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Los Angeles, California, United States

Monday, September 27, 2010

Banking on a Reality Check



Statistics are dangerous. They can either show you the severity of a situation, or reduce it to mere digits and decimals. Once in a while though, you come across statistics that are too meaningful to be ignored. Such was the case when I began reading poverty statistics on www.afaceaface.org.

The disproportion of the world’s wealth is staggering. Before I go any further, I have to say that I am not a socialist, although I have been accused of being one. I am not a communist either. I do believe in the freedom to make your own way in life, and that your hard work and perseverance should be the only factors that determine how successful you are. I understand that not everyone can be rich, and not everyone wants to be. I understand that there is no utopia, no fool-proof plan, no magic that can fix it all. Still, I can’t help but to want to do something.

Less than one percent of what was spent on weapons worldwide could have provided basic education for all children by the year 2000, but that did not happen. Not to mention the world’s richest 20% consume 76% of its resources. So what does all this mean? It means that all around the world priorities are completely backwards. While that rich 20% are of consuming a bunch of crap they really don’t need, millions of children are dying around the world because they lack basic human needs like clean water and sanitation.

My brain feels like it’s swimming in my scull as I read these statistics. Americans and Europeans spend nearly three times as much money on pet food every year as the entire world spends on education. Europeans spend nearly ten times as much on alcoholic beverages as the entire world spends to make sure that all women have reproductive healthcare.

I think a big part of this problem is that people in the western world egotistically view themselves as the pinnacle of civilization. According to our behavior, we think our way of life is the best way, the lack of water and sanitation around the world has no effect on us, and our pets are more important than uneducated, third-world children dying. In truth, rampant consumerism is completely unsustainable and it’s destroying the very earth we live on. American children are being caught in the tide of anti-intellectualism and our education system is failing miserably.

Perhaps instead of a war on terror or a war on drugs (both of which have made almost no measurable progress) maybe we should be fighting a war on ignorance, or a war for government accountability, or a war on greedy fat cats who abuse not only the capitalist system, but the environment and the American people. Maybe those kind of wars would actually yield some successes.

The time has come for people to stand together and say, enough is enough. People lived on this earth for thousands of years without all the crap we think we need today. We cannot go backward, but it has become apparent that we aren’t moving forward either. If we don’t start making changes on our own terms, the universe will respond to our oblivious decadence with destruction, like it has already done with so many civilizations before ours. It’s our call.


Link to statistics: http://www.afaceaface.org/blog/?p=1223

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

M.I.A. in the Hood



I absolutely adore the music and style of Sri Lankan rapper/singer M.I.A. She is one of the most creative artists out there in my opinion. Her music blends all different styles seamlessly to create something entirely new. It seems that with the warm reception she received form the critics as well as the hip-hop community, that her music would be more popular among urban and inner city youth who like hip-hop.

At first, I thought maybe her music was just too weird for some people. It is very different, and in L.A. where I live the hip-hop community doesn’t really listen to much electronic music, unless it’s co-signed or performed by an acceptable hip-hop artist. Since M.I.A.’s music contains so many electronic elements, this seemed like a good reason.

Recently, I watched a short documentary on M.I.A. by acclaimed director Spike Jonze. In it, M.I.A. stated that she felt like hip-hop had always come from the perspective of urban and inner city youth in America and the UK, and her music spoke to a completely different kind of experience-the experience of a refugee from a third world country. She seemed to imply that their experience is nothing like that of people growing up in poor communities in developed countries.

This statement kind of blew my mind. There it is, I thought, that’s the reason she’s not as popular in the African-American community. She doesn’t seem to understand that the differences between living in poverty in the United States as a minority and being a refugee from a third world country are much fewer than the similarities. African Americans may not be refugees, but we were brought to this country against our will, enslaved for nearly 400 years, and then legally treated as second class citizens. We experienced an unprecedented level of racism, the remnants of which are still evident today.

The separation of families during slavery all but destroyed our concept of family structure, our African heritage and culture was forcefully stripped away from us. We have struggled, fought, and died for rights as simple as drinking from water fountains and riding on busses. Everyday in the black community there is genocide, and evidence of self-hatred. Many black people consider the definition of beautiful to be lighter-skinned with “good hair” and of course this description does not fit the majority of black people.

I don’t love M.I.A. any less, because much of what se said was true. I can’t imagine what it must be like to live in a third world country, and I’m glad to hear an intelligent, thought-provoking voice speaking out about the injustices the people there face, but in the words of Martin Luther King Jr., “injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere” and we are experiencing severe-albeit different-injustice in the inner city communities of America.

To only focus on the differences is to marginalize the problem. Poverty, genocide, and racism are not third-world issues, they are world issues. We may not see the effects of the third world on America directly, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t any.

I want to walk down Crenshaw and hear somebody bumping M.I.A. I want to go to Hollywood to a popular night club and hear “World Town” blaring from the sound system and hear everyone singing along. I want everyone to have a little more substance to go with their style, and M.I.A. definitely has both. But until her music is a reflection of both experiences, hinged upon their similarities and not quite so hung up on the differences, I don’t think it will happen. I will, however, be listening and hoping.