Remembering Ron Takaki, the man who put Asian Pacific Americans into historical context for the academy

In the future, we will know why May is Asian Pacific American Month.  It isn’t just because of the arrival of the first Japanese immigrant (May 7,1843). Or the sweat equity earned by Chinese workers who helped complete the transcontinental railroad (May 10,1869).

Sadly, it is now the month that marks the passing of Ronald Takaki, Professor Emeritus, UC Berkeley, who in the last 50 years became the pre-eminent advocate for the inclusion of Asian American history in the American academy.

Takaki died the night of May 26 after a long illness, according to his family.  He leaves a wife, Carol Takaki, three children, Dana, Troy, and Todd, and several grandchildren.

It’s hard to imagine what we read before Takaki’s  seminal work,”Strangers from a Different Shore”?  What did we have to read? The answer. Not much. You might have Asian Americans from a white perspective, but mostly it was considered  history on the margins, not seen worthy of serious study. When I was an undergraduate at Harvard in the ’70s,  I recall how I hungered for information that would explain to me what happened to the Chinese, the Japanese, and the Filipinos who came to America.  Deep in the library stacks I found a few unpublished dissertations from Asian Americans that opened my eyes, but were mostly ignored by others.  It wasn’t until Takaki came out with “Strangers” did the sense of the American experience of Asians take place. There was nothing that had the scope, nor success of Takaki’s “Strangers…” I remember when I first saw it, I thought this was it. The most comprehensive telling of our story. I have at least three editions, two hardbound, and one paper back. I keep lending off all my dog-eared copies. Maybe that’s why I never thought to ask Ron to sign a copy for me. His book was a working tool.

So no autograph. But I did get a blurb. I called him up and I was flattered when he said he read my columns. He said he would be happy to blurb my book, a collection called “Amok:Essays from an Asian American Perspective.” For me it was like getting a blessing from on high.

Takaki’s “Strangers…” gave our community a context that brought us together as Americans.

And it gave me an informed sense of the importance to go amok.

By giving our past real meaning, Takaki lifted us up, made us relevant to others,  and gave us hope for a better future for our community. That is, if we learn from history.

In the hallowed halls of learning, it was Ron who made people respect our stories.

Hi Amok readers…we were hacked!

Maybe somebody didn’t like my posts on Sonia Sotomayor, and how she symbolizes the first real act of President Obama that wholeheartedly embraces the New America.

Or maybe it was someone who didn’t like my comments on how Ron Takaki made Asian Americans respectable in the American academy.

Or it could have been a random act of cyber-assholicness.

Really, is hacking an opinion site any different from any affront to free-speech like a book burning? 

At any rate, I take it as a compliment.

Some of the comments of this week will be reprised and re-posted shortly.

California budget cut question when it’s bone vs. bone: Which is more important–my left leg or my right?

Schools or  Mental health? Nah.

But elected officials pay?

Now you’re talking! Voters know what’s important.

Not to dwell too much on the inconsequential. But the American Idol vote and the California vote do point out the same problem.

What do the voters know?

When you leave it up to the people,  imperfect democracies becomes even more imperfect. Nice gimmick, letting the people decide. But in the end, are the people, or at least those who turn out to vote, any better than your elected representative?

Seems like California;s problems began when the state veered from a representative democracy to include  the initiative process and direct democracy.

Sounds great, but you end up with a hodge podge of policies  swayed by the political flavor of the day. Where’s the long range vision? You can’t have any with term limits and hamstrung budgets with their 2/3rds majority requirement, all a direct result of letting the voters take policy matters into their own hands.

If you don’t live in the state and are all too happy to let California fall, consider that it is only one-tenth of the national population, and merely the 8th largest economy in the world.

If California fails,  everyone in the country  will feel it to some degree.

The answer, unfortunately, is more federal money and  more borrowing. Still,  all that does not make the state whole. It just  means the state can afford to cut less.

But when you’re already down to the bone, the decision comes down to which do I need more, my left leg or my right?

No justice in “American Idol”‘s multiple-vote, all-you-can-eat- democracy; But it makes Kris Allen the poster child for the undeserving

It felt like the night George Bush won and Al Gore lost.

This was a night when  meritocracy in pop America  really lost.

It’s still  not as bad as if William Hung had won. It’s not as big a fraud as say calling the Monkees  better than the Beatles.

But everyone knows Adam Lambert should have  been declared this year’s “American Idol”  winner.

Lambert’s talent just dwarfed all the others. Adam made Kris look like Opie at the junior high  talent show.

At first, the night had appeared somewhat stacked in Adam’s favor. On this final episode, he  got to sing with no less than Kiss and Queen, essentially a grand showcase of the eye-linered contestant with his musical forebears.  It almost seemed  a pre-annointing of the winner.

So when Kris was announced as the “Idol”  it just seemed like a false note.

But what do you expect from a multiple-vote system. It’s been said America doesn’t like to sense its vote doesn’t count.  The AI system indulges those voters. Vote doesn’t count? Make it count 10 times. Vote all you want. It’s an all-you-can-eat democracy.  But it does make the vote about the voters and not about the talent on stage.

Doesn’t matter.  Before long, Kris will be joining previous winner  Taylor Hicks on the county fair circuit.

Meanwhile, Adam will emerge quite simply as the most versatile and gifted performer birthed by the show ever.

Talent always wins out in the end.

Emil Guillermo's amok commentary on race, politics, diversity…and everything else. It's Emil Amok's Takeout!

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