April 6, 2012
Telltale Signs
By Rodel Rodis
By Rodel Rodis
Terror Alert! A group of 16 Filipino suicide bombers are poised to infiltrate the US border in Mexico wearing deadly explosive vests to be detonated in heavy metropolitan areas to kill Americans. A crack team of US Navy SEALs have been dispatched to intercept them.
That is the surprising plot of the new Hollywood film “Act of Valor” which premiered as the top box office draw of the weekend it opened in theatres all over the US last month and which remained in the top 5 for a month.
The film features real-life active duty US Navy SEALs playing themselves in a plot the movie publicizes is “based on actual events.”
Imagine what image of Filipinos is being formed in the minds of millions of Americans who have viewed or will view this film in movie theatres, on HBO and in DVDs. Why Filipnos?
The opening scene of the movie is set in Manila with Filipino terrorists killing the American ambassador and his son along with dozens of children by detonating an improvised explosive device (IED) inside an ice cream van. The Filipinos are directed by a terrorist mastermind named Abu Shabal from Chechnya who escapes and returns to Russia after the mass murder.
The scene shifts to Costa Rica where a Jewish drug smuggler terrorist named Mikhail “Christo” Troykovich and his henchmen capture a CIA agent and torture her to obtain information.What she knows is that Christo and Shabal are partners in terror. They meet in the Ukraine to plot their attack on the US by visiting a factory where special vests are being assembled that use plastic explosives that can evade metal detectors, and are thin enough to be worn under any clothing without notice.
Abu Shabal brings his 16 Filipino terrorists to Baja California in Mexico to prepare them to enter the US through tunnels built under a milk factory that are used by drug cartels. When the Navy SEALs using their binoculars spot the terrorists, one of them immediately identifies the men as “Filipinos”. Why weren’t they identified as possibly Indonesians or Malaysians? How did the SEALs immediately know their identities?
When Abu Shabal instructs the Filipinos on their mission to wear the suicide bomb vests and to blow themselves up all over America, the Pinoys express reluctance but are somehow compelled to do so. There is a scene of the Filipinos praying on the ground of a Mexican desert crying and looking scared as they ponder their suicide mission.
The movie ends with all the Filipino terrorists killed by the US Navy SEALs who suffer only one casualty.
After San Franciscan Rudy Asercion, the head of the local Bataan Post of the American Legion, viewed the movie, he was so incensed at its racial profiling of Filipinos that he emailed everyone on his email list to denounce it. He then launched a global petition (http://www.change.org/petitions/the-president-of-the-united-states-stop-stereotyping-filipinos-as-terrorist-in-american-movies) that stated:
“On April 9, 2012, as the nation commemorate the 70th anniversary of the Fall of Bataan, please join us in a world-wide conversation to stop the Motion Picture Association of America from stereotyping Filipinos as evil fanatics and anti American terrorists.”
Rudy organized a group to watch “Act of Valor” at a local Daly City theatre on March 31 and to discuss the movie afterwards. After dozens signed up, Rudy called on the day of the screening to inform everyone that the movie was no longer showing.
“We haven’t even organized a boycott campaign to demand that it be pulled yet and it’s no longer showing? Wow!” one asked in awe of Pinoy Power.
While the movie was patently offensive to Filipinos, it was also insulting to another ethnic group that has considerably more clout in Hollywood.
While the movie was patently offensive to Filipinos, it was also insulting to another ethnic group that has considerably more clout in Hollywood.
Debbie Schlussel, a journalist who regularly writes for the Wall Street Journal and the New York Post, wrote Amanda Greenberg, the Navy press person handling press inquiries regarding “Act of Valor” and posed these questions:
“Who at the Pentagon, US Navy or Navy SEALs was in charge of approving “Act of Valor”? Was the final product vetted? Was the script vetted? Was there no problem expressed or objections to the fact that the script makes a Jewish billionaire the bad guy and the smuggler and financier behind the major terrorism plot?”
“What is the position of whomever vetted and approved the final script, regarding anti-Semitism? Can that person name a single major terrorist plot against America in which Jews were involved? I note your name is Greenberg. Does it not offend you that the major players in the “jihadist” plot in this movie are not really Muslims, but a Jew and a Russian who “converted”?”
“Are there any Jewish Navy SEALs? How do you think it will affect Jewish Naval officers and enlisted men, knowing that their branch of the U.S. Armed Forces believes that Jews will be behind a major terrorist plot against America?”
In her Jewish community blog, Schlussel denounced this glorified US Navy recruiting film as “an anti-Semitic tripe wrapped in the American flag with a Navy SEAL cherry on top.”
She warns her community: “Don’t give money to blood libel movies like this that seek to turn America against the Jews using patriotism, the flag, and the Navy SEALs.”
If you change the words “Jewish” or “Jews” above with “Filipinos”, we would express the exact same sentiments.
(Rodel50@gmail.com)
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