Interview
(To protect respondents' identities, surnames are not disclosed.)
A. Magazine
December 1997
The Numbers Game and the White Boy Shuffle
GENEVIEVE: No one really takes an official poll at my film company. Of
250-300 employees, there are 2 African-Americans, 3 Asian Americans, and
everyone else is white. In the creative group -- the group that decides what
movies to purchase or produce -- I am the only Asian American. There are two
African American women brought on primarily to serve on urban films. A lot of
times the three of us feel like we have to be the voice of "equality."
There are times when you'd be arguing with colleagues and say" don't you
find it inherently offensive and racist?" And they'd look at you like
you're from Mars! So it's a balancing act walking that fine line between
understanding what will sell, making that business decision, and trying to feel
comfortable with yourself at the end of the day.
ELENI: Among basic, entry-level finance professionals, there is a good
population of Asians. Moving up to management level, there's much fewer. And by
the time you move above VP, I've never seen any. And I'm personally worried
about what happens to people of ethnicity after they hit VP. For instance, in my
department of 60 people, we have no black people, and only two other Asians. At
the management level, I am the only minority, and the only woman.
FRANKIE: Even in a quasi-lefty environment, like a nonprofit, everyone is
still subject to misconceptions about people who look like us. When I was at a
large service agency of 600, it was an unwritten policy, "If you don't know
anything Asian American, ask him!" There was a handful of Asians, working
in immigration, and other stuff. And as I expected, a lot of line staff people
-- who do service -- are people of color. And the upper management levels were
white.
URDUJAH: I want to share my personal experience on how to get promoted in the
federal government. Last year there was an opening for a GS-13 level position,
and I applied. There were two Asians and 10 white applicants, and the selection
narrowed down to me and a white lady. I have been there longer than this lady,
we both have a masters degree, we both have specialized skills. It was a shock
to me, and to everybody else -- for some reason, she got the job. The problem is
that there is a way to "game" the system, by tailoring the job
description so it fits the person they'd like to have it, and still be within
the law. I found out that the only difference between me and this lady is is
that I don't participate in outreach programs as much as she does. In her
specialty field her audience, the public, is readily accessible. But the
technical community I need to reach is involved in direct health care services,
hence, they are not readily accessible. I feel that the selection was
"tailored" because the selection committee knew that my outreach
program activities in my field were not as impressive as the candidate who got
the job. And yet, the committee had chosen outreach activity as the deciding
factor for selection.
The other thing is being stereotyped as a hardworking Asian. I've noticed
over the years that I get more work than my other co-workers, two whites. This
is stereotyping whereby the Asian cannot readily say no. I think my two
co-workers expect me to be receptive to any kind of job they shove at me. It
disturbs me.
ANAND: Do you think you get more work because you do a better job than the
other guys? And have you just said "no" sometimes?
FRANKIE: I'm a little bothered by your line of questioning. That's similar to
what I've heard white people ask people who say "I've been discriminated
against in my job." That somehow, that's her fault, as opposed to who is
funneling the work and why. I think you're right that we do have a certain
amount of responsibility and power over the situation, but discrimination is
never our fault.
ANAND: It's just human nature that people try to follow the path of least
resistance; and to the extent that you don't give resistance, they will take
advantage of you -- that's true of almost any race.
ELENI: I've had to work harder, better, faster, and perform more to get where
I am, so that they have no excuse but to promote me. My firm is a hundred times
worse than any other firm I've seen. It's still your true all-time traditional
white boy's club. The women are the Hamptonite, New England blonde skinny girls.
It's about looks and weight when you're a girl at work.
I hear jokes all the time, that aren't directly geared towards me. Like
"Look at this roster of names -- it reads like the fucking U.N." Or
when working late and ordering dinner, I've heard Chinese food referred to as
"chink food." They think I don't hear. "We got Italian, we got
chink, we got whatever." That's racism -- and I don't fight it, because I
think I wouldn't have gotten far by fighting it. I went along with it, and I am,
as much as you can be, a "white boy." Even the women try to be white
boys.
J.D.: Does it bother you that you have to go along with it?
ELENI: It bothers me. But I've accepted that if I want to advance in my
career in this field, I could fight it -- but it probably wouldn't change their
minds.
URDUJAH: Do you have an employee program where you could talk about problems?
ELENI: We do. I'm required to attend diversity training with a lot of other
white men. It's funny to be the minority attending it -- some white man is
teaching all these other white men and me how to hire and treat everybody
equally, whether they're women, black, Hispanic, or Asian. And in the end, yeah,
they hire them. But they're secretaries or entry-level professionals, or just in
non-threatening positions. And I practice it. As a manager, I'm in a role where,
as part of a team, I hire people. When white applicants are qualified, they
always get a second interview. We interview black people -- but they almost
never get a second interview -- and when they do, it's cut off somewhere!
URDUJAH: The two interviews that you give whites, is that some kind of
unwritten protocol?
(Laughter)
ELENI: A white person could be qualified, a black person could be equally
qualified, and the white person would get a second interview. Everybody seems to
have the right excuses or reasons for giving that chance or not -- like,
"It was a wrong fit".
GENEVIEVE: You have to be more white than white people! At my company, what
made our first financial African-American executive so "hireable" is
that he's from Orange County, an Ivy League graduate, and talking to him on the
phone, you'd swear you're talking to Lawrence Welk! People meet him, and they do
a double take. Similarly, for me, I interact with a lot of people on the phone.
If you're not familiar with Asian last names, you wouldn't know my ethnicity,
and I don't have an accent. I can certainly play that Valley girl thing to the
hilt -- which helps in my business -- and I've had people call and assume I was
some blonde surfer girl from L.A. They have no idea!
J.D. (to ANAND): A lot of people have talked about "playing the white
boys' game" or "acting white." How much of that do you think
plays into who's hired and who's promoted at your law firm?
ANAND: I definitely think law firms -- at least these white-shoe firms -- are
looking to convey an image to clients and to each other. You can call it
"white" or whatever you want, but the image is: nice suit, pressed
shirt, a tie, black leather shoes. If you look a little bit odd, you're not
going to fit in. They may be looking for different races -- but also ones that
fit into a particular corporate mold.That's what they think clients expect --
and what they're comfortable with -- although I don't think white people have
the monopoly on suits and ties.
JD: If you want to stay there and be partner, can you just do what you're
doing now to get there? Eleni said that she can't be herself.
ANAND: I got a leave of absence to go to India on a pilgrimage, and wound up
getting my head shaved, and I came back completely bald. That's not something
you do if you're interested in advancing in the corporate world. I don't think
what I'm doing now will get me to partner, just because I'm not willing to make
the sacrifices necessary for the firm. I'm not sure that has to with me being
Asian per se.
GARY: I had a question about the "white boy club" versus being
yourself. If we're actually talking about abandoning our culture in the
workplace to get ahead, I believe we actually started a long time ago -- as a
kid -- to be socially accepted while growing up, to get into Stanford or Yale
Law School, to get that dream job. The role-playing probably started well before
entering the work force. I play the white boy game at work, but it's certainly
not any different from my behavior outside of the office.
ELENI: I notice that I live two different lives. There's a very Chinese side
of me, that doesn't touch work at all. What seems normal for us -- going down to
Chinatown, eating in a loud Chinese restaurant and gettin' down and eatin'
seafood with chopsticks -- that's not a part of my professional life. My
colleagues would be appalled! They're white, so what I do with them is a
completely different life than hanging out with my Asian friends -- I feel it's
a double life. It always has to be one or the other. For instance, I had a
Christmas party and I didn't know who to invite, because I was afraid to bring
them together!
JD: In the best of all worlds, would you change so that you could integrate
them?
ELENI: Yeah, but I can't picture it.
JD (to GENEVIEVE): So being an Asian American woman in this field, that's not
a problem?
GENEVIEVE: It's a double-edged sword. Hong Kong films are really hot. It's an
advantage for me because I have the language skills. For a while, I was
resisting it, "No, 1 don't want to be pigeon-holed into Hong Kong
films." But someone hit me over the head and said "Are you stupid?
This is something you can just jump right into. Go for it." But it also
hinders, because then I get the dumbest, most trivial questions!
FRANKIE: I'm at a point in my life now where I'm really sick of "dancing
to whitey's tune." With my politics, how I live, I'm trying to make it all
one thing. For me, I decided to work for this API organization, so that I can
pay my bills working for something that A) is worthwhile B) addresses not only
our people, but people who have class, race, language issues, compounded by
serious health problems. I can't imagine where else I'd want to be.
My father and my mother and the generations before us really paid in blood so
I could go to college. They fought so I could have these opportunities. So I
feel that if I don't make any headway and try to fight, if my kids have to go
through the same thing that I did, then I didn't do my job.
JD: So what you're doing now enables you to have that integration and be
yourself.
FRANKIE: When progressive white people ask "what can I do in the
struggle?" I always say "well when you hear a white person say
something fucked up, tell them that it's fucked up!" Unless I'm at the
receiving end of it, I don't want to waste my time with that. That's not my job
anymore.
GARY: We keep using thewords " discriminated against" and I don't
think I've been a victim of that. I don't feel like my career has been held back
because management sees me as an Asian American. I know I've been tokenized --
but I never felt like it was mean-spirited. I've had very high-ranking
executives make jokes to my face about my ethnic background, like "here
comes yellow fever" or gesturing with bowing and martial arts-like moves.
But it's always been friendly, I guess.
J.D.: It doesn't bother you?
GARY: I'm a little taken aback that somebody of that stature would choose to
behave with what I consider ignorance. But as a subordinate, I'm not really in a
position to come back and say, "you're out of line."
J.D.: Have you ever felt being tokenized?
GARY: When I first started out, my company was pitching a Japanese account.
They were quick to get me in a suit, take my picture, and put my photo on the
organizational chart presented to the client. It was an obvious attempt to show
me off -- personnel below mid-level management had never been presented that way
before.
J.D.: There's a fine line between being a token -- and where you actually
become the valuable player. Without you, they're in deep trouble -- because they
need you. On the other hand, your picture's up there so they'll think that
they're diverse, "and while we're at it, let's get a picture of a woman and
a black person and a Latino too."
URDUJAH: Affirmative action is good for entry-level, or in the initial hiring
process. But once you're in the organization, how you are promoted or advanced
is another matter. I feel that minorities are there to show that the quota has
been met. Where I am at now, there are a number of us minorities at the GS- 12
level. But there are less than a handful at the GS- 13 level, and none at the
GS- 14 or 15 level.
J.D.: Why do you think it's like that?
URDUJAH: A lot of employees have been there for years. To reward them, the
management has to manipulate the job description to promote those employees to
higher levels. And those I personally see being promoted are not minorities,
even though minorities have tried in vain to compete. Also, by identifying a job
as a temporary position, you can put anybody in there that you want, and once
that particular person is in that position, you can convert it into a permanent
position.
There was another job opening I reluctantly applied for, because we already
knew who the "favored" candidate was. I have been informally advised
by colleagues to apply, even though my chance was slim. If I have some sort of
track record showing that I've applied for several jobs which I am qualified
for-but still denied the opportunity to advance-I would have a chance to seek
grievances eventually. Unfortunately, the "favored" candidate suddenly
passed away. Do you know what happened to the job opening? They canceled it! I'd
like to accept management's explanation on why it was canceled, but I wasn't
buying.
FRANKIE: That speaks to how advanced racism has become. Look how calculated
that is -- to tailor a job description when you know who you want to have it.
That's also why I want to be in an API agency. This is the first time I've been
in a work position that I've actually thought of staying in beyond two or three
years. I think we just have to create our own opportunities -- this goes for
film, for everything. I think Bruce Lee said that -- "I don't wait for
opportunity to knock on my door. To hell with that, I create it."
J.D.: Are you talking about creating opportunities within the Asian Pacific
community, or in the mainstream, or both?
FRANKIE: Primarily in the Asian Pacific community -- and it overlaps with the
mainstream. My agency's funding comes from city, state, federal government, but
it's focused very much on the API community. I'm not seclusionist or
isolationist, but I think we have to take more control in setting the terms we
want to work with.
The Question of Power
J.D.: Let me ask, if we had Asians in key power positions, does that become a
problem for other Asians?
URDUJAH: There's a disadvantage if you have people in the higher level of
your same ethnic background -- because of that perception of preferential
treatment. If I were to interview employees, I would be very careful to even
choose Asian applicants. My administrator was African American, and I have a
feeling that a lot of African American employees were not really advancing --
because he would be perceived as preferring his own ethnic group for
advancement.
ELENI: Actually, in my staff, there is an Asian girl. I am reluctant to
promote her. They think I favor her, and to be honest, I think I do -- I baby
her a bit, because I want to see her do well. So, I may throw her up for a
promotion, but when we make the decision, I would be hesitant to be a strong
advocate.
ANAND: You're reluctant because of her race? And your race?
ELENI: Actually she's Korean. But in their eyes it's all the same.
J.D.: Do you know what the old boys' network is?
FRANKIE: People hire.their sons and nephews and friends of friends -- this
very nepotism kind of thing.
ANAND: They would have stuck up for their boy.
J.D.: You wouldn't be doing anything different than what these other people
are already doing.
ELENI: Earlier Frankie was saying that he didn't get anywhere if our kids
have to go through the same shit that we have to. But I also want to advance
professionally. There are other ways to fight. For me, I volunteer in a
big-brother/big-sister program for inner-city Asian American youth -- which
people at work don't know about. I've gotten funding from my company -- which
people in my department also don't know about. The company on my behalf donated
a pretty large sum, allowing the inner-city Asian American kids to go to camp.
Maybe it's a silent little thing, but that is my way. By being a mentor to an
Asian inner-city youth -- I believe that if we don't watch out for our own, who
will?
J.D.: Okay, but then why can't you translate that to work? Is that a problem?
ELENI: I think I do I just do it silently. Like I said I watch out for the
Asian girl at work, just quietly.
GENEVIEVE: There are some very powerful Asian Americans "up there"
in this industry -- they never helped me out. I think they're probably afraid,
because they feel like it'll politicize them too much to their company.
J.D.: Because they don't think of themselves as Asian, or they don't care
about you, or is it not the way the industry works?
GENEVIEVE: My God, entertainment is the most nepotistic favoritistic industry
in the world!
What About Affirmative Action?
J.D.: Does affirmative action mean anything in any of the industries you work
in?
GENEVIEVE: Absolutely nothing. Our company never had a program, never had a
diversity training, never had any kind of outreach, nothing. They don't care.
URDUJAH: The government is a big proponent of affirmative action, since it's
regulation. But I feel that the real intent of affirmative action, in terms of
promotion and/or equal opportunities, is not observed or followed. There are
programs to develop employees -- mentoring, cultural diversity, educational
enhancement, employee services, etc. But there are ways to "game" the
merit system that make affirmative action ineffective. My experience with trying
to gain higher positions speaks for itself.
J.D.: Affirmative action is supposed to work for promotions too. Hearing from
you, it obviously is not working.
URDUJAH: I don't think so -- as long as there are ways to cheat the system,
and the government is decentralized. Each region has a different way of
interpreting affirmative action. So it's good for entry-level, but once you're
inside, you're on your own.
GARY: I think affirmative action has meaning in education, and admissions --
but not in the work place. I do believe the government has a responsibility to
even out the playing field for kids who want to go to college but haven't had
similar educational opportunities as others. But private businesses should be
left alone by the government -- they should be able to hire anyone they feel
will strengthen their business. Because the objective of affirmative action
seems to be simply to meet head count quotas, the real problem -- ignorance --
is not addressed. It needs to be revamped so businesses encourage a diverse
workforce to share their ideas, and that these ideas benefit not only the
employees, but the company -- particularly its bottom line.
J.D.: Affirmative action is something very specific -- it only applies to
minorities and women -- it's leveling the playing field. Now,
"diversity" is something which has gone beyond affirmative action; an
extension which encompasses a much broader range of folks.
GARY: My last client, a state government agency, made a pretty good effort to
develop and implement an affirmative action plan. It was probably prompted by
the Texaco incident, but whatever the reason, they did gather minorities from
several departments, encourage an open forum, and meet on a regular basis to
address the problem of diversity. l believe the voices were heard and taken
seriously.
J.D.: Affirmative action for many people has the negative connotations you
talked about: the head count, the quotas, the unqualified people and all kinds
of stuff.
FRANKIE: The right-wing's really succeeded in corrupting the original
purposes of these things. And affirmative action, they've really reduced to
"it's just a head count, it's a quota system," and unfortunately a lot
of ways it's played out, it IS that way. It's not that affirmative action
doesn't work -- it's just that depending on how they're using it, who's hiring
who -- and WHY are they hiring -- that's where the problem is. A lot of people
say it's a band-aid -- and there's something to that argument. But without it,
we'd be a hell of a lot worse off. Getting back to affirmative action, you have
to attack where it is, site by site. It's how it's being used, how it's being
corrupted, that's messed up. Unfortunately now, it even seems like it's supposed
to work for promotions, now, you can barely get in the door, and when you do,
it's the same old bullshit.
J.D.: Would any of you be really upset if you found out you were an
affirmative action hire?
FRANKIE: No way.
GENEVIEVE: Not me.
ELENI: I'd be really happy. Because I think I would be a case where it
worked. Because I got in the door and advanced. Being in investment banking, I
see how affirmative action is just "diversity training" -- and I think
that's a mandatory eight hours so we don't get sued!
ANAND: I would feel disappointed. I can't say that I've never been the
beneficiary of it, but no one's ever told me. I certainly wouldn't kill myself.
I know I've been helped out along the way by various people, but I'd like to
think that what I've done is not based on some system designed to count me.
FRANKIE: But as an individual you know that you could do this job. You
wouldn't have applied for the job unless you felt like you met the
qualifications somehow.
ANAND: You're right. Once you get there, once you feel like you can do the
job, it may not matter to you as much how you got there, whether by luck, or by
racial happenstance. I guess I just wouldn't be happy.
GARY: It would bother me. It's a matter of pride. Like Anand, I'm also
arrogant enough to think I've always gotten jobs on the basis of my ability
alone. I would probably consider quitting if I found out that I was hired based
on meeting an affirmative action quota.
J.D.: For some people, the old boys' network is just a corrupt form of
affirmative action. A lot of people feel that within the old boys' network, some
people who get promoted are not qualified. But obviously, affirmative action,
people are not comfortable with that. What about " diversity?" Is that
better?
URDUJAH: I had to go to the personnel department and ask if we had a
diversity program! I said "when was the last time we had this?" They
said "about two years ago." I didn't remember it!
(Laughter)
URDUJAH: I asked someone about the agenda of the "cultural
diversity" meeting, and was informed that there were no specific issues on
"sensitivity training" dealing with various ethnic groups. But the
government is very concerned that employees observe certain ethical standards as
"public servants."
ANAND: I know that the bar association and some other national associations
have set goals for hiring amongst minorities, that the law firms are trying to
meet. I don't know if they've been too successful. We haven't had diversity
trainings here, but other law firms that I've been at did. I think a large part
is to avoid being sued -- they can say "we did try to sensitize people
about sexual harassment, racial discrimination; we made an effort and we can't
mind-control people, so what happened happened." But some of those firms
actually did feel like they wanted to hire more Asian Americans, hire more
African Americans. I think some people are more sincere about it.
FRANKIE: In non-profits, it's a very big thing. I don't know how many
diversity trainings I've been to. But, if there's someone who doesn't want to be
at that training, they can completely sabotage any learning process that's gonna
happen for anybody else.
ELENI: For us diversity training is mandatory for anybody who is at the
management level. They harass until you go.
FRANKIE: Is there a lot of resistance from the other guys?
ELENI: No one wants to go. To be fair, it's because you lose a day. But they
set the tone by saying "I realize that some of you are hostages to
this." Then they spend eight hours, in a roundabout way, saying "well,
we have to deal with a lot of different kinds of us; different weights, ages,
hair color, looks" -- because at my company, we have very few fat people --
"We have to deal with everybody, so just be sensitive to not say things in
front of them that will offend them." In our training, the instructor
mentioned EVERYTHING BUT Asian! He mentioned black, Latino, Puerto Rican, Native
American, fat people, old people, ugly people, handicapped people, blind people
-- everything -- no Asians! And I was sitting in that room.
J.D.: Why do you think that was?
ELENI: I think we're invisible to them! I felt invisible. And in the
beginning, at the introductions, I even offered that "yeah, it's been hard
being Asian in this firm."
J.D.: Were you the only Asian in the training?
ELENI: Yes. I was honest -- and I was ignored. Not meanly -- but they just
didn't address Asian issues. I think it was because I was in the room.
ANAND: I think that most of the country sees race relations as being
black/white, not brown or different skin colors
FRANKIE: Latinos often get lumped in with Blacks. Asians -- and this is very
problematic and we need to challenge more -- often get lumped with whites. With
Blacks and Latinos, there's a joke I heard that broke my heart: they call us
"the other white meat." That's NOT good! (laughter) Unfortunately, I
think that's largely how we're seen. Part of how 1 overcompensate is, whatever
the social stigmas about being an Asian male, I make sure that I'm
hyper-aggressive and loud! And because I've done diversity trainings, one of the
points I try to make is that one day or a couple of hours isn't gonna do it --
so always try to encourage people to continue dialogue outside of this room.
Otherwise it's pointless -- and you come in here and all you did was lose a day.
J.D.: Obviously, with affirmative action and diversity, we're trying to
remedy problems. And I hear from all of you that in some places, it's not even
addressed. And in other places, it's not working.
FRANKIE: I should say that in the non-profit world, at least a lot of people
who attend really are trying to open their minds. There's less resistance than
I've seen in corporate settings
J.D.: But do you all agree that there are problems at work? Is there racism
going on? Or are things like affirmative action and diversity a waste of time?
ELENI: Well, Genevieve said there just aren't enough Asians in the
entertainment industry. I think in order for us to even have awareness about the
problems at work, there needs to be enough of us AT work! So you may feel like
there's a problem -- but you're the only one!
J.D.: So you think it's matter of numbers?
ELENI: I think you need at least a few people to get it started.
J.D.: But let me give you some examples. We started to do diversity training
ten years ago at TRW. One-third of their professional staff was Asian Pacific
Americans. They had no one above the director level and yet one-third of their
workforce was Asian Pacific. So I'm not sure if numbers is the only thing.
ANAND: I'm not a believer in affirmative action at all. As far as the public
sector goes, I don't think there should be anyone asking what race you are,
having you fill out a form or anything like that. I think they should use as
little racial identification as possible. As far as private employers go, I
think they can just do whatever they want. If they want to have affirmative
action that's fine. If an Indian restaurant wants to hire all Indians, if a
Korean grocery store wants to hire all Koreans, I don't see anything wrong with
that. If a white investment bank wants to hire all whites, that's fine too.
J.D.: So you're in favor of a total segregated society if that's what it
boils down to?
ANAND: I don't think it's a good idea to exclude people on the basis of race
for hiring, but I'm not going to tell someone -- a Korean grocery store or an
Indian restaurant owner -- that he has to hire someone of another race just
because the government thinks it's a good idea to have people of different
backgrounds working at a grocery store, at a speaker company like Bose, or a
computer company like Wang.
J.D.: So qualifications in your system would have no place because it's
purely a matter of race?
ANAND: I don't think we can tell people that you have to choose the best
person for the job, because then you wouldn't have families hiring their
children to work. People should just be able to hire whomever they want to --
except the government, where you shouldn't be able to discriminate on race at
all.
FRANKIE: Your system really takes for granted that there's a level playing
field already. There's a difference in terms of a Korean hiring Koreans in their
deli. They're doing it for survival, and because they want to give another
Korean person a job. Whereas with an investment banker, the amount of power
that's wielded is completely incomparable.
ANAND: I completely agree with you. I don't deny that -- I would just say I
don't see why it's okay to give the break to the Korean guy but it's not okay to
give a break to a white guy.
J.D.: Because the white guy's already got breaks lined up for him.
ELENI: And the white guy's dad runs the investment bank! The Korean has the
choice of being a grocery store owner like Dad and if he wants to be an
investment banker, he needs to have a foot in the door. With the picture that
you paint, all Indians are owning restaurants, all Koreans are running grocery
stores, and Chinese people are doing laundry. What about the Chinese or Korean
who wants to run the investment bank?
ANAND: Well I mentioned Bose speakers. Look, Jewish people were tired of
being shut out of law firms, and they just opened their own. They found a way to
survive and overcome. I don't want to go to some place where I'm not wanted,
where they have to hire me because they want to meet some jellybean counters'
fantasy world of five blueberries and three licorice.
J.D.: (to ANAND): What about protesting a company that doesn't hire Asians?
ANAND: There's nothing wrong with that. You should protest whatever you want
to. I'm just saying I don't think it's the government's place to tell anyone who
they have to hire. I don't buy the notion that a small business owner has more
freedom to do what he wants than the owners of the big business. I personally
wouldn't want to work at a place where I felt like they were just counting
beans. I'd much rather know that they don't want to hire Asians. You can see
that when they're not being forced to by some law and they're just not
relegating people to some back water department just to satisfy some bean
counter's fantasy.
GENEVIEVE: I will agree with Anand that in the private sector, ultimately it
doesn't matter what color you are. It's the green that matters. If you make
profit for the company, you can go there and you can demand almost anything.
J.D.: So if an Asian in entertainment could do those things, then they would
be up there?
ANAND: I think what she's saying is that companies want to make money and
they'll do it with anyone who can take them there. On the margin, perhaps being
a minority makes a difference; but I think the dominant motivating factor is
money. If you're Michael Jackson and you're Blacker if you're Bruce Lee,
eventually you can hit the top and you're going to make money too.
FRANKIE: But Bruce Lee, he went through a tremendous amount of crap. He was
driven enough to go challenge Hollywood racism, and demand to work on his own
terms. That's why he had such a hard time. He's quoted as saying "I don't
want to do these chingchong roles." He always set parameters.
Making Change
J.D.: So what are we going to do? Anand threw out on the table what he thinks
needs to happen.
GARY: American business is driven primarily by making money, not doing what's
right. While I strongly believe that government doesn't have the right to tell a
private company how to hire employees, I do think companies are better off with
a diverse workforce. Companies need to come to this conclusion on their own. At
my last job, there was an effort to bring in more minorities -- and I think the
company benefited, but perhaps more importantly, the work it did for its clients
benefited from having a more diverse work force.
J.D.: Yeah, because affirmative action is regulated but diversity is not.
Some people say they want to do diversity because it's not regulated.
FRANKIE (to ANAND): I agree with you in that we need to take more initiative
creating our own opportunities. My agency was founded because government and
other agencies providing services were not scratching the itch that Asian
Americans and Asian immigrant communities particularly had. I think that's
largely where we need to move -- setting up our own institutions where we can be
in those positions to make those key decisions
J.D.: So you're advocating more of a separatist approach?
FRANKIE: Things need to happen simultaneously. That's a key component; but I
want to focus my energy on more Asian American autonomy.
TAMINA DAVAR, workplace editor:. Many of you spoke about being one of few
Asians in your workplace. And even though Asian Americans are underrepresented
in all but a few industries, there's a general perception that we're
well-represented in every industry. Even if, as Eleni pointed out, in finance,
most of us are at entry-levels. So what would you say to someone who said,
"What are you so uptight about? There's already too many of you Asians here
in this industry?"
ELENI: Before I came to work, I had that perception as well -- because the
quality schools produce a lot of good undergraduate people who have degrees for
business. But now that I'm here for a couple of years, I don't know where they
all went! When we were graduating, we all had job offers.
J.D.: Where do you think the disconnect is?
ELENI: I think they got in the door at entry-level. And I find that a lot of
Asians starting out in the financial industry don't fit into that
"white-boy" image; they don't play that game well. So I see more
people leaving. Of my friends from college, I'm among the few left.
TAMINA: Has management noticed that so many Asians have left?
FRANKIE: Do they care?
ELENI: No. But I noticed it -- because it affects my life! It affects my
friends. And also because when we get together socially, I hear how much
discomfort is felt by them -- especially Asian men. I feel for them. Not only do
they not fit in, they are excluded. I suppose, being a woman, you're a little
less threatening -- because you're never gonna fit in so it doesn't really
matter. They can at least let you in.
FRANKIE: They just want to date you!
ELENI: Yeah, they want to date you! But with the Asian male, I see SO much
discrimination against them -- that they get angry -- and don't know what to do
about it -- so they leave. I've seen that among a lot of friends.
TAMINA: What would you change in your company or an industry, given this
massive Asian American exodus that no one else seems to notice?
ELENI: Mind frames of upper management need to change. But in my mind, it's
asking the impossible. They're white. They're brought up a certain way. And to
ask them to broaden their horizons is difficult. One way is to get us in those
entry-level positions and let them have contact with more Asians -- we're gonna
be a little more accepted. But I don't know if any diversity training will
actually change their minds, or even enlighten them in some way.
FRANKIE: I think you have to concentrate on young people. Some of the best
diversity work I've clone has been with the youth because they don't have the
hang-ups of that 50 or 60 year old white dude who's been living the good life.
You're trying to retain and develop young people, so they don't have to go
through the same shit we do.
GENEVIEVE: I do want to help Asian American youth. But you need to make more
dollars to give dollars to the community.
FRANKIE: I feel if you allow others to define your worth -- feeling shame
about being an affirmative action hire -- you need to ask yourself some serious
questions about where you get your sense of worth. If you need approval from
white mainstream society, just turn on the TV, or see a movie, and you'll see
exactly what they think of us.