« February 2007 | Main | September 2007 »

June 28, 2007

A nasty day all around

beverly daniel tatum.jpg
Today the Bush Supreme Court struck down the rights of school systems to use race in order to determine school attendance rolls. With our nation's schools already segregated, this ruling puts more nails in the coffin.

The New York Times has a good editorial here.

I also have sitting on my desk (but haven't read it yet) this book: Can We Talk About Race?: And Other Conversations in an Era of School Resegregation, by Beverly Daniel Tatum. I hope that it has some inspiring ideas for me to help change things.

Her previous book, "Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria?": And Other Conversations about Race , is one of my all-time favorites. Buy it at your local bookstore!

eqcalogo.gifIn other disturbing news...

I found out today in an e-mail from Equality California (EqCA) that Four anti-LGBT initiatives were recently filed in Sacramento. From their email:

"All four measures would ask California voters to amend the state constitution to ban marriage for same-sex couples. Two of the initiatives go even further and would void all of California's current domestic partnership rights, which lawmakers, EQCA, community activists and our allies fought so hard to earn."

California's offical website on initiative measures is here.

According to EqCA, they still need to collect signatures before they can be voted on. I pray to anyone who's listening that such signatures will not be collectible; but after prop 22, I don't have my hopes too high for the voters of this great state.

June 24, 2007

Happy Pride weekend, you fabulous creature you!

ba_gaypride405.jpg

ba_gaypride033.jpg


I love this town, I love this parade, I love being queer. Hallelujah and pass the leather boots!

June 22, 2007

What I'm tired of seeing

v_for_vendetta_inner.jpg


Q. Why did I turn off the movie "V for Vendetta" after 30 minutes?

1. The main female character (and in the first 30 minutes, the only one with any significant lines) is threatened with a brutal rape in the first ten minutes of the movie. She escapes this fate because she is rescued by a masked white man.

This is not a plot that I want to submit myself to watching. Rape is not a casual shorthand for brutality - it is a tactic of war used against women. I don't want to see it casually onscreen as a minor plot point.

2. Unless I missed one when I blinked, every person in the first 30 minutes of the movie was white. (*OK, turns out that there is a convenient 'ethnic cleansing' plot that explains this....but I am not convinced it was necessary.)

3. The violence was unnecessarily graphic.

Q. Why criticize this movie when it's a remake of a comic book? That comic is the original source of any sexism, racism, or violence in the story; the filmmaker was just bringing that story to the screen.

Well, I probably wouldn't buy the comic either, but more to the point, the stories that we tell shape who we are. If all of the powerful anti-Bush movies (as well as, of course, all of the summer blockbusters and the large majority of American movies in general) are also sexist, racist, and violent, then we are telling ourselves - and especially our children - that only white men:

- have the power to beat Bush
- are interesting enough to build a story around
- have the power to stop rape, and only when it serves their purposes

We are telling our children that women:

- are helpless and dependent
- are instantly rendered terrified and helpless by a threat of rape
- do not fight back

We are telling our children that people of color:

- do not exist

Q. Why do I feel the need to criticize a movie that many progressives support as an anti-tyranny, anti-Bush movie? Shouldn't we be supporting art that supports our cause?

I freely admit to having mixed feelings about this. Yes, I do want to support art that supports the causes that are vital to our survival as a species and to general issues of social justice. But I also feel that in order for social justice to proliferate, I need to remind those with more power than I (like V for Vendetta's male white movie director James McTeigue, and white male writers the Wachowski brothers) that just as it's not cool to invade Iraq, it's also not cool to use rape as a quick way to establish a repressive backstory, or to leave out people of color as if they do not exist.

I am tired of watching women be helpless, brutalized, terrified and useless in movies, whether those movies depict the Hulk or the "War on Terror". I am tired of white men getting all of the good lines and all of the good roles. I won't give those directors my money because my power clearly doesn't matter to them.

When I make my hundred million dollars, my movie production company will tell the stories that I feel need telling: of strong women, multicultural societies, people who fight to end racism, etc. The stories we tell shape who we are.

June 13, 2007

Cool web resource of the week

Or...you know, of the...semester. Unless I manage to actually post more often than that.

mavin mag.jpg

The Mavin Foundation is "the nation's leading organization that builds healthy communities that celebrate and empower mixed heritage people and families."

They have a great website and also a magazine. I love their positive and constructive articles on multi-racial identity, activities, empowerment, family issues, and more.

Some examples of articles in the magazine:

Hawai'i as mixed-race immersion therapy
The [im]possibility of [multi]racial + [homo]sexual border crossing
One box does not fit all: UC Regent's suggested policy change sparks a heated debate
Mixed Recognition: Canada's Metis continue their fight for constitutional rights
Mixed Blood Native Americans: First nation reflections on being mixed
Understanding transracial adoption
The Mexipino Experience: A personal reflection & history of a multiehtnic community in San Diego, California
Report on the 8th Annual National Student Conference on the Mixed Race Experience

Check it out!

Sometimes, laughter is the best way to deal with the idiots

I can be VERY fond of Stephen Colbert. Enjoy!