This is 2016 SJW Asian American Video

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Fast Eddie said:
Let's keep one thing straight. There is no such thing as a minority SJW. Only non-Jewish whites can be SJWs. The minorities you mistakenly call SJWs are just ethno-nationalists agitating for more gimmedats/power/territory for their own respective group. They're [insert minority group here]-supremacists, not SJWs.

Not that there is anything wrong with that. That's one thing about minorities that I respect.

What about all of the Asian SJWs who march for Black Lives Matter? Seems like a lot of them are more interested in LGBT/pro-Islam/pro Immigration/Black/whatever group is in the oppression Olympics rights than forwarding the rights of their communities

The video pissed off some Brown Asians:

The Marginalization of Brown Asians: It’s Even Worse Than We Thought

A few days ago, I and four other Brown Asians criticized the New York Times for their disregard of the Brown Asian community. This continued neglect caused serious disappointment and hurts for many Brown Asians who are pained to realize that even though #thisis2016, people still don’t understand that #BrownAsiansExist. In fact, not only do Brown Asians exist, we compose half of the Asian American population!

To be clear, the outcry from Brown Asians isn’t about #thisis2016; it was a great vehicle to show America how widespread and damaging racism against Asian Americans really is. What Brown Asians are complaining about is their continued marginalization even within the Asian American community, which the New York Times video painfully showed us is still happening. Brown Asians are just tired of being unseen, unheard, and unappreciated – even by other Asians.

We are tired of the fact that when people think of Asian Americans, they seem to always think of East Asians – Chinese, Koreans, or Japanese. We’re tired of the fact that when people think of getting the Asian American perspective, Brown Asian experiences are not included or if even considered, often disregarded. We are tired of being forgotten and being treated as if we are invisible!

But - you know that nagging feeling that tends to come around whenever you complain about something? That question mark in the back of your mind asking if – maybe – you are just being overly sensitive?

I got that feeling.

So although this marginalization is something that I and many other Brown Asians have felt to be very true and real, I figured I’d look for some basic information to back up our “hunch.” To do this, I just did a simple search on the websites of four major media outlets using the six largest Asian American ethnic groups as the search terms (i.e., Chinese, Filipino, South Asian, Vietnamese, Korean, and Japanese). The media outlets I checked out are:

(1) a major media network whose reach includes multiple television channels, including a recently launched effort to cover issues specific to Asian America;

(2) an Asian American website/blog that operates as a trusted source of information on anything Asian American-related, especially topics about racism, politics, activism - stuff that gets you angry;

(3) an Asian-American magazine that has been around for over a decade; and

(4) a very influential newspaper in a very major city.

Here are the results of my search:

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As you can see in the graph, the content for all four media outlets extend higher than the red line for East Asians (Chinese, Koreans, and Japanese). This indicates that for all four media outlets, stories about East Asians are disproportionately overrepresented given their population size (marked by the red line). Here are some examples:

55.5% of the content in the Asian American website/blog is about Chinese Americans even though they compose only 23%of the Asian American population. In contrast, only 3.8% of the content in the Asian American website/blog is about Filipino Americans even though they compose 20% of the Asian American population.

The Asian American content of the major newspaper is 39.2% Japanese when they compose only 7.6% of the Asian American population, but only 3.9% of the newspaper’s Asian American content is on South Asians even though they compose 19% of the Asian American population.

We also see that 22.9% of the major media network’s Asian American content is about Koreans when they compose only 10% of the Asian American population. In contrast, although Vietnamese also compose 10% of the Asian American population, only 0.4% of the major media network’s Asian American content is about Vietnamese.

This disproportionately very low representation in content given their population size is true among all four media outlets for Filipinos, South Asians, and Vietnamese. Brown Asians are disproportionately underrepresented, consistently and across the board! As can be seen in the graph, the content for all four media outlets do not even reach the red line for Brown Asians, indicating that Brown Asian stories are not covered enough by the media.

So based on this data, our hunch – the feeling that we are often treated as if we are second-class, perhaps even third-class, Asian Americans – seems to be correct.

And just like how racism against Asian Americans goes beyond the woman who told Michael Luo’s family to “Go Back to China,” the marginalization of Brown Asians also goes beyond the New York Times. This disregard and invisibility is widespread, and is clearly seen in which Asian Americans are covered by the media – whose stories are deemed as important, whose realities are validated, whose truths are shared, whose complexities are explored, and whose humanities are displayed.

We understand the importance of media in shaping society’s perceptions of the world and of all of us who are in it. In this case, we understand how media shapes who society thinks as Asian American and how society sees Asian Americans. For our specific case, we understand oh so well what media’s role is in shaping how society sees us and what to make of our brown skins. Therefore, we want to be represented in media so that our realities and experiences, struggles and victories, pains and joys – a more complete and nuanced portrait of us – can be shared with society.

This is why we want representation. This is why we are hurt whenever organizations and people – including other Asian Americans – tell us that we don’t matter. We do.

This whole bitching about Brown Asians not being counted with other Asians is a pile of shit to me. What the fuck do South Asians have in common with Koreans and Chinese? The whole "Asian" signifier is an artificial classification created by the US Government. I've never seen Indians and Chinese grouped as one demographic group in other countries.

Asians who complain about the US being a racist hellhole are full of shit in my opinion. The US is nowhere near as racist as many countries in Asia.

Personally as a Brown guy, people who bring up my race in the US most of the time are Korean and Chinese FOBs! The one time somebody said I spoke English well, the person saying it was Filipino American. Just about every white, black, Latino American I come across accepts me as being from the UK, whereas it's the yellow FOBs who can't get their head around it. Should I do a video and bitch about them?
 

Tenerife

Kingfisher
If you're a white guy in asia, you'll experience a lot more racial language than this.

In indonesia they have a show called "bule gila" which means "crazy caucasian" where white people do embarrassing things.

Asian people in Asia harbor all sorts of stereotypes towards whites.

Even in Hawaii where Asians form a minority majority the discrimination against the "haole" is notorious.

but of course it's only racist when white people do it.
 
America can be open minded about things - this guy was elected to Congress in 1955!

Dalip Singh Saund

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Dalip Singh Saund (Punjabi: ਦਲੀਪ ਸਿੰਘ ਸੌਂਦ) (September 20, 1899 – April 22, 1973) was an American politician who was a member of the United States House of Representatives. He served the 29th District of California from January 3, 1957 to January 3, 1963. He was the first Sikh American/Asian American/Indian American elected as a voting member of the United States Congress.

Born in Chhajulwadi, Punjab, India, to a Sikh family, he received his bachelor's degree in mathematics from the University of Punjab in 1919.

He immigrated to the United States (via Ellis Island) originally to study agriculture at the University of California, Berkeley. While at the university, he obtained a master's degree (1922) and a PhD (1924), both in mathematics. He thereafter remained in the United States, becoming a successful farmer.

Later, he campaigned to allow "Hindus", as all people of South Asian descent were called at that time, to become naturalized citizens. After the Luce-Celler Act was passed in 1946, he applied for naturalization and became an American citizen in 1949. He ran for election in 1950 as a Justice of the Peace for Westmoreland township, California, and won the election, but his election was thrown out as he had been a citizen for less than a year. He later ran again for the same post and won.

In November 1955, he announced his campaign to run for the House of Representatives as a Democrat and won an election for an open seat against a famous Republican aviator, Jacqueline Cochran. He was re-elected twice, becoming the first Sikh American, the first Asian American, the first Indian American and first member of a non-Abrahamic faith to be elected to Congress.

Here he is with JFK and LBJ:

saund1.jpg
 

chicane

Woodpecker
Gold Member
I suppose nobody care about the origin of the term "paddy wagon". Yeah, my ancestors suffered severe oppression for centuries.
 
Foolsgo1d said:
All of this racism and Asians are a successful group of people in a country where they're not the majority. So much racism!

fugly1000 said:
Booofuckingwhoo. Yeah they think that's racism. Imagine what their parents or grandparents had to deal

Both these posts have no logic. Yes, Asians are successful due to their own drive and hard work. That does not mean there is no racism, there is a clear imbalance for representation of Asian-Americans in American cinema and a lot of leaked conversations sound nothing less than discrimination. There was also a peer-reviewed study that concluded that Asian-Americans are discriminated against during higher education admission processes as well as academic positions. It might not be racism in it's strictest meaning but it is discrimination based on ethnicity and it is unacceptable.

The second post is ridiculous, saying it's much worse in Asia or it was bad before then doesn't change the fact that it's still pretty fucking grim now and needs to be addressed.

WalterBlack said:
Personally as a Brown guy, people who bring up my race in the US most of the time are Korean and Chinese FOBs! The one time somebody said I spoke English well, the person saying it was Filipino American. Just about every white, black, Latino American I come across accepts me as being from the UK, whereas it's the yellow FOBs who can't get their head around it. Should I do a video and bitch about them?

Your dynamics are different innit? I'm a foreigner too, don't give two shits about anything that goes on in this country to be honest but for people who grew up here and identify as American yet aren't accepted as mainstream it must be infuriating.

The other post has no real value, so there was one successful guy? Great! I'm sure you could find a Chinese or Japanese one too, doesn't change the fact that the Chinese exclusion act and the intermittent camp still happened in the States. It's absurd to be honest, compared to places like the UK, Australia etc the USA is still stuck in the racial stone age.
 
^Underrepresented? Asians are 6% of the population.

The sad thing here is that most Americans who have no to limited contact with Asians are going to see this video and think that all Asian guys are fags.
 

ed pluribus unum

Ostrich
Protestant
I actually lol'd at the 'do you see in widescreen' comment.

Interesting to note that so many of these 'incidents' occurred in oh-so-progressive NYC.
 

Mochihunter

Woodpecker
Private Ching Chong is not military material. If you can't take shit that your drill Sargent is saying to you, you have no business fighting. What always cracks me up is how offended American-Asians get when you ask them their ethnicity. You ever see two asians meet each other? Before they even say hi they ask...wait for it..."where are you from?"
 

Lunostrelki

Kingfisher
Asian-Americans who go SJWS betray the traditions of the cultures where their parents or grandparents came from and cannot be considered any different from white SJWs in this regard.

A couple years ago I had dinner with a 21-something childhood Chinese-American friend, no, acquaintance of mine to find that she was dating a Jewish communist 8 years her senior, and had forgotten almost all of the Chinese her parents taught her. After a 90-minute-long cakewalk of a debate on the flaws of communism and leftism in general (which I'm pretty sure turned her boyfriend off to me permanently, good riddance), we left the restaurant and I chatted her up while he walked ahead of us in silence.

Later my mom (who is friends with this girl's mom, which is why I know her) informed me that the girl's parents were quite worried about her: the Jewish boyfriend apparently had bad manners, as exhibited on one occasion when the girl was moving out and her dad was helping her move stuff while all the guy did was find a stool to sit on and eat. It's pretty sad considering that as first generation Chinese-Americans they are probably hoping that he has a mind to marry her.

As a small consolation, the girl didn't seem to care for her boyfriend's radical views at all.
 

BossOfBosses

Woodpecker
Lunostrelki said:
Asian-Americans who go SJWS betray the traditions of the cultures where their parents or grandparents came from and cannot be considered any different from white SJWs in this regard.

A couple years ago I had dinner with a 21-something childhood Chinese-American friend, no, acquaintance of mine to find that she was dating a Jewish communist 8 years her senior, and had forgotten almost all of the Chinese her parents taught her. After a 90-minute-long cakewalk of a debate on the flaws of communism and leftism in general (which I'm pretty sure turned her boyfriend off to me permanently, good riddance), we left the restaurant and I chatted her up while he walked ahead of us in silence.

Later my mom (who is friends with this girl's mom, which is why I know her) informed me that the girl's parents were quite worried about her: the Jewish boyfriend apparently had bad manners, as exhibited on one occasion when the girl was moving out and her dad was helping her move stuff while all the guy did was find a stool to sit on and eat. It's pretty sad considering that as first generation Chinese-Americans they are probably hoping that he has a mind to marry her.

As a small consolation, the girl didn't seem to care for her boyfriend's radical views at all.

To them, even if he's a broke communist, a white jewish guy is a step-up. They don't care about his views because it was never about that. It's simply about what he is. Chinese are pragmatists, not ideological at all.
 

XPQ22

Ostrich
dicknixon72 said:
I'm in retail sales, so I could easily take offense at an absolute encyclopedia of what people say to me. But when someone asks me, "Where are you from?" or "What are you?" or "You're from Taiwan? I LOVE Thai food!" :)huh:) I don't snap, take offense, quit my job, and write slam poetry about it; I engage these [HARMLESS] people in conversation, answer the question in a congenial manner - after all they're not interrogating me, they're expressing interest in trying to engage in conversation, score some interaction points, gain mutual confidence and trust, and then use it to sell them a car.

I think a lot of the offense to that sort of stuff among "the kids these days" comes from the usual suspects: ego and narcissism.

Other people aren't part of your play. They don't have intimate knowledge about you. People say dumb things, silly things, even outrageous things from time to time for all sorts of reasons, even just because they're trying to make conversation in a situation they find themselves unfamiliar with. Hell, I do it myself plenty.

It's like they're expecting grade A conversation game to be run on them by everyone at all times, because they're the center of their universe and have grown to expect it. The real world doesn't operate that way, and there's nothing intrinsically wrong with the fact that it doesn't.
 
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