Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Your internship in New York doesn't make you a New Yorker

                I love how some people believe they are so open minded that they can become legitimate members of every city, culture, and place they visit. It reeks of arrogance. In their mind, going to a few tourist attractions, living in a posh refurbished house they were given for an internship and eating NYC cart food makes them undergo a magical transformation that allows them to be a "New Yorker". Well I'm here to remind you that you are not a New Yorker, Bostonian, DCer or what ever city you happened to intern at. And it's not because you weren't born there. It's because I believe, and at least I know this is true for New York City, that the drudgery of the city, the unspectacular moments of being on the train, taking the bus, having your train canceled, missing your favorite halal cart guy before he goes to lunch and other sort of mundane things are what makes up the bulk of NYC. You can't properly appreciate the oddities that can only exist within the city until you've lived through the monotonous hum of what the city is made of.
             Also, when you live in a place temporarily, you only make short term investments in that place. Perhaps you decided to give a few dollars to a homeless man when walking down the street. Or you decided to buy a starburst from the teen selling it on the train to keep himself "out of trouble". These gestures, while kindhearted in nature, aren't long term investments. Compare this to those who have spent hours helping rebuild NYC for free after Sandy. How about the mentors who day in and day out mentor troubled kids in the city, accepting no compensation but smiles and brightened futures. These people are making long term investments because they realize that when they put more into the community they live in, their lives become richer. When you have felt that NYC has given you so much that you want to give it all back, then call yourself a New Yorker.
          New York is a safe haven for so many that it would be irresponsible of me to not mention those who have fled to the city for its open minded culture. Many irresponsible teenagers and college dropouts come to a city where they know judgement won't be passed, and even if it were, then you're fully within your right to tell that person to fuck off. Those people are New Yorkers by default. They have no where else to go and so they call New York City their home because that's all they have.
        And right along with them are all the workers and everyday people who aren't fortunate enough to go to an elite University. These are the people who serve hot dogs. Fix your roads. Unclog your pipes. Clean your hotel rooms. Basically anything you think seamlessly goes on in the city is in some part facilitated by them. For them New York City is just a place. They don't mindlessly take part in the revery we can clearly see in your poor photography of skylines and waterfronts. They don't have time for such merrymaking. Instead they have to make a living. But once in awhile they'll go over to Coney Island on a friday night. Exhausted and feasting on sandwiches they had prepared beforehand, you see them sit down with their family on the sand, while fireworks illuminate the sky above them. This is their vacation. This is their New York City.
        New York and any city is an actual place. Not some fanciful wonderland, where with business savvy and a blind eye, you can live the "good life". There are plenty of people who have lived in the city all their lives and will never be New Yorkers. That's because the final step to being New Yorker isn't the flat out rejection of all of the wonderful things you are currently experiencing, but instead the acceptance of everything else the city has to the offer, good and bad.
    

Saturday, July 13, 2013

Where do we go from here?

                   We are upset. We are outraged. We want blood and some of you might have been thinking that this time it isn't enough to just put up a facebook status. Some of you might have thought that perhaps now is the time for some retribution. This retribution comes in various forms. Many want to protest and are protesting. Many want to riot and destroy things (typically their own neighborhoods, which is a shame). And some just want to live out the Hammurabi code to its fullest extent. A life for a life, specifically a white life for a black life. And all of this want is justified. Those of you who look down on this, need to be quiet. You don't know. You don't know the disappointment a minority feels as they think about this "colorblind" justice system. You don't fully comprehend the fear blacks and other minorities now feel as they see yet another young man die because he "looked suspicious". You don't know the anger minorities have, since their country and justice system has failed them. Yet you expect us to adhere to a sense of honor, stewardship, and overall justice. Where were those virtues for Trayvon?
                But this post isn't about you. We've been far too focused on you and it's time for us to take back what is ours. But we need to do it on our own terms. That's why I plea for those of you who choose to react emotionally, do so with words. For those of you who wish to cry, sing out to the community. For those of you who wish to shoot and kill, fashion bullets out of ballots and euthanize this unjust system. If you want to start a war, then let us charge with a well coordinated brigade, not a haphazard militia. I am not promoting inaction. I am not asking us to put our pitchforks away. I merely want us to succeed in the most effective way possible, if not for our community, then for Trayvon.
            Does this mean no violence? Well, some of you might find a well coordinated way to perpetrate violence in response to all of this. And that would be terrorism. I am not at full liberty to pass judgement on you for doing so. While I am outraged about this situation, my pale skin makes it so that the brunt of this tragedy doesn't sting quite as much as it does for those of you who are people of color (this doesn't mean that I am not stereotyped based on other physical attributes). I don't know if you feel these acts of violence are necessary just to regain your sanity and security. But before you do, I want you to think about our morals. I want you to think about your children and your loved ones. I want you think about us in a  colorblind sense for a second, so that you might be able to empathize for a second for all those who you are intending to harm. Then if you really feel it is necessary, I will ask you to shoot me first, not because I love the people I'm protecting, but because I love our dignity as a community. And for those of you who feel dignity has gone to the wayside, I urge you to think of the innocent lives that might be caught in the crossfire. Such lives cannot be weighed less than Trayvon's. For when we begin picking and choosing the value of human life based on color, we are no better than those who oppress us. Also let's not forget our white brothers and sisters, who stand with us in unity, not only when it is convenient, but also when it is necessary. Will you risk harming them for a misguided sense of justice?
            This post is for minorities and our allies. If you do not fall within that group and feel threatened by this post, then good. We are threatened all the time and the fact that we have finally decided to take action should be unsettling for you. I am not going to say I don't condone violence. Such a message would distort the complicated feelings I have towards violence. I personally would never engage in it and I believe the previous paragraph outlined my plea for those who intend to do so. But when it comes to talk of violence and it's possible ramifications, immediately ostracizing people isn't the answer. We need the thought of this violence out in the open that way we are all honest with how much this has hurt us.
          Some of you might think that none of us actually consider violence a viable option, and I hope that is true. But unfortunately something this triggering and this horrible is bound to have negative ramifications. To assume violence will not happen would be careless. That is why I wrote this post. To not only stop any small conflagration of violence, but also to re-purpose it into a meaningful cry for social change.
        

Friday, July 5, 2013

The African Double Standard

            The international community and American political sphere has went crazy over the recent coup/revolution that occurred in Egypt. Everyone with a little political savvy or people who don't know when to keep their mouths shut (I consider myself in the latter group) have either picked sides or felt a need to keep close watch on the political future of Egypt. And I'd be a complete hypocrite if I didn't admit I was doing the same. I immediately sided with the democratic process (i.e. sure Morsi may have sucked, but you voted him in), while saving my own ass by claiming ignorance to how bad things are, therefore withholding judgement on the actions of the Egyptian people. Honestly as I said before, people like me and many others seriously needed to say absolutely nothing. Specifically http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/05/opinion/brooks-defending-the-coup.html?hp this nytimes article by David Brooks is a perfect example of the exact opposite opinion to mine, but just as presumptuous and patronizing. I won't get into the specific details on why David Brooks is completely out of line, but I can acknowledge that we're both making asses of ourselves with each comment. So instead of discussing the merits of the situation, I want to bring up the fact that this very occurrence has been happening in Africa for the past 3 decades and yet most African countries only get a small fraction of international attention in comparison to Egypt. Sorry western countries of the world, your bias is showing a little.
       One might argue, " Raymond, African governments are getting toppled over all the time, if Egypt makes this a habit, we'll stop caring about it as well." Such an argument is of course incredibly ignorant, seeing that there have been many successful African governments with steady turnover and healthy political elections, but a good recent counter example to this would be that of Mali. Remember when Mali suffered a coup? No? Really because it was a pretty big deal, seeing that at the time Mali was considered the golden standard for African democracies (some people still think it is, but the coup definitely hurt its perception). And while the Mali coup certainly made it to the front page once, it immediately faded in the background of typical American hooplah (some of that hooplah was important mind you, but there's important hooplah happening now, yet Egypt still  remains the talk of the town).
     I don't know what I'm asking for by writing this. The point is I feel like a hypocritical asshole and misery enjoys company. And I'm kind of tired of people who parade as politics lovers, when in fact they just like being able to talk about the latest political events and don't really care about politics equally. Own up to your bias and realize that most of us don't honestly care about what happens in Egypt. The majority of us are just using it as a spectacle.