Thursday, January 5, 2012

De-Americanizing Asian Americans

At the Huffington Post, law professor Bill Ong Hing writes about the "image of people of color with immigrant roots as perpetual foreigners," (which I have addressed here and here and much more extensively here):
Eight U.S. soldiers serving in Afghanistan have been arrested in connection with the apparent suicide of Pvt. Danny Chen, a 19-year-old infantryman who was Chinese American. The arrests came after family members pressured the Pentagon to investigate allegations that Chen had been repeatedly taunted with racial slurs. The alleged anti-Asian bullying and taunting started during basic training when fellow soldiers used a mocking accent while calling him Jackie Chen; others allegedly told him to "go back to China." The eight soldiers have been charged with dereliction of duty and manslaughter.

Asian American history is replete with examples of the de-Americanization of its members by vigilante racism.

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Even more recently, de-Americanizing antics have been directed at Chinese Americans. In the midst of an international crisis in April 2001, when a U.S. spy plane had to land on Chinese soil and China would not immediately release the plane, many Americans took their frustration out on Chinese Americans. A radio station disc jockey in Springfield, Ill. suggested boycotting Chinese restaurants. Another commentator called people with Chinese last names from his local telephone book to harass them. Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist Pat Oliphant ran a cartoon portraying a buck-toothed Chinese waiter yelling at a customer (depicted as Uncle Sam), "Apologize Lotten Amellican!" The American Society of Newspaper Editors was entertained by the renowned satirical group Capitol Steps, featuring a white man dressed in a black wig and thick glasses impersonating a Chinese official who gestured wildly as he said (in a manner reminiscent of the chant that greeted Mary Paik Lee on her first day in school): "ching, ching, chong, chong."

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Somehow the soldiers who allegedly harassed Pvt. Danny Chen felt licensed to engage in taunting and bullying of a young Chinese American who was trying to serve his country. Perhaps that's the problem; those soldiers didn't think that the United States was Chen's country to serve. Somewhere the soldiers got the message that their private vigilante actions were condoned. That message has done much to solidify the image of people of color with immigrant roots as perpetual foreigners. This encourages private individuals to engage in discriminatory acts and reinforces their hostility. As such, Asian Americans become prime targets for de-Americanization by vigilante racists. And that can lead to death.

2 comments:

Reena said...

How's this-- work colleguse mentioned that during some political talk (Republican debate?) the comment was made either to or by Santorum, "You are not really American because you have a Chinese baby."

I'm trying to find the report on the web.

Reena said...

Here is a link:
http://www.theatlanticwire.com/politics/2012/01/jon-huntsman-chinese-sleeper-agent/47052/

The web chatter is that this was produced by some wierd group and not 'really' an ad. Well, people I work with are talking about it.

Who else has heard it?

This is just the thing-- too many people, when they hear something racist, they don't say anything to let people know that saying those types of things are not OK.

I think more people than not are uncomfortable with that kind of talk but are too shy of confrontation to say anything.

So the person saying them thinks it is OK and continues to do so.

If more people responded that racist talk, jokes, etc, makes them uncomfortable, then more people would like join with them and more people would start to think twice about their comments.