Senator Huff Outlines Plan To Combat Beckel's Racist Rant
anonymous-114 07/23 5389Senator
Huff Outlines Plan To Combat Beckel's Racist Rant
Chinese version: http://www.weidb.com/p6339
Bob Beckel, member of a popular program
called “The Five” on Fox News recently referred to Chinese as “Chinamen” along
with other negative comments about Chinese. What he said:
“…Chinese are the single biggest threat to the
national security of the U.S. …Do you know what we just did? As usual, we bring
them over here and teach a bunch of Chinamen – err -- Chinese people -- how to
do computers and they go back to China and hack into us… There are billions of
them. And, and all they do is to hack into our stuff. They send these cheap
toys, all of which got lead in it and kill kids.”
There is no differentiation by Beckel
about whether he’s talking about the Chinese government, the Chinese people, or
the Chinese-Americans who have come to the United States to pursue their
dreams. These comments are unacceptable, and have no place in our media.
Chinese are understandably upset, since less than a year ago Jimmy Kimmel aired
a segment in which a child said we should “kill all the Chinese” to erase our
nation’s debt to China.
Some believe that the Democrats are
trying to use this issue to refocus the anger of the Chinese community away
from SCA 5. While fueling the fire against Fox News, they fail to mention that
Bob Beckel is a life-long liberal Democrat operative. Racism and ethnic slams know no partisan
boundaries.
The real question is, what do we want?
Many have called for an apology, and Bob Beckel has offered one, although it
was weak. Others want him to resign or be fired. But does that change behavior?
Will we find that yet another network is tripping over their comments in a few
more months?
I’m probably more sensitive to immigrant
issues than the average American, since I’m married to a Chinese-American
immigrant. But it is my observation that our culture does not often react with
the same sensitivity to offenses against the Chinese Community as it does for
Blacks, Latinos, or Native Americans, for example. I believe what we are really
looking for is to receive the same amount of respect as everyone else. That’s
it. But as a society we aren’t there yet.
Two of the strongly held principles of
the Republican Party are personal responsibility and limited government. When
we have a level playing field of opportunity, with government out of the way,
those who work hardest tend to be the most successful, whether in school or
business. That is what most of the Chinese who I know—or anyone for that
matter--are looking for.
So, for my part, as the Senate
Republican Leader, here is my action plan:
1. Call Fox News and have a private conversation
with them to see how we can avoid such negative commentary on their network in
the future. I don’t know how that will go, but I know that a meaningful discussion
is the best way to find a solution. Protesting feels good, but just makes people
on both sides angrier.
2. I will continue to advocate for
merit, not race, as the criteria for admission to our public schools.
Re-introducing “affirmative action,” or race-based admissions policy remains a stated
high priority for the Democrat leaders of the Assembly and Senate, as well as
our Governor. Allowing race to be a criterion in admission to higher education is
the ultimate slam against all hard-working students. Beckel has gotten us all
angry because of words; SCA 5 and other race-based policies are much more than
just words, they will result in game-changing actions, and fly in the face of
all men being created equal or personal responsibility. As Supreme
Court Justice John Roberts famously said, "the way to stop
discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis
of race."
3. I
will continue to work for education reform in the K-12 system so that everyone
has a better and more equal opportunity to get a quality education, at the K-12
and university level. On this point, our Governor and legislative leaders
should be embracing the recent Vergara decision by Judge Rolf Treu as an
acknowledgement that our educational system is broken, and has left our most
vulnerable students behind, putting the wants of the teacher unions ahead of
the needs of our students.
4. I will continue to work my SJR 23
through the Legislature and to Congress, asking for a formal apology for the
Chinese Exclusion act. This is not only appropriate, but recent events
underscore that racial bias is not just something from the 1880s. Highlighting our nation’s past mistakes helps
us keep from repeating them today and in the future.
5. I will continue to advocate for
comprehensive immigration reform, such as I did by co-authoring and getting
passed SJR 8 last year. Bob Beckel lamented that “….we bring them (Chinese) over
in here and teach them how to do computers and they go back to China and hack
into us….” I authored and passed Senate
Joint Resolution 9 as well, that called on Congress to increase our skilled
worker and entrepreneur visas.
The United States economy has been enriched
by the innovative and entrepreneurial spirit of immigrants from around the
world. Foreign nationals residing in the United States were named as inventors
or co-inventors in one-quarter of all patent applications filed in 2006.
Fifty-two percent of Silicon Valley startups between 1995 and 2005 were founded
or cofounded by immigrants generating $52 billion in revenues and employing
450,000 workers.
If we had an immigration system that met
our country’s needs, we wouldn’t need to educate foreigners and send them home;
they should be able to stay here, get a green card, and be employed—if they
want to--here in our own county. That is part of what a comprehensive
immigration reform should include, and we must continue to call upon Congress
to enact real reform.
6. I will continue to proactively work
to reduce governmental hurdles that stifle entrepreneurs and job creation, so
that with a growing economy and increased jobs, people will be less concerned
about jobs going to immigrants.
7. I will work proactively in any way
that I can to help all races receive equal respect and treatment. As we
celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the Civil Rights movement, we must
all recognize that we’ve come a long way toward equality and respect, but as
the events of the past year have demonstrated, we aren’t there yet.
Bob
Huff serves as the Republican Leader in the California State Senate and
represents the 29th Senate District covering portions of Los
Angeles, Orange and San Bernardino Counties. Follow Senator Huff on Twitter
@bobhuff99.