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‘Desperate’ Slur: A good reason for Filipino American History Month

By: Emil Guillermo, Oct 12, 2007
Tags: Emil Amok, Opinion |

The sad part about the Desperate Housewives slur on Asian Americans of Filipino descent is that few people got it: not the perpetrators from ABC, and incredibly, not even some Asian American watchdogs.

But the Filipino community felt the sting, and that’s all that matters to make a simple throwaway line unacceptable.

In case you were watching PBS’ The War (which had great Filipino stories), here’s the cause of the latest media transgression.

On the Sept. 30th episode of Desperate Housewives, the Teri Hatcher character is about to see a doctor and says, “OK, before we go any further, can I check those diplomas? Because I would just like to make sure they are not from some med school in the Philippines.”

Ouch. And right on the eve of Filipino American History Month, the month we celebrate the first time a Filipino ever step foot on America, just off California’s Morro Bay on Oct. 18, 1587.

After all this time, people are still ignorant about Asian Americans of Filipino descent.

What is known is the typical cultural shorthand that informs the ignorance of writers at Desperate Housewives and then reinforces the collective ignorance among TV viewers.

That’s how stereotypes fester and become part of the accepted bigotry of modern America. You can’t make a joke out of Filipino med schools unless you believe in the inferiority of everything Filipino.

That such a line could get past the standards officials at ABC is truly amazing.

Using the math principle of substitution (all you APAs should know that one), if the show featured a Passover Seder, you wouldn’t hear stereotypical Jewish jokes bandied about, I assure you.

More frustrating, the true butt of the joke here is not the Filipino but the white American.

They’re the ones not smart enough to find a spot in a U.S. medical school and desperately seek a placement anywhere they can.

But the Desperate writer didn’t know that Filipino medical schools generally are among the best foreign schools, and that Filipino doctors educated both here and in the Philippines are among the most respected in the world.

Other countries do have medical schools that fall well below the U.S. standard. Remember when Reagan invaded the tiny country of Grenada in the ’80s?

The only Americans there were medical students not smart enough to get into a U.S. med school.

EVEN ASIAN AMERICANS MISSED THE MARK

But here’s a truly frustrating thing: when I contacted MANAA, the Media Action Network for Asian Americans, I figured it would be leading the fight against the networks.

Incredibly, even MANAA, which has fought Hollywood for years on these sorts of issues, didn’t feel any outrage.

When I contacted Guy Aoki, the MANAA guru, he e-mailed, “You’ll probably hate me for saying this, but we didn’t think it was a big deal. If they mention any foreign country, people descended from that country are going to be upset. We have no idea about the caliber of doctors from the Phillippines [sic], only that there are a lot of Filipino nurses. Besides, we don’t usually get involved when foreign countries are involved.”

Now, I love Guy Aoki, have publicly praised his efforts in general and still want to work with him.

But his reaction is troubling because I’m sure he’s not the only non-Filipino who felt that way. To many, Filipinos still don’t rate on the “offend-o-meter.”

Fortunately, Karen Narasaki, another legendary community advocate who works with a coalition of media diversity activists, recognized the slur and helped in the peacemaking between ABC and the Filipino community last week. The network has agreed to remove the slur from all repeats and DVD compilations.

But that’s not enough. Removing the slur sounds like a nice gesture, but it only erases the incriminating evidence.

It doesn’t deal with the insensitivity.

It whitewashes the episode and shines up ABC’s image, like it never happened. ABC is left smelling like a rose.

And the Filipinos? To ABC and to the millions who bought into the slur in the first place, we smell the same as ever.

Nothing is done to restore our lost esteem.

In fact, ABC merely erases us totally from memory and returns us to our natural state — invisibility.

It wouldn’t be an issue if there were simply more references, positive or benign, just not negative. For now, that’s all there is.

That’s why the protest should continue — at least through Filipino American History Month – until ABC truly makes amends. Me, I’d like to see a Filipino on Desperate do something heroic — like teach Teri Hatcher’s character a lesson. I’d volunteer for that.

Comments

  1. I am in complete agreement with journalist Emil Guillermo concerning the slur that defames Philippine medical schools. The complete ignorance or malice of the screenplay writers involved should point to the weightiness of the matter from a U.S. standpoint concerning what is editable for TV and what is basically an act of discrimination against doctors and medical schools in the Philippines who are legitimate and have studied and practiced medicine together with doctors from the U.S. and many countries. Hopefully, for their sake, the show doesn’t end up in some DVD pre-programming format file inside of a Manila television station, awaiting translation.

    –John on Oct 12, 2007

  2. Interesting how you condemn Desperate Housewives for making a racist remark about Filipinos, and yet make at least two racist assertions yourself:

    1) “Using the math principle of substitution (all you APAs should know that one);”

    2) ” the true butt of the joke here is not the Filipino but the white American. They’re the ones not smart enough to find a spot in a U.S. medical school and desperately seek a placement anywhere they can. ”

    Such pronouncements are worthy of Kenneth Eng. Before blasting this vacuous television program with accusations of racism, you should check your own.

    –Christian on Oct 12, 2007

  3. Really Christian, worthy of Kenneth Eng? Kenneth Eng had neither the wit nor the style.
    People who read my column know what my point is on the “Desperate” matter. They also know how to take a joke because they read the column. The vacuous television show throws in the racism as an afterthought. There is no explanation, no context, only a sorry display of ignorance.
    By the way, do you not know the principle of substitution?

    –Emil Guillermo on Oct 12, 2007

  4. You have to calm down for a second and give these things some thoughts before you write your angry tirades. I’m guessing this is a reference to the psychic surgery scams famously prepetrated in the Philipines on the terminally ill. I salute your gumption and your cause but temper it and it will be more.

    –Peter Rollins on Oct 12, 2007

  5. Interesting that you don’t even bother to defend/explain the racist characterizations of both whites (as too stupid to attend stateside medical schools and thus forced to study abroad) and Asians (as math whizzes) but instead focus on your wit and style (both of which I’ve always found sorely lacking in your work). Why don’t you address the substantive points I raise? I’ve never considered you much of a journalist, but I never realized that you were an Asian supremecist.

    –Christian on Oct 12, 2007

  6. I have relatives who went to med school in the Philippines and aren’t practicing in the US. However, I have other relatives and know of many other Filipino Americans who went through medical training in the US and are doing quite well.

    While the comment stings, I would certainly prefer a US trained Doctor over anybody trained in the Philippines or otherwise (that is if my insurance covers it).

    And Christian, Kenneth Eng can’t write. Don’t even try and compare Emil to him. That’s just silly.

    –rebron on Oct 12, 2007

  7. To Peter: The reference in the show is clear. They’re not talking about psychic surgery, but rather regular old, “Say Ah” medical school. So the insult is real, and the loud voices of protest justified.

    –Emil Guillermo on Oct 12, 2007

  8. Dear Emil:
    I have to agree with Rollins, but not for his reasoning. Rather, because I think you are wasting your anger, something fully justified and something the great American Establishment can NEVER perceive, much less understand. They are mired in their time-warp of presumption and ignorance AND their blithe disregard of the simple concept of R-E-S-P-E-C-T.
    The last presupposes the bestowing of respect in the act of demanding.
    Actually, why would you NEED “their” acknowledgment of all you know and believe in? The facts of American acts and prejudices in re the Philippines are on record and known to everyone else.
    May I suggest you check three articles featured in today’s online Info Clearing House website, about American actions, American snafus of global consequences, global corporate evils, AND the bottom-line fact that EVERYone’s enemy is the transnational oligarchy of the rich and infamous and ruthless, now including the nouveau riche of the Mainland and Russia, and, no doubt, the renascent e-literate India.
    In light of which, Gollywood impertinences are small change indeed, and what this nation continues to promulgate in the Philippines may truly justify outrage, “patronization” even more insulting than ignorance.
    Frank Eng
    P.S.: Are you as bemused by Ann Coulter’s inferred self-perfection? Or the supposed op/ed joustings of collegials in re the “China problem” in the L.A. Times? Other facets of the contemporary contempts on the part of SOME fellow Americans. Ah, wilderness! Or is that too Persian an expression of “love” in the face of ill-disguised hatred?

    –Frank Eng on Oct 12, 2007

  9. “They also know how to take a joke because they read the column. ”

    I’m sure Adam Corolla would proffer something along those lines, so take another look in the mirror, Emil.

    –Jim Erbes on Oct 14, 2007

  10. rebron, Kenneth Eng could write, and consistently used his column to issue racist tirades against Whites, Blacks and even other Asians. While Emil’s racism and ethnocentrism is more tempered, it’s none the less still present, as is reflected in his comments about whites being compelled to study abroad because they’re too stupid to get into U.S. medical schools. This is particularly galling to me, since I know many young medical students, both white and of other ethnicities, who consciously chose to study abroad both to deepen their understanding of the world (including in the Phillipines) and assist people in developing countries. In order to achieve anything approximating good journalism, Emil needs to divest himself of such racist formulations. I stand by my analogy.

    –Christian on Oct 15, 2007

  11. Christian,

    We can attribute altruistic reasons for all we like to Americans who study in foreign medical schools but the basic reason as to why they are in a foreign medical school is that because they could not gain entry into US medical schools . That is the basic reason as to why white Americans or American born Pilipinos are in medical schools in the the Philippines and mostly private schools at that. The basic requirement for practicing medicine in the US is passing the USMLE. There are graduates of US medical schools who have a hard time passing all parts of the USMLE. As long as a foreign student is able to pass
    the USMLE he is adjudged by the medical boards as competent to practice medicine in the US. Perhaps the most salient point that was brought out here in this discussion was the one brought out by Frank Eng with his mention about ” the transnational oligarchy….. “.If Frank Eng was refering to the rich and the powerful, in a capitalist country like the Philippines he may have found his mark. Many who get into Philippine medical schools specially the private ones are those who have the money to educate their children. It goes without saying that many people who get into medical school in the Philippines are people who have the means or the money to make a go at it. Poor people even if they are talented are dissuaded from applying to medical school for this sole reason. Unless you are talented enough to get into the University of the Philippines or some other other public medical school, your option is pretty much the private medical school where the tuition is high. LIke in the United States private schools tend to favor the rich and the affluent inspite of the frequent claims about financial aid. The outcomes of this kind of situation are reflected when Philippine medical school graduates take the USMLE, you know which Philipine medical school is likely to perform best and which will not. Like in any capitalist country, there are groups of people who are in school who do not deserve to be there. In this country, there are many whites who are at Stanford , harvard, Yale, Dartmouth, Swarthmore , Princeton, Vassar etc. who do not deserve to be there. They are just there because of a vast system of preferences for the rich, the children of alumni, the children of the wealthy, the famous, administrators , professors, athlethes, favored minorities etc. Such are the facts of life Christian.

    –leo cruz on Oct 15, 2007

  12. Guys:
    If you are quite through with irrelevant pissing contests, I have a question, to wit:
    Why is a discussiion, much less a debate, relevant to a world in which “doctors” minister to victims of mindless murder and mayhem, as in Iraq, or Palestine?
    When you, we?, have addressed the political idiocies of “our” movers and shakers, then, perhaps, we could ask “them” to do the same with “theirs.”
    Meanwhile, as with the UN”intelligence” of our 27? agencies dedicated to the proposition that everyone else is a “spy” and “evil” at that, what is the likelihood of ANY diploma validating an authentic “healer”?
    And what has “race” to do with ANYthing “human”?
    Or “individual” for that matter.
    The gene pool today seems pathetically inadequate to the survival of the species.
    Frank Eng

    –Frank Eng on Oct 15, 2007

  13. “In this country, there are many whites who are at Stanford , harvard, Yale, Dartmouth, Swarthmore , Princeton, Vassar etc. who do not deserve to be there. ” Yet more racist drivel within the pages of Asian Week.
    White racists would contend that there are many people of color in these schools as well who don’t deserve to be there (especially Asians), and would not be save for affirmative action. Why doesn’t Asian Week change its name to Asian Supremecist? I’m appalled by the virulent racism (both anti-white and otherwise) of both its contributing writers and many who post comments on its website. Please note that you’re in no position to complain about anti-Asian racism if you’re constantly expressing the self-same attitudes towards whites, African-Americans, etc.

    –Christian on Oct 16, 2007

  14. Christian,

    It does not matter whether whites believe that there are Asians who do not deserve to be in such schools like Stanford, Harvard etc. You are way behind the times, you don’t seem to understand that there are existing qoutas against Asians in the Ivies and in the liberal arts
    schools in favor of whites. You see Christian, whites are the biggest beneficiaries of preferences in the Ivy League and the private schools….

    Frank,

    That was a whole slew of rhetorical questions that you posed which may or may not answer Emil’ assertion about the Desperate Housewives episode……

    –leo cruz on Oct 16, 2007

  15. Leo:
    I find your comments more than germane, and I am perfectly aware that my little contributions are, largely, NOT germane to the core of this subject.
    But I continue to insist that all the pissing about races and quotas and degrees and practices are even LESS germane to the present state of “medicine” in these benighted States of Amurrika.
    Aside from the likes of a lion like Dr. Andrew Weil, or perhaps a Deepak Chopra?, the operative players herein are the greedy and conscienceless pharmaceuticals, on a par with their greedy and conscienceless “fuel” industries brethren, and exceeded in their excesses only by our incomparable “insurance” (yeah, as positive as our “intelligence” buddies) providers .
    Never mind the pencil pushers and the waiting-room attendants, these poor souls need the jobs.
    But this rotting, tottering patchwork quilt of a security blanket makes ANY consideration of a “healthcare system” in this country, laughably if you are of a quixotic mind, absolutely?,non sequitur. Certainly irrelevant.
    It used to be only millionaires could afford decent medical attention. Today, it’s billions, baby.
    Frank Eng
    P.S.: Hey, Christian, did someone Asian or Asiatic insult your mother? Or are you, simply, a believer in “the Yellow Peril”?

    –Frank Eng on Oct 16, 2007

  16. Frank Eng, I am not a believer in the “yellow peril,” and kindly leave my mother out of this discussion. I’ve always been advised that family is sancrosanct in Asian societies, so I can’t believe you’d stoop to such a low, but that’s generally what people do when they couldn’t formulate an intelligent argument if their lives depended upon it. Judging from your contributions to this and other online conversations on this website, that’s clearly the case with you.

    –Christian on Oct 18, 2007

  17. Christian:
    I DO apologize for the familial reference, but I AM glad you don’t believe in yellow perils. Or any other color, I trust. As for families and parents, aren’t they our individual microcosmos, and, as such, mirror all of human experience, the negative as well as the positive?
    Frank Eng

    –Frank Eng on Oct 18, 2007

  18. “You can’t make a joke out of Filipino med schools unless you believe in the inferiority of everything Filipino.”

    No, you’d just have to believe the med schools were inferior.

    You should really relax a little bit.

    –Nick Danger on Oct 18, 2007

  19. Frank, I believe the word you’re looking for is “microcosms,” although you might have chosen to alter its spelling for artistic reasons - microcosmos is a very creative take on it. And I don’t deny that unfortunately, generations frequently pass on racist attitudes to their children. My mother was and is vehemently opposed to racism in any of its manifestations. Having grown up outside the U.S., she was shocked by the racism that permeates this society, and always took pains to ensure that her children did not imbibe this ideological poison.

    –Christian on Oct 19, 2007

  20. “They also know how to take a joke because they read the column. ”

    You should follow your own advice and learn how to take a joke, because that’s what the statement was in Desperate Housewives.

    I’m amazed at the appalling ignorance being shown on AsianWeek. You’d think after the debacle with Mr.Eng you guys would learn how to do better.

    –SS on Oct 19, 2007

  21. Christian:
    My mistyping on this keypad is legend, but I did intend microcosmos. Parents and family ARE the cosmos to us kids, no? By the way, greetings to your mom, and your greeting to the robed one was bingo!, maybe jackpot insofar as political posturings and disingenuity go. Now, how about the robed one who wears Prada? Draw the line at madrasas; they issue fatwahs.
    And please let our Emil lay siege to ABC, with blessings. Gollywood only learns via deflated bottom lines.

    –Frank Eng on Oct 19, 2007

  22. -o Nick Danger and SS:
    Guys, I think you are overlooking the fact that when you read AsianWeek, you are reading a publication focussed on and dedicated to, one hopes, the minorities so addressed.
    God knows the so-called mainstream media, never mind tbe Establishment that hires and fires, can only recognise a stereotype when they republish or reprint one.
    “We” hyphenated “Americans,” and, of course, I can only speak for myself, object to “your” assumed and PREsumed notions of what we, individually, are or can be, if you could only see past those stereotypes you insist on.
    No one would object to even Mickey Rooney’s buck teeth in “Breakfast at Poofany’s” if you also regularly projected images of the rest of us, well, at least some of us, as simply other human beings and not merely cookie-cutter copy readers, make that “anchors” or other favored flavors of the moment in your mindless fantasies.
    Yeah, the Irish and even the Jews, before AIPAC, that is, and, mind you, I support the state of Israel, minus THEIR theoneocons who make a mockery of the Holocaust, endured and suffered through THEIR Ellis Island initiations.
    So, allow the growing APAmerican experience to pass through this awkward adolescence, on YOUR part, including the presumptions and arrogances of taken-for-granted superiorities.
    I, too, can take a joke, especially if it’s on someone else.
    On occasion, I can even laugh at myself, when I can stop shaking from senility, that is. Oh, EVERYone gets old?
    Yeah, that and majorities that fail, continually, to “get” it, the point of stereotyping, that is.
    Framk Eng
    P.S.: Wbat was it that great Mexican character actor, can’t think of his name this moment, but he is ignored in Yankee compendia, par for the course of course, who said to our Bumphrey Gocart in “Treasure of the Whatever” — “I don’t need your steenkin’ whatever … .”
    P.P.S.: Could “psychic surgery” be but a street-theater version of psychotherapy, complete with entrails? Hey!, some of us need psychoSOMATIC reference.

    –Frank Eng on Oct 19, 2007

  23. Emil,

    I was trying to google your backgroud, but it should not matter. There was no slur, it was true. Should Irish be mad for the thousands of references to them being drunks? It was just a TV show, we should grow up.

    Besides, have you checked your facts lately? The Phillipine Nursing Exam was rigged by some corrupt bureaucrats, and these are the nurses who were going to be the key medical practioners in the US trying to take care of US patients? Have you heard about Asian foreigners going to the Phil Med Schools to secure MD diplomas?
    Joke should only bother their subjects if they are true, otherwise, it is a TV show!!!
    You are just a raving race-baiter, real Asians spend their valuable time focusing on positive things like:
    - Family Values
    - Being Americans without losing their culture
    - Assimilating and integrating themselves in America
    - Contributing to the American culture as a sign of gratitude for being given the privilege to be an American

    You seem to be a very intelligent person, why don’t you get out of the Liberal, I-am-a-victim, I-am-entitled-to, mentality and do something positive?

    –From an American Born in the Phillipines on Oct 26, 2007

  24. With no intention whatsoever at insulting medical schools in the Phillipines:
    “But the Desperate writer didn’t know that Filipino medical schools generally are among the best foreign schools, and that Filipino doctors educated both here and in the Philippines are among the most respected in the world.”

    That statement is just butkiss. I’m sure they are just fine, but there is no general “thought” amongst doctors in the US or abroad that those schools stand out anymore than schools elsewhere. This is important is because if you are just making up facts like that, why should anything else you state be accepted?

    –Michael on Oct 26, 2007

  25. You people need to ignore Christian because I’ve noticed he’s systematically gone through the articles of this site and accused every single writer of being an asian supremacist. This is the 2nd or 3rd article i’ve encountered his comments and his accusations.

    who IS this guy? Pathetic. Obviously he’s got a vendetta and this place is just a convenient way for him to vent his frustrations.

    –yhm on Feb 05, 2008

  26. Dear “yhm”:
    Finally, a “landsman,” of whatever eace, color, or creed, who recognizes “the enemy” when he reads him.
    Note also, that a “Christian” has posted an anti -McClain bit about said superpatriot’s “racist” comments in the past.
    And all this at a time when “Winter Soldiers” are marching on Washington, D.C., that is, and when a decades-old “diary” of a young Vietnamese Communist doctor, a young woman, has been published and is being made into a “film,” it is more than coincidental.
    Those “Vietnamese-Americans” who continue to embrace the idiot American “invasion” of their homeland in the name of “anti-Communism” and “democracy” need to examine their own motivations and rationalizations.
    Dr. Dang Thuy Tram may also have been the victim of our own “Americal” units, the likes of which are reborn in Iraq today, including the “private” “licensed contractors” beholden to no one who gun down taxi drivers sans compunction.
    ALL true “Americans” should be ashamed of and denouncing said likes.
    Waterboarding and mercenary murder are no less odious than My-Lai.
    Frank Eng

    –Frank Eng on Feb 05, 2008

  27. yhm, sorry if you dislike the fact that I and others post comments critical of expressions of racism within Asian/Asian-American communities in this country and other nations (i.e., widespread Han chauvinism in China, theories of racial superiority that animated Japan’s expansionist machinations, including its commission of genocide in China, Vietnam, etc.), but you’ll just have to live with it. Your little post demonstrates that you are incapable of critical thinking. Whites do not have a monopoly of harboring racist attitudes and thought patterns in this country. Racism is no less odious simply because it’s expressed by people of color as opposed to whites. Just check out the brouhaha that erupted when Chinese American parents learned that their kids might have to study alongside black and Latino/Chicano children instead of attending “neighborhood” (read: virtually all Anglo/Asian) schools. They repeatedly rose at School board meetings to insist to express their fears that their children would develop gang ties, drug addictions, etc. as a direct consequence of their interaction with peoples of color demonized by the status quo. The thankfully now-departed (at least from the pages of Asian Week) Kenneth Eng proudly proclaimed himself an “Asian Supremecist,” and Emil constantly plays the race card, largely because he’s got no discernable journalistic talent whatsoever. Asian Americans constantly complain that they’re victims of racism and discrimination. It’s therefore incumbent upon them to critically assess their attitudes towards other peoples of color and divest themselves of their own racism.

    –Christian on Feb 05, 2008

  28. Dear Christian:
    If, indeed, you are the identical “Christian” who some months ago chided me for my inability to reason and to dismiss me as obviously “unbalanced” brainwise, I see you are still peddling the same basic arguments in re “yhm,” and, more to the point, still focussing and insisting on your “campaign” against “Asian-American,” no, make that “Chinese-American,” and Emil Guillermo in particular as a talentless journalist, have you dropped AsianWeek from your list of targets?.
    You speak glibly of “Han” chauvinism, did you have any idea that many, most in my day, “Chinese-Americans” called themselves the “Tang” people?
    Not that it matters. Actually, herein, “race” matters only to your likes, those who seek to divide and conquer, who use fear and loathing as weapons, who seize upon ANY point of vantage to dishonor and “diss.”
    Are you still rooting for the full pound of flesh from septuagenarian Margaret Tse? For snipping a few snippets or unlicensed hair?
    Oh, and your extrapolation of “history” in claiming “Han” chauvinism for the rise of Japanese military imperialism is farcical.
    Christian, NO “race” has a monopoly on “racism” OR xenophobia, and no “race” is “innocent” of ALL that is wrong and hateful in the world, today, yesterday AND tomorrow, sadly but likely.
    But this administration, and today’s theoneocons and “Christian Zionists” DO own the hardware and the delivery systems of literal Apocalypse.
    And some “experts” still think that Cheney/Bush are still actively plotting Iranian idiocies, and, failing that, a genuine Yankee putsch, in the face of all the mounting evidence that “the people” know and understand and dissent.
    You, Christian, are narrowly focussed on your pet bete noire, apparently “Chinese-American” parents who rise in PTA and school board meetings to insist on their perceptions of the “best” for their progeny.
    On this point, I disagree with them, not only in the fact that I think the American “education” system is almost as “broke” as the political AND the “healthcare,” which would more logically be dubbed the “disease industry” foe the benefit of the pharmaceuticals and the insurance guys.
    That said, as I told you, personally, early-on, I find your “tone,” your online demeanor, continually irritating in its condescension, and, more to my point, insulting in your presumptions of attitude.
    YOU, alone?, or are you speaking for others?, continue t0 sound like a broken record, stuttering on your contempt, hatred?, for Asian-Americans, Chinese in particular.
    You make “us” sound like the 99% majority, whereas, fact is, it’s the other way around, 10 to one for APAs and 99 to one for “Chinese.”
    MY generations stemmed from recruited laborers who labored under generations of, yes, “oppression.” The new generations from Hong Kong and Taiwan are as different from us as Ashkenazi Jews from the North African? As for the “Vietnamese” who may yet grow to become a “yellow” version of those noisy anti-Castro Cubanos in Florida, I couldn’t begin to understand. And, I speak only for myself, knowing full well that today’s young people of “color,” and I do mean APA, are every bit as diverse and independent as today’s Super Tuesday vote is proving across the length and breadth of this land.
    And, speaking for myself, Christian, I find you not anathema quite, but close enough. I can’t quite drum up respect for you, since you have none for those you presume to address.
    Frank Eng
    P.S.: Who’s Kenneth Eng?

    –Frank Eng on Feb 06, 2008

  29. Okay, so flog me with a million semicolons.
    But
    Christian, you old dog you, can’t you learn from the past? So few of us can.
    It’s “supremAcist,” and NOT “supremEcist,” baby. At least from my latest edition of Webster.
    I also hbelieve the preferred, if not the “correct” spelling is ‘discernIble” and not “discernAble,” able as you may beliuelve yourself to be.
    Ah, now to count the delegates.
    Frank Eng
    t

    –Frank Eng on Feb 06, 2008

  30. This is the first time I’ve read Asian Week, and I am so disappointed. It seems it’s more of a forum for the anti-Asian views of Christian and for people who would “fight againstAsian Supremacy” than anything else.

    Just a thought–while I agree Emil’s opinion might have been a bit over-the-top, I would surmise that it’s a knee-jerk reaction from someone who has been privy to racism in all its manifestations–even the meandering criticisms and racist overtones of our Christian. I also surmise that some of Emil’s strangely* aggressive critics have never experienced such racism as much as Emil if at all. (*I mean, it’s a little strange that someone would get his/her kicks by going on minority issue sites to berate everybody. The diatribe lured me in. What did it for you, Christian? I guess I know. I mean, Lord knows the biggest threat to this nation and the greatest social foe is ASIAN supremacy.)

    And for the person who names him/her self “An American Born in the Philippines,” need I comment on how shockingly ignorant your little snippet of this Emil-bashing (and Frank Eng/Christian-bashing [though I rather enjoy the latter]) is?
    In particular, “…real Asians spend their valuable time focusing on positive things like:
    - Family Values
    - Being Americans without losing their culture
    - Assimilating and integrating themselves in America
    - Contributing to the American culture as a sign of gratitude for being given the privilege to be an American”
    I’m simply nonplussed. Speechless.

    Shame on you Asian Week for allowing this site to spiral so wildly out of control. You have lost a potential reader. Though I quite enjoyed my short foray into derision of people I(hopefully) will never know, I have a life I must lead…y’know, I have to “contribute to the American culture as a sign of gratitude for being given the privilege to be an American” and all. Oh, and there’s that “Yellow Power” rally to which I must attend. Now..what did I do with my yellow hood…

    –American born in America on Feb 06, 2008

  31. Frank Eng, you desperately need some sort of medication, if not full-scale institutionalization. I won’t even begin to attempt to navigate my way thru the mists of your ill-focused diatribes. I can imagine you now, locked in a darkened room, ingesting God knows what substances and furiously tapping away at your keyboard. I stand by every point that I’ve made in every one of my posts. As most glaringly evidenced by its publication of racist, Asian supremecist diatribes by Kenneth Eng, for which it was justly compelled to apologize, Asian Week is far too frequently a forum for the most racist and reactionary elements in the Asian American communities of the Bay Area. Just because a people (or peoples) has/have been and are subjected to discriminatory practices does not mean that they are immune to the ideological poison of the racism that permeates this society. Obviously I and others who have pointed this out on this website have touched a very raw nerve.

    –Christian on Feb 06, 2008

  32. Okay, Christian:
    i give up. You win. But do you think you can raise enough moolah for the “institution” of my preference?
    Can’t quite manage it on my Social INsecurity.
    And to
    American born in America:
    I think I would enjoy meeting you, since all you say is a “been there, done that” for me. And in the ancient past at that.
    And don’t blame AsianWeek for this er, ah tempest in a teapot for “spiralling out of control.”
    There are NO “controls” in the ether, on the internet, AND in those inner spaces of our individual perceptions and beliefs and, yes, “prejudices.”
    Generations of “Chinese-Americans” were “assimilated,” “culturally,” long before your shock and awe at the above kitestring of irrelevancies and non-sequiturs.
    Speaking of which, may I adjure one and all to access today’s online post-election pieces by Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St. Clair on “Counterpunch” and the Alterman piece on Newsweek?
    PLUS tonight’s Michael Moore plug for “Sicko” on “Larry King Live.” MM nails the tail on the donkey with his observations on Billary’s consistent pro-war votes , after all, she IS “Lieberman Lite,” my venture? But who could equal Cockburn/St. Clair’s dubbing Anne Coulter the blonde “Saxon Klaxon,” who shrilly proclaims she would vote for Hillary, more “conservative”than McCain. And what could top Limbaugh’s line about “anal” infections in the RepublicanParty?
    And it’s all for free for the searching.
    Frank Eng
    P.S.: AsianWeek staffers, you haven’t “lost.” Yet. And Billary had to dent the bank account for 5-mil? And, oh, yes, I think I heard the word “Asian” once by way of Obama, and Alterman did mention that we-’uns went for Billlary in Californ-I-A. So, what else is new, nu? Mine own mother was a Chiang believer. I would have voted for Ho Ho Ho Chi-Minh, never mind ho-ho Wen Ho-Lee.

    –Frank Eng on Feb 06, 2008

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