPEN TO ANYONE. But in this case it doesn’t excuse him from taking SEVEN LIVES.

Anyone who condones either bullying or murder is part of the problem–and we all know (or should know) that.

So, please, I beg the media and you netizens to write and talk about about this issue with awareness, sensitivity and respect. And I hope we all keep the victims in mind as we try for the nth time to figure out what this means for the AAPI community–if it means anything at all.

Muse-Sick Fix

It’s Friday. And there are a lot of shitty, terrible things happening in the world. And sometimes when I feel like there’s no end in sight for the uphill battles that marginalized people have to fight, I put on pop music. Because that’s what you gotta do.

Today I’m listening to Korean rap star Yoon Mi Rae (real name: Tasha Reid) kill it (both literally and lyrically) in her latest single, “Get It In.” Check out the official music video below, which I’d describe as Kill Bill + ill rhymes and beats.

Yoon Mi Rae is an American performer of mixed race (Black and Korean) who moved to South Korea and rose to fame as “Korea’s best female rapper.” She first debuted as “Tasha “or “T” and was highly regarded for releasing a song called “Black Happiness,” in which she discussed the difficulties of having a mixed heritage.

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Daily Texan Posts ‘Apology’ for Racially Insensitive Trayvon Martin Cartoon

The University of Texas at Austin is my alma mater, so it thoroughly disappoints me when something like the racist Trayvon Martin cartoon is born in our hallowed halls, is published in The Daily Texan, is pulled off the site (not due to the public’s reaction but due to server issues), is put back on the site, continues to spread a crappy message and be a failed attempt to make the students and faculty of UT think about the media and racial issues.

What’s worse is that Daily Texan student adviser Doug Warren, who has spent 30+ years in journalism posted an “apology” on the site today that has been swiftly removed, though the page still pops up on the Interwebs if you search for it. I’ve taken the liberty of making some marginal notes. Just “take a deep breath” before you click on this thumbnail…

Daily Texan Trayvon Martin cartoonThe newly minted journalists and self-appointed judges of racism might want to ask themselves what is more “yellow”–actual journalists using neutral language to relay facts, or cartoonists who use racial slurs that drive traffic to their online newspaper?

 

 

 

 


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Lin-spired Race-Tweet Wars and Peace in Comedy

I know, I know, you’re sick and tired of hearing about Jeremy Lin. He plays basketball and he’s Asian and that’s about it. End of story, right? It should be. If we were living in a post-racial, meritocratic world we’d be saying “Hey, look at this new kid on the Knicks: he’s got game and a lot of potential!” and that would be the last we’d hear about him until he gets on a Wheaties box or cheats on his wife.

The fact is that we can’t talk Jeremy Lin without talking race. Taiwanese Americans, Chinese Americans and Asian Americans in general want to celebrate the fact that Lin is one of only a handful of Asian American basketball players in NBA history–and the first in more than a decade. And there’s absolutely nothing wrong with celebrating an underdog who breaks barriers. Well, until the celebration turns into “hype” and fame becomes predicated on race. Then everyone wants you to stop talking about Lin and his accomplishments because it ought not be a “race thing.”

If you share the above opinion, I’ve got news for you: it was a “race thing” long before Lin became starting point guard for the Knicks. It was a “race thing” when people were telling him: ”Go back to China”; “Orchestra is on the other side of campus”; “Open up your eyes.” It is always part of the story, the underdog narrative, and it matters. It’s precisely the racial baggage that makes him such a role model for many Asian American kids who play sports or dream of playing professional sports in this country and need confirmation that it’s even possible and that the barriers aren’t too big. Let’s just accept that and celebrate that and nurture that–can we?

Who am I kidding? We can’t accept that. We’re hopeless. Let the Race-tweet War commence:

Floyd Mayweather Jr.: Jeremy Lin is a good player but all the hype is because he’s Asian. Black players do what he does every night and don’t get the same praise.

Jeremy Whitlock (of Fox Sports, on the Knicks win against the Lakers): Some lucky lady in NYC is gonna feel a couple of inches of pain tonight.

Jenny Hyun (K-Pop songwriter): *A response to Floyd Mayweather that’s really a psychotic, racist Twi-rade against Black people.* (Warning: Clicking this link will make you lose your shit. Try not to lose it in a similarly racist or non-constructive way.)

And let the off-Twitter racial insensitivity commence:

ESPN.com headline: A Chink in the Armor

The Nick and Artie Show (on nationally syndicated KNBR 1050): Most Racist Joke about Jeremy Lin and Asian Americans Contest

UGH. Don’t it all just make your heart hurt? White people, Black people, Asian people: can we STFU already with the hate? All of this smack talk is only going to get you an Internet smack in the face. And all of this tearing other people down is only tearing down yourself and the respective and multiple communities you represent. BE BETTER THAN THAT.

While I’m horrified and ashamed at some people in the media, I’ve also found solace in comedy, a frequent peacemaker and unlikely voice of reason in these, our craptastic times. I’m glad to share with you a few clips that really put Linsanity into perspective and demonstrate how farcical our limited viewpoints and unbending attitudes really are.

SNL Cold Opening: Linsanity Postgame

The Colbert Report: Linsanity!

“Conan” Writer Deon Cole Begs Asians to Leave Basketball Alone

Have you seen any other funny Jeremy Lin clips on the Web? Feel free to send me some links. I’m especially interested in seeing Asian American comedians’ takes on the Jeremy Lin phenom if they’re out there. And I hope one day to see an Asian American on SNL, playing Jeremy Lin or Kim Jong-un or whoever. Like, maybe Ken Jeong, Bobby Lee, John Cho…anyone on this list?

 

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Too Late to Apologize: The Pete Hoekstras vs. The Jeremy Lins

There’s far too many non-apologies going around the Web of late, and I’m sure nobody’s too surprised.

Michigan Senate candidate Pete Hoekstra took down his racist website which featured the racist “Rice Paddy” ad played during the Super Bowl. Hoekstra’s campaign spokesman Paul Ciaramataro said “”Democrats talk about race when they can’t defend their records,” and Hoekstra himself has echoed the sentiment. Hmm, no, I’m pretty sure that Democrats–and even Republicans–talk about race whenever something is racist. 

Taking Hoekstra’s “it’s not really about race” lead, sports journalist Jason Whitlock kinda-sorta apologized last weekend (I think Richard Pryor’s at fault or something?) to Knicks superstsar Jeremy Lin for making what a lot of people have called “unfunny” (and some people have called “offensive”) joke about the basketball player following the Knicks win over the Lakers.

To the Pete Hoekstras and Jason Whitlocks of the world, I’d just like to say, in the immortal words of the band One Republic:

It’s too late the apologize, it’s too late

I said it’s too late to apologize, it’s too late

Too late, ohhhhh

We don’t need no stinkin’ apologies. The Interwebs have already spoken. If I were Pete Hoekstra, I wouldn’t try to google myself or I might find a whole lotta finger wagging. Oh, and this awesome parody video featuring Ali Wong reprising the role of Rice Paddy Girl.

And you can call him Jason Dimwitlock for thinking he could make light of the Linsanity that’s sweeping the nation. You want funny? See the Colbert Report. Pay attention, Jason Whitlock, for this is how comedy, as they say, is done, son:

You know things are bad when a Harvard economics grad has an easier time getting a job as an NBA point guard than a Wall Street bond trader…

Fans have not come down with a basketball-born disease this intense since Kareem Abdul Ja-botulism.

The Colbert Report Mon – Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
Linsanity!
www.colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full Episodes Political Humor & Satire Blog Video Archive

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Details of Racist Hazing of Pvt. Danny Chen Revealed

On October 3, 2011, a 19-year-old infantryman, Danny Chen, died in Afghanistan. He was not killed by a barrage of bullets or an enemy explosion–but by the racist bullying of his countrymen and one “apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound” to the head. Last December, eight servicemen were charged with assault, negligent homicide and reckless endangerment of the young private. Now, we’re finally learning the details of exactly what happened to Danny.

NYMag.com has a feature on Danny that paints a picture of a smart, young, potential pacifist, drawn into the Armed Forces and conflict for reasons he may not even have understood. Here’s the most detailed excerpt about what young Danny had to endure:

When he arrived, Chen was at the bottom of the social hierarchy: a newcomer to his unit, a lowly private, still just a teenager, in a combat zone for the first time. And the only Chinese-American in his platoon. In a meeting with Chen’s parents on January 4, Army officials said that his superiors had considered him not fit enough when he arrived, and singled him out for excessive physical exercise: push-ups, flutter-kicks, sit-ups, sprints done while carrying a sandbag. Such punishments resemble the “smokings” that drill sergeants mete out at basic training to correct mistakes. But, in Chen’s case, it wasn’t long before this campaign of “corrective training” escalated into sheer brutality.

Members of this group allegedly harassed and humiliated Chen from almost the day he arrived at The Palace. They belittled him with racial slurs. They forced him to do push-ups with a mouthful of water, refusing to let him swallow or spit any out. And, on September 27, a sergeant allegedly yanked him out of bed and dragged him across about 50 yards of gravel toward a shower trailer as punishment for supposedly breaking the hot-water pump. He endured bruises and cuts on his back. Army officials told Chen’s family that although the leader of his platoon found out about this incident, he never reported it as he was required to.

One week later, on the morning of October 3, Chen was scheduled to report for guard duty at 7:30 a.m. But when he got to the guard tower, he realized he’d forgotten his helmet and didn’t have enough water. A superior sent him back to the trailer to get what he needed, then allegedly forced him to crawl, with all his equipment, across some 100 meters of gravel in order to return to the tower so he could start his shift. While he was on the ground, two other superiors pelted him with rocks. And once he reached the tower, a superior grabbed him by his body armor and dragged him up the steps.

When I first heard about this story, I literally sunk down on the floor in tears. I’m so saddened and enraged that in two-thousand-fucking-twelve this shit still happens in the army. It’s been a whole year since DADT’s been repealed! Servicemen and women are on the TV talking about how the army now respects them for the content of their character and the whole of their identities–and then, THIS?

Let’s get real, people. Discrimination and hazing still happen. Not just in college frat houses, but in America, in Afghanistan, in the barracks our nation’s defenders inhabit. And it’s going to keep happening until people speak out against this bullshit. (One of these people is Esther Choi, who last month campaigned for people of color and other marginalized people to refuse enlisting in the army until hazing and hate crime responses were reformed. After reaching out to the Occupy Wall Street movement to get them involved in the cause, she posted this critique on Racialicious.com in which she denounced OWS for–surprise, surprise–co-opting the causes of POCs and thereby marginalizing and oppressing them.)

Back to Danny. I shared his story on Facebook and one of my friends, Francis, shot me a DM about it. Here’s what he said:

I kinda felt the same way as him. I was the only Asian guy in my platoon, and better yet, I was the only Asian guy in my whole company (company is 4 platoons). But yeah, I kept my mouth shut when I was made fun of. I was trained on the weekends so I would get stronger, and whoever made fun of me, eventually I got stronger than them. Then I winked at them…haha. Marines think they’re so tough. But I made great friends with them as well.

Although I’m quite certain that he glossed over any actual events of discrimination to tell me a pleasant story, I don’t doubt his truth. Though he may have never seen combat, Francis is one of my heroes. He’s got double the strength of some privileged asshat: he’s Army Strong and Oppressed Strong. And I’m glad there are people like him serving the country. But, most people aren’t doubly strong. They’ve got strength, yes, but it’s regular human. They’re naive enough to believe that the army is a place where they can feel like they belong, can make a difference, can be stronger than they’ve ever been. They just don’t realize that “in part because of low enrollment and in part because of enduring prejudice, the military is especially tough on its Asian soldiers.”

If Danny had known, maybe he wouldn’t have enlisted. Or maybe he did know and enlisted anyway. Either way, Danny is one of my heroes too–because he dared to be that one “gook,” “chink,” dragon lady” who stood apart and wouldn’t go home. It’s more than most of us would. Better a dragon lady among soldiers than eight nasty little boys among an embattled community.

 

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