PEACE not prejudice.

author: ctran1023 category: PEACE! tags: date: November 18th, 2008

At Berkeley we are known for the oddball tree-sitters, free thinkers, and weekly protests. After calling Berkeley home for nearly a year and a half, I admit that on several occasions I have thought that it was unnecessary that so much political action takes place on campus. Why was I being bombarded with fliers on racial equality or freedom of speech? Didn’t these people know they were preaching to the choir? Sadly, the violence that ensued last week over a difference in religion, ideology, and even race has shown me that we are far from conquering prejudice. And even in a place that touts intellectual innovation and progress, the rally for “Peace not Prejudice” is more pertinent than ever.

Yesterday evening I attended a community forum that aimed to address the concerns of students who were affected or just generally disturbed by the fight between members of the Zionist and Pro-Palestine groups. I was disappointed that there was very little constructive discussion on the specific incident and that the two hours was dedicated to a lot of finger pointing and heated remarks. The coverage of the violence has been nothing short of vague and the administration has responded much too slowly–an email four days after the incident will not suffice when the magnitude of the situation is so great. The divisions ran deep, although they were often aggravated by folks who clearly were not students, nor directly affiliated with the university. The take home message is that students feel unsafe on campus and that is not acceptable.

Despite all this, what does give me hope is that most of the people who came genuinely wanted to start a dialogue and reach a peaceful solution. I hope that we can see that while this specific situation must be dealt with justly, the student divisions need to end. Respectful discussion is more crucial than ever. As a Berkeley community, I hope we can find it in ourselves to recognize that we ARE bigger than this.

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What a downer…

author: elainechen category: effing racism tags: date: November 11th, 2008

Yesterday during my ASAM 141 class (Law in the Asian American Community) we had an extensive discussion on hate crimes, hate speech, and just good ‘ole racism. It was a timely discussion, for me, after seeing some particularly hateful and racist things on someone’s facebook recently. Essentially, what I had saw, was an Asian American student here on campus putting up photos with hateful racist comments about the black community. I won’t go into details here because it’s a tricky situation, but after seeing that album posted publicly, with comments ranging from “hahahahaha” to “you should post more pictures,” I felt disgusted.

I get the feeling a lot of times that people are certain that racism is erased from our more modern contemporary progressive times, and that any forms of racism that do show up are just the anomaly: a rare incident by people who are not up with the times. But that thought is naive, and just plain ignorant. Here is an article we were discussing in class. Note the date of this article. Is that not ridiculous?

Although I’m a firm believer in the notion that racism nowadays appears in more subtle forms, with these discussions in class and personal incidents of racism manifesting itself into hateful actions, I can’t help but accept the fact that there is still hatred and racism within the minds of many in America.  It’s so messed up, because it’s wrong. In my heart there is a deep aversion to that type of senseless hatred.

So let’s not kid ourselves into thinking that our culture is more colorblind nowadays and that minorities who are complaining about racism are just “being sensitive” or “playing the race card.” Let’s not claim that these thoughts and actions are the outliers. All of us must accept and develop an awareness for these things, or else they’ll just continue to be perpetuated in society.

Jeez, racism friggin’ sucks.

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Cchhheck-it-out

author: aliiiiiiiice category: election 2008 tags: date: November 11th, 2008

The Model Minority Myth

Hell yes to: Talking about race is not indulging in the “Oppression Olympics”

Asian-Americans = homogenous group of individuals

“Respect for Authority” should not be synonymous with “political apathy”

But near the end, Bui writes:

“The road map to economic justice all of a sudden isn’t about forms of political resistance like the iconic Civil Rights Movement. It’s about replying to inequity with passivity-something that’s worked to keep Asian Americans as a minuscule political force.

Don’t believe me? Asian Americans make up roughly 40 percent of the student body on this campus. But the first languages set to be cut next year? The East Asian Languages.”

Personally, I’m offended. Although I realize that Bui acknowledges that we must “reject political passivity” and is, perhaps, striving to mobilize Asian Americans on campus to care, to say that Asian Americans respond to “inequity with passivity” and is a “minuscule political force” is a gross, gross generalization and an unfair analysis of Asian Americans on campus and around the country.

Recent events and current movements show otherwise: Rock the Vote!, Count Me In!, and API Education/Language Now!

(and look at those exclamation points!!!! They’re anything but passive.)

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Berkeley Block Party

author: JulieT category: election 2008 tags: date: November 9th, 2008

On Tuesday night, a little past 8:30pm, one of my roommates yelled, “Party on the street! Party on the street! Julie come!” So we headed out towards Shattuck and to my surprise, there was literally a party on the street. There was music playing from Guerilla cafes, a ghetto-fabulous-Berzerkeley -styled-Scooby Doo-mystery-machine with a couple of kegs and old drunken people dancing the sprinkler

Somewhere in the middle of this, I realized that choosing to come to Berkeley really was one of the best decisions I’ve ever made. Never in my life will I see anything like this and never in my life will I have gotten this opportunity if it weren’t for this town

This thought was strengthened when I went home this weekend. As my friends and I sat around recapping the highlights of our lives from the past month, I found out that this Tuesday night block party wasn’t a nationwide event like I assumed it was

Me: So did Stockton go crazy Tuesday night at around 8:35?

Friend: huh? What?

Me: Tuesday night, elections…

Friend: Well, we were in the library and when we knew Obama basically had it, we did a little ‘woot.’

Me: Oh, so no crazy rampage of students? No broken library windows? Nobody climbing light posts? Nobody climbing on buses?

With a shocked/WTF/damn-Berkeley-people-are-crazy expression, she simply replied, “No.”

So for those who missed out, shame on you! You missed out on history

For those who felt like Waldo in the crowd, have fun looking for yourself in all those facebook pictures. You have some awesome stories to entertain your grandkids in 40 years (even if you failed that bio midterm and now have to retake the class because you spent three hours on the street cheering with your classmates…your grandkids don’t need to know about that part).

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I see… CHANGE!

author: elainechen category: election 2008 tags: date: November 4th, 2008

Congratulations, Obama! A victory well earned. :)

…And speaking of DEMOCRACY– what’s with hardboiled not getting office space for our organization?? Not even cage space?? Yet people who don’t even want it get offices again? What? -_-. Someone please give me a logical explanation for this!

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Be a part of history!

author: elainechen category: election 2008 tags: date: November 4th, 2008

Just a quick post to remind everyone to VOTE! This is a really important and awesome election, and everyone should participate. ESPECIALLY Asian Americans– let’s make a difference this election, everyone! Turnout for Asian Americans has been gradually increasing for the past few elections, and let’s really make a big impact! The more Asian Americans vote, the more political attention we’ll get, and the more attention we get, the more policy will include our voices.

So everyone, please please vote! And tell your friends to vote! :)

Now, who wants to stay up tonight to watch the numbers roll in? Yeah, yeah??

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LAUNCH… #2? #3? Ah, whatever, just check out our new blog!

author: admin category: administrative tags: date: November 2nd, 2008

So this is going to be an attempt at a new launch of the hardboiled blog! I know we really really tried to keep it up to date on the front of our page, but for awhile the posts stayed at “9-11-08″ for months, with the same youtube video linked on the front. Sorry about that.

But now with the awesome help of wordpress, it’ll perhaps be a lot easier to update, manage, and organize our blog. It’s a little inconvenient, we know, to have to click on the link to come to this website, but hopefully you’ll still find our posts SO INTERESTING that you can’t NOT click to read our blog! :)

Keep checking back here and our hardboiled staffers will be sure to continuously update this baby with new and spiffy things! Thanks for reading!

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