杨安泽:对自己身为亚裔感到“有些羞耻”

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近日,已经退出美国总统竞选的美籍华人杨安泽,在美国《华盛顿邮报》上撰写了一篇奇怪的文章,称在新冠疫情之下,他发现有被路人在用异样的、带有指责性的眼神看自己,于是对自己身为亚裔感到“有些羞耻”。

他进而呼吁亚裔美国人向二战时的日裔美国人学习,积极向美国展现自己的忠心,证明自己是个爱美国、愿意为美国做贡献的美国人,才不会再被人视作“病毒”。

然而,他的文章不仅在亚裔群体中引起了强烈的争议,更遭到了日裔美国人的抨击。


在这篇名为“我们亚裔美国人不是病毒,但我们可以成为解药的一部分”的文章中,杨安泽称他上周在购物时,发现有三个中年人在交流事情时,其中一个人用指责的眼神看着他。

然后,杨安泽就表示他已经很久没有过的一种感觉突然涌上了心头,那就是对于自己身为一个亚裔“有点羞耻”。

他进而表示,新冠病毒疫情在美国暴发以来,亚裔美国人遭到了很多肢体和言语上的攻击,但他并不认为喊“不要种族歧视亚裔”的口号能改变什么,理由是疫情让很多人都遭了灾,很多人都有怨气。

他认为,改变亚裔被攻击的做法,是更积极地热爱美国,为美国做贡献。他还特别提到要学习二战时的日裔美国人那种积极参军报效美国的精神。

“要证明我们是解决问题方案的一部分。我们不是病毒,但我们可以成为解药”,他写道。

不过,他的这个观点却很快在美国的亚裔群体中引起了强烈的争议,有不少亚裔人士都在抨击他这种认为亚裔“应该证明自己‘很美国’,才能避免被歧视”的言论。

其中,美国《赫芬邮报》的亚裔记者Marina Fang就在贴文中写道:杨安泽说对抗种族主义的办法,就是让亚裔美国人拥抱并用前所未有的方式展现自己的“美国人气质”,但这不管用,亚裔几代人都被要求去证明我们的“美国人气质”,但我们仍然被视为“外人”。
这位记者还继续抨击说,杨安泽的言论其实是在进一步加强美国社会对于亚裔的刻板偏见,即亚裔就应该闷头努力工作,别抱怨太多。可结果却是亚裔被认为不能去抨击种族主义。所以,她认为亚裔真正应该做的是与杨安泽所说的相反的事情——站出来抨击种族主义。

她的这番言论也获得了大量的点赞。一名非裔美国人就在评论中表示,她也对杨安泽的文章感到不满,并表示她受够了那种“要让白人对自己满意”的思维模式。

另一位非裔美国人也留言说,杨安泽应该意识到他的那套“向白人证明自己是美国人”的想法,已经被所有被白人视为“不美国”的少数族群试过了。

还有非亚裔的美国网民表示,自己很后悔之前支持过杨安泽,认为杨安泽的言论就是在给种族主义洗白,他对杨安泽“非常非常失望”。

但更尴尬的是,那些被杨安泽在文章中称颂为“热爱美国的榜样”的日裔美国人,也专门站出来抨击了杨安泽的观点。

在美国NBC新闻网的一篇报道中,多名日裔美国人社区的领袖就表示,杨安泽的文章和观点让他们想起了当年那种“做美国人还不够,还得做更好的美国人”的痛苦回忆。

其中有日裔美国人还表示,被杨安泽所称颂的那段二战时日裔美国人积极报效国家的历史,其实并不准确。因为并不是所有日裔美国人都是自发自觉地在参军,有不少其实是当时被美国政府关在集中营里的日裔美国人,为了避免家人再遭到这样的迫害,而被迫去前方当炮灰的。有日裔美国人还表示他们长辈这种通过参军去证明自己对美国“忠心”的代价,太大了。

这篇报道还指出,不少专家和读者都认为通过证明自己“更爱国”的方式来消除种族主义是不对的,这不该是亚裔的责任。

“美国人不应该通过这种曲折的方式去证明自己的忠心”,一名来自日裔美国人社区的人士表示。
 
a y 都已经混成民主党总统候选人之一,还会有这种问题,美国社会这种种族主义疾病真是癌症。
 
向美国展现自己的忠心,证明自己是个爱美国、愿意为美国做贡献的美国人,才不会再被人视作“病毒”

可悲。你本来就不是病毒。
 
亚裔不包含日裔?日裔不是亚裔?白马不是马,什么乱78糟的逻辑。
你没看他的政治理念吗?他要搞亚裔细分法案,日裔和韩裔为高级亚裔,中国人是低级亚裔。的确,日裔和韩裔不是他所谓的低级亚裔。
 
Source?

你没看他的政治理念吗?他要搞亚裔细分法案,日裔和韩裔为高级亚裔,中国人是低级亚裔。的确,日裔和韩裔不是他所谓的低级亚裔。
 
Andrew Yang Says Asians Need To 'Show Our American-ness' In Order To Avoid Racism
"It shouldn't be on Asians to prove we're American by sacrifice," one Twitter user wrote in response to an op-ed written by the former 2020 hopeful.
Wendy Lu
Andrew Yang’s name is trending on Twitter, but for many Asian Americans, something isn’t adding up.
In a Washington Post op-ed published Wednesday, the former presidential candidate, who suspended his 2020 campaign in February, attempted to address the increasing incidents of harassment and blatant racism against Asians amid the coronavirus pandemic.
In what he described as a “call to action,” the businessman argued that Asian Americans should combat coronavirus-related racism by helping to end the public health crisis, urging them to “help our neighbors, donate gear, vote, wear red white and blue, volunteer, fund aid organizations” and “demonstrate that we are part of the solution.”
“We Asian Americans need to embrace and show our American-ness in ways we never have before,” he added in the article, titled, “We Asian Americans Are Not the Virus, but We Can Be Part of the Cure.”
By late Thursday, more than 6,000 tweets had turned “Andrew Yang” into a trending name, with people criticizing the former presidential hopeful for suggesting that the burden should be on Asian people in the United States to prove that they deserve to be in the country.



1,521 people are talking about this





Ashley Oh

@itsashleyoh

https://twitter.com/itsashleyoh/status/1245804537111359492

andrew yang, wearing "red white and blue" isn't going to stop people from being racist when they see me. do you think the guy who harasses me on the street cares about community work we've done? want us to hand out resumes while we're being told to "go back to china"? fuck off

1,157

4:05 PM - Apr 2, 2020
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The op-ed opens with an anecdote about how Yang felt last week when a man outside a grocery store gave him an “accusatory” look.
“I felt self-conscious — even a bit ashamed — of being Asian,” the entrepreneur wrote, explaining that he had occasionally felt this way growing up and that it was “the first time in years” the feeling had gotten to him.
By and large, Yang said, he has remained unfazed by microaggressions. But because the coronavirus has led to a major spike in “physical and verbal abuse” against Asian Americans, along with an increase in Asians requesting counseling services, Yang said that “things have changed.”
“We all know why. The coronavirus is devastating communities and lives. People’s livelihoods and families are being destroyed. And people are looking for someone to blame,” the former tech executive wrote.
“I obviously think that being racist is not a good thing. But saying ‘Don’t be racist toward Asians’ won’t work,” he continued.
Instead, Yang argued, Asian Americans should be the ones who prove to the rest of the United States that they really are Americans.
“We should show without a shadow of a doubt that we are Americans who will do our part for our country in this time of need,” he wrote.
In other words, as many people on Twitter summarized, Asians should keep their heads down and focus on assimilation, or the idea that immigrants and people of color need to adapt to white America to be accepted.


gerrnard sanders, phd@gerrieyaki

https://twitter.com/gerrieyaki/status/1245732685278072838

ah you're right andrew yang, it's up to us asian diaspora to perform patriotism for the bare minimum human right of not being beaten and stabbed in broad daylight. gah. fighting back? poc unity? white accountability? WHAT WAS I THINKING?????
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1,816

11:19 AM - Apr 2, 2020
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In the op-ed, Yang seemingly showed sympathy toward people who look at Asians and associate them immediately with the coronavirus, saying, “People are hurting.”
“They look up and see someone who is different from them, whom they wrongly associate with the upheaval of their way of life,” he added.
“It shouldn’t be on Asians to prove we’re American by sacrifice,” one Twitter user pointed out. “We prove we’re American by fighting things that should be un-American, like racism — and not just when it happens to us.”
“Do you think the guy who harasses me on the street cares about community work we’ve done?” another user wrote.
One person criticized Yang for saying Japanese Americans during World War II “volunteered for military duty at the highest possible levels to demonstrate that they were Americans” as part of his argument.
“This rhetoric is extremely dangerous and takes me back to the WWII camps, when Japanese Americans were encouraged to display their patriotism as a response to being treated like prisoners,” the person wrote on Twitter.


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Still others said Yang’s op-ed failed to address the role that oppression has had on Asians in the United States.


Kimmy

@kimmythepooh

https://twitter.com/kimmythepooh/status/1245792598171832322

on the yang op-ed
1. AAPI, a marginalized community, should not have to prove loyalty and be forced to assimilate due to racism. this is essentially making demands of the oppressed, not the oppressor. this is letting those in power off the hook, no consequences.
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422

3:17 PM - Apr 2, 2020
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Throughout his presidential run, Yang was often rebuked for playing up harmful stereotypes about Asians and Asian Americans, from adopting “MATH” — or “Make America Think Harder” — as his campaign slogan to implying he knows a lot of doctors because of his race at a cringeworthy presidential debate.
Since the end of his campaign, Yang has transitioned into his new role as a political commentator for CNN and plans to launch a weekly podcast with the Cadence13 network about public policy, technology and social issues, called “Yang Speaks.”
Though it’s all fine and great that Yang has chosen to remain in the spotlight, especially since national media is lacking in people of color, his op-ed for The Washington Post isn’t doing Asian Americans any favors in the acceptance and inclusion department — and it’s certainly not “part of the solution.”


A HuffPost Guide To Coronavirus
 
这个垃圾。
上次知道了他老婆被白人医生摸逼,我还有点同情他。现在我后悔。
 
Japanese Americans speak out against Andrew Yang's call for Asian Americans to display patriotism
“The article brought back memories of elders telling us how they were instructed by organizations to be ‘good Americans,’ when just being American should have been enough,” one Japanese American leader said.
April 3, 2020, 3:01 PM EDT
Japanese American leaders are criticizing former Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang's call to Asian Americans to display patriotism during the coronavirus pandemic, saying it brings back painful memories of the rhetoric directed at Americans of Japanese ancestry who were incarcerated during World War II.

In an op-ed article published in The Washington Post this week, Yang called for Asian Americans to “embrace and show our American-ness in ways we never have before” as a response to anti-Asian racism fueled by the COVID-19 outbreak.

But some Japanese American groups say his words feel all too familiar, pointing out that their families were also encouraged to demonstrate their loyalty to America when they were forcibly removed from their homes and imprisoned in concentration camps by an order issued by President Franklin D. Roosevelt after Japan bombed Pearl Harbor in 1941.

“Reading it gave me a sense of deja vu,” Bruce Embrey, the co-chair of Manzanar Committee, a nonprofit organization dedicated to educating the public on Japanese American incarceration, told NBC Asian America of Yang's article.

In his op-ed, Yang addressed the increase in anti-Asian American racism as a result of the pandemic.

“We need to step up, help our neighbors, donate gear, vote, wear red white and blue, volunteer, fund aid organizations, and do everything in our power to accelerate the end of this crisis,” the entrepreneur wrote. “We should show without a shadow of a doubt that we are Americans who will do our part for our country in this time of need.”

Many experts and readers on Twitter said it shouldn't be the responsibility of Asian Americans to stop racism through a display of patriotism.

“The article brought back memories of elders telling us how they were instructed by organizations to be ‘good Americans,’ when just being American should have been enough,” Embrey said, referring to the period when Japan bombed Pearl Harbor in 1941 and Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, which provided for the forced mass removal and incarceration of more than 110,000 individuals of Japanese ancestry in violation of their constitutional rights as U.S. citizens.

Yang did not respond to a request for comment.

Tom Ikeda, the founding executive director of Densho — a nonprofit organization that offers an online encyclopedia specifically to share WWII incarceration history — also fact-checked one of the anecdotes Yang lauded as inspirational. Yang referenced the 442nd Regimental Combat Team and the 100th Infantry Battalion as examples of patriotism that Asian Americans today should follow. The groups were formed as segregated units of Japanese American soldiers to serve in the war.

Known as the most decorated unit in U.S. military history for its size and length of service, the unit also suffered casualties that added up to several times the number of people it rescued.

“During World War II, Japanese Americans volunteered for military duty at the highest possible levels to demonstrate that they were Americans,” Yang wrote. “Now many in the Asian American community are stepping up, trying to demonstrate that we can be part of the solution.”

However, not all soldiers volunteered willingly.

“While it’s true that the units started out recruiting volunteers, the government eventually drafted Japanese Americans from the concentration camps,” Ikeda said. “They were essentially drafting them out of prison and giving them no choice but to fight for the country that kept their families behind barbed wire.”

In response to Yang’s article, filmmaker and UCLA Asian American studies professor Renee Tajima-Peña posted a photo on Twitter of her uncle in military uniform, flanked by her grandparents. The photo was taken behind the barbed wire of Gila River, where her family was imprisoned. “My family served in US Army & wore red/white/blue. Didn't work out well for them.” the caption reads.

“Military service and laying down your life has never been the golden ticket into being accepted,” Tajima-Peña said. “It’s offensive to think that you have to risk your life to prove your belonging in this country. I’m proud of my dad, my uncles, and grandfather for their service, but these families paid a big price."

Experts also point out Yang’s praise of Japanese American soldiers leaves out the dissenters and protesters at each of the camps who actively resisted the draft. One infamous group, the Heart Mountain 63, who were incarcerated at the Heart Mountain camp, refused to fight until their rights were restored. They were arrested and convicted in the largest mass trial in Wyoming’s history.

“They knew that what the government was doing was unconstitutional and illegal, and to falsely incarcerate them and expect them to sacrifice their lives was wrong,” said Shirley Ann Higuchi, chair of the Heart Mountain Wyoming Foundation. “No American citizen should have to go to those lengths to prove their loyalty.”

While the media portrayed the Japanese American community post-war as the model minority for their ability to rebuild their lives without complaint, the children of camp survivors led a grassroots movement in the 1980s to demand reparations for their family’s incarceration. As a result, the Civil Liberties Act was signed by President Ronald Reagan in 1988, which granted redress of $20,000 and a formal apology to every Japanese American incarcerated during WWII.

For Tajima-Peña, the Asian American community’s swift social media response to reported attacks demonstrates the power of organizing — work that communities have been doing for decades. Notable Asian American actors and influencers have teamed together to create the #WashTheHate campaign, which strives to spread awareness of anti-Asian racism amid the pandemic and is supported by dozens of community organizations, including the Japanese American Citizens League.

“Andrew Yang may think the solution to racism is to be compliant, but fighting for one’s rights against the dominant narrative has been an integral part of our nation’s development,” Embrey said. “Fighting back is as American as you can get.”
 
这个垃圾。
上次知道了他老婆被白人医生摸逼,我还有点同情他。现在我后悔。
你这人受过教育吗?讲话注意点修养比较好
 
首先要摆正好自己,堂堂正正,不亢不卑,若想成功,建议此人先向毛泽东好好学习。
病毒可治,心毒难除。
 
最后编辑:
这个垃圾。
上次知道了他老婆被白人医生摸逼,我还有点同情他。现在我后悔。
也许他老婆当时就告诉他了,是他让他老婆作模范美国人,不给白人添乱。
 
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