Showing posts with label racism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label racism. Show all posts

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Japan

I wanted to title this post, "My Faith in Humanity Has Tentatively Been Restored." 

If you've read this blog for any amount of time, you'll realize that I don't have a lot of patience or tolerance for racism.  To be perfectly clear, I think that racism is completely and totally stupid and ignorant.  I'll go a step further and say that I think that racists have some sort of an inferiority complex and the only way that they can feel better about themselves is to lash out against members of races other than their own.

Why do they feel that way?  I have no freaking idea.  It makes absolutely no sense to me.

Racism is stupid and short-sighted.  Racists are ignorant fools who are content to live in their own state of foolishness.  I can't understand why one person would, based solely on race, form any opinion about another human being.  We are all part of the human race, people!!!  And we are far more similar than different. . .why focus on our differences?

Over the years, I have noted a fair amount of e-mails and Facebook statuses about how upset the writer (or sharer) is about funding or aid that the United States has given or pledged toward impoverished nations or nations who are wounded by natural disasters.  Most often, I chalk those statuses up to racism because they are often focused on countries that are full of so-called "icky foreigners" and there is no real substance to the complaints.  It's just people feeling disgruntled over money given to people who don't look like the complainer.  I've yet to read a complaint about the US offering aid to predominently English-speaking countries. . .just sayin'.

I'm cautiously optimistic about humanity in that I've yet to see a Facebook status complaining about international aid that is being given to our friends in Japan.  Please understand that our Japanese brothers and sisters are dealing with a disaster of epic proportions.  It would be heartless and inhumane to expect them to suffer alone without our care or assistance.  YES!  IT WOULD BE HEARTLESS AND INHUMANE TO EXPECT THEM TO SUFFER ALONE!!

As I've said countless times before, our poor in the US are far richer than those who are in the midst of suffering.  I am extremely libertarian and somewhat conservative from a political standpoint, but I believe this to be true:  It is our duty and privelege to give to those who need it more than us!  Thank goodness for our forced taxes and our volunteered charitable giving is what I say in these situations!  Thank goodness indeed!

Are you on Facebook complaining about the international aid being given to Japan?  THANK YOUR LUCKY STARS!!  It could so easily be you in the throes of one natural disaster after another. . .followed by the threat of a nuclear meltdown.  Join me in praying for the people of Japan. . .they will surely need the hand of God in the midst of this crisis!

On a personal note, my sister-in-law is Japanese and her entire family still resides there.  She is a lovely woman and I ache for how she must hurt over the devastation suffered by her homeland and her countrymen.  I can't imagine how pained I'd be if anything happened to my beloved California while I was living abroad. . .

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Sci-Fi Movies Usually Have a Deeper Meaning

Dammitall, I really am a sci-fi nerd, aren't I?

I was engaged in a deep conversation last night. Well, it didn't exactly start off that way. I was asking my mother about some new video releases that she had on DVD and expressing shock at how quickly movies zip out of the theaters these days.

While I perused her videos, I noticed that she had District 9. I mentioned that I loved the movie. She looked surprised and even said, "You're kidding?" I answered that both my husband and I really liked it. She apparently didn't like it as she said I could take it home to keep.

I remarked that I had read a review on it and the reviewer simply focused on the special effects and the sci-fi aspect of the film. To me, this reviewer missed the entire point of the film and I added that I appreciated the deeper message conveyed in the film. I continued to say that it was obviously a sharp condemnation against racism in general and, since it takes place in South Africa, apartheid in particular. She replied that she "got" the message, but she thought the movie sucked. Fair enough, we typically have dissimilar taste in entertainment.

This exchange got me thinking about sci-fi. It seems to me that sci-fi often highlights what people are sometimes afraid to say about the problems of the modern time. Lest you believe that sci-fi is just about nerds with pointy ears and light sabers, I'll remind you of the many issues that sci-fi tackles: racism, criminalization of wide swaths of the population, sexism, violence, ageism, the horrors of an unchecked (& balanced!) government (including law enforcement), the evil that walks unnoticed or ignored among us, and more. You probably understand what I mean if you've spent any time at all reading or watching sci-fi.

Since I started off talking about District 9, I'll focus on racism. I think it's correct to say that racism is hateful foolishness believed and repeated by the ignorant. Ever notice how usually the most racist people are the ones who don't know a damn thing about those who they hate so much? Ever notice how hanging out with people, even people who you don't particularly know or like, often leads to mutual friendship and respect?

Putting anyone in bondage is wicked - and I'm not talking about BDSM here, folks. Subjugating others is wrong. Oppression (typically violent itself) leads to further violence and, ultimately, revolution. Given their treatment by the humans, is it any wonder that these aliens are quarrelsome, skeptical, and dissatisfied?



SPOILER ALERT: Stop reading if you haven't seen District 9 because I'm going to spoil some of it here.


In the movie, the lead character is depicted gleefully killing the unborn young of the aliens. He threatens to split up a family by removing parental custody of an alien's child. He regularly calls the aliens by a derogatory slur. Guess what? In a most satisfying turn of events, he becomes that which he despises. He ends up removed from his own family. I noticed an ultrasound picture behind his wife at one point, but there wasn't any child shown, so I'm assuming he lost his own unborn child. It really sucks when the shoe is on the other foot, doesn't it?

Though the movie is about aliens and humans, I think it's a fascinating allegory about the races. Love your neighbor as you love yourself. Is that really so hard to do? We have so much more in common with each other than we have differences. I guess I'll never understand xenophobia. Vive la difference!, as our French friends would say. I agree. Don't you?