Asian-Americans
are voicing outrage over the refusal of the White House to help ban a song by
the hip-hop artist YG that glorifies attacks on the homes of Chinese
families in the US
A reaction from the Obama administration was prompted after
more than 114,000 people signed a petition calling on the president to wade
into the controversy surrounding the California-born rapper’s song, “Meet The
Flockers.” The nationwide drive began in September under a
presidential program that allows any petition gathering over 100,000 signatures
to receive an official White House response.
The
petition asked the federal government to ban the song “from public media and investigate
the legal responsibilities of YG.”
“The
First Amendment protects the freedom of speech in the United States. The White
House doesn’t make decisions about whether particular songs are available
publicly. Individual platforms determine their choice of content and the rules
of participation and conduct for their sites,” said a statement first posted on
the White House website on November 29 and signed the “We the People Team.”
Many
Asian-American leaders, while affirming their support for free speech, were
angry that the president chose not to condemn the song’s lyrics.
“(The
White House decision) was disappointing, both in tone and substance,” said
Yungman Lee, the CEO of Global Bank in Manhattan’s Chinatown and a former
Democratic candidate for New York’s 7th Congressional District. “The response
was delivered in soulless bureaucratic language suggesting our complaint wasn’t
taken seriously … Of course there is a First Amendment right of free speech.
But we learnt even in high school civic lessons that you cannot cry fire in a
crowded theater. Have the rappers crossed the line? I think so. You are not
free to commit a crime against a group of people.”
“I am
very disappointed that President Obama refused to ban rapper YG’s song,” said
Yukong Zhao, president of the Asian-American Coalition for Education. “This
song (constitutes) hate speech because it incites violence against Chinese
Americans, a specific racial group. He should have at least condemned it. If
this song had targeted African or Muslim Americans, President Obama would have
immediately banned it. Just like his attitude toward college admissions,
unfortunately, President Obama’s social justice only applies to some racial
groups he favors, not Asian-Americans.”
Crime blueprint
YG’s
“Meet The Flockers” lyrics read, in part:
First,
you find a house and scope it out
Find a Chinese neighborhood, cause they don’t believe in bank accounts
Second, you find a crew and a driver, someone ring the doorbell
And someone that ain’t scared to do what it do
Third, you pull up at the spot
Park, watch, ring the doorbell and knock
Four, make sure nobody is home
Find a Chinese neighborhood, cause they don’t believe in bank accounts
Second, you find a crew and a driver, someone ring the doorbell
And someone that ain’t scared to do what it do
Third, you pull up at the spot
Park, watch, ring the doorbell and knock
Four, make sure nobody is home
The song
was the focus of an October demonstration by over 700 people in downtown
Philadelphia. The protesters connected the two-year-old song with the armed
robberies of more than 100 local Chinese American families and businesses in
2016 and demanded more police protection. Twelve families were also said to be
victims of home invasions between July and August of this year.
The large
rally, timed to coincide with a concert by YG in Philadelphia on October 15,
was attended by Asians as well as some members of the African American
community.
“All of
us together, the city of Philadelphia, must stand arm-in-arm, hand-in-hand to
oppose any act of violence,” said the Reverend Robert Shine, an African
American pastor who attended the rally and characterized YG’s lyrics as
“reprehensible.”
Chinese
American groups also demonstrated against the song in other cities across the
US.
Not the first time
This
isn’t the first time that rap lyrics have outraged Asian-Americans. New York
hip-hop station Hot 97 was blasted in January 2005 for playing a song that
mocked the victims of the earthquake and tsunami that killed nearly 230,000
people in Asia.
The lyrics of the parody, sung to the 1985 tune “We Are The World,”
read, in part:
All at once you could hear the screaming chinks
and no one was safe from the wave
there were Africans drowning, little Chinamen swept away
you could hear god laughing, “swim you bitches swim”
and no one was safe from the wave
there were Africans drowning, little Chinamen swept away
you could hear god laughing, “swim you bitches swim”
Hot 97
apologized and fired the staffers responsible for the incident — which drew
criticism from non-Asian groups such as the Anti-Defamation League and House
Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi.
“For
someone to market these negative, despicable and deplorable images of people
who have suffered so much is a travesty of justice. People of good will must
condemn this,” said Charles Barron, an African American member of the New York
City Council, at the time.
Doug
Tsuruoka is Editor-at-Large of Asia Times
No comments:
Post a Comment