The First 48 and our Criminal Justice System
Posted: November 3, 2011 Filed under: Racism, Uncategorized Leave a comment »Being out of school has been a weird time for me. Before I could let out my frustrations with our world and this society through student activism–but now all I can do is tweet about it. Sometimes, as I sit in my warm cocoon of Northern Virginia suburbia, I feel so distanced from it all that i almost forget. Can you imagine? All those ECAASU workshops I organized, all those books on institutionalized racism I read, all of those lectures and panels on the prison industrial complex i’ve attended…how could I block it all out like this?
Today in an uncharacteristic move, I switched on the TV while eating lunch. I flipped through the channels and finally settled on Criminal Minds (I’m a sucker for psychological crime shows). Half an hour later, Criminal Minds was over and “The First 48″ came on. Apparently, it was a “real life” account of the first 48 hours following a homicide (the most crucial window to catch a murderer) as conducted by the police. The episode that followed was called “Shell Shocked/Cradle To The Grave.”
I had never seen the show before, so left the TV on. Unsurprisingly, the two cases featured were from urban areas around the United States (Memphis and Miami). Both centered around homicides involving impoverished black youth. Both contained references to drugs/narcotic dealings.
One of the cases (“Shell Shocked”) struck me in particular. It involved three young African American males. Robert was involved with an altercation with his childhood friend, Buck. And apparently, Buck’s cousin Raphael shot Robert in the commotion. The altercation had started over an argument over the price of a little bag of marijuana. Robert threatened to kill Buck and Raphael, and Raphael, shell shocked (he had been shot in the leg just a month earlier), panicked and pulled the trigger on Robert, unintentionally killing him.
I watched as the officers questioned a tearful Raphael, who was handsome, clearly regretful, and only nineteen. He admitted his guilt and explained that he was shell shocked from being shot earlier, so he had panicked when Robert angrily threatened to kill him and his cousin. In his ragged T-shirt, Raphael began to softly cry, all the while insisting that he and Robert had been long time friends, and that it had never been his intention to kill him.
My heart cried for him. Raphael was a boy. He was 19. He fought over a three dollar difference for a tiny bag of marijuana because three dollars meant that much. Because selling drugs was the way he lived. Maybe it was all he knew. He was born into a world, a society, a system that set him up for failure. In his hole-punctured t-shirt, he broke down because he was scared–he didn’t want to get shot, he had gotten shot once–so he pulled the trigger out of fright at Robert’s (most likely empty) threat.
But he received 20 years in prison. In twenty years he would be forty. And then what? The kid needed help. He needed psychological, emotional, mental help. Could we take the money in his court fees and prison fees and put it into finding him a therapist or counselor? Put him on a different track of life? Maybe education?
There are too many examples of similar cases, where underprivileged youth who may have so much to give, are trapped in a never-ending cycle of petty criminality and prison. Here in this black hole, their lives become ruined and their futures sucked from them. Then it’s just rinse and repeat.
I turned off the show after the announcer victoriously announced the 20 year prison sentence. So the police caught the “bad guy?”
Well, it wasn’t satisfying at all.
i got my bachelors degree wooo written in…
Posted: June 30, 2011 Filed under: Art, Celebrities, Event, Events, Fashion, Personal, Racism, Travel, Uncategorized 1 Comment »i got my bachelors degree….wooo…
(written in may but i never posted…sorry!)
great, 16 years of nonstop school and here i am. it’s so crazy, but i’m happy. i think i’m ready for this…ready to be on my own and ready to NOT WRITE PAPERS.
no, but seriously, this past month has been crazy. graduation on may 22…and before that there was the laurel parade, our school tradition. i looked everywhere for a really unique white dress (we were all supposed to wear white) because EVERYONE will be wearing one of those knee-length white sleeveless dresses and…i never found one good enough.
then, one day i was walking through union square and on a complete whim found this AMAZING white trina turk jumpsuit. fate! so good to me ;D i was DEFINITELY the ONLY one in a jumpsuit hahaha. everyone went crazy over the outfit, and strangers even came up to me to ask where i had gotten it from!


good buy =D now my parents have left for asia (including bali and hong kong) and my mom stole the jumpsuit T__T (“i want to wear this on the beach in bali!!”) but whatever….im home alone now! (with my brother)
anyway, back to graduation. the actual ceremony was horrendously boring, as graduations usually are. i was 30 minutes late to the ceremony and ran into my spot just as soon as everyone was lining into the amphitheater. oops.
after graduation and goodbyes i went to nyc for a couple days. then home, and then i went back to nyc for my bday weekend! more on that in a few days…i’m such a slacker with updating these days. instead, i leave you with a song and a review!
REVIEW/RECAP:
Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty at The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Okay, so it’s not really a review…more like a recap on my visit. I went first on a Monday or something in the afternoon. The line was over 45 minutes long and wrapped around the entire level of the museum! I didn’t have the patience, so opted instead to visit the musical instrument exhibit and other painting galleries. The next day I arrived a bit earlier, around 2pm, and the line was still long, but definitely not as long as it was the day before when we got there at 3/4pm. We only waited for about 25 minutes, and it was well worth the wait! I spent maybe an hour inside as there was just SO MUCH STUFF! Mcqueen dresses, yes, but also lots of shoes, hats, accessories, and media exhibitions too! I loooved the Kate Moss hologram at the end–i watched it maybe 5 times until Silvena pulled us away! It’s SO worth the visit and wait; I loved the whole thing (except for the weird Africa/Asian exhibitions that were a bit racist/orientalist in their depictions…).
I bought a tiny McQueen armadillo shoe from the gift shop at the end. Overpriced, but so cute. Everyone should go visit, especially since the exhibit is only running until July 31st. No photos, but i sneaked a couple.
http://lockerz.com/s/104729517
go go go!
This is so powerful
Posted: April 10, 2011 Filed under: Personal, Racism, Uncategorized Leave a comment »watch it. remember it. act on it.
—-
my promises:
1. i will try to not buy outsourced goods. this will be difficult, but i will remember to check tags, look for fairtrade logos, and shop at thrift stores.
2. i will not succumb to capitalist selfishness when i enter the workforce. whatever i choose to do, i will remember the importance of social justice.
3. i will continue to fight (whether it be about sex, race, labor, etc), and do what i can to educate others and myself.
4. i will never give up. and i will never forget.
“Justice” System
Posted: August 19, 2010 Filed under: Personal, Racism, Uncategorized 3 Comments »As you all may or may not know, Kunku and I were recently involved in an incident that took our phones (among other things) away. As a result, we have been in constant contact with the police, detectives, social workers, and the hospital as follow-up. Everything has been somewhat surreal, and I feel like this experience really is worth writing about. I’ve been so busy though, and haven’t had the time–especially seeing that this is my last week in New York. Anyway, it all seems a bit like something out of Law and Order—and it definitely gives a bit of insight into our criminal justice system.
For the past week, Kunku and I have been going into the Midtown South Precinct office to meet with the detective who has been assigned to our case. From the names taken down at the scene of the crime, the officers have been able to track down a few possible suspects. Kunku and I picked pictures of people we recognized or thought were involved first, and after the police performed more background checks and investigation, we finally picked out a suspect out of a live lineup yesterday at around 7PM.
It was very much like TV, but also very much unlike it (definitely no glam quotient). Kunku and I went in separately, with her going first. When it was my turn, two policemen led me into a narrow corridor with a strip of glass/window. This was apparently the one-sided mirror, where I could see the lineup but none of the people in the room could see me. There were six men, and each sat on a chair holding a number. I could not positively recognize any of them, but the officers told me I must pick one and only one, despite my not being sure. I picked number four, but only because I thought I remembered him from one of the pictures the officers showed me before. In the end at the debrief, the officer asked for my signature and told me my answer would be discounted because I did not seem very sure (thank goodness—I didn’t want to falsely accuse anyone!). I also asked where they found the extras (5 were innocent civilians and one was the suspect) and the policeman told me they were students at the police academy. I think I felt a bit uneasy during the whole process—with thoughts of racial profiling and stereotyping and prejudice continuously resurfacing in my mind. So police academy students had to be subject to this constantly? Just because they were young black males they were asked to pose as possible criminals—but they weren’t at the police academy for acting…why did they have to do this?
Then again, I cannot offer another solution, nor can I suggest an alternative procedure in dealing with catching criminals. How is it possible not to use race? And then, how is it possible to not make any assumptions or stereotypes at all due to race?
From the moment the police officers drove Kunku and I around in the cop car attempting to identify various groups of young African Americans they had rounded up immediately after the incident, I was uncomfortable. Bruised, bloody, disheveled, and bewildered, Kunku and I shook our heads at each group, terrified of accusing the wrong people, terrified that the suspects were all African American, and terrified of what that would mean for them and all those in the area—racial profiling, bias, discrimination?
However, at the same time, how do I offer an alternative? In a physical description, race is crucial. But why does my mentioning the race of my attackers make me cringe? When I tell the story, most everyone asks if the teens were African American, and after I nod, most everyone sighs, unsurprised as if I had just confirmed something they already knew.
This incident rests heavy on my shoulders for multiple reasons, with race issues and government bureaucracy being in the forefront. Everything is extremely inefficient. And everything seems extremely questionable.
I want to shout, “its not fair!”
But who’s listening?
ps. i’m using my old phone. same number.
pps. i’m fine, thanks everyone for all your concern. i will be going home august 25th and then going from dc back to school on august 29th.
Movies You Should NOT Watch
Posted: July 14, 2010 Filed under: Movies, Racism, Reviews 6 Comments »Hm, is that Jackie Chan in “The Karate Kid?” Oh, haha, alright. So Jackie Chan is the new Mr. Miyagi and he’s teaching Karate. Alright. Okay.

WAIT, WHAT?
Excuse me, but am I the only one missing the connection here?!?!?
JACKIE CHAN = CHINESE
MR. MIYAGI = JAPANESE
KARATE = JAPANESE
KUNG FU = CHINESE
Right, so Asian people are so similar that the movie producers failed to note the difference between CHINA AND JAPAN?! I don’t have a problem with the setting of this movie being in China. I’ll stomach the fact that the “bad guys” in the story are little Chinese boys. I’ll even forgive that “the Karate Kid” can be any ethnicity BUT Asian.
BUT REALLY, WOULD IT BE THAT DIFFICULT TO AMEND THE NAME?
How about “The Karate Kid: IN CHINA” or “The Karate Kid/Against the Great Wall”…or even “The KUNGFU Kid…”
I wish they could make a distinction between China and Japan, Kungfu and Karate. Instead, by slapping “Karate” and all its Japanese connotations over a very much Chinese-infused movie, you’re implying that all Asians are interchangeable and the same. The Caribbean and Africa are not the same. South Asia and the Middle East are not the same. Likewise, Japan and China are NOT the same. They are two COMPLETELY different countries with two COMPLETELY different cultures.
Which brings me to my next MOVIE YOU SHOULD NOT WATCH.
Avatar: The Last Airbender.
Before I begin my rant, let’s look at a list of the characters.
- Aang
- Katara
- Sokka
- Toph
- Zuko
- Iroh
- Azula
Note also that these names are Romancized, meaning they also have Chinese counterparts. Note also this quote from wikipedia:
Avatar is set in an Asian-influenced world[2] of Chinese martial arts and elemental manipulation. The show drew on elements from traditional Asian culture, while blending the styles of anime and US domestic cartoons.[3]
Oh, I see. So all the names are Chinese/Tibetan/Japanese and the setting is Asian culture influenced and all the fighting are martial arts, and oh, even the drawing style is anime…
Then explain this cast:

OH LOVELY. SO THE ANTAGONIST IS THE ONLY PERSON OF COLOR. Just lovely.
And if you take a look at the REST of the cast:
(courtesy of IMDb)
…you’ll see that there is not a single East Asian person in here (aside from the “Old Man in Temple.” Even Princess YUE is a white girl. Uh, last time I checked, THATS A CHINESE WORD. I appreciate the fact that there are so many South Asians, but this is EAST ASIA you’re borrowing from. WHERE IS OUR EXPOSURE? WHERE ARE OUR ACTORS?!?! And there is DEFINITELY no shortage of East Asian actors, so there are no excuses.
I want to see more Asians in the media.
You can’t exploit us, our history, and our culture and exclude us.
That’s stealing. I won’t tolerate that.
And you shouldn’t either.
ps. i love how we have a blog-tagging category for “racism”…haha did you make this sharon? how perfect….and useful. *checks box*
A small talk during a haircut
Posted: June 14, 2010 Filed under: Hair, Personal, Racism 1 Comment »I’ve been meaning to update our blog for a while now, but I just didn’t have the time the last couple weeks. After I got back from Amsterdam, I was in luck for some amazing weather in Brighton all of last week after my first psychology exam, which meant beach all day, everyday. (I’m so dark my mom even called me black when she first saw me). Followed by consecutive end of exam and goodbye parties, my last dubstep/drum and bass gig at concorde 2 with zinc and skream (an amazing night except for the end when the crowd got rowdy, started a mosh pit and pushed me to the side, where a guy picked me up in an attempt to save me from the mob but ended up dropping me and giving me a huge cut on my shin, next to the one I got from drag ball last year), sunrises at the beach, friends who don’t mind dirtying their pants to take tequila shots with me on the beach, more reasons not to leave, nights I don’t remember, my last exam on Saturday (which I took with an empty stomach, worst idea ever because all that I could think of were questions like what I should eat afterward, how I should cook it, and whether I should stop by Falmer bar to get their duck and pork paella, instead of questions such as how do Freud and social cognitive theorists think of unconsciousness differently), and last minute packing, which involved throwing out half my shoes, all of my notes, and drinking all the wine I didn’t want to leave behind.
But there is a story I forgot to tell, and I want to take you back to last Monday to share with you a bit of what I go through because of the way I look. No, because of the way people look at my eyes, the color of my skin, think Asian and nothing more.
After dancing my night away to Zinc and Skream on Saturday, I realized my hair was too long. It came up to my shoulder. I could even tie it in a ponytail. It was too long. So on Monday, I took a day off and went into town to get a haircut at Pee Wee’s hair studio, which was all booked, and I made my way down to Headmaster’s to see if they were looking for hair models because I didn’t want to pay 40 quid for a haircut. They were looking for hair models and had an opening for seven that evening. I was in luck.
I was initially hoping to cut my hair this short.

But after talking to Chelsea over dinner, for some reason, I started picturing a bob in my head. And that’s what I described for my hairdresser when she asked me what I wanted. I decided on an impulse that what I wanted was what she called an asymmetircal A line bob.
Since I was a hair model for a student at the academy, the girl who was to cut my hair was only a student, and there was a professional stylist who gave her advice on where to start, how to cut my hair, and at what angle she should cut it at. She came to check up on us once in a while. As my hair took shape, however, I realized an asymmetrical A line bob wasn’t exactly what I wanted. I didn’t mind it being asymmetrical. I just didn’t want a bob.
“What do you think about making this side shorter?” I asked the professional hair stylist when she came around again to check up on her student. I pointed to the side that was already short, barely half an inch below my ear. “Oh, but it’s going to be shorter when it’s dry,” she said, implying that the length was short enough. That was fine with me as long as it was going to look good. But her next words made me doubt my ears. “And Oriental hair is a pain anyway.”
I stared up at her in surprise. Not even in a malicious way because I was in shock. I didn’t believe that’s what she said. Well, at least I couldn’t believe that’s what she meant. What did that even mean? What was so different about my hair that she differentiated it from everybody else’s, called it Oriental, then proceeded to call it a pain to cut? Was it the black color that made it difficult to cut? And why did she feel the need to point that out? This frustrated questioning only boiled into anger. I sat there in complete silence, not because I didn’t know how to react (I was reacting already), but because even though I was dying to ask her why my hair was a pain to cut, I didn’t want to know. One such comment was enough.
But maybe it was my silence that condoned her words because she didn’t stop there.
“Where are you from?” She asked. “Korea,” I answered.
“Oh I worked with a Korean lady once. Shim. That’s her name.” And she continued on. “You know, Koreans, Japanese, and Chinese people have eyes that are shaped like…” she stopped to squint her eyes and traced the outline with her fingers. “Almond-shaped?” I tried to help her with her word choice. “Yeah, wider!” She was excited I had understood what she meant.
Oh, I understood what she meant. Whether she understood the implications behind her hand gesture is another matter. Again, it was another unnecessary comment that I can’t attribute to anything other than her attempt at trying to be friendly. She was just trying to relate to a person so different from her. But really? The shape of my eyes? That’s all you could think of? A small talk about the weather or about Brighton would have sufficed.
This time, I didn’t know how to respond. She saw my eyes, then she saw my race. She probably thought I must be very different because I looked so different. I wanted to point out how racist she sounded in making those associations, but I didn’t want to irritate someone who had full control over how I was going to look in ten minutes. Plus, she was one hot hairdresser. But just as ignorant as she was attractive. “Yeah, we tend to have smaller eyes,” I said with a smile, which made my eyes even smaller.
Race is a social construct, but I can’t escape it. It’s in my eyes. And apparently it’s in my hair too.
An asymmetrical A line bob. I hate it and love it at the same time. I love it because its a great look but sometimes I hate it because I don’t think it looks good on me. But you know what, I’m going to rock it. And I don’t care if you think my hair is too short, my eyes too small, and my skin too yellow. But I would prefer if you just kept it to yourself.

Put my Republic of Korea passport together with Easyjet and you get a story. A sad story.
Posted: May 31, 2010 Filed under: Personal, Racism, Travel 1 Comment »Oh Amsterdam, with its illegal, but tolerated coffeeshops (where they sell marijuana), the antique buildings and the canals, and its red light district where prostitutes come in all sizes and shapes…and colors…and genders.
It was going to be an unforgettable four-day adventure with Katie, Alissa and Rafael.
But I almost didn’t make it. (Those of you know know me well are probably thinking she overslept and missed the plane. But thanks to my friends, I got to the airport two hours before departure.) So why was it?
Well, this is why.
We were flying out of London Gatwick, and because we were flying on Easyjet, we didn’t need to get our passports checked until we got to the gate. There were two lines forming at the gate, where Rafael and Katie got in one line and Alissa and I stood in the other one. The Easyjet flight attendants were scanning the boarding passes and checking the passports for visas if relevant.
Then came my turn. The blonde Easyjet lady flipped through my passport then asked, “Where is your visa?”
I explained I didn’t need a visa for Netherlands because I could travel within the EU without one.
“No, you need a visa.”
“I’m pretty sure I don’t.”
“Okay. I’ll call the manager.”
After a short phone call, she came back. “Republic of Korea. You need a visa.”
This was ridiculous, I thought. Was Netherlands not part of the EU? No, that couldn’t be the case. They used the euros.
“I traveled to Spain, France, and everywhere else without visas, and it was fine-“
She wasn’t listening. She was too busy writing “VISA REQUIRED” on my boarding pass.
Alissa tried to help by explaining that we were students studying in the UK. Her response? “Oh, you’re US citizen. You’re fine.”
So Alissa, Katie and Rafael went in. I was directed to the side of the desk, where I waited until everyone was let in. I approached the other lady who had handled Rafael’s and Katie’s passports.
“Can you double check for me if I can go to Amsterdam without a visa?”
“Okay,” she replied, and turned to the guy next to her to go tell the pilot that everyone had boarded and that the plane was ready for departure.
Was she kidding me? It was even before she checked if I could get on or not, and she had basically told the plane to leave without me. “Wait, can you call first?”
“Madame, please wait. I will.”
And after the guy left, she did call. ONLY TO FIND OUT THERE WAS NO REASON FOR HER TO DETAIN ME. “Republic of Korea. Is that South Korea?” She asked me to make sure. I gave her the of-course-it-is-you-bitch look with a nod.
“I’m so sorry. I apologize for the confusion. You should go run to catch the flight.” I did eventually make it, but what I felt was nothing close to gratitude or relief. Anger was more like it. It wasn’t just annoyance or irritation at her attitude though. I wasn’t just angry at the lady for being ignorant about whether Republic of Korea meant South or North. But my anger had its roots in deep frustration—what Koreans would call ‘han’ (한 or 恨, a term used to refer to lament and resentment against injustice and oppression). It’s a “feeling of unresolved resentment against injustices suffered, a sense of helplessness because of the overwhelming odds against one, a feeling of acute pain in one’s guts and bowels, making the whole body writhe and squirm, and an obstinate urge to take revenge and to right the wrong—all these combined” according to some Korean expert.
It wasn’t the first time the passport control confused my green “Republic of Korea” passport for a North Korean one. But it was the first time I felt discriminated against because of the color of my passport. The first time I felt ashamed to be different from everyone else, and the first time I hated the flight attendants for making me feel ashamed. The way she assumed I wouldn’t be able to board made me feel helpless. Powerless. A sore thumb sticking out.
What Rafael said after I got on the plane made me even more angry. “Yeah, she was racist, but hey, you just have to expect it.”
I refused to agree with him because I refuse to accept that is how I am supposed to be treated and that is how I will be treated because of my passport, because of the color of my skin. I won’t accept the invitation to expect the worst. That is too pessimistic for me, and I believe the world can be a better place.
But maybe he is right. Isn’t that the reality of the world we live in? Should we just expect the worst? Because racism does exist. Right here. Right now.

