Category Archives: politics

Maybe people would vote for an American Idol Tax? Who cares? Why politicians are thrilled with yesterday’s vote; Also–Kudos to Chu, Pleitez

Arnold Schwarzenegger should have had a singing contest for all the different tax and budget proposals. Maybe more people would have shown up at the polls in California.

The only measure to muster a victory was the most obvious one, the limit on pay raises.  That was like putting up a “kick me” sign on the back of public officials.  Yes, for sure. All others, no. Perhaps to the detriment of our state government.  Services were already going to be cut. Now they’ll be cut more.  When there’s little faith in government to begin with, it’s hard to sell the voters on a sense of value.

Still, if politicians know that sending something to the voters is almost always a sure loser, then something else is at work here too.

The governor and the legislators shouldn’t have taken it this far. Putting things up for a  vote is just a massive cop- out that signifies  a real  inability to govern. The politicians shouldn’t be able to use the electorate to dodge their own lack of responsibility.  But now the politicians can say,”We gave the voters a choice and this is what they wanted.”  But do we truly want underfunded public services, inefficient state government, bad schools? I don’t want that.

Tuesday’s vote just gave our elected officials a convenient alibi.

They can now say, “Not our fault; blame the voters, (or lack thereof).”

The tough decisions have been made –not by our elite elected representatives–but by a handful of voters who showed up on Tuesday.

CHU’S VICTORY, PLEITEZ IMPRESSES

Congrats to State Board of Equalization Vice Chairwoman Judy Chu, victorious in the race for the open 32nd Congressional District seat. She won the most votes to beat  fellow Democrat state Sen. Gil Cedillo, but did not gain a majority to avoid a runoff.  Chu survived almost every tactic Cedillo could throw at her.

The real surprise, however, was not the Asian defeating the Latino. The real story is the strong showing of  Emanuel Pleitez,  a Stanford grad from the Eastside of LA, who showed he learned a thing or two from his time on the Obama campaign. The former Goldman Sachs executive used the internet and his personal contacts to run a strong third against the  two veteran Democrat frontrunners.

Clearly, Pleitez is the future.  Not Villaraisgosa. Not Cedillo. Look for Pleitez to resurface again soon somehwere–victoriously.

Asian Pacific American Heritage Month is half over; Have you hugged an Asian Pacific American yet? How about an LGBT APA?

Specifically, have you shown a little love for Dan Choi or Sandy Tsao?

Both are doing what few Asian Americans ever do: Stand up to the institutional hypocrisy in America.

Lt. Dan Choi and 2nd Lt. Sandy Tsao could make history, if they are the first to break the military’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” charade.

The policy makes sexual orientation irrelevant in the military, until it’s spoken. A mere verbal admission of one’s homosexuality is considered a sexual act and grounds for dismissal.

Choi, 28, is a West Point grad, trained in Arabic and until recently a valued member of the New York National Guard. But when he admitted being gay on a national cable show, the Army has now moved for his discharge.

His service was never in question. But his homosexuality is. In fact, in reports  Choi admits to being a bad homosexual claiming zero  sexual relations with men or women, for that matter, while in the Army. It was only when he recently fell in love with another man that he decided that coming out was the morally right thing to do.

Because President Obama has strongly opposed DADT in public, Choi is hoping the president will take up his cause. It takes both bodies of Congress and the president to change the policy, which seems unlikely. But Choi is hoping people see through the hypocrisy and join his petition drive:

http://www.couragecampaign.org/page/s/dontfiredan

Choi actually is the second Asian American in recent weeks to come forward.

2nd Lt. Sandy Tsao, an army officer in St. Louis, disclosed  her homosexuality and actually wrote to President Obama.  The president wrote her back.

“It is because of outstanding Americans like you that I committed to changing our current policy,” Obama’ wrote. “Although it will take some time to complete (partly because it needs congressional action) I intend to fulfill my commitment!”

It could be an empty promise for Tsao, discharged officially May 19.

Roxana Saberi’s free, but mistreatment of journalists continues world-wide

It’s a good week that begins with the release  of Roxana Saberi, an Asian American freelance journalist held in an Iranian prison since March for espionage.

Reports source her lawyer who said the Court of Appeal in Teheran has ruled to reduce her sentence from eight to two years, creating the possibility for a suspended sentence for Saberi, born in the U.S. to an Iranian father and Japanese mother.

Saberi’s arrest and her subsequent espionage conviction has been a baffler.  Saberi was there to do a book on Iranian pop culture and was unlikely a “spy” in the George Bush-CIA-traditional sense, but as our envoy providing  real information about a country where the truth is intentionally layered, shrouded and buried.

She was doing the work of a journalist– the most dangerous and threatening job imaginable to individuals, institutions, and governments that would rather control the truth to their liking.

I’m happy for Saberi’s release. It’s not easy being a journalist without a big news organization backing your search for the truth. But the treatment toward Saberi is not isolated. There are at least five other Iranian journalists imprisoned in Iran, according to the most recent census by the Committee to Protect Journalists. Unlike Saberi, there is little hue and cry over their imprisonment.

Indeed, journalists worldwide have met fates far worse than prison. The CPJ puts the number of journalists who have been killed in the last 17 years at 734.

One of them was my buddy Chauncey Bailey who was killed in 2007 in  Oakland.

http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=01cc32ef3213e4b5ef8834f9fb10eb3b

Normally, they don’t kill journalists in America.

But in many countries, journalists , including bloggers,  have been killed.  In Burma and China, bloggers disappear after writing their on-line stories. In the Philippines more than 24 journalists have been murdered mysteriously in the last decade, their cases go unsolved. The record makes the Philippines’ the deadliest peacetime democracy where one can practice journalism.

That’s what happens when journalism is about life and death.

Here in America, they don’t bother killing the journalists. Just their newspapers.

Who gets the blame when a bi-racial Obama screws up?

Thanks to Wanda Sykes, we know.

At Saturday’s White House Correspondents Dinner (now simply called the WHCD), comedienne Sykes pointed out that the “first black president,” was in fact  bi-racial.

So when Obama’s wonderful, he’s  TFBP (the first black president).  But when he screws up—then he’s the white guy.

Obama is positioned by birth to be at both ends of the joke.  He can be the pin-pricker and the pin-pricked.  It’s the new ethnic humor.   As mixed marriages and their offspring grow in number,  expect to see more of this  new ethnic joke form come up.

I said the same thing recently about Giants’ Tim Lincecum, last year’s Cy Young winner for best pitcher in the NL. When he’s pitching well, we Filipinos love to point out he’s  at least a quarter Filipino (which explains his greatness, of course).  But when he’s getting shelled and pitching poorly,  that must be the white part  giving up all those hits.

I point this out because ethnic humor may be one way to break the ice and begin having those awkward race conversations Attorney General Eric Holder said we should be having.

If we start talking wonkily about race by exploring Brown and Plessy, or their latter day counterparts that could impact us all,  no one will be having a conversation soon.

But if we talk about our president like Sykes did at the WHCD, we may be able to sneak up on the tough conversations we are too  cowardly to have.