Why I Hate Press Release Reactions

by guest contributor Rage, originally published at down on the brown side

There is a storm brewing in Asian America this weekend over an idiotic posting by columnist Kenneth Eng at AsianWeek called “Why I Hate Black People” (can’t find the article anymore on Asian Week, so I’ll post later if I can find it). While I think that the underlying uproar is justified, the tired reasoning that found itself into the immediate press release issued by the Asian American Justice Center is a troubling retread of apologetic liberalism that doesn’t strike at the core of why Eng’s piece, and Asian Week’s publication, are deeply problematic.

First of all, Kenneth Eng is not a leader in the Asian American community, and he’s just some bullshit opinion writer who wrote some bullshit that got through some clueless editor at Asian Week. It was a dumb decision all the way around, but one that they’ll likely regret far more on their own than through some kind of public stone throwing contest. Also, because he’s not a leader, his words strike a shallow blow to the uneasy alliance we like to imagine exists between the larger communities. In other words, he’s one guy who, albeit he did it through a media source, is voicing his own stupid opinion. It’s not even a mainstream paper. Hell – because they don’t RSS their articles, I don’t even read Asian Week. Who else does? (and let’s not mention that I find their perpetual use of “yellow” as shorthand for “Asian American” incredibly offensive on its own merits).

Second, I’m really tired of hearing our so-called leaders come out of the gate tripping over one another in an attempt to apologize faster than the next one about how fucked up some marginal person from the community is. In this instance, the reaction seems pretty out there. The story broke yesterday, as far as I can tell, and with the number of people that they have quoted in this press release, I imagine that there were quite a few late calls made back and forth from Washington to California (where many of the 6 quoted commentators are based).

Interestingly, there are no Filipino, Southeast Asian, Pacific Islander or South Asian folks on this release. What does that mean? Does that meant that our communities don’t have much to say about this issue? Does it mean that Asian Week is clearly not catering to these communities? Does it mean that this mainstream Asian American group has finally transcended the tokenism of which many other Asian American groups have been accused by these communities – and they just go to the best folks to comment on the issue, regardless of their ancestry? Or does it mean that they still have to look deep into their own motivations to determine what gives and why the quotes turned out as they did.

Third, I just can’t understand why civil rights leaders in our community retread “we know how much of a debt we owe to African Americans” without any further analysis. I think that this article and its publication should be opened up as a way to discuss the misunderstandings, misgivings, miscommunication, and missed opportunities between our different communities. I think that this is a reminder that what happens in the elite halls and meeting rooms of civil rights organizations and the Capitol Hill feel-good lobby is not what is happening in the real America, where class, race, and the state’s deliberate pitting of groups against one another have been mixed together in the infernal cauldron of urban America, and people are not seeing eye to eye about oppression, power, and where we go from here. This is happening across the board, and unless we find ways to create a broader analysis – ways that don’t just repeat the “we owe you a lot” analysis that new immigrants and privileged second/third generation Asian Americans generally don’t understand/believe, we’re not going to get anywhere.

I thought that Vijay Prashad’s exploration of historic exchanges and respect between Asian and African nations and peoples was quite interesting in Everybody was Kung-Fu Fighting. I think that modern America is replete with its own examples of interesting intersections that don’t suck, but people remember L.A. in 1992. People remember the boycotts of Korean grocers in Brooklyn. People remember the countless episodes of personal racism that they have witnessed, experienced, and maybe even contributed to. Young folks who are more socially conscious need ways to broach issues of pervasive racism that exist within our communities without the throw-away, catch-all aphorisms that don’t move the debate anywhere.

Beyond that, if we continue to simply say “we owe,” we’re disallowing the potential for true partnership as equals who bring important things to the table. We’re supporting some kind of free-rider argument that Asian Americans aren’t doing our share for civil rights, and perhaps even that if immigration opened up solely because of the civil rights fight (which I tend to disagree with, and am surprised that the Justice Center would put out there when the economic realities and unforeseen consequences of dropping the differential national quotas in the 60s are well documented), African American positions on immigration reform should have special weight on what the nation does. The positions are mixed, of course, but some black “pundits” aren’t afraid to say “close the borders” based on a strict economic analysis concerning competition for the lowest rung of jobs in the nation. Instead of saying “let’s work together on raising the bar for all workers” we’re going back and forth on who should get these crappy jobs, and the big bosses couldn’t be happier.

If we really care to show that we believe in the strength and importance of the African American community, we should be advancing political and social agendas that embrace zero compromise on education reform that really focuses on ensuring that the education gap for African American and other children disappears – so that the United States doesn’t justify immigration on an economic basis, because that’s what causes the tension between immigrants and native communities more than anything else. Why can’t the nurse shortage or high-tech job market have been addressed by African American graduates? Why can’t we focus on making sure that the education system guarantees a good education for everyone, instead of just the rich? Won’t that make a much bigger impact than empty recognition of the past?

If we really care, we would work on prison and criminal justice reform. It is a real problem that the incarcerated population is so impossibly proportioned: it should not be the case, and the incarceration of African American men for minor offenses creates gaps between that community and others that are only multiplied over the generations. Why aren’t we working tirelessly to change these policies, which are far far more problematic and devastating than some misdirected fool in a paper? Why aren’t we putting our collective will behind issues of this kind of weight if we care so much?

And on the flip side, why is it that immigration is not a civil or human rights issue for the majority of the African American civil rights community? Why don’t they really touch the issue, really relegating it to the Latino and Asian communities? And why don’t we say how much we owe Latino communities for their fight against national origin and language discrimination in this country? I just don’t feel like this analysis is adequate – or even analysis, really.

Not to mention that the statements themselves seem fairly hollow. And you don’t think that other people see that? Why do we, as a people, have to apologize for an outspoken idiot? If we’re going to do that, why can’t we admit that it’s a viewpoint that exists that we pledge to work against? Why do we have to play the “it’s not me, it’s him” game when that’s not truly representative of our community? Is this the new model minority that we’re playing out, always apologizing, never pushing the envelope toward justice?

Anyway, finally, and this is a small point, I’m underwhelmed by the lack of sophistication in the press release by the AAJC. Generally quite media savvy, it boggles the mind that the Justice Center would actually send out a press release on something this small – basically giving Asian Week free publicity, not to mention TinyURL.com. But it’s the TinyURL thing is what prompted this comment, because the posted link that made its way around list servs was through a TinyURL shortcut – which found itself into the AAJC release. They should have just had their tech person create a permanent page with the offensive site through their own site which would have been effective in a number of ways:

1) They could control the content, in case, as it has since done, Asian Week pulled the actual page that you’re pointing to.

2) They could track the number of times folks click the link, giving a more solid sense of how many people learned of the story through their release. Without these numbers, their media advocacy really doesn’t mean much.

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Comments

  1. Ka_Jun wrote:

    *clapping* nice post.

  2. eric daniels wrote:

    Hey, now Asian- Americans have their own “Jesse Lee Peterson” congrats, I wished Eng had kept his job . I like to know my enemies regardless of race, ya know it’s a black thing.

  3. naina wrote:

    A great read! Thank you!

  4. Latoya Peterson wrote:

    Great analysis!

  5. kim wrote:

    I know who wrote this.

  6. Adrianna wrote:

    Well said!!!

  7. thelostgirl wrote:

    You mentioned that you’d post the offending text if you found it- and i have.

    The original article ‘AsianWeek runs a column called “Why I Hate Blacks”’ posted on Feb 28th- contains a link to the petition ‘Act Against Racist AsianWeek Article’. There is a link to a PDF in the 2nd paragraph. The PDF can be found at http://www.capaweb.org/awpetition/AsianAmerican_Leaders_Condemn_Racist_AW_Article.pdf. This document contains a large, clear, readable screen print of the article (in full it seems) is on Page 2.

    You may be able to copy the full article from there?

    Either way. Great, interesting post. Keep up the good work!

  8. Rage wrote:

    Thanks for all the comments – and thelostgirl, thanks for the tip on the actual text. At this pt, I don’t even know if I’d want to reprint his words – but having the link is helpful.

  9. Ali Wong wrote:

    WORD!

  10. Robin wrote:

    This guy also wrote columns entitled “Why I Hate Asians” and “Why I Hate White People”. Was there no uproar over those???