Archive for June, 2009

28
Jun

Who Was He – The Question of Michael Jackson

In the early evening of June 25, a small headline in the news read that former Charlie’s Angels actress and hairstyle icon Farrah Fawcett had died. Her death was not particularly surprising, as she was after all 62 and had been struggling with cancer for some time. An hour later when I went to the computer, a much bigger headline stated, “Is the King of Pop dead?” with a huge picture of Michael Jackson in the background. The question was answered shortly afterwards: Jackson had indeed passed away in unknown circumstances, and fans were already gathering outside the hospital to which he had been taken.

While Michael Jackson was a celebrity who received an enormous amount of media attention, it has been said that nobody truly knew him. Indeed, questions about the man linger on. For example, did he or did he not sexually molest the young boys with whom he kept company? He was accused of doing so on two separate occasions, but in the first case he reached an out-of-court settlement with the purported victim’s family and in the second he was acquitted. The jury’s decision was somewhat equivocal: though they could not exclude the possibility that he might have sexually abused children in the past, in this particular instance he did not. I strongly suspect that the accusations against Michael Jackson were part of the wave of child sexual abuse hysteria that swept through the United States and that led to many people being charged on dubious grounds.* However, the real truth will probably never be known.

Michael JacksonEven before that Jackson’s sexual identity was always the subject of much speculation. It was sometimes hard to tell by his appearance whether he was a woman or a man. A rumour in the 1980s had it that he was intending to undergo a sex change operation because he could no longer silence the “woman in me,” but either the rumour was untrue or Michael Jackson changed plans because nothing became of it. Similarly his sexual orientation was unclear in the minds of many. In his youth he was said to have romantic relationships with actress Brooke Shields and his co-star in the Thriller video Ola Ray. A number of observers suggested that these publicized romances were just for show and that these women served as a so-called “cover” for his true sexual orientation. No media report, though, was ever able to pinpoint any relationship he may have had with another man. He did marry women twice and father two children, but comments about his actual sexual proclivities continued.

Michael Jackson’s greatest ambiguity lay in his racial identity. To quote one of his most popular songs, was he black or white? Pictures of him as a child and young man show him with clearcut African features: a large Afro hairdo and a typical “Black” nose. By the time Thriller rolled around, however, he had obviously undergone a nose job, and his hair was curly rather than kinky. At the time of his death his hair was completely straight. But the biggest question had to do with his skin colour, which became progressively lighter over the years. Jackson himself claimed that the lightening was the result of a medical condition that made his skin lose colour. Such conditions do exist (the mother of an African-American friend of mine had one), but given Michael’s apparent attempts to “Caucasianize” himself (the nose operation, the hair straightening), doubts on the veracity of his explanation will persist.

Of course like many American Blacks Michael Jackson had non-African ancestry as well. One of his ancestors was a White man, another an American Indian. Nonetheless, according to America’s “one-drop rule” Jackson and his family would definitely be considered Black. Some Black activists lamented his various “Whitening” endeavours, seeing them as a sign of racial self-hatred. Jackson, though, never claimed to speak for the African-American community. Indeed, his music was loved by people of all colours throughout the world, so he might have feared losing or alienating some of his fans by embracing a particular ethnic identity. In his song “Black or White,” he appears to disavow any racial allegiance – although many observers noted that for a man who proclaimed it didn’t matter whether you were Black or White he seemed to do everything in his power to be White himself.

An autopsy done on Jackson’s remains was inconclusive. As of now (June 28) the cause of his demise has yet to be determined. In death, as in life, the man remains an enigma. And perhaps that is how he would have wanted it to be.

* Here I do not mean to imply that the sexual abuse of children does not exist or that it is not a serious crime. However, starting in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s there was a trend of attributing seemingly unusual behaviour in children to sexual abuse and fingering adults with whom they had come in contact with molesting them.

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25
Jun

Michael Jackson Dead?


6:10pm

TMZ is claiming so …

We’ve just learned Michael Jackson has died. He was 50.

Michael suffered a cardiac arrest earlier this afternoon at his Holmby Hills home and paramedics were unable to revive him. We’re told when paramedics arrived Jackson had no pulse and they never got a pulse back.

A source tells us Jackson was dead when paramedics arrived.

Here is a screen-shot of what TMZ has written:

TMZ Reporting Michael Jackson Has Died

Continue reading ‘Michael Jackson Dead?’

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23
Jun

Album Review: Angina P – Sensitive Files

Artist: Angina P
Album: Sensitive Files
Genre: Electronic (IDM / Drum n Bass)
Label: Hands Productions
Year: 2009
Rating: 91%

Vienna based producer Angina P has amassed an impressive underground following since first posting music to mp3.com. Her photogenic looks belied her skills behind the sequencer as she gained cult status for synthesizing complex electronic rhythms and melodies with the soul and story-telling capability of a traditional artist. In 2008, Angina P released her debut album, 8-Rooms on Notochord records to wide critical acclaim – all the while teasing wanting fans about upcoming releases.

Angina P - Sensitive FilesAngina P’s sophomore release, Sensitive Files, dropped abruptly on May 30 and spares little time turning on the energy. “I break your beats” kicks off with a classic trance-style build up to a techy 2-step ruckus – complete with Amen break teasers. Of course, there are several layers of atmosphere behind the floor-friendly energy along with chilled out moments of reflection, as long-time listeners have come to expect. The energy soon fades into “Remember That”, a similarly energetic track containing something we are not used to – vocal samples (and naughty ones in this case). Angina P crafted “Sensitive Files” with equal parts aggression and finesse, weaving the experimental sound of her IDM-focused debut with proven club rhythms and vocal snippets.

The album also differs in that it contains a lot of previously available material, whether widely released (“Belladonna d30”) or available primarily on the artist’s website (“Free Radical”). The advantage to having these tracks on CD is obvious, as the uncompressed mix-downs don’t choke out the ambience and more subtle layering of atmospheric noises. On a good speaker system, the spatial griminess of the down-tempo “Geiteskind” literally jumps from the speakers.

Sensitive Files ends on a strong note with the rush hour mix “Tokyo 6pm”, that timeless classic that created an instant cult on mp3.com several years ago. For the uninitiated, this track was inspired by the artist’s experiences with the Tokyo subway and sounds frantically industrial … yet maintains a strong melodic presence capable of appealing to music fans outside the electronic genres. If any track from the golden age of mp3.com had “movie soundtrack” stamped all over it, this was the one.

Angina P has added another jewel to her crown by surpassing her initial release with a sophomore LP – no mean feat at a time when, thanks to online music services, the single is once again the primary focus. Long-time fans may be let down by the lack of brand new material and many buyers will be annoyed with the hoops they may have jump through to actually obtain a CD (ordering directly from the label is a two-step process involving email verification and painful shipping charges for non-Europeans). However, Sensitive Files was certainly worth my money, adding a touch of heart to a notoriously soulless branch of the music universe.

Track List:

1. I break your beats
2. Remember that
3. Belladonna d30
4. Free radical
5. Geisteskind
6. Meta dialogue
7. Regime in my head
8. Stand alone unit
9. Wander away
10. School’s out
11. Tokyo 6pm (rush hour mix)

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22
Jun

How About A Trivia Question For Pocahontas (Part 2 of 2)

See Also: Part 1

Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse were Sioux (Lakota) Indians and Geronimo was an Apache Indian. Three is not many, but these individuals are known and the larger tribe or nation they were born into. This is different from Pocahontas, Pilgrims, Puritans, Squanto or the Mohawk where we know the group or the individual, but not both. This is a change.

Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse and Geronimo were 19th century American Indians that attached themselves to a rising power at the time, the United States. The wars with Plains Indians permitted no chance of victory for these Stone Age peoples against an advancing industrial civilization. Fighting however meant glory, a struggle with wins and losses. It gets your name in the media and creates history and stories. Simply fighting, even when you can’t achieve victory, prolongs the inevitable, but gets your voice heard and ringing through the ages. This was bad news, but sometimes that is the only way to get news out of your people. To let them know you are still out there, surviving against long odds against an implacable foe. You’ve got spirit on your side while they have superior arms, technology, and numbers, but still you battle them for decades and instil terror in them because they can never be sure where you will strike next.

We can easily conjure up mental images how Apache and Sioux Indians lived. Writers and Hollywood took this image and ran with it. Some of the portrayals were inaccurate and romantic on the silver screen and in print, but they discuss real real Indians and the world came to know them. They are American Indians that came from the Midwest, not the east coast. From the Midwest are the “real” American Indians. They seem like the first but they are not.

Not only do we know their names and nations of Crazy Horse, Geronimo and Sitting Bull, but also how they lived. Their famous hand signals, headdress of eagle feathers, their very manly and exciting methods of hunting buffalo, their famous tepees-cone shaped animal skin tents where smoke comes out and pipes are smoked for various reasons. These Plains Indians are icons of masculinity. Hunting buffalo on horses and chasing those vast thundering herds under the big sky is far more heroic than fishing or farming. One reason why William Frederick “Buffalo Bill” Cody took his Wild West show, with Sitting Bull, to Europe.

In Canada a non-white, part European person in Louis Riel became famous when he led the Red River Rebellion against Canada in 1869-70. Again, west of the Great Lakes, on the wide open prairie of Manitoba he had room to manoeuvre. Riel is an important figure in Western Canadian history, a Métis, who was of French and aboriginal background. Riel is not well known among the general public, but he has no equivalent east of the Great Lakes in Canada. The Red River Métis were fur traders who worked with the Hudson Bay Company and were buffalo hunters that ranged across the western frontier until it closed late in the 19th century. The Métis hunted buffalo in wagons with their families, which is not as exciting as riding a horse, but their resistance to the government of Canada has put them firmly in the history books.

Another example that when you rebel against the government, they record it, the media reports this as news, and you get a measure of recognition you otherwise probably would not get had you not protested.

George Washington in a HouseThere is a legacy east of the Great Lakes that that remains from the colonial period. When looking at portraits of George Washington, one sees images of a cultivated man who looks like he could have been born in Europe. In fact, growing up in the mid 18th century, until his twenties, he considered himself English. It seems to have taken a successful war to create Washington‘s fame and an assertion he was no longer English. A new man in the New World made a new American country and the world wishes to find out more about him. England and other European powers do not give up their political grip easily, it has to be wrested away.

A portrait shows George Washington as a boy who has just chopped down the mythical cherry tree. The picture is an idealistic portrayal of a plantation in a well maintained landscape of gently rolling hills, green grass, and well built brick houses. This is could easily be an estate in Europe, safe, relaxed and comfortable. It is a far cry from the wilderness of the dusty Wild West with its sod huts, tepees, rain storms, tornadoes, floods, saloons, poker, six shooters, Winchester rifles, cowboys, Indians, buffalo, Rocky Mountains, tumble weeds, cactus, deserts, cowboy hats, cowboy boots, ranches, longhorn cattle, and cattle drives that shout, “not Europe.” A geographic space distinct from Europe, was not colonized by a European power, and thus permits a non-European people to emerge from it.

It was lands from the Great Lakes to the Atlantic that were directly governed by England and France. Through the charter of the Hudson Bay Company, so was most of Canada. Here were the colonies of England and France that had New France, New England, and Nova Scotia. How can you have Indians living in a region called England or France? Even if they are prefaced with the word “new”? The great powers of the day dominate the lands they control, and people who do not appear to be from England, France, Scotland, or Europe are dimly seen, faint in the distance. This cultural legacy lingers on through the centuries even as formal political control has ceased.

What is to be done? History cannot be changed, but interpretations can be, and new knowledge acquired that was not popular before. Trivia perhaps is one answer, it can be so trivial, yet it is fast and easy, built upon what we already know in small increments. Some trivia is unimportant, and should be forgotten, but not all of it is. Pocahontas is already in the media, in our consciousness, so modestly increasing what we already know about her is entirely feasible. One or two small questions that prod our thinking can be a start.

And the answers are Pocahontas spoke an Algonquin language and was in the Powhatan tribe.

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22
Jun

How About A Trivia Question For Pocahontas (Part 1 of 2)

The first successful, ongoing English colony in the New World was established in Jamestown in 1607. There was a popular animated movie that was made in the 1990s where an Englishman, John Smith, married an aboriginal woman. We know where John Smith was from and the language he spoke, England and English. Yet who can state the aboriginal tribe or nation the movie was named after? Or the language Pocahontas spoke? How can the star of a major motion picture be so poorly known? Something seems missing here.

The Pilgrims who sailed on the famous Mayflower in 1620 and settled at Plymouth Rock are also poorly known individually as one cannot name a famous Pilgrim. The internet can quickly give an answer, but not an answer your neighbour will know.

We all know what it means to be called a Puritan nowadays, it refers to someone who sees something wrong with having fun, or, seeing others have fun. From Puritan we get the word puritanical, which means prim, priggish, prissy, straight-laced, prudish or a killjoy. The first famous Puritans in the New World came and successfully settled off the east coast in 1629 at Massachusetts Bay colony. Like Pilgrims, Puritans are individually anonymous despite being successful early pioneers of the United States. In the late 16th and early 17th centuries, several colonies perished on the east coast, their success was not a foregone conclusion.

The Indian who assisted the Pilgrims in their early struggles to survive, Squanto, has a similar problem. What aboriginal tribe or nation was Squanto from?

Pocahontas and John Smith

A few decades into the history of the 17th and 18th centuries, other pre-Columbian residents of the New World make it into the media. There are the Iroquois, known for being part of the Six Nations Confederacy. One of the Six Nations, the Mohawk, have a haircut named after them which is also called a rooster tail. Football players like to wear the Mohawk because they believe it makes them look fiercer. Punk rockers like it because it makes them look more wild. The Mohawk is a strong fashion statement. Yet try to name a Mohawk or Iroquois person.

Canada is a country that has many Indians, but few stand out. Most draw a blank because none has fame in Canadian history, despite supposedly decent and what many think better treatment of them over the centuries than what they received in the United States. Canada did not have Indian wars but this did not enhance their status in the country.

In Canada during the French regime one cannot name a famous habitant, a Canadien settler who lived along the St. Lawrence River from the 17th to 18th centuries. Voyageurs and coureurs de bois, who engaged in the fur trade from the Gulf of Mexico to Hudson Bay to the Atlantic Ocean also have a low profile. Men from France who spoke French loom much larger prior to 1762, such as the intendant Jean Talon and the explorers Jacques Cartier; Rene Robert Cavalier, Sieur de La Salle; and Samuel Champlain. They come to mind fairly quickly when thinking of this geographic area and period in history.

Canada, which became a British possession in 1762, and whose head of state still resides in Buckingham Palace in London, as the Queen of England, seems to maintain a system of keeping Europeans more popular in the country than people born in it. Which could partly explain the poor knowledge many Canadians have of their history, Canadians seem to play a secondary role in it.

There is more complete information about Indians, people born and raised in North America west of the Great Lakes.

See also: Part 2

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08
Jun

Why Would this Fiscal Conservative Support Obama? Toxicity.

Note: While keeping this blog relatively politics-free over the past few months, I’ve been fervently defending Obama at Jack’s Newswatch against all manner of attacks (some particularly underhanded). One of my favorite counter-posters inquired why if I was an Obama-maniac do I appear to be falling back. Airing direct political views isn’t something I like to do too often but it’s worthy clearing the air in this instance. Below is a slight modification of my response:

Actually, I supported Clinton over Obama, stating that Obama would be a wonderful candidate … for 2012.

When McCain came up I supported McCain over Obama because Obama’s economic policies didn’t (and don’t) appeal to me. I am a fiscal conservative in the truest sense – money coming in should surpass money going out, no matter how “righteous” the spending. This applies to both government housing and Middle-Eastern war-mongering. Both Obama and Reagan were/are failures in this respect (a tax cut is simply another form of redistribution and is just as toxic when combined with skyrocketing spending).

However, when McCain introduced Sarah Palin and she brought along her gaggle of toxic rednecks, I turned the corner. So did many people to the right of me. We held our nose and hoped for the best for Obama.

So far it doesn’t look like he’s done anything that Bush hadn’t done or wasn’t en route to doing. No one’s mortgage has been paid off, Acorn has not been given any special mandate to help the poor, etc. That doesn’t bother me, but it should bother his heartfelt believers. I’ll continue to defend Obama against anything that looks like a Blog-lynching, just as blacks who did not believe in MLK’s conciliatory approach to civil rights nonetheless defended him against the KKK and similar groups. But that’s where my support ends. I’d honestly rather have a beer with Bush – he seems less pretentious and more likely to embrace Cynapse’s oddball humor. I didn’t care for “shrub” as a leader, mind you.

Still, to say Obama should fail is equivalent to saying America should fail. That’s pretty toxic talk, and people who campaign for Obama’s downfall even though record deficits hang in the balance are basically saying they’d rather have their nation fail financially than not have their pet projects funded (or worse yet, withhold funding from their neighbors just to “stay ahead”). That’s exceptionally selfish.

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01
Jun

Mail Order Brides

During the first large wave of Asian immigration in the twentieth century, many Japanese and Korean women came to the United States as picture brides. The picture bride system, according to author Yen Le Espiritu, was a form of “arranged marriage facilitated by the exchange of photographs.” A Japanese or Korean immigrant man would look at a photograph of a potential wife back home and, if he “liked what he saw,” send for her to join him in the United States. Some Japanese and Korean women volunteered to become picture brides, seeing migration to the States as an adventure as well as a chance to escape the restricted life women frequently led in their homelands. As one Korean woman put it, “then I could get to America… that land of freedom with streets paved with gold!”

Nearly a century later, picture brides have been replaced by mail order brides. But the two practices diverge in a substantial way. Whereas Korean and Japanese picture brides generally married men of the same national background, the mail order bride system involves men seeking wives, and women seeking husbands, from ethnic groups other than their own. The homelands of modern mail order brides also differ from those of yesterday’s picture brides. The majority of the former come from the Philippines, Thailand, Latin America and the former Soviet Union, with a smattering of women from North and sub-Saharan Africa. Most of the men who “order” these women live in developed regions, such as Australia, North America, Western Europe, and Japan.

Feminists and minority activists have attacked the mail order bride system as racist and sexist. That it is sexist seems beyond question; after all, the only “mail order groom” site on the Internet turned out to be a joke, featuring one man who wanted a wife between the ages of seven and fifteen and another who couldn’t use the family car without his mother’s permission. Some women’s rights advocates point out that mail order brides are vulnerable to domestic violence. The case of Susana Remerata, a Filipina in Seattle who was murdered by her American husband, is cited as an example.

The charge of racism is not far behind, especially as most of these women come from the Third World. White men who seek mail order brides are often accused of subscribing to stereotypes about the supposed “submissiveness” of non-Western (particularly Asian) women. In her essay “Recipe,” Chinese-Canadian writer C. Allyson Lee gives a humorous description of a fictional client’s search for a submissive Asian woman. She writes: “Attractive Straight White Male, middle-aged business executive looking for that special little China Doll, preferably short, petite and obedient. Object: to fulfill typical fantasies of the stereotype of Oriental ladies anxious to marry a Canadian in order to get out of Hong Kong or the Philippines and willing to do anything to pamper and please her man.”

Mail order bride agencies on the Internet frequently do have something to say about the ethnic traits of the women they feature. For instance, one venue declares that unlike modern-day American women, Filipinas are completely devoted to their husbands and families. The same characteristics are attributed to Latinas on another website. An agency based in Italy states that Filipinas are still “good Catholic girls” — which Italian women apparently no longer are. Some organizations play minority women against each other, touting the superiority of one group. According to an American outfit, women from the Philippines are more beautiful than their counterparts from China and Japan, so much so, the site adds, that Filipinas are often hired to play Chinese and Japanese roles in the movies.

While it’s easy to condemn such pronouncements as sexist, many mail order bride agencies don’t shy away from commenting on the men from these women’s homelands.

But they don’t paint a very flattering picture of them. One site featuring Filipinas purports that Asian men, in contrast to their Western peers, don’t hold doors for women (this certainly wasn’t true of the Asian students at my old university). Another claims that Latin American husbands typically come home drunk and beat their wives. The purpose of such bad-mouthing, of course, is to convince potential clients that by choosing an American (or Australian or Western European) husband, these women are getting a far better deal than what they’d find in their country of birth and will be grateful as a result.

In the end, however, the mail order bride racket can’t be boiled down entirely to race. A good portion of the women signed on with these agencies are white, generally from the former Soviet Union, and some of the men who “order” brides via such venues are not. Among the frequent destinations of Filipinas, for example, is Japan. As well, some American clients who seek wives from the Third World and Eastern Europe are black or Hispanic. The movement of mail order brides is less a flow of women from non-white to white countries than from poor to rich ones. There probably aren’t too many mail order brides going from Japan to Romania, for instance.

Though Romanian men may very well hold the same stereotypes of the “passive Oriental lady” that other white men do, the fact that at the moment Romania is a poor country and Japan a rich one effectively stops the flow of brides between the two nations in its tracks. The predominance of economics over race can also be seen by looking at individual countries. When the mail order bride phenomenon first caught the public’s attention in the 1980’s, most of the women in question were Asian. Yet a glance at any mail order bride website’s headings for industrialized Asian nations such as Singapore and Japan will show that the women featured are primarily Filipinas working there as domestic servants. Japanese and Singaporean women don’t need to go abroad as mail order brides.

In addition, the fact that a mail order bride transaction is intraracial rather than interracial doesn’t mean that ethnic stereotyping isn’t involved. Some agencies supplying Filipina women to Japanese men, for example, contrast the former’s traditional devotion to home and hearth to the modern Japanese woman’s supposed rejection of marriage and motherhood. Others depict Russian mail order brides as uncontaminated by the militant feminism that has allegedly infected America’s female population (why Russian women would be considered June Cleavers is somewhat curious, as at least during the Soviet regime most of them worked outside the home). And just as mail order bride venues often portray Latino and Asian men as boorish compared to their white American counterparts, Eastern European men are described as slobbering drunks who don’t know the meaning of the word “provider.”

In the same way I’m hesitant to reduce the mail order bride business solely to the issue of race, I’m also sceptical of labeling potential or actual brides themselves as deluded victims of racism and/or patriarchy. That’s the viewpoint of many feminists and minority activists. But Carlos Butalid, a Filipino community leader living in the Netherlands, points out the dangers of treating such women as victims. He cites an incident in which Philippine feminist associations berated Filipinas for corresponding as pen pals with European men and asked them how much they were being paid to marry Europeans. The women in question took offense, feeling that “after struggling so hard to earn the respect of their colleagues and their community, all of a sudden they [were] portrayed by Philippine progressives as cheap playthings.”

The feminist groups’ behavior reflects in some sense the general attitude of some progressive Asians toward Asian women becoming involved with white men, mail order brides or not. As I’ve mentioned in previous essays, well-known Filipina-American activist Karin Aguilar-San Juan speaks of Asian female partners of white men as “splaying themselves” at the latter’s feet. She essentially portrays them as C. Allyson Lee’s fictional white male in “Recipe” does. Undoubtedly some Asian women might find Aguilar-San Juan’s description of them insulting, even if it’s meant in their best interests, in the same way I would take offense at Spanish so-called feminist Ana Perez del Campo’s statement that by trying to keep their children, divorced women are driving them into a life of poverty. With friends like that, who needs enemies?

Some Asian women feel compelled to explain their choice to go the mail order bride route, and their reasons for doing so aren’t necessarily that they want to act as geishas for white men. In some cases, they actually perceive Western men to be more egalitarian than their own male compatriots (whether this perception is correct or not is another story, of course). One Filipina who runs her own marriage agency explains that “in the Philippines, a man can beat his wife.” In a similar vein, a report on Brazilian women allegedly exploited by European sexual tourism claimed that these women’s European husbands treated them better than their “macho” boyfriends at home.

I nonetheless don’t take an entirely benign view of the mail order bride business. For one, many women get involved in it because of unfavorable economic and/or social conditions in their homelands. Feminists and minority activists are also right to say that women who go abroad as wives of men whom they may hardly know and who wield such enormous economic and often psychological power over them are easy targets for abuse. Finally, I do believe race, and racial stereotyping, play a role in the mail order bride system. Yet the reduction of the system to racism is not necessarily the whole story either.

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