Asian Americans Are Still Caught in the Trap of the ‘Model Minority’ Stereotype. And It Creates Inequality for All

Ireland News News

Asian Americans Are Still Caught in the Trap of the ‘Model Minority’ Stereotype. And It Creates Inequality for All
Ireland Latest News,Ireland Headlines
  • 📰 TIME
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 211 sec. here
  • 5 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 88%
  • Publisher: 53%

.viet_t_nguyen: “Asian Americans, while actively critical of anti-Asian racism, have not always stood up against anti-Black racism. Frequently, we have gone along with the status quo and affiliated with white people”

he face of Tou Thao haunts me. The Hmong-American police officer stood with his back turned to Derek Chauvin, his partner, as Chauvin knelt on George Floyd’s neck for 8 minutes and 46 seconds and murdered him.

Let me go back in time to a time being repeated today. Even if I no longer remember how old I was when I saw these words, I have never forgotten them: Another American driven out of business by the Vietnamese. Perhaps I was 12 or 13. It was the early 1980s, and someone had written them on a sign in a store window not far from my parents’ store.

Looking back, I can remember the low-level racism of my youth, the stupid jokes told by my Catholic-school classmates, like “Is your last name Nam?” and “Did you carry an AK-47 in the war?” as well as more obscene ones. I wonder: Did Tou Thao hear these kinds of jokes in Minnesota? What did he think of Fong Lee, Hmong American, 19 years old, shot eight times, four in the back, by Minneapolis police officer Jason Andersen in 2006? Andersen was acquitted by an all-white jury.

Or were we? A couple of Asian-American students talked to me afterward and said they still felt it. The vibe. The feeling of being foreign, especially if they were, or were perceived to be, Muslim, or brown, or Middle Eastern. The vibe. Racism is not just the physical assault. I have never been physically assaulted because of my appearance.

American history has been marked by the cycle of big businesses relying on cheap Asian labor, which threatened the white working class, whose fears were stoked by race-baiting politicians and media, leading to catastrophic events like the Chinese Exclusion Act and the internment of Japanese Americans in 1942.

None of these efforts have prevented the stubborn persistence of anti-Asian racism. Calling for more sacrifices simply reiterates the sense that Asian Americans are not American and must constantly prove an Americanness that should not need to be proven. Japanese Americans had to prove their Americanness during World War II by fighting against Germans and Japanese while their families were incarcerated, but German and Italian Americans never had to prove their Americanness to the same extent.

The legacy of the Third World and Asian-American movements continues today among Asian-American activists and scholars, who have long argued that Asian Americans, because of their history of experiencing racism and labor exploitation, offer a radical potential for contesting the worst aspects of American society. But the more than 22 million Asian Americans, over 6% of the American population, have many different national and ethnic origins and ancestries and times of immigration or settlement.

This is what it means to be a model minority: to be invisible in most circumstances because we are doing what we are supposed to be doing, like my parents, until we become hypervisible because we are doing what we do too well, like the Korean shopkeepers. Then the model minority becomes the Asian invasion, and the Asian-American model minority, which had served to prove the success of capitalism, bears the blame when capitalism fails.

If Hmong experiences fit more closely with the failure of the American Dream, what does it mean for some Asian Americans to still want their piece of it? If we claim America, then we must claim all of America, its hope and its hypocrisy, its profit and its pain, its liberty and its losses, its imperfect union and its ongoing segregation.

This is why Tou Thao’s face haunts me. Not just because we may look alike in some superficial way as Asian Americans, but because he and I are here because of this American history of war. The war was a tragedy for us, as it was for the Black Americans who were sent to “guarantee liberties in Southeast Asia which they had not found in southwest Georgia and East Harlem,” as Martin Luther King Jr. argued passionately in his 1967 speech “Beyond Vietnam.

If we are dissatisfied with our country’s failures and limitations, revealed to us in stark clarity during the time of coronavirus, then now is our time to change our country for the better. If you think America is in trouble, blame shareholders, not immigrants; look at CEOs, not foreigners; resent corporations, not minorities; yell at politicians of both parties, not the weak, who have little in the way of power or wealth to share.

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

TIME /  🏆 93. in UK

Ireland Latest News, Ireland Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Emily in Paris: Ukraine complains over Kiev character stereotypeEmily in Paris: Ukraine complains over Kiev character stereotypeUkraine's culture minister has described the portrayal of a character from Kiev as 'insulting'.
Read more »

Ukraine's culture minister blasts Netflix show Emily in ParisUkraine's culture minister blasts Netflix show Emily in ParisOleksandr Tkachenko, Ukraine's Minister of Culture, has lodged a complained with the streaming service giant about the stereotypes in the show, calling it 'unacceptable'.
Read more »

Ukraine's culture minister blasts Netflix show Emily in ParisUkraine's culture minister blasts Netflix show Emily in ParisOleksandr Tkachenko, Ukraine's Minister of Culture, has lodged a complained with the streaming service giant about the stereotypes in the show, calling it 'unacceptable'.
Read more »

Munroe Bergdorf: ‘Transition was an act of love for myself’Munroe Bergdorf: ‘Transition was an act of love for myself’The model and activist, 34, on bravery, happiness and getting back to nature
Read more »

One Tree Hill stars share cute reunion pictureOne Tree Hill stars share cute reunion picture'Always a good day when I get to spend time catching up.'
Read more »

New Year's Eve hell for 21 people trapped in Albuquerque cable cars for 12 HOURSNew Year's Eve hell for 21 people trapped in Albuquerque cable cars for 12 HOURSMORE than 20 people spent New Year’s Eve trapped in a cable car, dangling above a 10,000ft mountain after icy conditions in the area froze the tramline. Two tram cars carrying a total of 21 p…
Read more »



Render Time: 2025-04-06 15:10:52