It’s not easy being Green

SM tipster Veeral informs us that 29-year-old Californian Mehul M. Thakker is running for state Treasurer as a Green Party candidate. From his website:

Ummm. Is it just me or does Thakker look like he is auditioning for The Apprentice?

Mehul M. Thakker is an Investment Advisor in Oakland, CA with a focus on Socially Responsible Investment and Community Development. He is passionate about securing Economic Justice for low-income and minority groups in the U.S., and strives to educate on how to use the power of investment to create positive social change locally and globally.

His priorities as California State Treasurer would include reforming the State’s Investment Policy to create Economic Justice for low-income and minority groups, and implementing Renewable Energy Revenue projects to fund public schools and better teacher pay. In addition, he believes these reforms can help clean up California’s environment, create high-paying jobs, fix the State’s fiscal crisis, fight corporate corruption, and advance social justice and equal opportunity.

Mehul has served as Treasurer of NetIP-SFBA (Network of Indian Professionals) and is active in the movement for shareholder rights, and corporate social & environmental responsibility. He is also a member of the CA League of Conservation Voters, The Sierra Club, and The Gujarati Cultural Association of the SF Bay Area….

A first generation, South Asian American, Mehul was born and raised in Odessa, Texas and holds a B.S. in Business Administration from the University of Texas at Dallas. His parents Mahendra and Vasant Thakker immigrated to the U.S. from India in 1969. Mehul has one sister, Shilpa Chaparala, and brother-in law, Amar Chaparala. He enjoys many hobbies, including travel, sports, camping, reading, and volunteering. [Link]

Wait. If he was born and raised here that would make him second generation, not first. I got to say that I really like his stance on the issues.

Thakker is up against some pretty stiff competition and they all have more cash on hand than him. You have to start somewhere though:

Candidates:

Bill Lockyer (Democrat)

* Cash on hand: $9,535,568 (as of 12/31/05)

* Late Contributions: $70,268 in large contributions since last report.

Justin Noonan (American Independent)

Claude Parrish (Republican)

* Cash on hand: $274,621 (as of 12/31/05)

Keith Stuart Richman (Republican)

* Cash on hand: $419,492 (as of 12/31/05)

* Late Contributions: $39,500 in large contributions since last report.

Mark J. Saladino (Democrat)

* Cash on hand: $66,428 (as of 12/31/05)

Mehul Thakker (Green)

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p>Mehul’s current occupation is that of an investment manager at a Socially Responsible Investment (SRI) firm. Even this job seems to be clean and green:

How people invest their money may seem like a private matter, but investment decisions have undeni­able influence in the public sphere. Through the power of the share, investors of conscience can channel resources toward businesses that benefit the economy, society, and the environment and away from those that do harm. When many investors act in concert, the power of the share can make itself felt on a global scale. The PAM Network puts the power of the share to work by offering clients the opportunity to invest for social progress and financial return at the same time…

Proponents of the social investment philosophy understand that profits without responsibility contain hidden costs that are eventually passed along to investors, consumers, communities, and the environment. Socially responsible investors are therefore selective investors. They avoid companies that pollute, discriminate, impose unsafe working conditions, or produce nuclear weapons. They choose to invest in businesses that actively benefit society and the environment or, at the least, have an impact that is neutral. [Link]

If you want to volunteer for Thakker’s campaign you can start by filling out this form. If you want to donate cash then you can do so here.

22 thoughts on “It’s not easy being Green

  1. If he was born and raised here that would make him second generation

    Nope. “First generation” is the first generation born in the country in question. The parents of the first generation are immigrants.

    But I’ve seen the term used incorrectly a lot — as a synonym for ‘immigrant’. Maybe it’s acquired that meaning by now.

    Odessa Texas! Anyone seen Friday Night Lights?

  2. “First generation” is the first generation born in the country in question.

    That’s not how the term’s commonly used in the U.S. See FAQ.

    Japanese Americans have special names for each of its generations in the United States. The first generation born in Japan or Okinawa, is called Issei. The second generation is Nisei, third is Sansei, fourth is Yonsei, and fifth is Gosei. The term Nikkei was coined by Japanese American sociologists and encompasses the entire population across generations. [Link]

    The Nisei Japanese Americans… (lit. second generation) are American-born citizens of the United States of Japanese ancestry… [Link]
  3. “First generation” is the first generation born in the country in question.

    Hmmm. I’ve alyways known it (and this site has always used it) to refer to the “first generation” that arrived onto U.S. shores. Just semantics I guess. Anyways, back to Thakker.

  4. Yeah, I believe one major reason “first generation” is used for the generation which immigrated is because the alternative doesn’t acknowledge the especially strong dual nationality identity that immigrants have. For example, if those born in the U.S. are first generation Indian Americans, what does that make immigrants? The 0 generation? If you accept the proposition that those who are born in the U.S. are first generation, then you deny the immigrant generation the status of being Indian Americans. They would instead simply be Indians living in the U.S.

  5. For example, if those born in the U.S. are first generation Indian Americans, what does that make immigrants?

    Immigrants. If they become Americans, then naturalized Americans.

  6. He looks hella tough in that photo, like he’s all, “Go ahead. Just try and slip a fraudulent Annual Report past me.”

    Except for the one curled up lock of hair. heh.

  7. Through the power of the share, investors of conscience can channel resources toward businesses that benefit the economy, society, and the environment and away from those that do harm. When many investors act in concert, the power of the share can make itself felt on a global scale.

    this is a recent development peculiar to the american society. it might be that the americans are ahead of the curve and the world will follow soon. in recent times i’ve seen a new breed of entreprenuers out there who are using “feel good” as trading collateral. in some cases the intent is to differentiate a company from its peers – viz. the branding strategy of shell. in others it is a clear desire to capitalize on the emptiness shared by many in the modern society. the rise of lifestyle stores catering to the “feel good” element – “hey! you may not have done anything good in your life today and your life is empty, but if you buy this product, not only will it exfoliate your ass, but help an indentured laborer clear across the world put her twins through school”. i am sure such a target market exists everywhere – but what i marvel at is the people chairing such organizations who actually trade the “feel good” element for greenbacks with the same techniques that have been used to peddle smut, oil, pesticides etc. the canadian parallels dont exist yet – and may never will – possibly because the urban centers, which are the target market, are too few in number for the businesses to become really big.
    our man thakker seems to be onto the right track. it’s where the puck’s going. the market says so.

  8. to carry my thought further – i looked through the prospectus of an ‘ethical funds’ income fund – more than a few banks in there who in turn hold funds comprising the likes of philip-morris and such. so much for ethical – so the “ethical” is not really about making the world a better place, but about feeling like you’re making the world a better place. “i’m a powerless, middle-class, middle-brow schmoette in a dead-end job pulling 70k, but i’ll pretend i like living like this because i spurn the $ that comes with the corrupt life. let me eat designer granola “whole oats” and give a dollar to that nice vegetarian beatle to save the seals and get a massage with naturally harvested desert-moon coral flakes from the guatemalan archipelago collected by a woman who was born with two left feet”. so my point is that it’s easy being green.

  9. manish, Abhi: Despite your FAQ, this site’s use of “first-generation American” is not in concert in how the term is traditionally used in the media, in letters. As Ikram and the article states corectly, the first generation American is the son/daughter who is born in this country. You use the terms “second-gen” to separate yourself from your parents/recent immigrants and it’s understandable but not accurate. I don’t intend to get in a “political” debate, but it’s semantical and important.

  10. “Immigrants. If they become Americans, then naturalized Americans.”

    The American/Indian either/or mode of identity is somewhat lacking in its descriptive powers. Are you saying that the day that an Indian national becomes an American citizen, he or she exchanges his or her Indian label for the American one? At what magical point, if not at the point of citizenship switch, does this take place? I think the problem here is that nationality alone cannot adequately describe someone. If you were raised in the U.S. as someone of Indian origin, but move at the age of 20 to France, what exactly are you? You’re ethnically Indian, culturally American and legally (in terms of nationality) British. The mutually exclusive model which doesn’t allow for the description of first-generation Indian Americans as such would classify the person above as merely a naturalized Briton. This situation is somewhat more complicated than that of an Indian who immigrates to the U.S., but the same logic applies.

  11. this site’s use of “first-generation American” is not in concert in how the term is traditionally used in the media, in letters

    Link? We use the prevalent terminology among Asian Americans.

    the first generation American is the son/daughter who is born in this country

    The reason that fell out of favor among Asian Americans is that it defines immigrants who have been here 30 years, the majority of their lives, as not-American.

    You seem to be using the terminology in the legalistic sense of natural-born citizenship. That’s not of interest to me as a naming scheme– we’re using it as a rough measure of cultural affinity.

    The terminology you describe would make my kids first-generation Americans, as I was born overseas and came here at a young age. So my parents would be -1th gen and I as 0th gen would be presumed to have less in common with my demographic cohort. It’s just not useful.

    The issei (1st gen)/nisei (2nd gen) model is the way to go here and is in fact the de facto terminology among Asian Americans.

  12. At what magical point, if not at the point of citizenship switch, does this take place?

    The day you take your oath of American citizenship is the day you have to get a visa to go to India regardless if you think/feel/sing in Hindi/Telegu/Tamil/Marathi.

    If you were raised in the U.S. as someone of Indian origin, but move at the age of 20 to France, what exactly are you?

    An Indian-American in France.

    we’re using it as a rough measure of cultural affinity

    Exactly, but that’s not how it’s been traditionally used.

    So my parents would be -1th gen and I as 0th gen.

    This is not about software upgrades version 1.0, 2.0. You and I would be considered immigrants albeit at a much younger age than our parents.

  13. but that’s not how it’s been traditionally used.

    Can you show me some examples, and is it relevant given the Asian American context? We’re not talking Eastern European immigration in the 1800s here.

    You and I would be considered immigrants albeit at a much younger age than our parents.

    W.r.t. cultural affinity, that’s a useless taxonomy. Having come over as a young kid, I usually have more in common with someone born here than someone raised in the motherland.

  14. not getting into the first/second/whatever generation discussion

    heck he does look like an apprentice wanna be..

    we need a show down between raj bhakta and mehul..

    my vote : bow tie bhakta

    hands down…

    the third generation chick pea 😉

  15. First-Generation: If you immigrated to the West as an adult. Second-Generation: If you were born in the West or you were a minor when your parents came over here.

  16. *or you were a minor when your parents came over here.

    …..And brought you with them, of course.

  17. Even the dictionary has conflicting meanings for “first gen”, although the primary definition refers to immigrants. http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=first-generation

    first-gen·er·a·tion (fûrstjn-rshn) adj. Of or relating to a person who has left one country and settled in another. Of or relating to a person or persons whose parents are immigrants. Of, relating to, or being the first form or version available to users: first-generation computer software; first-generation camcorders.

  18. I hazard a guess that since language evolves and ultimately depends on usage, the 2nd generation = grew up here (birth aside) will eventually take over, b/c we (and Japanese Americans and similarly concerned folks) use the phrase a lot more than media stylists. style books are not infrequently out of step with the general use of language.

  19. The terminology you describe would make my kids first-generation Americans, as I was born overseas and came here at a young age. So my parents would be -1th gen and I as 0th gen would be presumed to have less in common with my demographic cohort. It’s just not useful.

    No. Under the traditional meanings, you are an immigrant. Your parents are also immigrants. If your parents had additional children after arrival, they would be ‘first generation’. Same with any children you may have. It’s perfectly useful in delineating between those born here and those born abroad.

    Maybve the term began to be misused because people became uncomfortable calling themselves ‘immigrants’. In Canada, the gvt has even begun using the euphemism ‘newcomer’! Perhaps they associate the word immigrant with ‘dirty’, ‘filthy’ or ‘tired .. poor .. huddled masses’ and ‘wretched refuse of [the] teeming shore’

    As noted above, you’ll find both meanings in the dictionary.

    (I’ve also noticed people on this site using the term ‘1.5 generation’. Another term used to seem less ‘foreign’?)

    Anyway, as Saheli notes, language evolves. Nobody says ‘negro’ anymore. The Manish-ist meaning of 1st generation will probably predominate. But a new term will arise to describe people born here. I’ve heard the term ‘born-Canadian’ occasionally, to distinguish us from the foreign born. Is the term ‘native born’ used in the US much? ‘American-born’?