Sunday, August 10, 2025

Arabs are White, Because Jesus Can't be Brown

The history of Arab American identity is complex. The first major period of Arab migration to the U.S. began in the 1880s and coincided with rising nativism in the country, where Anglo-Saxons worried about "race suicide." The Naturalization Act of 1870 prohibited people of Asian or Native American descent to become citizens, and the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 limited immigration to U.S. after an influx of Chinese workers was blamed for declining wages and economic malaise in the West Coast. Not surprisingly, Arabs didn't wish to be categorized as Asian, which would make them ineligible for citizenship. The issue came to a head in 1909, when a Lebanese-born police officer George Shishim from Venice, California, came before Judge Hutton of the Superior Court of Los Angeles with his naturalization petition. Weeks earlier, his application for citizenship was rejected by an immigration officer, despite Shishim being established resident of L.A. and civil servant, on the grounds his "Arab identity" disqualified him from being white within the meaning of the statute." As noted in a NYU law journal, Judge Hutton initially seemed "persuaded by the Naturalization Examiner’s position, which deemed immigrants from the [Arab] region hostile to both American democracy and Christianity, and thus...[were] inassimilable aliens." Short on persuasive rebuttals, Shishim sought a "Hail Mary" to redeem his prospects for citizenship. He rose from his seat and declared: “If I am a Mongolian, then so was Jesus, because we came from the same land." Since Christianity ranked among the primary hallmarks of whiteness in the U.S. at the time, Judge Hutton accepted Shishim’s appeal that, although an Arab, he was not a Muslim and, in fact, a Christian. As a result, Shishim became "the first immigrant from the Arab World to be naturalized as an American and judicially ruled white by law. 

There were many other important cases of course, including Ex Parte Mohreiz, where a district court in Massachusetts declared all Arabs to be white. But leave it to Arab comedian Sammy Obeid to provide the best recounting of the legal battles of early Syrian Americans in a funny bit that highlights the traditional narrative of Jesus' (perceived) whiteness to reconcile the country's racial and religious characters. 

Monday, July 21, 2025

The March of Progress

In the 1950s, a 5MB storage device weighed over a ton. Today, that’s the size of a typical iPhone photo.

Sunday, July 20, 2025

OAN Asks the Hard Questions...Really?

One America News (OAN) is a family-owned, far-right, pro-Trump news channel popular with many in the MAGA base. President Trump also loves the network; so much so, that his administration plans to publish news from OAN on the Voice of America and other U.S.-run media. So, it is salient what plays on OAN.

On foreign policy, MAGA's views on Israel appear to be shifting after Netanyahu's pre-emptive attack on Iran that threatened to embroil the U.S. in another Mideast war. In a further sign of unease with Israeli policies that are at odds with MAGA's "America's First" tenant, OAN host Matt Gaetz (the controversial ex-Congressman and Trump acolyte) ran a segment titled: How Many Americans Do Israeli Settlers Have to Kill Before We Care? The report covered the killing of 20-year old Palestinian-American Saif Musallet in the West Bank that Gaetz called an act of terrorism. Gaetz also talks about broader attacks on Palestinians by Israel with U.S. tax dollars...so, OAN doing hard-hitting news now?

The Resistance Begins with Jerome Powell?

The Federal Reserve is, arguably, the most important financial institution in the world. It is responsible for managing America's monetary policy, monitoring and regulating the nation's banks, and maintaining the stability of the U.S. financial system (and by extension, the global financial system; because what happens in the U.S. never stays in the U.S.). But the Fed is also, by design, a staid and dispassionate institution; run by bland, competent technocrats. It's the last place you'd think to find fodder for The Daily Show. And yet, here was Jason Klepper recently doing an extended segment on Trump's beef with Fed Chair Jerome Powell. Klepper jokes that Trump's so angry with Powell, you' think he caught him with [Melania] at a Coldplay concert!! 

Trump's dissatisfaction with Powell stems from the fact he refuses to do the President's bidding and lower interest rates as demanded. Powell is strictly apolitical, which irks Trump no end. After all, Big Lawmajor media companies, and even the Supreme Court have effectively bowed to Trump. So why not the Fed Chair, who Trump himself appointed? Moreover, Powell has refused to step down before his term is finished next year and has steadfastly maintained he will fight any attempt to remove him. That sounds like a challenge, but Trump realizes that firing a Fed Chair (even if he had the authority to do so) is a huge risk for the economy. Fed independence is a core part of the U.S. financial system and Wall Street has come to Powell's defense. So, is Powell, of all people, the hero the Resistance has been waiting for?

 

Sunday, July 13, 2025

Live Aid: The Day Music United the World

Today (July 13), marks the 40th anniversary of that historic event--a bold audacious musical spectacle to raise funds for a "biblical" famine in Ethiopia that would kill 1.2 million people. Conceived and organized by Irish rockstar Bob Geldof, Live Aid "was two epic concerts held in London and Philadelphia" on the same day. Geldof persuaded "many of the world’s most top artists at the time to play for free, including Queen, David Bowie, Madonna, the Who, Elton John, Tina Turner and Paul McCartney." The two shows were seen by over 160,000 people live and by 1.5 billion people on TV in over 150 countries (~a third of the world's population at the time), raising more than $140 million (the government of the UAE, incidentally, was the single biggest donor).

While the horror of that devastating famine is thankfully behind us, Live Aid remains a cultural touchstone. In all 70 artists performed live over 16 hours at Wembley and JFK Stadium. The complete set list for both venues is here. While there were many great performances, by consensus three stand out:

3. David Bowie: Following Queen (see below) at 7:20pm in the evening his set included energetic renditions of TVC-15, Rebel/ Rebel, Modern Love, and a memorable version of Heroes, which became the event's anthem of sorts. Bowie was supposed to play five songs but agreed to cut one "so that his time could be used to show documentary footage of the famine in Ethiopia instead." Bowie quietly introduces the clip (set to the Car's Drive) after Heroes and asks people to send their money in. It was a somber reminder to everyone watching about the gravity of the situation. Apparently, that's when the donations came flooding in.

 
2. U2: Bono was already changing the world, but the band's performance "not only showcased their musical prowess but also cemented Bono as a passionate activist." U2 was set to play at least three songs, Sunday Bloody Sunday, Bad, and Pride. However, Bono famously jumped into the crowd to help/dance with a fan during “Bad,” turning what could have been a musical disaster into an emotional and unforgettable moment. Years later, drummer Larry Mullen remarked: "It was kind of excruciating. We didn’t know whether we should stop, we didn’t know where he was, we didn’t know if he had fallen.” After Bono went AWOL for several minutes the rest of the band heroically filled in a very elongated (11-minutes long) version of Bad that "so searing" it cemented the band's reputation. The downside was it meant they didn't have time to play Pride. And Bono does have one regret from that day.


3. Queen: The best live performance in the history of music? Yeah, everyone agrees it probably was; certainly on that night, at least. Pete Townshend: "Queen were in the middle of a tour, walked out there, took the whole thing, and turned it into an advert for themselves. Dave Grohl: “Queen smoked ’em. They just took everybody. They walked away being the greatest band you’d ever seen in your life, and it was unbelievable.” But it almost wasn't, as Queen initially backed out of playing. They did in the end and rest is history...


Interestingly, all three played almost one after the other. So, it must have been the most electrifying portion of an already amazing event. The Wembley evening playlist was:

U2
Dire Straits
Queen
David Bowie
Elton John
Freddy Mercury & Brian May
Paul McCartney
Band Aid Finale

Friday, July 4, 2025

EU vs USA

There are many cultural differences between Europeans and Americans. But perhaps nothing encapsulates their many dissimilarities than their contrasting views on vacation.

(H/T Sarnia Asset Management)

As the cliche goes, Europeans work to live, and Americans live to work. To each their own.

Arabs are White, Because Jesus Can't be Brown

The history of Arab American identity is complex. The first major period of Arab migration to the U.S. began in the 1880s and coincided wit...