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Ep.11: Trump's 100, LA Riots, 9,125 days later; Chinese Takeouts Discriminated in Philly; In Ho Oh, Stephen Guillermo, forgiveness

Emil Amok's Takeout from Emil Guillermo Media

Release Date: 04/28/2017

Ep. 105: Little Manila Rising For All; Exec. Dir.Dillon Delvo with Emil Guillermo show art Ep. 105: Little Manila Rising For All; Exec. Dir.Dillon Delvo with Emil Guillermo

Emil Amok's Takeout from Emil Guillermo Media

Dillon Delvo, executive director of Little Manila Rising, talks to Emil Guillermo about how the Stockton non-profit has expanded its mission to do more and to help more people in South Stockton. From preserving Filipino American history and historic buildings, the LMR's mission now includes public health initiatives and environmental efforts in community air monitoring. Beyond that, the non-profit has its eyes on owning and developing land and projects to benefit the broader South Stockton community. Delvo said Little Manila Rising just wants to do what other groups are doing around the state,...

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Ep. 104:  Asian American Filipinos' Continuing Trauma Over the U.S. Colonization of the Philippines show art Ep. 104: Asian American Filipinos' Continuing Trauma Over the U.S. Colonization of the Philippines

Emil Amok's Takeout from Emil Guillermo Media

Emil Guillermo talks with Eleanor Wikstrom, an editor/writer with the Harvard Crimson, about her article on the open secret of the U.S. colonization of the Philippines and the role Harvard and higher ed elites played in educating the people on their own history from a white perspective. Wikstrom describes the impact of learning that history has had on her as a young American Filipina. Guillermo shares his story of Harvard (1970s) to show the generational impact of colonial history. More at www.amok.com

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Ep. 103: Environmental Justice Warriors: Little Manila Rising's Matt Holmes show art Ep. 103: Environmental Justice Warriors: Little Manila Rising's Matt Holmes

Emil Amok's Takeout from Emil Guillermo Media

Little Manila Rising is a non-profit based in Stockton, Calif. focused on environmental justice. LMR fights for the people of their community to abate the pollution from the area's freeways and ports. It has begun to work with UC Merced on air monitoring. Matt Holmes, along with Dillon Delvo heads up the environmental effort. He talks to Emil Guillermo.

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Ep. 102: Ep. 102: "Try Harder" Director Debbie Lum

Emil Amok's Takeout from Emil Guillermo Media

"Try Harder" director Debbie Lum talks to Emil Guillermo about Lowell High School and the college admissions process captured in the film's profile of five students. What are AAPI going through to get to the elite colleges of their choice? Emil, a Lowell alum, compares his experiences with those of the students in the film.

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Ep.101: Little Manila Rising Goes Door-to-Door to Get Out the Vaccine; Protects the Community by Fighting Misinformation. show art Ep.101: Little Manila Rising Goes Door-to-Door to Get Out the Vaccine; Protects the Community by Fighting Misinformation.

Emil Amok's Takeout from Emil Guillermo Media

Amy Portello Nelson talks with Emil Guillermo about Little Manila Risings' "Get Out the Vaccine" drive. Modeled after the "Get Out the Vote" idea, the program goes door to door to give people good information about the virus and vaccines. And it's working, vaccine rates went from the low 30 percent range to more than 50 percent in the zipcodes canvassed. Now the plan is to keep going through the end of November. But it's not easy. Some are hesitant, and one resident even pulled a gun.

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Ep. 91: Little Manila Rising's Youth: From Stockton to Stanford And Back On a Mission show art Ep. 91: Little Manila Rising's Youth: From Stockton to Stanford And Back On a Mission

Emil Amok's Takeout from Emil Guillermo Media

Little Manila Rising is an non-profit organization in Stockton, Calif. servicing primarily the South Stockton community. After a recent youth conference, Emil Guillermo talked with Celine Lopez, a recent Stanford graduate, who hopes to use her senior thesis in Urban Studies as a foundation for policy-making in her hometown. Celine talks about how she rediscovered her pride and self-worth as a Stocktonian at Stanford and why she wants to return to the Central Valley.

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Ep.81: How Little Manila Rising, An Environmental Justice Advocate in Stockton, CA, Makes A Difference show art Ep.81: How Little Manila Rising, An Environmental Justice Advocate in Stockton, CA, Makes A Difference

Emil Amok's Takeout from Emil Guillermo Media

A Filipino American group called Little Manila Rising is part of a "people-powered" Green Revolution that's changing how the community gets involved in environmental justice. Recently, community members, empowered by state money through AB617, rejected a $5 million proposal from the Port of Stockton. The community stood up to the polluters. LMR's Dillon Delvo tells how and why it happened, and about how LMR transformed its mission to fight for environmental justice.

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Ep. 71: Do You Know Angelo Quinto? He's the Asian American/Filipino American George Floyd show art Ep. 71: Do You Know Angelo Quinto? He's the Asian American/Filipino American George Floyd

Emil Amok's Takeout from Emil Guillermo Media

Angelo Quinto died after a policeman had a knee to the back of his neck for 5 minutes. Emil Amok is Emil Guillermo, journalist, commentary, performing artist reads from the column he wrote on www.aaldef.org/blog about Quinto, the need for re-thinking policing, and what this means for Asian Americans. Prof. Dan Gonzales of SF State Univ joins in to comment on this, the recent rash of anti-Asian hate incidents in the U.S., and other news. For more go to www.amok.com #angeloquinto

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Ep.70: Phil Tajitsu Nash on E.O. 9066 and the Incarceration of Japanese Americans show art Ep.70: Phil Tajitsu Nash on E.O. 9066 and the Incarceration of Japanese Americans

Emil Amok's Takeout from Emil Guillermo Media

Japanese Latin Americans were left out of the redress settlement, but now they have standing to go forward to seek justice. Emil Amok Guillermo talks to Phil Tajitsu Nash, professor, lawyer, and activist about why FDR signed E.O. 9066 that incarcerated Japanese Americans in the first place. And about the case of the Japanese Latin Americans (JLAcampaignforjustice.org). Also discussed: how society allowed internment, and the solidarity movement for justice. Go to amok.com

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Ep.67: Farewell to Corky Lee-- My goodbye and my 2017 interview with Corky show art Ep.67: Farewell to Corky Lee-- My goodbye and my 2017 interview with Corky

Emil Amok's Takeout from Emil Guillermo Media

Corky Lee died on Jan.27 of Covid. He was 73. Journalist and commentator Emil Amok Guillermo gives his farewell to Corky, a photojournalist who documented the Asian American experience and dedicated his life to what he called "photographic justice."

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Show notes (index at bottom)

Korean American community leader John Lim from the KCCD/MyKoreanStory.org series on "Sa-I-Gu." Go to www.saigue429.org. Also, how Chinese Takeouts in Philadelphia are being discriminated against in another story that involves Asians and African Americans pitted against one another. Councilman David Oh details how what started with home invasions has progressed into harassment by police. Oh, a Korean American, says he gets guidance from the brutal death of his cousin in Philadelphia in 1958. Beaten by black youths, In Ho Oh died, but his family rejected revenge in favor of forgiveness. And it's the third year after the murder of my cousin, Stephen Guillermo.

http://aaldef.org/blog/emil-guillermo-trumps-100-days-la-riots-cousins-death-asian-pacific-american-heritage-month-david-da.html

 

Emil Guillermo: Trump's 100 vs. real anniversaries: the LA riots, a cousin's death, and Asian Pacific American Heritage Month; PODCAST: Will Dao get a tax cut? And more...

April 27, 2017 4:44 PM

 

I guess Dr. David Dao didn't want to drag it out.
 
He didn't need 100 days. Neither did United. CEO Oscar Munoz continues his apology tour in the media with a new report that heralds changes in service, including an increase in fees from $1,350 to $10,000 for bumped passengers. Dao's settlement amount hasn't been disclosed. Frankly, I would have dragged it out in the media, what with court delays and every story accompanied by the shrieking doctor being treated like a sack of rice. So, good for United. But not necessarily good for the consumer, because now the pressure is off of United to live up to its word.
For now, we're left to wonder if Dow will benefit from that Trump Tax plan.
 
TRUMP'S 100
The obsession over Trump's 100 days is natural. It's a round number check-up, the first benchmark we have to contemplate the big question: Did America make a mistake electing Donald Trump?
 
But most of us knew the answer on Nov. 9. And there is no political "morning-after-pill."
 
So more than an arbitrary thing, the 100-day window lets everyone give the victor the benefit of the doubt and show us he's legit. 
100 days.jpg

With 100 days, it's even rigged in favor of the president. Mind you, the "honeymoon" phase is when the president's capital is said to be at its highest (largely because he hasn't screwed up yet). Rightfully then, we can expect the "100 days" to give us a good sense of the absolute best an incoming president can do.
 
In other words, it's never going to be any better. This is it. 
 
Which makes it troublesome that as we approach the 100th day, the best we can say is, "Can we get an annulment?"
 
No, here's what can be said. Trump knows how to be a boss. He just doesn't know how to be president.
 
He knows closely-held family businesses and is all too willing to appoint inexperienced family members to influential positions. Democracy? It's an alien notion to Trump. LIke his towers, he likes to be the big bully, above it all. With three immigration executive orders held up in federal court (two on travel bans, one on sanctuary cities), it's clear he doesn't know the limit of his reach.
 
His tax cuts are like his public payout for your silence. Raising the standard deduction for individuals may put a few hundred bucks in your pocket. But it's nothing compared to the corporate tax cut. And according to Trump, it's all made up by growing the economy at 3 percent.
 
It's a variation of "trickle down" economics. Over the last 30 years, we've already learned that "trickle down" theories don't work well in practice. Cutting taxes on the rich so they reinvest in jobs and it all magically trickles down throughout the economy is a nice fantasy. But it doesn't work (not if companies merely use cash to buy back shares and pay the top execs). The plan enriches the 1 percent and practically guarantees the growth of budget deficits, putting the country in the red--if the fantasy doesn't come true.
 
Couple all that with Trump's huge military budget, and his 100 day penchant for using missiles in Syria and Afghanistan like he's trying to outdo Kim Jong Un, and you see where this could all be heading. 
 
It's not the middle class, let alone America first.
 
The tax cut is bad policy. Don't let Trump buy your silence. It's not like a money back guarantee. Besides, your vote in our democracy is worth way more than that.
 
Resist. Insist on tax fairness. Trump said in his campaign he'd raise taxes on the rich. Make him live up to that. Either that, or it's just another Trump lie. A typical flip-flop like we've seen in the first 100 days.
 
From China, to trade, to NATO, to his bad appointments, to his aggressive military stands without Congressional approval, the president has done more in 100 days to discredit himself than to reassure us in his presidency.
 
Hence, my grade for Trump:  F. And that doesn't stand for Filipino.
 
And if you still believe, like Trump, that the 100 day marker really doesn't matter, well, it does mean this. 
 
America still has a healthy sentence remaining for which there is no parole. 
 
You can mark it on the wall with chalk, but it's better simply to act up and resist. 
 
After April 29th, we've got 1,360 days left.
 
That includes the lost days if Trump's politicking results in a government shutdown.

What can you expect from Trump but the best kind of gridlock we've ever seen?
 
IN LOS ANGELES, ANOTHER ANNIVERSARY: 25 years, or 9,125 days later
In Korean, the phrase being used is "sa-i-gu," or 4-2-9, the date most Korean Americans will never forget. If you were in Los Angeles, you were at ground zero. They call it a riot. They call it an uprising. There was plenty to be upset about. The Rodney King verdict--which acquitted four police officers caught on videotape beating King--was the flashpoint. But it also allowed a community to vent about everything else, including the case of Latasha Harlins, a 15-year-old girl who was shot and killed by a South Korean store owner. Soon Ja Du, the liquor store owner, was convicted of manslaughter, fined, given five years 'probation, but no prison time-- even though the jury suggested Du get 16 years.
That, combined with the King verdict, is said to have triggered six days of unrest. It left 55 dead, 2,000 injured, 11,000 arrested.
 
And it was the Korean American community that bore the brunt of the outrage.
 
On the AALDEF podcast, I play a clip from the Korean Churches for Community Development's (KCCD) partnership with KoreanAmericanStory.org. 
 
The first story is from John Lim, who was the president of the Korean American Bar Association in 1992. He says Korean Americans, by virtue of their businesses, were misperceived by the media and the public as reaping economic benefit from the African American community and "not giving back." 

JohnKim.jpg

Because of that, Lim says Korean Americans were unfairly victimized during the riots. They were harshly treated in the aftermath when liquor licenses were taken away, and families not compensated. Lim doesn't see why a struggling Korean American community, most of them newly arrived post-1965, should have been blamed for the hundreds of years of social injustice endured by African Americans in society.
 
The KCCD Commemorative service is one of many to be held this weekend in Los Angeles at the Oriental Mission Church, at USC, and UCLA. 
 
Listen to Lim on our podcast: coming soon!
 
IN DEFENSE OF TAKEOUTS, and In Ho Oh
I've named our podcast "Emil Amok's Takeout," and that means we have a soft spot in our heart for Chinese takeouts. 
 
In Philadelphia, takeouts are under siege by overzealous cops who often ticket them unfairly for being open after 11 p.m.
 
GoodLuckRestaurant.jpg

I talk with Philadelphia councilman David Oh about the situation. Are Chinese takeouts no different than the Korean liquor store owners of Los Angeles? Oh talks about that. And he tells his own personal story of his cousin beaten to death in 1958 in Philadelphia. It was a Korean/African American story that was felt from Philadelphia to Seoul. The story of In Ho Oh has become a motivating factor for David Oh in the modern racial disputes he sees. It teaches him to seek the high road--by rejecting revenge and offering forgiveness.
 
As you'll hear in the interview, it didn't take the family 100 days in 1958 to show its compassion
 
MY COUSIN STEPHEN--1,095 DAYS LATER 
Finally, on the podcast, Oh speaking about forgiveness makes he consider my own cousin's murder. Stephen Guillermo was gunned down May 3, 2014 when he entered the wrong apartment by mistake. The resident, an African immigrant, was armed and shot him with a single bullet. I've written about it here.
StephenG.JPG

The murderer was known, was arrested, and then released. The DA wouldn't touch the case. My cousin remains a victim, with no real resolution or sense of justice.
 
But a story like In Ho Oh's offers some comfort and guidance as we approach May 3rd, 1,095 days after Stephen's murder.
 
In these key anniversaries, we remember as we approach Asian Pacific American Heritage Month how easy it is to slip into an unwitting divide-and-conquer mindset. No one wins, if we take the bait and fight each other. 
 
After hundreds of days, in these painful instances where the poor are pitted against the poor, maybe our best options always come down to this: forgiveness, understanding, and empathy.
 
*     *     *
Emil Guillermo is an independent journalist/commentator.
Updates at www.amok.com. Follow Emil on Twitter, and like his Facebook page.
The views expressed in his blog do not necessarily represent AALDEF's views or policies.

SHOW LOG

:30 Hello

1:45 Prevue on LA Riots

2:30 Prevue of Takeout Discrimination

4:00 Dr. Dao Settles with United

6:30 More on Trump's 100 days and the tax plan

11:56 25 years after the LA Riots, on 4-29 Sa-I-Gu

14:40 John Lim from KoreanAmericanStory.org, and their Sa-I-Gu project

28:46 Chinese Takeouts discriminated in Philly

Philadelphia David Oh intro

30:06 David Oh talks about how the situation began.

1:01:00 Oh's cousin, In Ho Oh

1:04:00 Act of Forgiveness

1:06:00 Stephen Guillermo

1:12:30 Wrap up on Stephen

 Contact:

http://www.aaldef.org/blog

http://www.twitter.com/emilamok

http://www.amok.com

Thanks for listening to Emil Amok's Takeout