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The Watch
Affirmative Action study
The study done at Princeton finds that ending affirmative action would devestate under represented groups. BUT the study also found that ending affirmative action would raise White students enrollment by .5%. That is 1/2 of a percentage increase.

Therefore, it concludes that basically, all the people who are claiming reverse discrimination in admission policies are mistaken and probably would not have made it anyways.

Check it out
Chinese Corpse Show for Profit
So...in San Fransico....Chinese corpses....Displayed as art?

'The Universe Within'

Do I need to state how wrong this is?

How about how Germany put Jewish bodies up during WWII?!

Anybody remember that?

How the @%#^ are Chinese corpses art?

Check it out
You terrible Asian drivers!
An interesting thought crossed my mind today as I was in a work-related meeting with several of my fellow co-workers.

There were three white women, one Hispanic man, one black woman, and myself, an Asian American man.

During the small talk and friendly chatter someone brought up that their husband was a poor driver. Then other women in the group began sharing their experiences with their husbands at the wheel and how poor their driving was. Anecdotes were shared about how scared they were to ride alongside their husbands because of the dangerous driving. Someone said, "My husband's so aggressive when he's behind the wheel -- it can get pretty ugly really fast, I'm amazed that he's still alive!"

"Really? Don't you ever complain?" asked someone.

"Of course I do, but he says that's always the way he's driven a car all his life."

It occurred to me how similar the stories were about how poorly and even dangerously these men drove their cars and suv's. It also dawned on me that these were all coming from the white women in our group and that their husbands were also white. Also that there must be a considerable number of poor drivers out there on the road at any given moment, drivers from all races and ethnicities.

There is a stereotype that Asians are particularly poor drivers irregardless of evidence strongly pointing to the contrary. Whenever Asians behind the wheel make a simple human mistake on the road a lot of rage becomes directed at them fueled by the myth of the poor Asian driver; more so than the mistake would warrant. Otherwise sensible Asian drivers become the targets of unnecessary road rage and confrontation at what would otherwise be a small mistake anyone could have made under the same circumstances. That these women shared these stories only brought to my mind the privileges that their husbands have when they drive inconsiderably or just plain irresponsibly, to not have their entire racial/ethnic group labeled as exemplifiers of bad driving.

An article written by Brehm and Kassin in 1993, concerning stereotypes and social psychology describe what is termed "outgroup homogeneity bias." It is the perception that we all understand the nuances and differences, or the individuality of persons in our shared perceived groups (the in-group). Yet this recognition becomes blurred and vague when perceiving any persons deemed not included in our group (the out-group). This leads to an overestimate of the number of people in the out-group that fit any particular stereotype, and is the reason why stereotypes are birthed and attributed to groups as a whole from the example of a few or even a single person from that group. "Social categorization" or "the classification of persons into groups on the basis of common attributes" (Brehm & Kassin) becomes the other side of the coin in this type of generalizing that is so problematic in forming these stereotypes. In effect what stereotypes do is attempt to define for the person or people attributed them who they are and how they should behave as opposed to letting that person define who they are themselves. As a result of the "outgroup homogeneity bias," people are swift to generalize from one individual to an entire group of people.

Hearing the conversation about these poor drivers reminded me of this article and its social implications on other subjects besides poor driving and the stereotypes associated with them when there are Asians behind the wheel. It's the little things that add up and attach weight to a long day. The African American actor/comedian Richard Pryor put it best when he said something to the effect of, "you know it's hard enough being a human being...without having to deal with the day-to-day added burden that comes with racism."
Commencement Speech for the Graduating Class of UCLA's Asian American Studies Department
The following is the Commencement Speech given by Jeff Chang to UCLA's Asian American Studies Department Graduating Class of 2005.

Before we get to the speech here's a little tidbit about the speaker Jeff Chang taken from UCLA's website (http://www.ssc.ucla.edu/aasc/change/jeffchang.html):

ABOUT JEFF CHANG:

Jeff Chang (UCLA Asian American Studies MA Alum, 1995) has been a hip-hop journalist for over a decade. He has written extensively on race, culture, politics, arts, and music.

He began working as a hip-hop journalist in 1991 with URB and The Bomb Hip-Hop magazines, and has written for the Village Voice, the San Francisco Bay Guardian, the Los Angeles Weekly, Vibe, Spin, The Nation, Mother Jones, and the Washington Post, among others. He was a Senior Editor/Director at Russell Simmons' 360hiphop.com, and a founding editor of ColorLines magazine.

In 1993, he co-founded and ran the influential hip-hop indie label, SoleSides, now Quannum Projects, helping launch the careers of DJ Shadow, Blackalicious, Lyrics Born and Lateef the Truth Speaker. He has helped produce over a dozen records, including the "godfathers of gangsta rap", the Watts Prophets.

After being politicized by the anti-apartheid and anti-racist movements at U.C. Berkeley, he worked as a community, labor and student organizer, and as a lobbyist for the students of the California State University system. He received a bachelor's degree from Cal and a master's degree in Asian American Studies from UCLA and published scholarly articles on culture and race relations in Hawai'i and Los Angeles. He was an organizer of the National Hip-Hop Political Convention and serves as a board member for several organizations working for social change in youth and community organizing, media justice, culture, the arts, and hip-hop activism.

ABOUT THE BOOK:
Can't Stop Won't Stop:A History of the Hip-Hop Generation
by Jeff Chang
Introduction by DJ Kool Herc
St. Martin's Press
560 pages
ISBN: 031230143X
Visit the book's website: http://www.cantstopwontstop.com/book.cfm


THE SPEECH:
(copied & pasted from: cantstopwontstop.com)


To Dr. Min Zhou, Dr. Don Nakanishi, the Asian American Studies department faculty, the Asian American Center staff, Dr. Sue Ann Kim, Dr. Kay Song, Irene Soriano and the student graduation coordinating committee, and most of all, to the 2005 graduates of the UCLA Asian American Studies Department, please let me extend my heartfelt gratitude for being granted the honor to speak to you this afternoon. To you graduates, let me offer a hearty congratulations on your great achievement.

You are graduating into a dangerous world, a much more dangerous world than the one I graduated into 10 years ago.

During the time you have studied here, you have witnessed the unveiling of the U.S. as a warfare state. Indeed, the last three decades of wars—in Latin America, the Caribbean, and the Middle East, in domestic wars on graffiti, on drugs, on gangs, and on youth—seem but a prelude to this imperial moment.

In Afghanistan and Iraq, the kind of politics that conditioned the emergence of the hip-hop generation—namely the politics of containment and its twin, the politics of abandonment—are on view daily.

The logic of abandonment that left the Bronx and Watts to burn now leaves Kabul and Baghdad shattered. The logic of containment that has led to the incarceration, disenfranchisement, and dehumanizing of 2 million people in the U.S. takes on an ugly, globalized form in Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo.

War is the backdrop to even the most pressing local issues. The plague of joblessness, the resurgence of gang violence, the explosion of interracial and interreligious tensions, and the debt-driven real estate speculation that is driving massive racial displacement are all effects of war.

Every day we ask ourselves the question: how do we begin to turn back such catastrophic trends?

In a single, startling line of hope, Arundhati Roy has written, "Another world is not only possible, she is on her way."

But what will that world look like? And will Asian Americans be there to help midwife her birth?

ASIAN AMERICAN STUDIES AND TRANSFORMATION

Twenty years ago, I took my first Asian American Studies course at UC Berkeley, a freshman composition class. On the first day, the teachers told us the theme would be "transformation".

Now when you take an Asian American Studies class, things happen. Some people get very good grades. Other people get a lot of phone numbers. But everyone undergoes some sort of transformation.

You start thinking about the way you grew up, how you were socialized, who influenced you. You remember the first time you were made to feel different, and the way you reacted. You look at the dry cleaner, the bus driver, the waitress, the seamstress, your parents, your grandparents, your siblings and cousins, all a little differently.

Sometimes you develop a profound rage that you feel you have to unleash.

You walk into an Abercrombie & Fitch store and you can't believe they're selling t-shirts that say "Wong Brothers Laundry Service: Two Wongs Can Make It White".

You watch a sports show and you can't believe a basketball superstar is insulting another by making fun of his Asian accent.

You turn on your favorite hip-hop radio station, and you can't believe the African American host is defending a racist song about the tsunami by saying Asians who don't like the song probably think they're superior to Blacks.

Sometimes you stay there in your anger. Your first rage is so powerful, it's blinding.

Sometimes you think about it a little more, and you wonder about the sweatshop workers being forced to manufacture those racist t-shirts. You wonder what kind of masculinity requires an athlete to mock his opponent in racial terms. You wonder what happened to make that Black radio host want to be so hurtful.

Sometimes you then acquire a deep sadness, a disabling melancholy that you don't feel you can overcome.

Asian American Studies is a different kind of intellectual experience. It always takes you somewhere, and it also never leaves you.

THE CRISIS AFTER MULTICULTURALISM

When I was at UC Berkeley during the 1980s, multiculturalism was our rallying cry.

At its best, rainbow multiculturalism unveiled race in the production of knowledge, culture, and power. And it proposed alternatives, such as affirmative action or independent community-centered arts. Jesse Jackson's presidential bids and Spike Lee's "She's Gotta Have It", the anti-apartheid movement and the redress and reparations movement, the push for diversity graduation requirements and Don Nakanishi's successful tenure fight—they were all part of this moment.

Times have changed.

I was part of the first cohort of graduate students to enter the Masters Program here after the Los Angeles Rebellion in 1992. Those riots shook Asian American Studies to the core. The idea of Third World solidarity that had guided us from the founding of Ethnic Studies seemed to be in ashes. And in many ways, we are still sorting through the rubble.

After the rebellion, multiculturalism was absorbed into global capitalism, made easy for consumption. Its insurgency was contained.

Now dark skins—like Jet Li or the Wu-Tang Clan—provide global entertainment. Alberto Gonzales and Condoleeza Rice—not Yuri Kochiyama and Philip Vera Cruz—are presented as American icons of racial struggle and success. Universities and corporations increasingly see the value in diversity in a globalized world. And, post-affirmative action, it is Asian American bodies who largely provide that value.

For us, the Duboisian question is turned upside down, and is made to haunt us: How does it feel to be a solution?

TOWARD ANOTHER WORLD

Cast this way, we cannot avoid our responsibility. We can only dispatch ourselves with clearer purpose, principle, and integrity.

If we were to describe the world that we want, would it be a world in which professional athletes are tested for accent sensitivity the way they are tested for steroids? Would it be a world in which Abercrombie and Fitch only sells us yellow-power t-shirts?

I ask, because this world is certainly possible. But it's not what we should settle for.

Hot 97 radio personality Miss Jones tore open unhealed wounds with her comments on Asians' supposed perceptions of superiority over Blacks. But how do we heal those wounds? Where did those wounds come from?

We cannot begin to answer these kinds of questions if we allow ourselves to be caged by our first rage, or incapacitated by our first sadness. That rage and sadness can block us from understanding our truer roles, our unfulfilled responsibilities, our necessary allies, and the larger forces at work against us all.

They prevent all of us from healing. They blind all of us to the possibility of another world. We need to act from love.

So the transformation that we begin in Asian American Studies does not end once classes do.

As the great Glenn Omatsu reminds us, the fundamental practice of Asian American Studies is to build community. Building community goes beyond centering the self. It is about imagining what it takes to revere justice, to respect difference, to reduce hurt, to correct wrong, to nurture growth, and to discover joy. It is about activating and propagating these values within a conception of "we" that continually expands, and is always concerned with caring for the least of us first.

For us, the possibility of another world can begin with the project of recuperating a progressive Asian American identity, one that stands against the totalizing push of global capitalism and the new imperialism, the disintegration of an anti-racist movement, and the destruction of other oppressed communities, particularly African Americans and indigenous peoples.

That possibility, in fact, begins with you.

To you, the graduates of Asian American Studies, here in this dangerous moment, I regret to say—and I am also happy to say—that we place a lot of hope in you. I regret it because it means in some sense we have not fully done our job. I am happy because I know our faith is well-placed.

We look to you to lead the way forward toward a new Asian American left, a new progressive movement, and the shining new world waiting to be born.

Thank you for this opportunity, and once again, congratulations on your most important achievement.
VietNam War Atrocities
This is our wonderful American Army during the VietNam war.
You know, how they would randomly make mass graves whenever they felt like it.
And how they would mutilate farmers
Torture women and children.
And all that wonderful stuff...

And the best part, they were never prosecuted. Americans, all about justice!

Don't forget how America sprayed Agent Orange all over VietNam, and the millions that it is still killing. Just in case you're a genius, Agent Orange is super DDT basically. So DDT harms humans in its regular, 'friendly' form, what do you think it does to humans, when enhanced. Kill more people perhaps?

Nope! The company who made it claims it to be 100% safe.

Anyways,

Check it out at:
http://www.modelminority.com/article1041.html
Breaking the Silence: Asian Americans and Mental Health
Wai Kwong Wong, Ph.D. discusses how Asian Americans lack a space and the encouragement to seek help for mental health issues. It is an interesting article about how stereotypes and cultural forces cause us to defer help and internalize many problems. In the article, one of the issues that Asian Americans deal with is shame and how powerful of a motivator it can be to not admit to needing help.

If you were suffering from depression, would you seek help?
Or would you tell yourself that you are being silly, or stupid?
Would you be afraid of your friends who might think that you are 'crazy'?
Would you be afraid that your parents would find out?
Would you be afraid that visiting a psychiatrist might damage your chances of getting a job?

Those were some possible fears/concerns that could dissuade Asian Americans from seeking mental health care.

Check it out at Model Minority

This second article was written by the Daily Texan. Asian Americans currently don't have anybody that can facilitate our needs in our Counseling and Mental Health Center. APAC is currently in talks with Dr. Drum and the CMHC about this issue.

Check it out at the Daily Texan
Japanese American Boy Scouts 60-year reunion
The Boy Scouts of Troop 343 met last week for their first reunion in 60 years. Now in their 60's and 70's, they are among the 120,000 Japanese Americans sent to internment camps during WWII.

These people, they had their life ripped away from them because of Executive Order 9066 by FDR. Because White people could not accept that they were Americans. Because they ate funny foods. Because they had slanted eyes. Because they were insidious. Because they smelled funny. Because they were not to be trusted.

Because... Because...Because they were different.

But the real question now, has anything changed?

check it out at:
http://sltrib.com/nationworld/ci_2797646
If you go missing, hope that you are white, pretty and female.
Most of the missing adults tracked by the FBI are men. More than one in five of those abducted or kidnapped are black.

But you might not get that impression from the news media, and some journalism watchdogs are now taking the industry to task for what they see as a disproportionate emphasis on cases in which white girls and women -- overwhelmingly upper-middle class and attractive -- disappear.

Television executives, who receive much of the criticism, defend their coverage. They emphasize that cases such as the recent disappearance in Aruba of 18-year-old Natalee Holloway of Alabama are extraordinary, and would be newsworthy no matter her background.

Looks count

Indeed, no critic denies that the Holloway case and other disappearances are wrenching for those involved. But some insist that media attention on so few people overshadows the more than 100,000 active files on missing adults and children tracked by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

''To be blunt, blond white chicks who go missing get covered, and poor, black, Hispanic or other people of color who go missing do not get covered,'' said Tom Rosenstiel, director of the Washington-based Project for Excellence in Journalism.

''You're more likely to get coverage if you're attractive than if you're not,'' he said.Said Dori Maynard, president of the Maynard Institute for Journalism Education, a group that works to increase diversity in news coverage: ''In terms of giving citizens the information they need, I think we're failing because we're not giving an accurate portrayal of the world around them.

''Of the nearly 47,600 active adult cases tracked by the FBI as of the beginning of May, 53 percent were men and 29 percent black.''Quoting those statistics -- it's like saying '99 percent of the nations in the world are not at war, so why are you focusing on the war?' But Iraq is an extraordinary event involving Americans,'' said Mark Effron, vice president of news at MSNBC. ''What makes news is the unexpected.''He said Holloway's disappearance during a chaperoned trip is unusual and would be heavily covered by MSNBC regardless of her gender or ethnicity.

Christa Robinson, a spokeswoman for CNN, said that a wide range of editorial considerations -- including competition from other news events -- affect the attention given to each potential story. The race or ethnicity of a possible victim, she said, is not a factor.But Rosenstiel said that analyses of cable news in recent years shows an upward ''trajectory of the salacious crime story'' including those of missing white women such as Chandra Levy, Laci Peterson, and Elizabeth Smart.

Source: AP
6/16/2005
49ers apologizes to the Chinese community for racist video
Basically, to update everybody, the 49ers made a racist, sexist, and homophobic video clip.

One segment was paticularily offensive to Asian Americans in San Francisco.

I found a commentary by the Daily Show on this.

Check out the video here

And now, the 49er apologized to several Chinese community leaders for the video and promised to implement more stringent rules against offensive material. It is pretty amazing of them to hold themselves accountable, and for them to come out and apologize for their mistake. Certain politicians could really learn from them.

Check it out at Sports Illustrated
Sreenath Sreenivasan is appointed Dean at Columbia
"Sreenath Sreenivasan, co-founder and former president of the South Asian Journalists Association, has been named Dean of Students at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism. His appointment will be effective July 1: Sree Sreenivasan Appointed Dean of Students."
-Angry Asian Man

He wrote it too well for me to change =)

Anyways,

Check it out at:
http://www.aaja.org/news/member/#2005_06_10_1
Many in U.S., Canada View China as Threat
"Two-thirds of Americans and half of Canadians say they fear that "China is a serious threat" to jobs in their own countries, according to polling done by Ipsos-Reid"

I think what the article is trying to infer is that some people feel that the Chinese people gaining some form of economic freedom is a threat.

Check it out at:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050611/ap_on_re_us/china_fears

Also, here's a well written commentary by Henry Kissinger about how containing China won't work.

Basically, he argues that Soviet style containment will not work with China, and the whole concept of an eventual conflict with China is absurd. He claims that the best way is for America and China to treat each other with a good amount of consideration and understanding of where each side is coming from. Also, what I found interesting is that China's military budget is only a fraction of several other powers' military budgets in the region.

Check it out at:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/12/AR2005061201533.html
Congratulations to Jennifer Kim! Yay!
"Jennifer Kim is the first Asian-American and first minority woman to be elected to the [Austin city] council. "

Check it out at:
http://www.news8austin.com/content/top_stories/default.asp?ArID=139197
The Beginning
Welcome to the Watch.

I am one of the co-directors of the Asian Pacific American Coalition (APAC).You can find us in the Multicultural Information Center (MIC), which is located in the SSB 1.104.
Feel free to visit us at the MIC!

The Watch is dedicated to news, events, and articles that affect Asian Americans.

These are my hopes for this space.
1. To educate people about issues that affects Asian Americans
2. To promote discussion about such issues.

Current Rules for the Watch's comment page.
1. There is freedom of speech, but it doesn't mean you don't have responsibility for what you say.
2. Do not write anything directly assaulting a person, please discuss issues and provide support and counter-support for arguments.
3. Do not write excessive profanity. Basically, don't be profane just to be profane.
4. Do not threaten people.
5. Do not reveal any personal information about yourself.

*note* These rules are subject to change without prior notification.

Got questions about anything written here?
ut.apac@gmail.com
 
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