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Group for Multiracial Solidarity Disbands

 
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chasbyrd
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Joined: 27 Nov 2004
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PostPosted: Thu 30 Aug 2007 13:52    Post subject: Group for Multiracial Solidarity Disbands Reply with quote

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Group for Multiracial Solidarity Disbands

Nichi Bei Times Weekly, Posted: Aug 29, 2007

SAN FRANCISCO – A group that established chapters on several California campuses to celebrate the diverse heritage of those with multi-racial identity is disbanding writes Alec Yoshio MacDonald in the Nichi Bei Times Weekly. The Hapa Issues Forum (HIF) was begun at UC Berkeley fifteen years ago by three students of mixed parentage. One of the founders Greg Mayeda, now an Oakland attorney, said about the group, “My belief was that it was important to expand the definition and understanding of what it meant to be Japanese American.” HIF extended their sphere of interest to multi-racial issues in general. HIF lobbied successfully for a “check all that apply” option in the 2000 U.S. Census. Interest in the group has waned recently so a farewell event will be held on Saturday, Sept. 8 from 2-5 p.m. at the UC Berkeley Student Union.


Greg Mayeda and Hapa Issues Forum were part of what I called the socialist wing of the multiracial movement. Their philosophy was and still is disposed to portraying mixedness merely as a subculture or as subsets of the so-called major races. Mayeda seems to confirm that with his “My belief was that it was important to expand the definition and understanding of what it meant to be Japanese American.”

I always believed that hapas never fully grasped the history and insidious nature of the one-drop rule, how it severely limited freedom of association, how it sought to impose ruthless restrictions on individual freewill. His group’s support of “check all that apply” instead of a separate multiracial category also expanded the definition and understanding of what it meant to be black – since federal agencies can collapse black and white respondents to the black category.

To say that Hapa Issues Forum promoted multiracial solidarity is a joke.
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