That is precisely how I feel when I consider my own journey, my own family’s travels. For here I am now, standing in a new country. Not as an expatriate or a resident alien, but as a citizen. And as I survey this realm — this Republic of Privilege — I realize certain things, things that my mother and father might also have realized about their new country a generation ago. I realize that my entry has yielded me great opportunities. I realize, as well, that my route of entry has taken a certain toll. I have neglected my ancestral heritage. I have lost something. Yes, I can speak some Mandarin and stir-fry a few easy dishes. I have been to China and know something of its history. Still, I could never claim to be Chinese at the core.
Yet neither would I claim, as if by default, to be merely “white inside.” I do not want to be white. I only want to be integrated. When I identify with white people who wield economic and political power, it is not for their whiteness but for their power. When I imagine myself among white people who influence the currents of our culture, it is not for their whiteness but for their influence. When I emulate white people who are at ease with the world, it is not for their whiteness but for their ease. I don’t like it that the people I should learn from tend so often to be white, for it says something damning about how opportunity is still distributed. But it helps not at all to call me white for learning from them. It is cruel enough that the least privileged Americans today have colored skin, the most privileged fair. It is crueler still that by our very language we should help convert this fact into rule. The time has come to describe assimilation as something other than the White Way of Being.
Republican students at the University of California, Berkeley are under fire for plans to hold an “Increase Diversity Bake Sale” Tuesday to protest affirmative action legislation, NPR reported.
The students say the sale was only meant to be a satire of legislation that would allow California universities to consider race, gender, ethnicity and national origin during admissions.
But UC Berkeley’s student senate and others say the bake sale is discriminatory, especially the organizers’ plan to charge different students diffferent amounts for the cupcakes they’re selling, with the price structure as follows:
— White/Caucasian students, $2 for each baked good.
— Asians/Asian-Americans, $1.50.
— Latinos/Hispanics, $1.
— Blacks/African-Americans, 75 cents.
— Native Americans, 25 cents.
Women get 25 cents off the price.
The student organizers said the prices were different “to ensure the fairest distribution.”
By Monday, however, the Facebook posting for the event had been changed to give specific details about the affirmative action bill instead of lampooning it.
“Obviously the satirical nature of the event was not received, so we felt it necessary to instead just put exactly what the point is,” Shawn Lewis, President of the Berkeley College Republicans, wrote on Facebook.
But Salih Muhammad, chair of the campus Black Student Union, didn’t find the satire so funny.
“We’re not open to being reduced to a price at a bake sale,” he told the college newspaper the Daily Californian. “There’s a certain point where satire becomes disrespectful.”
At a student senate meeting Sunday, the students voted 19-0 to condemn “the use of discrimination whether it is in satire or in seriousness by any student group.”
[Color Lines - By Jorge Rivas] Asian Americans are appearing in technology advertising more and more often and as a result creating a new stereotype, according to the Washington Post. When Asian Americans appear in advertising, they are typically presented as tech experts who are great at math. It’s an old stereotype that’s sadly made its way into consumer advertising.
SUBTLE posts important pieces of information on a variety of social issues from various media outlets, every Wednesday. To pass on news to SUBTLE to be considered for publishing, go to: http://www.subtlemag.com/submit
(via asubtleselection)
[Color Lines - By Jorge Rivas] Asian Americans are appearing in technology advertising more and more often and as a result creating a new stereotype, according to the Washington Post. When Asian Americans appear in advertising, they are typically presented as tech experts who are great at math. It’s an old stereotype that’s sadly made its way into consumer advertising.
SUBTLE posts important pieces of information on a variety of social issues from various media outlets, every Wednesday. To pass on news to SUBTLE to be considered for publishing, go to: http://www.subtlemag.com/submit
(via asubtleselection)