Showing posts with label TIME magazine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TIME magazine. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 31, 2021

VIOLENCE AGAINST ASIANS: AN OLD INJUSTICE

On March 16 a 21-year old white man, Robert

Long, allegedly attacked three Atlanta area spas, killing eight people, six of them women of Asian descent. The shootings became a part of a larger discussion about violence against the Asian American Pacific Islander (AAPI) community. StopAAPIHate, a group
formed at the beginning of the pandemic, says over 3800 acts of verbal or physical assault or harassment against Asians occurred in the United States in the year since, an average of 11 incidents a day. President Biden signed an executive order aimed at combatting the problem a few days after he took office. 

                     


Violence against Asians in the U.S. goes back to

the 1870s. Asian women suffer particularly egregious treatment, given how American culture and media often objectifies them as little more than sex items.  The Atlanta shootings present a critical opportunity for examining the problem and what the country does about it.

The Roots

Animus towards Asians began when Chinese migrants first arrived in the western U.S., many to work on the Transcontinental Railroad and other public works projects. Fearful the Chinese would take jobs from them, whites attacked the newcomers,  such

Act which shut down legal Chinese
immigration until the 1940s. These atrocities against Chinese Americans and many more are chronicled in Iris Chang’s book, “The Chinese In America”.

During the Second World War, the United States government perpetrated one of its great injustices when it rounded up about 120,000 Americans of Japanese heritage and locked them in internment camps. They committed no crime except being Japanese.

In 1982, two white auto workers murdered Vincent Chin, a Chinese man, in Detroit.  His assailants mistook him as being Japanese and blamed him for the decline in the American auto industry. These atrocities previewed a broader assault on Asians during the Trump era. A significant uptick in attacks on Asians followed the president’s derisive language about the origins of the coronavirus, including calling it the “China Virus” and “Kung Flu.”


A Complex History

Despite these dastardly events, the history of bias

against the AAPI community presents a complex narrative. It runs from the governmental and individual bad acts

described, to the election of Kamala Harris, whose mother came to the United States from India, as the first woman vice president. It also involves a nuanced relationship between Asians and other minority groups during the struggle for racial equality in America.

Asians have sometimes been viewed as the “model minority,” whose members achieved success in science, medicine, business, and other fields, including the media. In many academic endeavors, some Asians outpaced whites, particularly in mathematics and pure science. According to Iris Chang, “It is in connection with these immigrants, not surprisingly, that the term ‘model minority’ first appeared. The term refers to an image of the Chinese as working hard, asking for little, and never complaining.” Asians have been held up to blacks and browns as examples of how far hard work and a willingness to operate within the system can take an otherwise disfavored group. Some Asians decided against identifying with those protesting race discrimination and opposed affirmative action programs in higher education and employment. According to Chang, “[model minority] is now a term many Chinese have mixed feelings about.”

During the 1960s some Asians saw the virtue in allying themselves with blacks in the civil rights struggle. Writer and podcast host Jeff Yang, for

example, noted, “There would not be an Asian American community as we know it had it not been for both the civil rights victories that African Americans won with blood and sweat and tears, but also the desire by early Asian American activists to create common cause” with them.  

Following the Atlanta shootings, some AAPI

leaders, when asked what would help stem the wave of violence against Asians, called

for strengthening alliances with other people of color. They noted historical associations between blacks and Asians, such as support the Reverend Jesse Jackson offered in connection with Chin’s murder in 1978.

 

The Matter of Women

The Atlanta killings highlighted the special vulnerability of AAPI women. Asian women report 2.3 times more hate incidents than

Asian men. Time Magazine’s cover story on the subject quoted an American Psychological Association report that asserted Asian women are frequently “exoticized and objectified in popular culture and media as ‘faceless, quiet and invisible or as sexual objects.’”

The Atlanta shooting suspect claimed he suffers from a “sex addiction” and believed the shootings would eliminate the temptation the spas constituted. Leaving aside the plausibility of that assertion, the fact he targeted Asian women made clearer the danger women of Asian descent face in America. As Arizona State University professors Karen Leong and Karen Kuto observed in reporting that an armed white man was detained outside the official vice presidential residence, even Harris is not exempt from “this culture that racializes and sexualizes Asian women and all women of color. None of us is.”


The task of fighting violence against the AAPI community falls on everyone. All Americans must speak out because of the moral imperative and

because we never  know who will become the next target. The words of the great German minister, the Reverend Martin Niemoller, about the Holocaust still ring true:

First, they came for the socialists and I did not speak because I was not a socialist;

Then they came for the trade unionists but I did not speak because I was not a trade unionist;

Then they came for the Jews but I did not speak because I was not a Jew;

Then they came for me and there was no one left to speak for me.   


For whom will you speak?            

Monday, February 22, 2021

AMERICA’S CLOSE CALL WITH LOSING DEMOCRACY: THE 2020 ELECTION STORY THAT’S BARELY BEEN TOLD

         

At first, we thought the end of the impeachment trial marked a good time for turning the page on Donald Trump and the 2020 election. The new administration certainly has turned the page, as President Biden’s recent Wisconsin and Michigan trips, his first since taking office, indicate. Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris revved up their campaign to build support for the administration’s $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package. It appears they’re making headway. Polls showed Biden’s approval rating over 60% and support for the virus legislation nearing 70%.

One thing, however, caught our attention and made

us consider something about the election we can’t ignore –the danger democracy faced and escaped. The February 15/February 22 issue of Time Magazine includes a stunning report about the unprecedented effort by Americans of all political stripes to save the 2020 election. These Americans, first and foremost, wanted a fair election. Their objective was not engineering a victory for either side. The story hasn’t gotten the attention it deserves. According to Time, the key participants say they “want the secret history of the 2020 election told,” so we decided we’d help them get it out.

Molly Ball wrote “How Close We Came: The Secret History of the Shadow Campaign that Saved the Election.” She details how business interests, labor unions, and social activists made “sort of an implicit bargain” in which they came together to“keep the peace and oppose Trump’s assault on democracy.” It started with a man few people have heard of, Mike Podhorzer, and wound up involving hundreds of Americans from different political orientations.


Beginnings – Fall 2019 

Podhorzer’s political roots grew in union soil. He served as senior adviser to the leadership of the
AFL-CIO and developed a reputation for using scientific methods in campaigns. In late 2019, he realized a disaster loomed with the 2020 vote because Trump could try to “disrupt the election.” Podhorzer found others, especially in voting rights and civil rights organizations, who shared his fears. He began communicating with them and in March 2020 put his thoughts into a confidential memorandum that outlined how Trump might use right wing media and social media in claiming he’d won the election, even if he lost.

Four major concerns appeared early: (1)attacks on 

voters, (2) attacks on election administration,

(3) attacks on Trump’s political opponents, and

(4) attempts at reversing a Democratic victory. 

Podhorzer's group began working on these

problems before Biden clinched the Democratic

nomination and the Biden campaign never had a

real role in his efforts.


The COVID Bugaboo

Once the pandemic hit, it became clear conducting the 2020 election would pose special problems. States including Ohio, New York, and Wisconsin experienced turmoil in primaries because of poll-worker shortages, lack of polling places, and delayed vote counts.

           
The pandemic presented the first opportunity for real cooperation between the liberal activists sounding alarm bells about the election and business groups, many of whose members supported Trump, yet wanted a free, fair election. Business feared the impact on the economy of prolonged civil disturbances that might follow a disputed contest. Many states and localities didn’t have adequate funding for a pandemic-stricken election. Congress provided some money, but it wasn’t enough. Private donations, many from the business community, filled the gap, helping local election officials purchase protective gloves, masks, and hand sanitizer.

The pandemic dictated a major mail-in

ballot effort. Podhorzer’s group focused attention on helping states prepare for that, something many had minimal experience with. Additionally, they worked at (1) helping the public understand counting the votes might take longer than usual, (2) fighting disinformation on social media by getting the platforms to enforce their rules, and (3) encouraging both left-leaning activists and business groups to buy-in and avoid inflaming the situation. Meantime, Democratic lawyers vigorously fought court battles against Trump’s false claims, before and after the election.  

Alliances

Ball writes extensively about the “strange bedfellows” the effort attracted. She notes that the 

AFL-CIO and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce (along with some religious groups) issued a joint statement on election day calling on the media, the candidates, and voters to “exercise patience with the process and trust in our system,” even if they didn’t agree on a preferred outcome.

Once Trump’s post-election fraud claims went into overdrive, members of the group encouraged support from former elected officials for election administrators. In Michigan, for example, three former governors, Republicans John Engler and Rick Snyder and Democrat Jennifer Granholmjoined in calling for an electoral college tally free of White House pressure.

End Game

The Time story makes clear Podhorzer’s informal group anticipated the January 6 effort Trump and his supporters made to interfere with the congressional tally of electoral college votes. The left-leaning activists who were part of the alliance made things easier by standing down in the face of the insurrection. They didn’t confront Trump’s mob with a counter protest, which only would have made things worse, in part by letting the right wing media offer a false equivalency narrative.

In the end, the informal group Podhorzer spearheaded narrowly pulled out a victory. Ball’s story reported that they (and the country) “won by the skin of [our] teeth.”  That the  United States

needed the kind of effort reported by Time both depresses and encourages. It depresses, of course, that we had such a close call. It encourages because Americans of all political persuasions stepped up and preserved our democracy. The Time story is worth reading.