Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Stop and Identify Statutes

With the recent spat of people exercising the full extent of their liberties and testing the authority of law enforcement (examples here and here), I thought it would be a good idea to investigate exactly how much information a person is required to give an officer when suspected of a crime. The path led to the interesting article on Stop and Identify statutes at Wikipedia.

Apparently in Illinois, when a person is suspected of a crime and stopped, an officer may "demand the name and address of the person and an explanation of his actions." The implication, of course, is that a person must truthfully give the officer their name and address. The statute says nothing about providing additional information or showing identification of any kind. Also significant is the fact that any questioning must take place close to the stopping place and within a reasonable time period.

Unfortunately, the Illinois statute doesn't specifically exclude the imperative of providing other information, like the one in Ohio does. However, I suspect you will have grounds to legally challenge any situation where an officer wants more information than is required from you.

Now, I'm not advocating everyone to go out there and challenge police officers every opportunity they can get. It's just important to recognize that although law enforcement officers have the authority to police the streets, they are given that authority by us, the people. They only have as much authority as given to them by the people, and those powers are detailed in statutes of state and federal law. The more we allow these powers to be exceeded, the more we allow our rights to be taken away from us. Know your rights.

Monday, September 17, 2007

Racism on TV

Many of my friends know that I refuse to eat at Jimmy John's, and perhaps now I can enlighten others as to why. To begin with, here is an interesting website that came up on Digg the other day: http://flumesday.com/102906racist.html . Which is your favorite one?

Some of these commercials exploit viewers' xenophobic tendencies and amplify them to emotional effect. Others use a character's ethnic differences as a means to simulate comedy, as if being different is funny in itself. All of the commercials are racist.

I was particularly shocked to see the National Vanguard commerical. At first it seemed like a small piece of white supremacist attitudes that existed in the past. A quick visit to Wikipedia soon revealed that the organization was founded only two years ago. We may be living in the 21st century, but one cannot deny that racism still exists in our society.

Which brings me to the topic of Jimmy John's. This commercial aired on TV a few months ago, and may still be airing for all I know. My jaw literally dropped when I saw it for the first time. The implication that Hispanic families have a large number of children, that Hispanic parents cannot control their kids, and the commercial's use of the Spanish language and accent are all reprehensible. Before anyone disputes this argument, consider this: would the commercial have run if the actors were from any other ethnic group?

Let's cut to another commercial. Here, we have an image of Japanese culture as anime-centric, overly disciplined, and deferential. On top of that, the use of the gong and the accented 'r' are pretty heavily reminiscent of the Charlie Chan yellowface stereotype of those of Asian descent. And while I'm on the topic, can anyone link me to the racist radio commercial that Jimmy John's ran a few years ago? I can't find details about the situation online, but I do remember that it angered the Asian-American community enough that it called a boycott of the franchise.

When such instances of misrepresentation as seen in these commercials are encountered without being addressed, we lose an opportunity to learn and let society dictate what we should be thinking and feeling. For my part, I will continue to avoid Jimmy John's as much as I can, and I encourage everybody that recognizes these problems to do the same.

Sunday, September 16, 2007

A New Year?

Summer has come and gone, a new semester has started, and people seem to have found their individual equilibria between jobs and schoolwork and extracurriculars. I'm sure many of my peers can attest to how hectic the first few weeks of a semester can be while everybody gets used to their schedules. Now that things are settling down and summer vacation is over, I might try to regularly post here again. I make no promises.