Category Archives: Filipino

Emil Amok: Another “Emil Amok’s Takeout” with Prof. Daniel Phil Gonzales on Rob Bonta, #StopAsianHate, Atlanta, and more…

Emil Guillermo talks with Prof. Daniel Phil Gonzales about the fear post-Atlanta, what we call ourselves, Filipino American attitudes, Rob Bonta’s politics, Asian American history, Harvard KKK, and more.

Catch Emil Amok’s storytime on Facebook on Friday, April 2, 4pm Pacific, 7pm Eastern. It’s Live. He’ll tell a story from his “Amok Monologues,” and be joined by members of the Asian American Storytellers In Unity. Listen, learn Friday April 2

SEE EMIL’S COLUMNS on THE ASIAN AMERICAN LEGAL DEFENSE AND EDUCATION FUND SITE.

Emil Amok: My interview with novelist Ishmael Reed, Part 2, on Atlanta, hate crimes, the media, Basquiat, Boulder, and more.

We talk about the op-ed column that appeared in the New York Times and take apart its argument that the Atlanta killings were not hate crimes. They certainly were more than a coincidence. Yes, they were hate crimes.

See my other columns including a piece on Rob Bonta, the new nominee for Attorney General of California on the AALDEF site.

Emil Amok: More on the Atlanta killings where SFSU Prof. Dan Gonzales and I try to solve the whole problem.

It’s been frustrating to see the Atlanta story unfold, and harder still to see America and the mainstream media finally catch up to what Asian Americans have known and felt for a year. The community was alarmed when Trump first uttered the slur “Kung Flu,” or mocked Asians by scrunching his face and bucking his teeth while saying “CHY-na Virus.”

When the leader of the free-world models racism, his mignons and followers listened. There are now nearly 4,000 instances of anti-Asian hate. We didn’t need Atlanta to know that, but it seems like the rest of the country did.

I’ll be commenting more in the coming days. Read my columns on the AALDEF website.

Emil Amok is Emil Guillermo: Here’s more on the U.S. soldier David Fagen, the African American who became a Filipino Freedom Fighter. A true “Insurrecto,” Fagen knew what it meant when his U.S. commanders called Filipinos the “N-word.” They were fighting words. So, of course, he switched sides.

My Emil Amok’s Takeout talks to Professor Daniel Phil Gonzales about David Fagen, the African American Buffalo Solider who deserted during the U.S.-Philippine War to become a Filipino “insurrecto.”

See more of my columns on the AALDEF site.