The videos and writing below are my best pitch to get Americans, especially Asian Pacific Americans, to volunteer forObama/Biden this weekend. Click here to volunteer through your local campaign office (or just look up the address and show up!). Click here to learn about a canvassing effort in Las Vegas with groups driving in from Los Angeles, San Diego, and San Francisco.
Annabel and I
have been volunteering three or four days a week for the Obama/Biden
campaign in Northern Virginia, and will do the same down south in
Charlottesville (home of Thomas Jefferson and the University of
Virginia) this weekend. With only a few days left before election day,
duties as a volunteer are as rewarding as they are fun. Barack Obama's
vaunted get-out-the-vote effort has already narrowed the field down to
people who are probably supporting Barack Obama, so as you go door to
door, you'll be unlikely to be confronted with hateful idiots who still
think Obama is "an Arab" (not that there is anything wrong with being
an Arab of course). Your job as a volunteer is to make it more likely
that people who already support Obama/Biden will make time to go out
and vote.
Last weekend, Annabel and I visited the home of a 78-year-old woman
who had immigrated to the U.S. from Afghanistan. She said she very
much wanted to vote but was too old to leave the house. We helped her
fill out a vote-by-mail application and explained to her that she will
be able to vote after all. She was very happy about this, and it made
us happy to know we'd given her the opportunity to participate in a
historic election, and made a small contribution to the expansion of
the American electorate.
Yesterday,
I knocked doors in a forest neighborhood in Annandale, VA, where I met
8 very enthusiastic Obama supporters and only one guy who said "I'm the
complete opposite of what you're looking for." In particular I'm happy
about talking to a 22-year-old man named Jason who intended to take
advantage of early voting, but had planned to go on a day when early
voting is not available in Virginia (Monday, the day before the
election). Thanks to my visit, he'll be making plans to go today,
Saturday, or on election day.
Over the past two years, I have seen the American electorate expand
by leaps and bounds to include immigrants and minorities and many
others who had previously been left out of the process. Early on in
this journey, Barack Obama has come to symbolize this national
transformation, but it really is, as he will tell you, much bigger than
just one person, even the future President of the United States. This
entire movement was made possible by our great democracy and the idea
of government for the people, by the people. Various measures have
been taken to keep minorities from having a say in how this government
should function, and the result has been disastrous, an electorate
homogeneous enough to be blinded by fears and prejudices that cause
them to repeatedly vote against their own interest, and against the
interest of the nation. Asian Pacific Americans can and are playing a
pivotal role in a seed change, where the American electorate is
becoming too diverse to allow a fear or hate-based political strategy
to turn large blocks of voters against any particular minority (gays,
Latinos, Blacks, Muslims, Asians, the poor, etc.). With a diverse
electorate, the only movements that can unite the country are based on
values that we share across ethnic and religious barriers, across
sexual orientation and cultural barriers -- in short, we will build a
national consensus based on hope instead of fear. Different groups
fear different things, but we all hope for the same things: equality,
liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. That is the direction we can
take America if all of us participate.
So go vote, of course, go vote. But voting is only one of
the many ways that you can participate in your democracy. By
volunteering, you can help others who are intimidated or discouraged
from voting, you can show fellow Americans how to become part of the
process, and help them gain a sense of ownership and responsiblity for
our government and how it is practiced. Each person we bring into the
process during this election will be an invaluable contributor to our
democracy in the future (I'll expand on this in my first post after the
election), all the more so because they forever remember that they
participated in the historic election of 2008 -- and you will have made
that possible. So go do it!
PS: I like the video above because it shows a great
diversity of Asian Pacific Americans volunteering for Obama/Biden (I
shot most of the footage but did not participate in editing). We are
about to release a new English language version of the video below,
which now has 363,686 views on our United For Obama channel alone. It still chokes me up, right when we see Ken Leung's cameo at the end: Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ky8Hvq-F0U
Eric Byler (born January 15, 1972) is an American film director, screenwriter and political activist. He identifies as hapa biracial, born to a Chinese American mother and a white American father...
Eric Byler (born January 15, 1972) is an American film director, screenwriter and political activist. He identifies as hapa biracial, born to a Chinese American mother and a white American father. He grew up in Virginia, Hawaii (where he attended Moanalua High School), and California. He graduated from Wesleyan University in 1994, majoring in film. He currently resides in Gainesville, Virginia.
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Roger Ebert's review of Americanese (IFC Films release 2008)
http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060330/REVIEWS/6
03300302
Roger's review of Charlotte Sometimes (Visionbox Pictures 2003 Release)
http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20030502/REVIEWS/3
05020301/1023
Variety Review of my latest film TRE (Cinema Libre Studio release Nov. 2007)
http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117933164.html?categoryid=31&cs=1
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