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Tag: Racism

Why do we consider Timo Soini to be “a good cop” if he brought all these “bad cops” to power?

Posted on April 23, 2014 by Migrant Tales

Doesn’t Perussuomalaiset (PS) leader Timo Soini bear responsibility for giving people like Jussi Halla-aho, James Hirvisaari, Teuvo Hakkarainen, Olli Immonen and a very long list of others a platform to spread their hatred and intolerance?  Why does the media let Soini get off the hook so easily?

Is Soini the culprit for anti-immigration sentiment and xenophobia or does he represent something much deeper about ourselves that we’re not yet ready to openly admit never mind challenge in earnest?

If I’d draw a cartoon of Soini, I’d put him in a concentration camp standing in front of people like Jussi Halla-aho, Olli Immonen, Teuvo Hakkarainen and many others. Soini would tell the media with a poker face and then smile at the end of the following statement: “I’m against anti-Semitism and racism.”

One matter that has perplexed me for quite a while is how the media and journalists, who should know better, is that they treat Soini as some “good guy” in the face of the party’s near-constant anti-EU, anti-immigration, anti-Islam, homophobic and conservative values.

If we search through the maze of answers and explanations, I believe that what we’ll find at the end of the day will find the word denial as the root of the problem.

I’ll never forget April 17, 2011 when the PS won their historic election victory, rising from the minor leagues with 5 to 39 MPs! Some thought it was something passing that wouldn’t last too long. They claimed that it’s only a question of time when internal bickering would cause the PS to implode like the Rural Party did in the 1970s.

One of the most incredible matters about the rise of the PS is how little opposition it has had and how easily it has been allowed to spread its intolerance. Institutions like the media have played a helping role. From a migrant’s or minority’s standpoint, however, the view is quite different since the PS is seen as hostile and dangerous.

Since one of the PS’ main messages is that non-white migrants and refugees should not be allowed to move to Finland never mind marry Finns because they are lazy and even stupid, it’s pretty clear how the PS exploits fear and racism.

Certainly the denial that takes place in our society of the PS wouldn’t be possible without the help as well of the other parties, which may have the same closest racists among their ranks like the most outspoken anti-immigration voices of Soini’s party.

The PS are not a threat to Finland per se, but our denial of them and our own intolerance are.

Some migrants can be pretty racist, especially those who enjoyed ethnic privilege in their former homelands

Posted on April 21, 2014 by Migrant Tales

I am at a gathering at the British Council in Helsinki hearing a talk in 2013 by Eva Biaudet, the Ombudsman for Minorities, on discrimination and prejudice in Finland. After the talk, one of the participants, a white Englishman, says: “You speak just like a [U.S.] American.”

People who make such statements assume a lot of things about culture and person’s identity. When they assume, they make an ass out of u and me.

Not too far from this person, whom I suspect must be an English-language teacher since some explain their culture like grammar, or in simplistic terms that don’t take cultural diversity into account, is another person who continues to question if I am a Southern Californian. This was such a big issue for him that he actually asked and questioned who I am.

The questioning of  who I am, or my personal identity, is no different of how anti-immigration groups fight to keep their societies white in today’s Europe.

A while back, a good friend of mine told me about an Argentinean who claimed that I wasn’t an Argentinean because I was “a Yankee.”

IMG_8593
Something beautiful lies under the winter of our prejudices. One of the flowers you may find is yourself.

These three examples reveal how some migrants continue to see ethnic background, or background in general, as the most important matter about a person. It’s no different from those who house racist views and attitudes.

Why wouldn’t they have such prejudices? Weren’t they brought up in racist societies and part of the the system of racial oppression?

These types of comments by those three persons don’t worry me because I’ve heard them all my life. If I’d given in to such opinions about what others think I am and should be, I doubt I’d be sharing this opinion piece with you on Migrant Tales.

Contrarily, there are some in Finland who think that you’re not a “real” Finn if you’re not white and speak Finnish like Eino Leino. Those who house these types of prejudices have no idea what a “real” Finn is and I doubt that they have read Leino seriously.

One important matter to keep in mind in light of the above is that you are the owner of your identity.

Here’s what you should tell these people if they question who you are because you actually threaten who they are:

I am who I am and if you don’t like it, that’s your problem, not mine.

Selective hatred and racism know no master

Posted on April 19, 2014 by Migrant Tales

Migrant Tales has written on a number of occasions about how intolerance and discrimination are a direct threat to our society since such social ills eat away at our values and thereby undermine who we are. We have demonstrated how anti-immigration parties like the Perussuomalaiset (PS) use selective hatred to ensure their followers that they are strengthening not weakening our values and society.

How is this possible? How can one socially exclude others and uphold Nordic values like fairness, respect and social equality?

Selective hatred is one of the big political  sells that anti-immigration and far-right groups use to drive home their message of hate. In simple English it means that I can socially exclude and discriminate against any group I please and relegate it to third-class membership and keep my country and values simultaneously.

Any sensible person understands that selective hatred cannot work since it means living in a dilemma. It would be something like accepting and living with Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.

Some anti-immigration party politicians are such opportunists that they believe that you can keep racism on a short leash. To our horror, Anders Breivik proved to us on 22/7 that this was hogwash.

images
    Is it possible to live in harmony with Mr Hyde and Dr Jekyll if you master selective hatred?  Anti-immigration parties think so. Source: ENGLISHOŠACA.

Gunnar Myrdal (1898-1987), a Swedish sociologist and economist, highlighted this conflict in his famous study An American dilemma about race and equality of blacks during the Jim Crow era. The study was published in 1944, eleven years before Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat to a white passenger on a Montgomery bus on December 1, 1955.

Myrdal was asked in 1938 by the Carnegie Corporation to study the “Negro problem.” They wanted a scholar who was a foreigner and neutral to study the problem.

Here’s the question Myrdal posed:

How could a people who cherish freedom and fairness also create such a racially oppressed society?

One of the important points made in the groundbreaking study was the consequences of living in state of conflict with one’s values.

He wrote:

When people try to deny, to the outside world and to themselves, that they live in moral compromise and that they ceaselessly and habitually violate their own ideals, they are customarily brought to falsify their perception of reality in order to conceal this from themselves and others.

It’s clear that living in such a conflict creates a dilemma, which doesn’t strengthen but weakens your society.

Myrdal’s thesis is applicable to any country, even Finland, which are culturally and ethnically diverse.

Just like Myrdal, we can ask the same question of  Nordic politicians and parties who fuel the “dilemma” by compromising our values such as social equality, tolerance, fairness and respect.

When we hear anti-immigration politicians from Nordic parties like the PS, Danish People’s Party, Sweden Democrats and the Progress Party of Norway, the question is if they are weakening or strengthening our values as a society. It’s pretty clear that the former is the case.

Understanding the short- and long-term impact of our intolerance is crucial if we want to avoid undermining our successful Nordic way of life and values with “dilemmas” that Myrdal highlighted in his groundbreaking study.

One important point that Myrdal made was that all those who give simple remedies for complex problems like ethnic relations and cultural diversity “were not to be trusted.”

One of the problems with anti-immigration parties in the Nordic region and elsewhere in Europe is that they don’t even have simple remedies.

They only whine their broken-record sound bites.

Espoo city council votes against racism

Posted on April 15, 2014 by Migrant Tales

A proposal by the Perussuomalaiset (PS) to rewrite the City of Espoo’s multicultural programme because it stated that city residents “don’t tolerate racism” were voted down 64-10, reports Länsiväylä. 

Näyttökuva 2014-4-15 kello 12.28.26

Two PS councilmen, Simon Elo (left) and Teemu Lahtinen,  loathe Muslims and cultural diversity. Read full story (in Finnish) here.

If one reads closely the position of the PS, an anti-EU, anti-immigration and especially anti-Islam party, it reveals more ignorance about racism than anything else. In their narrow-minded world, everyone in Finland is equal. Sex and ethnicity aren’t factors that fuel discrimination.

PS Espoo city councilman, Teemu Lahtinen, criticized the multicultural program because it doesn’t take into account how some neighborhoods are becoming marginalized because of migrants. He was especially against affirmative action measures and the special treatment migrants get for cultural programs with tax payer’s money.

There’s one good matter happening in Finland albeit slowly: More Finns are becoming aware that intolerance is an issue we should address and not deny.

If we weigh Lahtinen’s and the PS’ message, what come in loud and clear is their opposition to cultural diversity. They are fighting tooth and nail to keep Finland white.

They never tell you this in plain Finnish but that it what they mean.

Racism Review: Mixed or not, why are we still taking pictures of “race”?

Posted on April 14, 2014 by Migrant Tales

Sharon Chang*

Just days ago PolicyMic put up a piece entitled “National Geographic Concludes What Americans Will Look Like in 2050, and It’s Beautiful.” In it writer Zak Cheney-Rice attempts to address the so-called rise of multiracial peoples which has captured/enchanted the public eye and with which the media has become deeply enamored. He spotlights a retrospective and admiring look at National Geographic’s “The Changing Face of America” project of last year featuring a series of multiracial portraits by well-known German photographer Martin Schoeller, and also peripherally cites some statistics/graphs that demonstrate the explosion of the mixed-race population.

changing-faces-615

(Image source)

“In a matter of years,” Cheney-Rice writes, “We’ll have Tindered, OKCupid-ed and otherwise sexed ourselves into one giant amalgamated mega-race.” Despite admitting racial inequity persists, he still flirts with the idea of an “end” approaching (presumably to race and by association racism), and suggests while we’re waiting for things to get better, we might “…applaud these growing rates of intermixing for what they are: An encouraging symbol of a rapidly changing America. 2050 remains decades away, but if these images are any preview, it’s definitely a year worth waiting for.” We are then perhaps left with this rather unfortunate centerpiece of his statement, “Here’s how the ‘average American’ will look by the year 2050”:

Portrait

 

Not surprisingly, the Net erupted in controversy/debate; some standing by and championing the purported beauty of race-mixing as hope for a post-race future; many others pointing out the absurdity of a multiracial=postracial equation, angrily accusing the article of privileging light-skinned mixes thereby centering whiteness and upholding an age-old white dominant race hierarchy. NPR blogger Gene Demby @GeeDee215 tweeted, “Dunno what to do with the fact that the idea we’ll screw racism out of existence is considered a serious position.” A day later Jia Tolentino wrote a rebuttal on the hairpin in which she calls the piece “dumb,” “shallow,” “shortcut-minded,” and charges it with appearing “researched and progressive while actually eliding all of the underlying structural concerns that will always influence what race (and attendant opportunity) means in America far more than the distracting visual pleasure of a girl that looks like Rashida Jones.” She too also unfortunately comes to rest again on this particular portrait, “Look at this freckled, green-eyed future. Look at how beautiful it is to see everything diluted that we used to hate”:

I have been thinking a lot about this face which, thanks to National Geographic and PolicyMic, is now flying around the World Wide Web and has become the stage for much heated race-arguing. What is particularly striking to me, and what I have written on before, is that this person is an actual living, breathing human being — but she is not being treated as such. She is being wielded as a tool, a device, maybe even a weapon? Her physical body is used as a site for others to play out their racial theorizing while her own voice and story remain conspicuously absent.

What I think is incredibly important here (and doesn’t seem to have come up in the ensuing disputes) is why portraits designed to quantify/quality racialized appearance were taken with such intent in the first place? Photography which captures a person’s image for the sole and express purpose of measuring then discussing their supposed race is not new and frankly, like pretty much everything race-related, has a long and insidious history. It’s known as racial-type photography and it was popularized in the late 19th century by white pseudo-scientists to “prove” the superiority of some races, and the inferiority of others. Anthropologists used photography to make anatomical comparisons, then racially classify and rank human subjects on an evolutionary scale “seeming to confirm that some peoples were less evolved than others and would therefore benefit from imperial control” (Picture Imperfect: Photography and Eugenics, 1879-1940 by Anne Maxwell, p.21). One of first scientists to use photography to record the anatomy of different races was Swiss-born zoologist and anthropologist Louis Agassiz who lived in America and in 1865 was the nation’s most celebrated naturalist. Agassiz, along with the help of portrait photographer Thomas Zealy, produced some of the earliest racial-type photographs of African slaves to appear in the US. He “wanted to see if the distinct traits of African-born slaves survived in American-born offspring. This would prove his theory that environmental factors wrought very few changes to the type, which by and large remained stable over time.” He staked his whole scientific career on the belief that the different races were created separately by God and in accordance with a divine, preordained plan (Maxwell, pp.23-24):

slave_girl_by_al_brazyly-d36n6gp

 

(1850) photograph of an enslaved woman in South Carolina by Thomas Zealy for Louis Agassiz

Other influential examples of racial-type photography include: those produced by “British anthropologists Thomas Henry Huxley and John Lanprey [who] developed guidelines for the anthropometrical photographing of native subjects” (Maxell, p.29), those produced in 1871 Germany by the Berlin Society for Anthropology, Ethnology and Prehistory which “set out to assemble anthropological images from around the world, with the eventual purpose of disseminating these to scientific institutions in Germany and Britain” (Maxwell, p.39), and those by Australian photographer Paul Foelsche, “among the best examples of photographs of colonized peoples taken under oppressive conditions” (Maxwell, p.35):

Foelsche

(1870) untitled portrait by Paul Foelsche

Of course the overt, blatant racism in this older practice of racial-type photography would not be acceptable today. But has the practice of “photographing race” then gone away completely? Has our need to scan and declare the racial appearance of others for the purpose of valuation diminished? Apparently not. We’ve now got National Geographic’s 2013 endeavor (photographed by a white man through a racialized lens no less). We also have Time Magazine’s infamous 1993 cover “The New Face of America: How Immigrants Are Shaping the World’s First Multicultural Society” which was the computer generated face of a mixed-race woman created by merging people from various racial/ethnic backgrounds and who I have read her creators subsequently sort of fell in love with Pygmalion-style:

1101931118_400

(1993) Time Magazine cover, “The New Face of America”

And we have Kip Fulbeck’s 2001 photo project of over 1200 volunteer subjects who self-identified as “Hapa” meant to promote awareness, recognition and give voice to the millions of multiracial/multiethnic individuals of Asian and Pacific Islander descent. Though Kip Fulbeck is aware of racial-type photographic history and acknowledges/challenges it in his book Half Asian 100% Hapa some feel his attempt to stand old forms on their heads, doesn’t work. He himself is a person of mixed-race Asian descent and certainly being a person of color behind the camera lends credence to the idea of reclamation and redefinition. Nevertheless at the end of the day, we are still left with a collection of photographs meant to capture race in some formation.

websample12

Apparently now we are comfortable shifting the practice of race-scanning and many of its same foundational values onto the ambiguous appearance of “different” looking people. Racism is incredibly adaptive and morphs to fit the times. I suggest that while modern race-photography believes itself to be celebrating the dismantling of race, it may actually be fooling us (and itself) with a fantastically complicated show of smoke and mirrors. What a critical mixed race view can offer at this juncture is something so crucial. We need to continually challenge and examine our desire to racially file people. We need to lift our eyes from the ground and take off the rose-colored glasses. We need to put away the headphones, turn off the music and turn on our ears. We need to make much, MUCH more space for something ultimately pretty simple — the stories of actual people themselves which in the end, will paint the real picture.

*Guest blogger Sharon Chang writes at the blog MultiAsian Families.

Read original blog entry here.

This piece was reprinted by Migrant Tales with permission.

Lahtinen and the PS of Espoo don’t like the term racism

Posted on April 13, 2014 by Migrant Tales

Perussuomalaiset (PS) Espoo city councilman, Teemu Lahtinen, said that the anti-immigration and anti-EU party would not vote for the city’s new multicultural program since it states that “Espoo residents don’t tolerate racism.”

Lahtinen, who is a member and has been president of the far-right association Suomalaisuuden liitto,  said he would like to replace the term “racism” with “we don’t accept discrimination.”

PS chairman Timo Soini is an Espoo city concilman. 

Why is this important for Lahtinen and the PS? Why doesn’t he like the term racism? 

Näyttökuva 2014-4-13 kello 13.21.43

Read full story here.

Lahtinen and the PS have a big problem. They have spread so many lies and racist views about migrants and visible minorities in Finland that it’s bound to hit them politically one day.

That day may come sooner than they expect.

Lahtinen’s knowledge of racism is just as bad as his ignorance about Muslims. For the 2011 parliamentary elections, he did a video with PS MP Jussi Halla-aho, who has been sentenced for ethnic agitation. Do Muslims use Sikh-like turbans?

 Lahtinen and Halla-aho think that Muslims use Sikh turbans.

Why is the PS the only party in Finland commissioning opinion polls about migrants?

Posted on April 11, 2014 by Migrant Tales

Here’s the question: Why is the Perussuomalaiset (PS) party the only one in Finland commissioning opinion polls about what Finns think about migration policy and migrants? They did this in 2010 with a no-brainer question that would give them the result they sought.

Näyttökuva 2014-4-11 kello 18.31.19

Read full story here.

The latest poll commissioned by the PS, an anti-immigration and especially anti-Islam party, doesn’t tell us anything new except that Timo Soini’s party wants immigration to be an election issue.

As Migrant Tales has written on a number of occasions, the anti-immigration stance of the PS hinges on two premises: immigration policy and cultural diversity.

By being against Finland’s immigration policy, one can limit Africans, Muslims and other visible migrants from moving here and thereby undermine cultural diversity. The main goal of the PS’ immigration policy is to keep Finland white. White for the PS doesn’t mean Russians.

Eighty-six percent of PS voters consider Finland’s immigration policy too liberal compared with 51% of all respondents, according to the poll. Even so, 8% of those polled compared with 19% of PS voters wanted stricter rules for migrants who planned to move to Finland.

While the poll shows PS followers to be less critical of migration policy and migrants when compared to 2010, the poll doesn’t offer us any valuable information except that immigration is an important campaign issue especially for the PS.

Why has Helsingin Sanomat’s  stopped commissioning these types of polls four years ago? Is it because they are biased and because one can load the questions in order to get the answer one wishes?

Imagine Helsingin Sanomat’s poll question in 2010: Do you want more migrants to move to Finland?

Seriously folks, how many countries in the world state that they want more immigrants?

So why did the PS commission the latest poll?

Because they are an anti-immigration and especially anti-Islam party that has built its popularity on xenophobia. Even if they claim not to be an anti-immigration party, they are loud and clear.

By ratcheting up their anti-EU was well as their anti-immigration and anti-Islam rhetoric, they hope to get a good election result in May and in the parliamentary elections of April 2015.  

That’s after they had disappointing results in the presidential and municipal elections.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jussi Halla-aho’s broken record: destroy cultural and ethnic diversity

Posted on April 11, 2014 by Migrant Tales

We hear over and over again the same anti-immigration diatribe by politicians like Perussuomalaiset (PS) MP Jussi Halla-aho, who complain constantly about too liberal immigration policy and multiculturalism.

Näyttökuva 2014-4-11 kello 12.21.00

PS MP Jussi Halla-aho would like to restrict free movement of people in Europe and tighten migration policy if elected Euro MP, according to Swedish-language daily HBL. Read full story here.

Even if the Finnish media and politicians consider Halla-aho near-invincible, he is very vulnerable. What would happen if the PS return to the single-digit-percentage league like before the 2011 parliamentary elections?

Would Halla-aho face the same fate as his ideological soul mate MP James Hirvisaar, who has been largely forgotten by the media after he was sacked from the PS in October?

In the same far-right populist style as other politicians in his dubious group, Halla-aho, who was sentenced for ethnic agitation, whines near-constantly about multiculturalism but does not offer any solutions. He does not give any solutions because he’d lose a lot of support if he did.

Much of the prejudices that Finns house today are parroted by Halla-aho. One of these is his hostility of our cultural and ethnic diversity. If he ever got enough power and backing, it would be only a matter of time when he’d expose his dark side on how to maintain Finland white. He’d suggest something that Dutch anti-immigration extremist Geert Wilders said recently.

Wilders outraged many people in Holland in March and much of the political establishment, including his own party, by telling a crowd of supporters that he would find a way for Holland to have fewer Moroccans.

It’s Halla-aho and his kind that should get with the times. Finland was, is and will be ethnically and culturally diverse.

 

Finnish tabloid media’s dubious “achievment” is spreading intolerance

Posted on April 6, 2014 by Migrant Tales

The Finnish tabloid media has the dubious “honor” for having spread intolerance in Finland by giving populists and racists inflated respectability and importance. If we look at some of the billboards that tabloids published in the 1990s, it’s clear that they were responsible for spreading racism and prejudice in Finland.  

Take for instance the most recent ad on Iltalehti’s website about Timo Soini, the right-wing populist leader of the Perussuomalaiset (PS) party who is hostile to migrants and minorities. The ad asks readers to buy the weekend edition to read about Soini’s “opening up” and soft loving dad side.

Soft loving dad side? Certainly everyone loves his family. But when it comes to loving others that’s where clear lines are drawn.

Soini, who likes to portray himself as a political leader who has not helped racists and ultra-nationalists to get political power, makes it clear that he is against gay marriage and abortion. This fact speaks volumes about what kind of a hell Finland would be if he ever became prime minister.

Näyttökuva 2014-4-6 kello 11.18.38

What about if I posted the following billboards below to contrast with the one above? How do two from 1994 and 1996 contrast with what Iltalehti claims about Soini?

Tabloids may have a short memory but many in this country, especially migrants and visible minorities, remember many of the insults and outright hostility against them. Such intolerance is daily and not difficult to forget.

l_1084-medium1

This billboard from 1996 by Iltalehti’s rival, Ilta-Sanomat, claims that those Somalis that got asylum in Finland in the early 1990s will remain permanently in Finland.

L_1062-Medium

This billboard claims that Somalis conned authorities into giving them asylum. In 1994, Somali was absorbed in a terrible civil war that has been going on to date.

.

Anti-immigration populist parties are a menace to democracy, ethnic and cultural diversity

Posted on April 3, 2014 by Migrant Tales

Migrant Tales has never hid its criticism of parties that base their message on populism, scapegoating minorities and nationalism. If such political parties ever got power, it’s doubtful that they’d know what to do with it except polarize our society more than before. 

Anti-immigration and nationalistic parties are masters at scapegoating because they are incompetent at doing anything right. Since they usually fail at what they do, they blame others for their failures.

Blaming migrants and minorities for unemployment and the recession are classic examples. It not only reveals who they are, but the fact that they don’t have any credible and workable political program.

How can a party that victimizes minorities and polarizes society be taken seriously?

There are already some disturbing signs what these far-right and right-wing anti-immigration parties would do if they got power. In Holland we heard Geert Wilders assure supporters that he’d make it possible that there would be less Moroccans in his country.

Ukip leader Nigel Farage, whom the Perussuomalaiset (PS) of Finland consider their political soul mate, has praised Vladimir Putin’s leadership in Russia and claims that the EU is undemocratic. He blames Brussels for the crisis in Syria and the Ukraine.

“As an operator, but not as a human being,” he was quoted as saying on the Guardian, “I would say Putin [is the leader I most admire].”

An editorial by Oulu-based Kaleva asks what PS chairman Timo Soini thinks about Farage and that if it wants to be a viable political force in Finland, the PS leader must distance his party and denounce what Ukip’s statements of support for Putin.

Näyttökuva 2014-4-3 kello 11.41.30

Read full story (in Finnish) here.

Such a suggestion by one of Finland’s largest dailies shows more naivety than real understanding of what the PS is and why it is a threat and menace to our democracy and peace.

The PS bases its recent success at the polls on isolationist-nationalism, anti-EU, anti-immigration and especially anti-Islam rhetoric.

Asking such a party to denounce the Ukip, which has become the third-largest political force in the country according to recent polls, would be synonymous to committing political hara-kiri.

Waiting for the PS to “change” into something credible is nothing more than wishful thinking based on self-deceit. It’s this kind of thinking that is already costing our country dearly.

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