how the Asian "Model Minority" perpetuates Anti-Blackness

the tension between the black and asian american community is complicated. with asian american immigrants being both foreigners and racial minorities, how does this position them in a black-white socioracial framework? (if you saw me change the title and thumbnail it's because i'm trying to make the video non-age restricted)
✧・゚: ✧・゚: check out foreign's video: • Asiaphobia in the BIac... *:・゚✧*:・゚✧
TIMESTAMPS:
0:00 intro
2:33 white supremacy
5:54 the immigrant majority
16:08 assimilation
19:45 the model minority myth
32:48 strengthening solidarity
★・・・・・★・・・・・★
If you want extra ways to support my channel and get more content, check out my PATREON: patreon.com/oliSUNvia
socials:
,, instagram: @olisunvia
,, tiktok: @olisunvia (v lame pls don't judge)
,, spotify: liv sun
FOR BUSINESS INQUIRIES:
olisunvia@nebula.tv
★・・・・・★・・・・・★
SOURCES:
Bell Hooks. Killing Rage: Ending Racism. (1995).
BlindianProject. "Unlearning antiBlackness In South Asian Communities." open.spotify.com/episode/07dd...
Chou, S.R., & Feagin, J.R. (2014). The Myth of the Model Minority: Asian Americans Facing Racism
Dutt-Ballerstadt, R. "Colonized Loyalty: Asian American Anti-Blackness and Complicity." (2020). truthout.org/articles/coloniz...
Han, S. Y. "Politics of race in asian american jurisprudence." (2006). Asian Pacific American Law Journal, 11(1), 1-40.
Ho, J. "Anti-Asian racism, Black Lives Matter, and COVID-19." (2021). doi.org/10.1080/09555803.2020...
McGee, E. "“Black Genius, Asian Fail”: The Detriment of Stereotype Lift and Stereotype Threat in High-Achieving Asian and Black STEM Students." (2018). doi: 10.1177/2332858418816658
Mistry, A. "Why We Can’t Give South Asian Artists Who Say The N-Word A Pass." (2017). www.thefader.com/2017/03/15/s...
National Geographic. "LA 92 (Full Documentary) | National Geographic." • LA 92 (Full Documentar...
Ozawa v. United States, 260 U.S. 178 (1922) supreme.justia.com/cases/fede...
Pan, D. "Asian-Americans, long used as a racial wedge, are confronting anti-Black racism
in their own communities." www.bostonglobe.com/2020/07/2...
Yellow Horse, A.J.; Kuo, K.; Seaton, E.K.; Vargas, E.D. "Asian Americans’ Indifference to Black Lives Matter: The Role of Nativity, Belonging and Acknowledgment of Anti-Black Racism." (2021). doi.org/10.3390/socsci10050168
MUSIC:
Debussy: Reverie, L. 68
Chopin: Nocturnes, Op. 62: No.1 in B Major
Chopin: Nocturnes, Op. 48: No. 2 in F-sharp minor
Chopin: Waltz in F minor, Op. 70 No. 2
Satie: Gymnopedie No. 3
• ♫ Sad And Melancholic ...
tags: blm, asian american, black community, asian community, philosophy, critical race theory, postcolonial theory, colonialism, orientalism, the model minority, racial minority, racism, white supremacy, chinese, korean, japanese, indian, african american, black lives matter, stereotype, identity politics, video essay, opinion, cultural appropriation, aapi, stop asian hate, 1992 la riots, immigrant, american dream, capitalism, shanspeare, jordan theresa, cj the x, tiffany ferg, alice cappelle, contrapoints, philosophy tube, madisyn brown, chad chad, tee noir, noah samsen, fd signifer, foreign man in a foreign land, khadija mbowe, T1J

Пікірлер: 3 600

  • @oliSUNvia
    @oliSUNvia Жыл бұрын

    if you see the title changing, it's cause i'm trying to appease youtube's arbitrary guidelines :/ [UPDATE: i failed. i uploaded a new unlisted version where i took out the latasha harlins shooting scene, the gun that appears shortly after, the rodney king scene, and FD saying the N word. it still got age-restricted]

  • @tranbaohoangvu9464

    @tranbaohoangvu9464

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't know what to say, but good speech.

  • @Noah057

    @Noah057

    Жыл бұрын

    Por favor activa los subtítulos :p

  • @kasketbase8741

    @kasketbase8741

    Жыл бұрын

    OliSUNvia, where do you fall politically?

  • @josuesjourney6931

    @josuesjourney6931

    Жыл бұрын

    Foreign sent me, 👋🏽 hi. Thank you for your deeply impactful informative labor, research, video editing, public speaking, writing for this is no easy task. Thank you Olivia

  • @hadalittlelamb

    @hadalittlelamb

    Жыл бұрын

    girl keep going because i had to come here through foreign when i'm subbed to you.

  • @rahher8670
    @rahher86709 ай бұрын

    As an 71yr old black southern Jim crow survivor I can tell that you have spoken nothing but truth . Thank you

  • @Decimo10X

    @Decimo10X

    9 ай бұрын

    God Bless you.

  • @electricearth1101

    @electricearth1101

    8 ай бұрын

    yea like when black people always rob asian people cause they think theyre weak.

  • @parisarnett87

    @parisarnett87

    8 ай бұрын

    Thank you for living and surviving. I love you for surviving because it means I might survive too.

  • @incubus_the_man

    @incubus_the_man

    5 ай бұрын

    There are other videos on KZread where Asian Americans speak about living in the Jim Crow South. From what I gather, they felt somewhat in between black and white while also being outsiders. They would often open stores in the black community because they didn't have communities of their own and they couldn't do it in the white communities. That's something that a lot of us black people don't realize. I think that if black businesses and Asian businesses would work together, it could improve things all around today.

  • @user-ck2hr5vn8e

    @user-ck2hr5vn8e

    5 ай бұрын

    I am sorry for what you went trough

  • @Fgjmnz
    @Fgjmnz Жыл бұрын

    As a Mexican-American, there’s a lot of colorism, anti-indigenous, and anti-blackness prevalent in our culture as well, and it’s something that is frustrating to see and feel powerless to change. Thank you for this

  • @rafaeldormito2458

    @rafaeldormito2458

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah I'm an Asian black Mexican American mixed in 3 different ways I don't feel accepted by any culture lol

  • @SmashBrosBrawl

    @SmashBrosBrawl

    Жыл бұрын

    lmao bruh, no there aint. Anytime a latino gets represented on any Hollywood movies, it's always meso-American latinos.

  • @klaudinegarcia8932

    @klaudinegarcia8932

    Жыл бұрын

    Same in the Phillippines!!!!

  • @r01dtox15

    @r01dtox15

    Жыл бұрын

    As an African American.... I can assure you that this got nothing to do with colorism or anti-blackness.... This has everything to do with some in our Community Fragile Ego that we are not superior than all yall.... Labels mean shit.... If yall really want us to feel better.... Yall need to adopt our culture of Pookie and Ray-Ray and Baby Momma Culture so we all can feel like Fam. BTW.... Most of us don't consider Philippines as part of Asians.... Because we can easily go to Philippines and find us some young Pinay to make us feel superior. ✊🏾👊🏾

  • @infozone9601

    @infozone9601

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@r01dtox15 You're sound like a demented cave ape 😂

  • @tikeglo730
    @tikeglo730 Жыл бұрын

    I’m half Japanese (on my mom’s side) and half white and this video really made me reflect on my experiences growing up. My mom and her family never spoke about racism they had experienced, but were never shy about calling black and Mexican people lazy/prone to violence. My dad constantly perpetuated the model minority myth, using it as a way to validate his own beliefs about black people. I never talked about any racist encounters I had with my family because I knew I would be told I’m overreacting and reading too much into it. I never thought about where these beliefs came from until now. Thank you for this video, it was great!

  • @mato_fato_ma-ah-fala-falafel

    @mato_fato_ma-ah-fala-falafel

    Жыл бұрын

    After the occupation camp of Japanese blooded people, Japanese parents intentionally did not teach their kids anything Japanese. In this way, their kids wouldn’t have to go through what they did. Or see themselves as the enemy. They could just see themselves as American. Hence, white wash. Idk if I agree with what they did. But the intention was to convey loyalty to America and not Japan. The proof is in the 442 regiment. Americans used Japanese American citizens to fight in Europe as those soldiers voluntarily signed up. The mentality for the Japanese American soldiers were that if they died with an American patch, no one can ever say that they’re not American. It’s a bit reminiscent of samurai mentality imo. The 442 is the most decorated platoon of its size. There’s a monument of them in DC. The point I was making was it’s not always some spooky white supremacy mystical notion that pulls the strings but life circumstances. You can make the same argument if this same situation was in Japan. But speaking of white supremacy as I go off on a bit of a tangent. Sometimes I think hip hop is “re-education” music to keep black ppl down coz all it does is perpetuate crime elements which reflects back on the community as part of their “culture.” And one more thing, the camps were only on the west coast. Japanese people could escape if they moved to the east coast. Which made me think of there was an ulterior motive. Which I forgot the details to but Japanese people were actually having a lot of ownership in *don’t quote me* something with pipelines in farmland. And the camp was just an excuse to make Japanese people lose ownership of that. The end.

  • @Cha4k

    @Cha4k

    11 ай бұрын

    "Model Minority" is a myth but not in the way you think. Its a slur used by the extreme far left to try and disparage successful Asian immigrants, cause further racial division and encourage Asian minorities to abandoned the aspects of their culture that cause them to succeed and instead push them into poverty so their anger can later be harnessed in far left revolutionary fantasies. Your mum and your dad are correct. They're not the racists but you are. Someday you'll hopefully realize this just like I did.

  • @19ars92

    @19ars92

    10 ай бұрын

    Wonder why the most interracial percentage couples are “white man asian woman”? And if it has to do with the internal racism among asian countries, there was a survey in Japan, Korea, and China where females would only choose to marry a foreigner IF he was a white man.

  • @frankalmauger9942

    @frankalmauger9942

    9 ай бұрын

    Yeah I can see where you are coming from. I’m Mexican American and my ex gf told me that her Chinese mom would call Mexican / Blacks lazy and she would bring up that Asian model minority. It’s crazy, but super disappointing that it’s still happening

  • @SirotanParkHanedaGarden

    @SirotanParkHanedaGarden

    9 ай бұрын

    I'm half Japanese too, and my mother would often b*tch and complain about how the Black British community is violent and dirty. Her views have become less racist now, but occasionally would mention something negative about them once in a while.

  • @shekwaga
    @shekwaga9 ай бұрын

    I want to commend you. Im a Nigerian woman who came to this country 30 years ago. There was an implicit messaging that told me to look down on black ppl in this country. So, I proceeded to do that. Thankfully, my eyes were open not too long after I have been doing anti-racist education for the past 20 years. Everyone who knows, has to speak up. Edit: This country seeks for the masses to be ahistorical. Appreciate the timeline and comtext.

  • @bigalsnow8199

    @bigalsnow8199

    9 ай бұрын

    How can a Nigerian immigrant look down on black Americans? You're blacker then they are...and your ancestors sold them into slavery 😅 Be lucky if they don't look down on you.

  • @karriem5666

    @karriem5666

    9 ай бұрын

    It's called 'assimilation'. Many foreigners, including many those from the African continent, in their pursuit to assimilate and be accepted in this country by the dominate group, were inclined to express contempt towards the African American population. Many Africans who came to the states immediately forgot about the turmoil in their own country (which led them to migrate to the states). They also forgot about the oppressive history propagated against them by colonial powers. It was essentially a case of mass and selective 'amnesia'. Only recently (due to the internet and social media) has many Africans started to pivot away from those habits and reject the brainwashing that tarnished would have otherwise been pleasant encounters between the two cultures. Also, colorism -- which is rejected in the African American community -- is still embraced by Nigerians and many other Africans. I was friends with a Nigerian in college who openly admitted that he refused to date dark skinned African women. I was shocked because he was dark complexioned. Most African American men would be ashamed to express such a view.

  • @jakebailey6285

    @jakebailey6285

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@karriem5666 Stop practicing the same generalizations about Africans that you complain about when people of other races direct them to Black Americans. I came to this country before the poster you responded to. I was never told by anyone to avoid Black Americans. Some of my closest friends since I came to America have been Black Americans. I have never really had any close friends from other races. You yourself sounds like a bigot when talking about Africans. Your claim that Black Americans have rejected colorism is completely false. You are far more colorist than Africans, to the extent that you proudly proclaim your bias in public media and in entertainment vehicles like music videos. Black America's elites are predominantly married to light-skinned or racially-ambiguous women. Most of Nigeria's elites, on the other hand, are married to some of the darkest of Nigerian women. Stop flattering yourself by thinking Africans are all conspiring against you. To be honest, Africans come here to succeed. We don't need to conspire against you to succeed in America. You are doing that amply enough with your many self-destructive propensities. Just because we know how to conduct ourselves maturely and also respect authority doesn't mean we are collaborating with the "oppressor". What a lot of Black Americans think of as fighting the system is making self-destructive choices that undermine their future prospects or trap them in the criminal justice system bottomless pit. African immigrants have nothing to do with it.

  • @Kalagenesis

    @Kalagenesis

    9 ай бұрын

    @@karriem5666Nigeria is a hot mess they aren’t even part of the conversation

  • @boomboombaby9140

    @boomboombaby9140

    9 ай бұрын

    The same people that told y’all to look down on us tell us that Africans have low IQ’s and are savages.

  • @CheyenneLin
    @CheyenneLin Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for interviewing me for this video! Really enjoyed being apart of this. Great job! 👏

  • @ForeignManinaForeignLand

    @ForeignManinaForeignLand

    Жыл бұрын

    I know I told you already but ima say it again - the vulnerability you showed talking about growing up transracial hit me like a mack truck 😮‍💨 I'm so happy you are a part of this

  • @chickennuggets1837

    @chickennuggets1837

    Жыл бұрын

    😎👍

  • @solarmoth4628

    @solarmoth4628

    Жыл бұрын

    I really enjoy all of your videos, I love seeing you guys collaborate.

  • @bootybanditforrest2396

    @bootybanditforrest2396

    Жыл бұрын

    I watch your channel a bit

  • @BLKPlutoh

    @BLKPlutoh

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks to all of you for making this content 🙏🏾

  • @ForeignManinaForeignLand
    @ForeignManinaForeignLand Жыл бұрын

    LIVVVVVVV 🚨😮‍💨 I’m cheating by commenting before it goes live but I wanna big you up for this one👏🏾 👏🏾 Its a privilege & a pleasure to link up with yuh! I know you was gonna snap on this but seeing the finished product, you gone above and beyond! The parallels between our points are eerily similar and it just shows that minorities have more in common with one another than the 1% wants us to think. That goes for working class white folks too.

  • @oo3006

    @oo3006

    Жыл бұрын

    wait howd you comment before it went live

  • @Spellzy

    @Spellzy

    Жыл бұрын

    @@oo3006 Unlisted video upload, then set to public

  • @oo3006

    @oo3006

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Spellzy ohhh makes sense considering the collab bro had the link.

  • @Mark-xw5yt

    @Mark-xw5yt

    Жыл бұрын

    Man collabs are always amazing. I was already happy that there was a new video, then a few seconds in I saw your face

  • @oliSUNvia

    @oliSUNvia

    Жыл бұрын

    thank you a ton for reaching out and making it happen!

  • @Chi_06
    @Chi_06 Жыл бұрын

    I’m a black woman and to be honest, I really don’t give a damn about what other people think of me. I know myself, I love myself.

  • @jp3630

    @jp3630

    Жыл бұрын

    Bingo! By this point we should just say "fine, let's be enemies".

  • @Chi_06

    @Chi_06

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jp3630 what are you even talking about?? Makes no sense

  • @jp3630

    @jp3630

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Chi_06 What? It does but you're being slow. Anyway, all the best.

  • @sophiascameraroll

    @sophiascameraroll

    10 ай бұрын

    ⁠​⁠@@jp3630a black woman says she loves herself and you say she wants to be enemies.. weird

  • @prettyxbonez96

    @prettyxbonez96

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@jp3630 Wow you must really project your hate onto others what a miserable way to live 😂

  • @sunsooora
    @sunsooora9 ай бұрын

    I'm japanese-brazilian and this video genuinely changed me in a fundamental way. You managed to put into words the anger and resentment I've always carried with me, thank you so much. The model minority myth is just another way that white supremacy divides and conquers, because they know our collective strength threatens the status quo. We're in this together for sure!

  • @zebulonreynaud919

    @zebulonreynaud919

    8 ай бұрын

    good golem

  • @nyah1808
    @nyah1808 Жыл бұрын

    as a black woman, i love how you inserted black voices and experiences firsthand instead of talking about them yourself. a really nice touch and validates their experiences and i valued ur perspective as an AAPI woman as well. well done essay!!

  • @danielb.1567

    @danielb.1567

    Жыл бұрын

    lol the white man got you shook! seethe! cope!

  • @JohnFrance-ns5ve

    @JohnFrance-ns5ve

    Жыл бұрын

    @@danielb.1567 lol another pale face in denial 😂 man you people are naturally sick 😂

  • @reallyreal7630

    @reallyreal7630

    9 ай бұрын

    @@danielb.1567 You need help. You are way way in your head and I don't blame you.

  • @mikestanly9007

    @mikestanly9007

    9 ай бұрын

    Asians worship white skin

  • @utterbullspit

    @utterbullspit

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@danielb.1567look at you being all racist and shit! 😉😒

  • @EeveeTheNaruto
    @EeveeTheNaruto Жыл бұрын

    My whole life has basically been what OliSunvia says about how some people think racism is only applicable to Black people. I've had to put up with a lot of shit because of this mindset from peers and teachers at school where I would actually speak out about the issue and everyone would say, "Oh, they aren't *really* being racist right? It's just kids being a bit silly and mean, you can it brush off." Unfortunately many other Asian people have had to deal with the same issue and it is almost never talked about whenever racism is brought up. Edit: There are already people trying to say this experience is not unique to Asians, great because I never said it was a unique experience. I want to make it clear that I'm simply stating what I've been through and sharing my thoughts on the matter. It's unfortunate that people have to constantly go against each other and make it a game of "who has it worse", when in the end we all have it pretty shit.

  • @u-will-begin-2-cough-in-3-days

    @u-will-begin-2-cough-in-3-days

    Жыл бұрын

    as a south asian, we're at the bottom of the list. People literally get away with saying all kinds of racist things everywhere and it never raises any eyebrows. Meanwhile saying anti black or east asian things is atleast considered racist depending on where you are.

  • @kokorobread5243

    @kokorobread5243

    Жыл бұрын

    @@u-will-begin-2-cough-in-3-days I agree with the fact that often times when racism is brought up that other groups are left out. But as a black person that has traveled to countries in Asian..seeing signs like "No black people allowed" and hearing other stories about racism that is highly overlooked..I just don't know. Racism is a big topic in America. But other countries haven't gotten as far socially to even open up the topic. Anti-blackness was a thing around the world (even amongst black people) before the Europeans had such a huge impact in colonization and their own social influence to spread such ideals. Black face is even still a thing. Not much in America society. But I've seen it in other places. Like parts in Asia and such. In very recent times.

  • @u-will-begin-2-cough-in-3-days

    @u-will-begin-2-cough-in-3-days

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kokorobread5243 I'm sorry about your experience and yeah asian countries are very often colorist and discriminate against their own darker people. But I can't really parse the point of your comment. Are you saying racism against south asians in particular dark skinned folks should be overlooked just because they haven't addressed the subject as much as the white supremacist capital of the world, as a form of silent retaliation? or are you saying that america is already doing more than other countries in discussing these topics on a global scale (which is not true) so a lil bit of sneaky and neglected racism against a minority of south asians or other groups is just inevitable.

  • @kokorobread5243

    @kokorobread5243

    Жыл бұрын

    @@u-will-begin-2-cough-in-3-days I think I'm saying a little something closer to your second idea. It shouldn't be ignored for sure when it comes to any group. But yes, if the topic isn't as open in other places in the world. I think people of other races have often been overlooked in the topic of racism, especially in America is because everything has been black and white for a while. And America was built on the black slaves. Again, that doesn't mean that I don't want to include other races into the discussion. But since most of the problems come from the scale of either people white or black. And majority of things being built on anti-blackness..its harder for others to have a voice specifically in America because they aren't black or "near black." I think black people are like the majority in a minority position. Because things that were made to oppress had us black people specifically in mind. And when it came to other groups it was a question of how close you are to blackness. That being said, I think the issue is talked about less is because there is a lesser population of south Asians, compared to black people.

  • @u-will-begin-2-cough-in-3-days

    @u-will-begin-2-cough-in-3-days

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kokorobread5243 Yes, I agree with your comment completely. I still wanted to add tho that it should be noted that america and europe being a hegemonic power with capital has empowered a lot white & non-white POC from black to jew to asian to get their voices out into the world through academia and the media which is overwhelmingly eurocentric which favours voices that speak, write and express in English and the western tradition which serves to portray america as the wokest. I think it might be a bit hasty and biased to say other countries have not opened up the topic of racist oppression as much because the western world which has a hegemonic control over the flow of scholarship and media globally might be biased when it comes to actually reporting & portraying internal emancipatory movements in other countries. Like the dalit movement in India and other south asian and south east asian countries where native people have often historically spoken out against oppressive racial hierarchy. Many of these countries are also still recovering from the long lasting impacts of colonialism and many people living in poverty and simply don't have the resources to challenge racism on an intellectual & institutional level like the average american or French feminist philosopher does, whose ideas often end up being pivotal to activism.

  • @TheSkyrimps3
    @TheSkyrimps38 ай бұрын

    I’m so glad that there’s finally someone of Asian descent willing to admit that there is some animosity towards blacks from Asians and not making it look like the beef we sometimes have for each other is one sided.

  • @troph6541

    @troph6541

    8 ай бұрын

    WELL SAID!!!!!!

  • @gardennovice7896

    @gardennovice7896

    8 ай бұрын

    If a hornet stings several times, it’s probably a clue to avoid that hornet.

  • @troph6541

    @troph6541

    8 ай бұрын

    @@gardennovice7896 bro ignored the whole video and all the information it had 💪🇺🇲

  • @RealKoolKid1

    @RealKoolKid1

    2 ай бұрын

    @@gardennovice7896”I’m a racist coward” would’ve worked very simply and easily

  • @gardennovice7896

    @gardennovice7896

    2 ай бұрын

    @@RealKoolKid1 literally what I was trying to say was avoid negative people because negativity spreads. 🤦🏻‍♂️ Interesting how others interpret a simple statement into something else.

  • @toffee.7904
    @toffee.79049 ай бұрын

    there's something so validating about hearing someone speaking on issues like these, even if i've only found this a year later. i don't normally comment on videos, but as someone who is black and asian, i feel myself being caught between both sides, namely my mother's family. my mother is a southeast asian immigrant and there was always a tension around how my father is a black man. i don't see either side of my extended family often yet i've grown to be uncomfortable with my asian family. its nothing outspoken, but i can feel my lolo seeing and treating me differently for how close i resemble my father and not their side. however, in spite of me growing dreadlocks now, i've never matched the "black" view people had either. the joke of not being black enough has followed me for as long as i've been around people since the way i talk is softspoken and polite. on the other hand, people wouldn't believe me if i told them i was asian because of how dark i was or tell me that my smarts were the result of my asian side showing. what stuck out to me most was when i asked why i got picked on so much when there were others mixed like me just to hear that it was because i was darker. i was in elementary school at the time but i feel like that recontextualized how i viewed myself it was like being in a constant dogfight to be acceptable. there were times i've felt at odds with being filipino because i wasn't east asian, which led to my culture feeling devalued in comparison. when i've been with my mother's family, i've wished i was more asian so id feel more "in place" with them. when i've been with my siblings and friends, i wished i was more black so no one questions my personality "not matching" my appearance. all the other times, i've wished i was white, or at least lighter, so that things would be peaceful watching this video has helped me believe in the hope for a better future, just from knowing others understand. i am in a better place with my identity, i think, or at least, i'm trying to make peace with who i am. and i'm glad that i'm now a subscriber of yours; thank you for this

  • @parrishharris3008

    @parrishharris3008

    8 ай бұрын

    This world ain't shit dude but be proud of who you are because you have the best of both worlds it's just that society doesn't want y'all mixed people too believe it.

  • @sihchenliang7260
    @sihchenliang7260 Жыл бұрын

    I remember one time I saw someone online posted basically meaning :“If asians want respect we should ditch 'lower class asians'(means not eurocentric or high educated enough) and other brown/dark skinned minority groups cause we are the 'good ones'. ” This is the most classist and pickme sh*t I've ever seen in my life, and yes it came from an asian person 🤦🏻‍♂️

  • @victai163

    @victai163

    Жыл бұрын

    colourism is so deeply rooted in asian communities, diaspora or otherwise. it's seriously impacting everything, internalized racism, discrimination against others, upholding white supremacy, weaponizing privilege and visibility and proximity to whiteness...

  • @RicochetForce

    @RicochetForce

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm not surprised that that sentiment exists out there.

  • @Katcom111

    @Katcom111

    Жыл бұрын

    As a southeast Asian son of a refugee and first-generation American, I have heard comments like that from upper-class east Asian. It isn't the SEA people's fault that they were placed in ghetto areas living among the blacks and Hispanics after living through war and settling into camps.

  • @RicochetForce

    @RicochetForce

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Katcom111 One of the first things the wealthy, in almost ALL societies do is blame the poor for their standing in life. It's always entirely or mostly the fault of the poor their locked in cycles of generational poverty. But they never mention that their wealth is the result of corrupt fiscal policy and government that shovels money into the hands of the few, and deprives neighborhoods of investment or taxes for any sort of budget.

  • @williamrockwell9705

    @williamrockwell9705

    Жыл бұрын

    Asians already think they are better than everyone else, not sure why people you think you are above need to "respect" you.

  • @metaphobic
    @metaphobic Жыл бұрын

    As a black man, I've to experience this sort of casual racism often. It was awful, but at some point you just get so used to it that it becomes the norm. Videos like this help me remember that, no, it really isn't at the end of the day. It's also quite fascinating to see the experience from the other side of the coin.

  • @DodoLP

    @DodoLP

    Жыл бұрын

    you mean like saying to someone from your family, who gets some sort of higher education "you acting white" ? :)))

  • @metaphobic

    @metaphobic

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DodoLP right on the money. My paternal family as pretty much ostracized me because I've just never been interested in following "African values and traditions". This "if you're not with us, you're against us" sort of mentality is rather tiresome

  • @fritzkuhne2055

    @fritzkuhne2055

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DodoLP clueless ethnic european asking here: how is this white peoples fault? tbh i found this vid pretty racist to myself

  • @DodoLP

    @DodoLP

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@fritzkuhne2055 why is it white peoples fault ? Because they need to find excuses to why theyre unsuccssesful..

  • @fritzkuhne2055

    @fritzkuhne2055

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DodoLP makes no sense. i dont need any excuses for my terrible life

  • @ThinkpieceTribe
    @ThinkpieceTribe Жыл бұрын

    You snapped actually thank you for making this! More conversations and solidarity amongst the black and Asian community needs to happen like this if we are to ever move forward with dismantling white supremacy

  • @Hornet135

    @Hornet135

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh brother “muh white supremacy”

  • @PungiFungi

    @PungiFungi

    Ай бұрын

    Then why insist on immigrating to white countries. Stay in your own where you are the norm and majority.

  • @jervey123
    @jervey123 Жыл бұрын

    i remember 17 years ago, the time when we just immigrated from the philppines to the US, i was 13 and one of the first kids who talked to me was a black kid (who i'm still friends with to this day) the notion of racism was so foreign to me that i called him a "negro" because that's the filipino word for a black person... and oh boy, did i get in trouble for that, they had to call in my mom to explain to the counselor that it's just what we call black people in the philippines, lol... i think most people (i said most, not all) don't have malicious intent when they are being racist, specially in communities, it's just something that is fueled by ignorance

  • @TheSkyrimps3

    @TheSkyrimps3

    8 ай бұрын

    Negro is literally the Spanish word for black… but it’s been twisted into a derogatory word in English

  • @Haobey
    @Haobey Жыл бұрын

    It's so sad that this video has been flagged for age restriction. Great content. I see parallels from this dynamic from the UK but the relationships between the Black and Asian communities can be really different.

  • @issness_god

    @issness_god

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@Naikomi Half of Amsterdam isn't ethnically dutch as of the last census and France is estimated to have the biggest Muslim population in Europe, I woudn't say Western Europe is comprised of ethnostates in the way Japan and Korea are or ''more European'' whatever that means. More old buildngs? also asian in britain means south asian, has nothing do with stereotypes or culture of Japan or Korea, generally.

  • @demonoiac2975

    @demonoiac2975

    Жыл бұрын

    KZread is not meant to educate people. It's meant to be part of an evil corporation that keeps few people wealthier than everyone else. These same few people divide and conquer with racism. "They own and control the corporations. They've long since bought and paid for the senate, the congress, the state houses, the city halls, they got the judges in their back pockets and they own all the big media companies so they control just about all of the news and information you get to hear. They got you by the balls. They spend billions of dollars every year lobbying, lobbying, to get what they want. Well, we know what they want. They want more for themselves and less for everybody else, but I'll tell you what they don't want: They don't want a population of citizens capable of critical thinking. They don't want well informed, well educated people capable of critical thinking." - George Carlin

  • @demonoiac2975

    @demonoiac2975

    Жыл бұрын

    @Naikomi Not stupid when very rich oligarchs are attacking human rights and investigative journalists everywhere. These same very rich oligarchs are dividing and conquering people with racism. Very rich and powerful people have done tyrannical things for a millennia. KZread is just another thing controlled by very rich people who want to indoctrinate their slaves. So, KZread is meant for indoctrination disguised as education. KZreadrs who are investigative journalists exposing these very rich oligarchs in power get demonitized, censored, artifically lower subscribers, artificially lower video views, or banned. It's why dumb music videos get popularized while investigative journalists are getting attacked. It's idiocracy.

  • @jp3630

    @jp3630

    Жыл бұрын

    YT age restriction, don't you think that is a bit suspcious to say the least? Their major platforms are run by pale supremacist (I can't say the W word or they will ban me) and that's the problem.

  • @only_fair23

    @only_fair23

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@issness_godMost european countries are over 80% a single ethnicity, maybe not comparable to Japan, Korea and Taiwan which are over 96% a single ethnicity but far more of an ethnostate than almost all post colonial countries

  • @rsarin18
    @rsarin18 Жыл бұрын

    This is such an important video and I'm glad you made a video on it! As an Indian American, I was glad you talked about South Asians claiming Blackness, as I feel it is a topic that isn't talked about as much. To add, the model minority myth was specifically created and used to separate Asian Americans from other POC. In 1966, the New York Times published an article about a successful Japanese American businessman, and quite overtly stated that if he could be successful in a racist society, then why couldn't black people. While easier said than done, it is important we come together. While each group experiences their race differently in America, we all suffer from the same white supremacy.

  • @omniframe8612

    @omniframe8612

    Жыл бұрын

    THIS WHOLE ENTIRE COMMENT 👌🏾👌🏾👌🏾

  • @Ian-pn1ff

    @Ian-pn1ff

    Жыл бұрын

    @Naikomi this ain’t about y’all and u guys aren’t considered poc anymore and irish/italians were never treated the same way poc were

  • @Ian-pn1ff

    @Ian-pn1ff

    Жыл бұрын

    @Mr.Beant when did i say that indian people did not suffer??

  • @Ian-pn1ff

    @Ian-pn1ff

    Жыл бұрын

    @Mr.Beant i don’t denounce the fact modern slavery exists and race plays a huge factor

  • @Ian-pn1ff

    @Ian-pn1ff

    Жыл бұрын

    @Mr.Beant i don’t denounce the fact modern slavery exists and race plays a huge factor

  • @gabriellevillareal
    @gabriellevillareal Жыл бұрын

    This video has inspired me to write my Sociology Final on the impact of the Model Minority on Asian and Black Personhood. Your video was very informative, captivating and truly introspective. As an Filipino immigrant, this spoke to me deeply as I have felt the weight of the Model Minority myth drive me to depression. I also witness a lot of Anti-Black sentiment in older generations due to the internalization of racist ideologies. It is sad and I'm glad you made a video that brings this problem up as it helps create bigger discourses that can hopefully one day amount to change.

  • @zebulonreynaud919

    @zebulonreynaud919

    8 ай бұрын

    hahaha, the comments are epic do you know the first time there was colorism in euriopa was when arabs and blacks colonized spain and blacks slaves were cheaper than whites slaves, there was a big fetichization too for whites sexual slaves, and it have effect today in england with sexual enslavement of young whites girls by pakistnanis.

  • @bendemare5270

    @bendemare5270

    8 ай бұрын

    When you work on it and publish it, please tell us so we can go read it

  • @charmelos1431

    @charmelos1431

    5 ай бұрын

    You done?

  • @AnxiousGary
    @AnxiousGary Жыл бұрын

    Came here from Foreign's video and wow, this is the first time I've ever had to click a disclaimer to watch a video even though I was already logged in!

  • @dt-x3772
    @dt-x3772 Жыл бұрын

    Anyone else watching this that is half black half asian? Being both black and Korean sucks. It's like you're not black enough to pass as not mixed to black americans, and you're not asian enough to ever be considered asian by asian americans. Then people will make race jokes or speak illy of other races and say it's ok because you're "not really black" or "not really asian." Also, I feel like people will associate certain negatives or positives about you to each race if that makes any sense. For example, athleticism or academic ability you possess gets reduced to a "must be your black half" or "must be your asian half" joke at some point by friends or acquaintances and stuff. Race jokes are made about everyone so it isn't that deep, but it just gets kind of tiring hearing them consistently when you're also told you don't really belong to those groups. Thanks to anyone who reads this rant. It just gets tiring sometimes man. Feels like I have to prove I'm black, or prove I'm asian, when I shouldn't really feel like I have to prove anything other than the fact I'm human. I guess it is human to separate into groups based on physical or ideological traits though.

  • @ElTeacherJ

    @ElTeacherJ

    Жыл бұрын

    Shout out to the mixed-race struggle, lucky for us, even if we're never enough X or Y for some, we're just the right amount of everything to be us.

  • @Crazyeg123

    @Crazyeg123

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ElTeacherJ exactly! if belonging was dependent on race I wouldn't want it anyways.

  • @cookies4everdiy640

    @cookies4everdiy640

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, I’m also half black half asian. I’m black and Chinese, though. I find it interesting how the enmity between Asians and black people is also reflected in my parents’ relationship. It does get tiring. It sometimes feels alienating like no side of my family wants me. I can definitely relate.

  • @rayshonthefishingaddict5412

    @rayshonthefishingaddict5412

    Ай бұрын

    I'm a black brother to tell you don't even worry about other people think of you

  • @reagankohler1181
    @reagankohler1181 Жыл бұрын

    This is by far the best video on your channel, and it was really annoying that they got it age restricted

  • @poppagBallZ97
    @poppagBallZ97 Жыл бұрын

    Watched this after watching Foreign’s video, and both of you provided so much insight and introspection 😊 I’m so grateful I watch his and your video, because I learned so much :)

  • @rinehardt6837
    @rinehardt6837 Жыл бұрын

    Found your channel through foreign man in a foreign land. As an African-American man I have witnessed the dynamic between Asian and black culture first hand. At one point dated a young Korean woman. Her father once had a conversation with me that was just point blank he said " if you keep dating my daughter you're going to make her life more difficult because White Society is something you've both got to navigate and your black society will never accept my daughter and my Korean Society will never accept you" I was crushed. We still keep in touch on Facebook over the years she got married funny enough to a black guy and they have two children my wife is Jamaican and we have two children. When i have seen racial Prejudice from the other side being around a group of black people who said the projects that they once lived in the people over there now are a bunch of the Asians and I cleaned up that language up cuz that's not exactly what they said. I've been got into a verbal disagreement with one of them for using that kind of language because I said had a white person or an Asian person said the same about you when you were living there you would have been upset. And as a fan of Star Trek I am a big fan of George Takei who is Japanese American and as a young boy lived in the camps that were set up by American government for Japanese Americans something you mentioned in your video. just as many people talk about how black people once had their own prosperous towns that were economically independent and they were destroyed. Many Asian Americans including George's father had their own businesses in predominantly Asian neighborhoods and they had their businesses homes taken away from them and after they were released from the camps they didn't give any of it back. I remember working with a young man who was Indian and he had no problem dating white girls but one day he saw a black man and an Indian woman who were a married couple with their two children and he didn't even try to hide his disgust. You made a phenomenal video in between you and foreign great job

  • @idjhalsey1

    @idjhalsey1

    Жыл бұрын

    Are you talking about Fort Greene projects in Brooklyn, NY. Just out of my curiosity.

  • @mandalorianhunter1

    @mandalorianhunter1

    Жыл бұрын

    Did you talk to the Indian guy? Say that thinking was wrong?

  • @Ahhh11

    @Ahhh11

    Жыл бұрын

    but if you were white my guy, youd get the rolling red carpet out for you.

  • @joseph3036

    @joseph3036

    Жыл бұрын

    Once they date a black guy, Asian men don't want to date them anymore so they end up dating/marrying a black guy again.

  • @rinehardt6837

    @rinehardt6837

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mandalorianhunter1 to be honest I didn't even really bother talking to him that much after that he wasn't the person I thought he was. One of my friends from India damesh told me he said Prejudice he said just think about religious how they had the partition that led to having India and Pakistan be two different nations.

  • @starryeyes2092
    @starryeyes2092 Жыл бұрын

    As a Bengali-American, I appreciate this video so much! I've experienced smth similar to what OliSunvia experienced, in that I didn't think I experienced racism growing up. In reality, I just avoided thinking critically about it because in my very diverse neighborhood and school district, I'm considered light-skinned and "white", and therefore appreciated my proximity to whiteness. I definitely see what privileges I gained from my being light-skinned, but I didn't become aware of my race and ethnic features until I went to a high school full of white and East Asian kids in an very affluent school district (fell for the model minority myth, too). Whereas before high school, I saw maybe 3 white people in real life and my school district was poor (I went to a zone middle school full of black, Hispanic, Caribbean, and South Asian kids), in high school, I felt the full negative effects of internalized racism, classism, colorism, and bunch of other isms. Thank you, oliSUNvia, for making this video, and helping me come to terms with my experiences and putting them into words.

  • @ummokkk6532

    @ummokkk6532

    Жыл бұрын

    oh hey i’m british bengali

  • @proger1960

    @proger1960

    Жыл бұрын

    Ayy Bangladeshi American here 👌

  • @fritzkuhne2055

    @fritzkuhne2055

    Жыл бұрын

    isnt internalized racism just a symptom born out of the underlying knowledge that the host nation was created by another ethnic group`?

  • @thedelordhimselfgokublack

    @thedelordhimselfgokublack

    10 ай бұрын

    No

  • @WastedBananas

    @WastedBananas

    7 ай бұрын

    there's no such thing as a "South Asian". you bengalis are just not Asian

  • @lilaloweree5908
    @lilaloweree5908 Жыл бұрын

    i love this channel is much. she talks about controversial issues with an open mind is fair and educated about and to EVERY group. best thing i’ve seen on youtube!!

  • @rowan8292
    @rowan8292 Жыл бұрын

    as a chinese person, I think our culture also encourages a lot of "mind your own business" mindset which is why racism or any form of subjugation doesn't talked about as much as it should be. I am also born in Singapore which was colonised by the British so the white supremacist mindset among the majority race(chinese) is so strong and there is a lot of discrimination against minorities such as the indian and malay races.

  • @whitepouch0904

    @whitepouch0904

    9 ай бұрын

    Ehrrrmm You are all racist tbh, Chinese, Koreans and the silent but still racist Japanese in the Far East Asian region. Yes there are exemptions but most and many of you are racist specially to the brown race (southeast Asian and South Asian) The brown race is the black of Asia.

  • @giovannitrumando

    @giovannitrumando

    9 ай бұрын

    It's funny cause here in Europe Singapore is set as an example of racial harmony between very different ethnic group

  • @alexgomez6723

    @alexgomez6723

    9 ай бұрын

    Imagine blaming white people for your own bigotry.

  • @elchurro7540

    @elchurro7540

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@alexgomez6723 Imagine not factoring in culture and experiences, lol. Also, misery loves company.

  • @alexgomez6723

    @alexgomez6723

    9 ай бұрын

    @@elchurro7540 That doesn’t disprove anything I said.

  • @drakegilliland1378
    @drakegilliland1378 Жыл бұрын

    I was born in South Korea and was adopted at 3 months old to a US family (white mom, half Korean dad) and for most of my life I've wished to be white. Even when my dad, who spent part of his childhood in Korea, tried to share the culture with me, I refused it because I wanted to fit in. I'd usually try to dampen the blows of racist jokes by telling them first or laughing at them, neither of which were healthy and caused a lot of shame and insecurity at the cost of the illusion of control. Only recently have I started to see my appearance as just a part of me, not all of me, but it's for sure a work in progress.

  • @fritzkuhne2055

    @fritzkuhne2055

    Жыл бұрын

    when it comes down to the wire, where one ACTUALLY comes from is the only important thing. i recommend immigrating to the land of your ancestors and connecting with you actual self, not this skinsuit

  • @tonksndante4809

    @tonksndante4809

    Жыл бұрын

    @@fritzkuhne2055 there is something deeply broken about how you’re trying to bring others down like this based on race

  • @tres5533

    @tres5533

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks K201 for the explaination because my BS meter went off but I could not figure out a reason "why" this "just" happened in UGANDA because they have other pressing national affairs going on. This blacklash makes sense. The US export of LGTBQ+ culture at hyperspeed makes sense. I definately don't agree with the legislation, but the problem is people today are impatient and don't think things through.

  • @Cha4k

    @Cha4k

    11 ай бұрын

    That's really sad, But that's all internal and you cant blame anyone else for your own racial neurosis. I'm adopted too and I've always just felt like my genetic ancestry doesn't mean anything. I am descended from the culture of my parents not the blood of people who didn't want me.

  • @CountingPrimes
    @CountingPrimes Жыл бұрын

    As a brown skinned (India ) Asian person it’s been really interesting recognizing anti blackness and the way it specifically pervades my communities. As I’ve gotten older I’ve learned to recognize the ways in which anti black rhetoric has been normalized in our communities. This video was a great primer on the ways this happens in immigrant communities and what we can do to solve it

  • @aiswaryabersan7983

    @aiswaryabersan7983

    Жыл бұрын

    What about the other way around east asian, African are pretty much racist to indians but whites behaviour are better in usa not so in eastern Europe

  • @user-fx5sw1cn7j

    @user-fx5sw1cn7j

    Жыл бұрын

    just like how black people are anti-cop because cops have been killing/assaulting black people, Asians (particularly elderly ones) have been killed/assaulted by black people in the US

  • @ml5923

    @ml5923

    Жыл бұрын

    @@aiswaryabersan7983 girl what?

  • @ev2175

    @ev2175

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ml5923 she means that East Asians and Africans are pretty much racist to Indians (generalisation) but the whites in the USA have good behaviour (in relation to being racist) unlike white Eastern Europeans.

  • @Dave_of_Mordor

    @Dave_of_Mordor

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ml5923 the person you're replying to is saying that black people can be racist too. is it really that shocking to hear? have you seen news about asians being attacked in new york? guess which race was doing the attacking?

  • @galvich3037
    @galvich3037 Жыл бұрын

    The way she articulates her words so that me and other viewers can truly understand the problems with our society is perfect and from all the news reports I’ve seen they’ve never explained anything like this with as much detail shown in this video. This was truly an eye opening experience.

  • @babykosh5415
    @babykosh5415 Жыл бұрын

    Found you via FD sig. This is BRILLIANT work..well done!

  • @blerdrotic
    @blerdrotic Жыл бұрын

    I also commented on Foreign's video. But my experience as a Black American, Blacks feel minimized and marginalized. The majority of my personal experiences with Asians, up until college, had been from Chinese take out, beauty supply stores, nail salons and the Koreans who owned clothing stores. The ownership of those businesses did cause resentment. I've always heard a lot of, "Well I have the money and the idea. Every time I go for a loan I'm denied. Unless I leave the area. But let an Asian come in and they can buy or open whatever." Especially in the 80's and 90's. On top of that, there is distrust from the fumbling of Reconstruction, the destruction of successful Black communities such as Black Wall Street and Rosewood. The signing of the Civil Rights Act, and that rainbow of people involved pretty much saying hold your own nuts, after everyone got what they wanted and took advantage of it. So there's already a sentiment that people will latch on to our issues, and then leave us hanging. So don't go being all kumbaya with the anti-Asian violence, because they'll discriminate against you too. There's resentment there, and it all stems from issues that this nation doesn't want to properly address.

  • @Ian-pn1ff

    @Ian-pn1ff

    Жыл бұрын

    are u fucking fr on your last point? gtfo

  • @yavaneshkumar3136
    @yavaneshkumar3136 Жыл бұрын

    The worst part is that they first treat them shit and look down on them and when they try to fight back they suddenly become a 'danger' like seriously

  • @newnewmee44

    @newnewmee44

    Жыл бұрын

    because they fight back the wrong people. If police is the problem fight the police,don't destroy the city you live in, it will make everyone in that city hate you instead of hating the corrupt police. If a company is racist towards you sue them.

  • @yavaneshkumar3136

    @yavaneshkumar3136

    Жыл бұрын

    @@newnewmee44 I agree with you completely The thing is that both sides can be right and wrong at the same time so they should change perspective to know the others view too

  • @komlat253

    @komlat253

    9 ай бұрын

    The thing Is about that danger label, it was put on us way before the rise of crime in black communities and protest .

  • @eldermoose7938
    @eldermoose7938 Жыл бұрын

    The best approximation I can make to the Asian "positive stereotypes" is being a black track athlete in collage. The only positive stereotypes black people have is sing, dance, and play sports. So when I was playing sports everyone loved me I was an "exemplar of my race". But wen I got injured and couldn't run at the same level as before I just felt like I was defective or inadequate like my entire self-worth evaporated. so I can imagine any "Asian" kid who feels by default that he/she should be smart then falling short of that would experience something similar. The positive stereotypes are only good when you achieve then and thus embody what you are assumed to be, but they make any deviation from that an you are other.

  • @JohnFrance-ns5ve

    @JohnFrance-ns5ve

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol you people must have been at an all white school smh

  • @davidgibson2861
    @davidgibson2861 Жыл бұрын

    had to make a whole other account to watch this video because it was age-restricted. really enjoyed it though, and even though i probably shouldve watched foreign's video and then yours back to back, it still helped me learn about both sides of anti-blackness and asiaphobia in the adjacent communities, as a young black kid. great videos!

  • @moldycheese5454
    @moldycheese5454 Жыл бұрын

    as a hmong person, thank you so much for talking about us. not many know us lol. i have been having to unlearn so many things i learned my entire life. even though there are many black people in my community, ive been taught that they are the worst type of people. anti-blackness is so common in the asian american community that it feels natural. it wasn’t until i actually had friends at school who were black that i realized they aren’t these creatures - they are people, like me. . i thank you for this video, it is very eye-opening

  • @midapita

    @midapita

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm glad you've come to realize that these people are simply people. I always wonder what the Asian Community thinks of Black people, do they tend to think we're all "creatures"? I've wondered this especially after my Lao boyfriend's mom was surprised he was dating me. She didn't explicitly mention me being Black but she did ask "I thought you were into Vietnamese girls?" (our area has a small Lao population). That kind of hurt lol...I wish she didn't see me as just my skin color. But a part of me felt maybe she was just asking a stupid question that some ethnic parents asks--besides, my mom would probably ask the same thing if my Black brother dated an Asian woman. Lol idk how to make of all this and idk why I'm ranting in response to your comment💀

  • @JohnFrance-ns5ve

    @JohnFrance-ns5ve

    Жыл бұрын

    @@midapita lol you’re stupid for dating one of these people now they think I might want one of them and I could never 😂 these people don’t like you… if you have kids with that woman you’re very selfish and deserve every thing that comes with it

  • @xollyxolly3234

    @xollyxolly3234

    8 ай бұрын

    ​​@@midapita During the 1980s when hmong communities were coming in from southeast Asia to the United States, a few incidents here and there will establish someone's perception of a certain group of people. My grandparents ended up living in one of the poorest and high crime area at the time. That neighborhood happened to have more blacks who seemed angry all the time according to my grandparents. The police visited that neighborhood 3 times a week for some sort of altercation or shooting. At one point a black teen got shot and laid dead on the sidewalk done by gang members. So my grandparents were always wary of black people. My grandparents since then moved to a small town in the late 1990s. In 2018 My black friend came to knock at our door and my grandpa was too scared to open it. he asked me did they have the wrong house? I told him that person outside is my friend. And he said ok so they are not going to hurt us? And I said no. My grandpa got stabbed in the 1990s in Milwaukee Wisconsin at the front door one night when he came home from work. Two black men were trying to come into the house. My grandma and the younger uncles threw plates and drove at the intruders off with brooms and a mop. That lived in my grandpa's memory so he is terrified. But it also isn't right for him to judge all black people for a few that weren't nice to him. I think the some older hmong generation have a hard time to change their mindsets because of past experiences. But it can be done slowly over time.

  • @kokorobread5243
    @kokorobread5243 Жыл бұрын

    I've been waiting for a long time for someone to make a video on this topic! Thank you so much your hard work 💜💗

  • @shockofthenew
    @shockofthenew Жыл бұрын

    It's ridiculous that this video is so restricted... like why? Anyway this was great, I'd love to see these topics explored even more.

  • @NaikaVideo
    @NaikaVideo Жыл бұрын

    I saw Foreign's video first and was already blown away by it but this really tied a lot of things together. This was an epic effort on both your parts. This was a great breakdown about anti-blackness within our community and it's my hope that more of our Asian diaspora friends can really watch, listen and digest all your points. I'm nearly 40 as an Asian american and I wished there was content like this when I was younger. Thank you both for making this happen!

  • @King_Gum
    @King_Gum Жыл бұрын

    I've always found the "Asians are smart" thing interesting because my hyper specific experience of growing up in west Africa means I always competed with other Black kids. I grew up in a culture of black people pushing education much the way Asians are said to. So when I emigrated and was in the top classes where Asian and black kids dominated with a few kids of other races, at best I thought, "Asians are as smart as us". Took a few years to realise that most of the world had never seen those rich, intelligent black kids I saw or the poorer ones I encountered after moving. Till this day it's crazy to me that anyone would argue black people aren't intelligent. And I also noticed how the less successful black kids in the school happened to often be those raised in the UK, or occasionally immigrants who fell into those crowds. And there was definitely rhetoric from my mother that said that the black British kids were to be avoided somewhat.

  • @only_fair23

    @only_fair23

    10 ай бұрын

    Legal immigration in the US is an entirely different beast from immigration in the UK, due to the empire

  • @chumajamesnxele106

    @chumajamesnxele106

    8 ай бұрын

    My South African Xhosa-speaking Mother told me to stay away from West African cause y'all here to sell drugs and steal our jobs...

  • @aqueiraoshun157
    @aqueiraoshun1579 ай бұрын

    Wow I am just floored and brought to tears behind this video. Thank you… this was well needed ❤❤❤

  • @BotheredBoy
    @BotheredBoy Жыл бұрын

    This video was an instant subscribe. Thank you for shining a light on this little known part of history and culture.

  • @Jabodie
    @Jabodie Жыл бұрын

    This was quite an eye opening video. I am half white/ Korean myself, the son of a white American man and a Korean woman. It has become clear to me that I moved from the embracing the "black" identity into the "white" identity some time in college. As I progressed more and more into academics (I just finished my phd in STEM), the people around me slowly shifted from 1st generation college students in minority families to whites and wealthy immigrants that were following in their parents footsteps. Naturally, the culture and social dynamics changed around me slowly, from 50%+ of my close childhood friends being black (and most of the others being a minority) to nearly all of my friends being white. It was like one day I woke up and realized I was in a different world. Building off of the fetishisation video, I have also had the interesting experience of having my physical features transition from being completely un manly/ unattractive to being very popular amongst any random girl at a party that's into kpop. I can't say I enjoyed either experience, if I'm totally honest. And I relate hard to that sense of wanting to be white, blonde, and blue eyed as a child, as early as the age of 6.

  • @whitepouch0904

    @whitepouch0904

    9 ай бұрын

    To be fair to whites, Koreans are one of the racist countries in the far east. So it’s not just the influence of whites, they really are racist to outsiders specially to brown races like Indians, Thai, Filipinos and other southern regions where brown colored- skin is predominant. If your half Korean but not half Europeans you are still an outsider. The same with Japanese and Chinese. But Japanese are more polite so they don’t express it as direct as Koreans and Chinese.

  • @blue-uo6yl

    @blue-uo6yl

    5 ай бұрын

    @@whitepouch0904 half Europeans also get bullied and Whites arent treated all that much better. Tons of Expats constantly hate on Korea because of this and tooo be quite honest im okay with it. Im tired of White Supremacy worldwide. Korea is the only place i feel safe.

  • @pablo3318
    @pablo3318 Жыл бұрын

    Racismo, discriminación, sexismo. The three are part of a same big problem. Saludos from méxico. Love you olivia

  • @oliSUNvia

    @oliSUNvia

    Жыл бұрын

  • @oreradovanovi5204

    @oreradovanovi5204

    Жыл бұрын

    Or the class struggle

  • @MyThoughtsImJustSaying

    @MyThoughtsImJustSaying

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah the victimhood mentality that you’re all living with

  • @Mateocruzfontes
    @Mateocruzfontes10 ай бұрын

    I am speechless. This is such an important and informative video for EVERYONE to see. New subscriber! 👍

  • @taeheepowers2537
    @taeheepowers2537 Жыл бұрын

    Coming from fd signifiers video with you because I failed to get a notification for this!!! Didn't know it existed, but sure to watch now~♡

  • @danielapena5437
    @danielapena5437 Жыл бұрын

    As a white mexican that has lived in the U.S. I can somewhat relate to the video, it is so weird that diversity is seen as a binary. Also it is so incomprensible to me that they see latin america as one place, given that the countries are so different,they think all latinamerica is méxico and mexico is so different than other countries like Argentina and Colombia, kind of like japan and China is seen as all Asia(I don't believe that's true tho).

  • @AlgonquianPatriota0521

    @AlgonquianPatriota0521

    Жыл бұрын

    That always had me a headache. Simply because they all speak spanish. But that is not always the case. They also look at Mexicans as Native Americans.

  • @quincy189

    @quincy189

    Жыл бұрын

    @@AlgonquianPatriota0521 and native americans are chinese... descended from ancient cave tribe from china

  • @Ian-pn1ff

    @Ian-pn1ff

    Жыл бұрын

    @Naikomi no shit

  • @Ian-pn1ff

    @Ian-pn1ff

    Жыл бұрын

    @@AlgonquianPatriota0521 most latinos and mexicans are native americans or are mixed with native americans

  • @yasminkamille6142

    @yasminkamille6142

    Жыл бұрын

    @@AlgonquianPatriota0521 imagine when Brazil comes into? We are literally erased from being latin just cause we don't speak spanish. And the whole idea of "latino" being a race is also stupid, latin american people come in many shapes and forms, in fact, Brazil has the biggest japanese population outside of Japan due to immigration. But still some people belive that it's a race

  • @j2smoove798
    @j2smoove798 Жыл бұрын

    The way racism is only brought up as a black and white thing is just absurd There are many other ethnicities and races that have gone through similiar troubles like latinos , hispanics, asians, natives, etc yet it’s less talked about.

  • @edwardlegend1564

    @edwardlegend1564

    Жыл бұрын

    YES those problems kinda intertwined together,we can see more clear view if we include other races

  • @imthatbishhh5152

    @imthatbishhh5152

    Жыл бұрын

    I speak on racism involving Asians all the time.

  • @BigHenFor

    @BigHenFor

    Жыл бұрын

    But who's doing that? If Ted Cruz is doing the talking, you know there's something wrong.

  • @spotlightspanther

    @spotlightspanther

    Жыл бұрын

    @@edwardlegend1564 I think every race is discriminated against . The media/society has a way of discussing certain topics without covering the full problem, same with abuse in both gender , hunger and mental health

  • @edwardlegend1564

    @edwardlegend1564

    Жыл бұрын

    @@spotlightspanther yeah, but in different degrees. It's really complicated

  • @obewankenobi785
    @obewankenobi78529 күн бұрын

    first gen Filipino American (family moved when I was 4). idk how I didn’t find this video sooner, as I’ve been watching you for a while now, but I’m glad I did. you managed to put into words so many things I’ve felt growing up. thank you for everything you do

  • @ogawasanjuro
    @ogawasanjuro9 ай бұрын

    Phenomenal work! I am a Black man now based in Japan and I a so impressed by your video. Also, my favorite part came near the end where you introduce Yuri Kochiyama and Grace Lee Boggs. I liked Ms. Kochiyama's "fight the power" raised fist picture. This is history that I never ever heard about while growing up. You did excellent here!

  • @Bloody_Orchid
    @Bloody_Orchid Жыл бұрын

    A good point you made in Foreign Man's video that I didn't see in this video, Olivia, is that the representation of black people in media was awful and limited to like drug dealers and other terrible roles. Then, you get the Asian immigrants that have never seen a black person in real life, that comes in the country with the only images of black people are criminals, it's understandable that there was anti-blackness in the Asian community. Awful, but understandable. I'll go even a step further and say that even without the influence of media, ignorance alone is enough causes for fear and hatred. Not saying it's right, but it has to be acknowledged. All that said, it affects mainly the first generation of immigrants. I just felt like adding something (that you already mentioned) to this very well made video!

  • @scratchpenny

    @scratchpenny

    Жыл бұрын

    Yep, this even happens to white rural kids in America. They grow up with a false idea about black people or any other race. As you say, one of the big problems is the racial generalizations from the media, which is essentially telling lies about everyone.

  • @chickenfishhybrid44

    @chickenfishhybrid44

    Жыл бұрын

    Because those Asian people could have only seen Black people on TV? They weren't seeing them in their everyday life?

  • @user-gs1lz2pw9v

    @user-gs1lz2pw9v

    9 ай бұрын

    It's not understandable. It's fear and it's not to be indulged

  • @dreyes397

    @dreyes397

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@user-gs1lz2pw9v Literally turn the TV on and you can quickly see who will become the "bad guys." Media coverage is weird so it can be understandable in some twisted way bc it can manipulate

  • @user-gs1lz2pw9v

    @user-gs1lz2pw9v

    9 ай бұрын

    @@dreyes397 i accept

  • @jehusawada3417
    @jehusawada3417 Жыл бұрын

    I love all of your videos, as a mixed guy from the Caribbean that’s both African and Japanese this video resonated with me even in my country because I’m more African passing and literally we feel the effects here

  • @bendemare5270

    @bendemare5270

    8 ай бұрын

    I mixed and in the Caribbean too !❤

  • @hardworkmcgee2998
    @hardworkmcgee29989 ай бұрын

    This is my first visit to this channel, and it bares watching more of the content, but based on this video, you (she) is a very knowledgeable person. Kudos's on a very fair and researched topic.

  • @Aeviae
    @Aeviae8 ай бұрын

    This was a really well researched and carefully considered presentation. Thank you for shinning a light on this matter and being brave enough to talk about this. It would be easy for you to not do so, and so I want you to know that I am grateful for your honest and authentic articulation of this complex topic. I trust that your video will enlighten anyone that watches it to completion. I will certainly be using it as a reference. And I hope that it leads to better relations between our communities.

  • @redundancy3143
    @redundancy3143 Жыл бұрын

    I'm so glad someone has finally started talking about this. Black people and us Asians have to stick together! 🤝🤝🤝

  • @RedVelvetBlackleather

    @RedVelvetBlackleather

    Жыл бұрын

    Like she said Asians think they’re better

  • @edwardlegend1564

    @edwardlegend1564

    Жыл бұрын

    YES everyone should stick together and fix problems in between, and I really hope one day we can live in a world with minimum racism

  • @Daniel-ih4zh

    @Daniel-ih4zh

    Жыл бұрын

    Maybe stop fucking burning down their shops then

  • @childrenofthesun777

    @childrenofthesun777

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed! The Black and Asian community have been at odds against each other for so long. I really believe that the cultural exchange between each of our groups could be so beneficial and useful🙏🏾

  • @williamrockwell9705

    @williamrockwell9705

    Жыл бұрын

    @Max შემიწყალე White people are making them do that or something.

  • @florisnail3528
    @florisnail3528 Жыл бұрын

    I loved the editing, the delivery, the thought of including others opinions, fantastic Olivia this was really interesting to watch.

  • @______1837
    @______18379 ай бұрын

    21:05 forgot the study but it was about how in an instance where kids were asked the choose which fill would be more successful the majority chose the white dolls over the black dolls. It's like Asian Americans have that shared memory of oppression in reverse they'll always been told how smart they are so now it's become internalized

  • @astrostar49
    @astrostar4911 ай бұрын

    One of my best-life long friends is Chinese-American, and I'm Black-American. We met in high school in 2002, and 20 plus years later, we are still great friends. I was able to go to her wedding three years ago, and she's even a mom now. I'll be flying back to the USA and seeing her again since we'll be attending another mutual friend's wedding (he's Filipino-American). I'm glad that we still share a strong friendship despite the tension that exists between certain contingents of the Black, and Asian-American communities.

  • @komlat253

    @komlat253

    9 ай бұрын

    Same ,my best friend Chinese. At 1st his mom was scared but then she realized that I was a good person. And for many years now she considers me 1st among all his friends and invites me to the family. But in general I've never seen personally the black asian tension, only recently in the last few years I heard it cuz I have many Asians friends.

  • @Boahemaa
    @Boahemaa Жыл бұрын

    I can relate to the immigrant anti-blackness. Immigrants often come with privileges because you need to be at least middle class to be able to afford to move to another country. So yes being a foreigner has its challenges but it's a far cry from systemic oppression.

  • @birdiewolf3497

    @birdiewolf3497

    Жыл бұрын

    Yup. Let's not forget about the class component. The reasons immigrants can even be models minorities is because they are not poor. The immigration system is literally a filtration system. The whole point is to try and pick people they want to come. But if the primary immigration channels have less class discrimination, the more society looks down on them. Look how ethnicities that immigrate largely through refugee status are treated and seen as. I mean that is why a huge reason why Latinos are looked down on. Because poor Latinos also have the ability to come to the United States.

  • @dreyes397

    @dreyes397

    9 ай бұрын

    Not in the 90s you didn't lol My mom came here with nothing but I already had a grandma here so we used to pool our money living cramped. Some immigrants come with some money others come here with norhing

  • @saints0931

    @saints0931

    4 ай бұрын

    @@dreyes397Thatd not happening anymore. The rely on the lottery system.

  • @ChrisBrooks34
    @ChrisBrooks34 Жыл бұрын

    This comes at the perfect time as I'm reading a collection of essays on Antiblackness and there's even a section on precolonial Korea and other parts of Asia

  • @Daniel-ih4zh

    @Daniel-ih4zh

    Жыл бұрын

    Colonial Korea?????

  • @ChrisBrooks34

    @ChrisBrooks34

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Daniel-ih4zh precolonial Korea I misread the title

  • @Daniel-ih4zh

    @Daniel-ih4zh

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ChrisBrooks34 but what is colonial korea? Do you mean when the japanese colonised it?

  • @ChrisBrooks34

    @ChrisBrooks34

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Daniel-ih4zh that's what my reference point was but like I said I misread the title and unfortunately I haven't gotten to that essay yet.

  • @idontownagoldfish
    @idontownagoldfish9 ай бұрын

    wow. this video really resonated with me, and it was almost crazy to hear someone talk about the nuances of asian american issues, i kinda thought no one else felt that way.

  • @dreamersdisease2481
    @dreamersdisease2481Ай бұрын

    Man those riots back in 92 they were taking things from the shop owners. Majority of it was black doing it to koreans.

  • @ashnight67
    @ashnight67 Жыл бұрын

    This is a collab I never knew I wanted! you are both fantastic ❤️

  • @bigheart30
    @bigheart309 ай бұрын

    the way some of these ignorant comments are proving her point 💀💀💀

  • @3m4un1
    @3m4un18 ай бұрын

    i love how you guys did these two videos together.

  • @gayasshoe8578
    @gayasshoe8578 Жыл бұрын

    i love this video so much as an asian who grew up in a dominately black and hispanic area!! i really hope this blows up and gets the recognition it deserves!!

  • @omgaddad5596
    @omgaddad5596 Жыл бұрын

    the video was great, but i'm a bit miffed from the fact that there was little to no mention of the south east asian and south asian experiences, and 99% of the video was about chinese, korean, and japanese people. south east asians and south asians have a long history in america, and their relations with blacks.

  • @solarmoth4628

    @solarmoth4628

    Жыл бұрын

    I kind of noticed that in foreign’s video as well, despite the caribbean having an indo-caribbean population with a long history, they weren’t really mentioned either. These communities are close to each other and have a long history of animosity but also mixing together, to the point that there’s specific terms for the offspring these relationships result in. Also I’m not sure if you’re black or not but saying blacks, when you’re not apart of the community can be a little derogatory. Perhaps try saying black people instead?

  • @DeborahGoldenflower

    @DeborahGoldenflower

    Жыл бұрын

    But oliSUNvia did mention herself how the majority of Asia is erased in discussions of the "model minority" and reduced to China/Japan/Korea, (around 19:59, and at other points as well). That myth is the focus of her video, so it's understandable why those are the experiences highlighted here. In my opinion, discussion of other culturogeographic regions of Asia (West Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, Central Asia, Northern Asia, what have you) and their relations with the Western world are an entirely different discussion in themselves, because those stories are suitably complex to require individual focus, rather than lumping them together. And that's exactly what the Western world will try to do (I live in the United States, so I'm using that government as a frame of reference) -- they will use "Asian American" as an umbrella term and cast it as WIDE as they possibly can! (And just ignore everyone who isn't suitable to the narrative.) But from a critical, progressive standpoint, we should seek to *avoid* that kind of behavior, so one could argue that it's better to isolate specific Asian experiences in every discussion, since they vary so widely. That said, I think a separate video or discussion on Asian experiences OUTSIDE of the model minority myth would be fascinating.

  • @angie578

    @angie578

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DeborahGoldenflower i agree with most of what you say, but as a south asian person i do still feel like the model minority myth applies to our communities. i’ve always felt that pressure to get the best grades, get into a good college, and have a good job. as i know many of my friends, who were both south asian and east asian, felt the same way.

  • @productioninquiry8937

    @productioninquiry8937

    Жыл бұрын

    @@angie578 Hi. Not Asian. I have always associated the model minority myth with the white gaze, or how white people perceive Asians. Do you think white people associate South Asians with the model minority myth? I don't think they do.

  • @saltpaddle5593

    @saltpaddle5593

    Жыл бұрын

    @@productioninquiry8937 I'm not south Asian myself rather a south east Asian in a western country, so I can't speak on behalf of @angie or their experiences. I do feel the mm myth is initially pushed through the lens of white people. However since this white perspective is as the video says considered the default or correct view that should be considered. It becomes a view adopted by these groups as the norm. The myth creates infighting between poc; and still rests on anti-black mindsets. Personally imo it feels like a position where individuals placed in the binary of being "not white", are trying to use this academic or financial success to boost themselves in a position equal to "white" or at least higher than other non whites. It's like a crab trap, we all fail in trying to drag ourselves out. South Asian and east Asian cultures also share high priority on academic success, as well as honouring of the family. So personally I have seen and can see how even those not explicitly singled by the myth still act within its bounds. I'm not sure if I got all that out clearly since this is partially from my own experiences; and i'd be super appreciative if anyone else had their own perspective on this matter they wanted to add:)

  • @Imhotep.inwords
    @Imhotep.inwords Жыл бұрын

    I really appreciate you making this video. Watching this made me think of all the ways I've found that Asian American history and Black American history are intertwined. Asian American activists partnered with and supported the Black Panthers. Yuri Kochiyama (a Japanese American activist) became friends with and in some ways a student of Malcom X and also how Asian American shop owners filled a void for Black residents who were discouraged from or barred from shopping at the mostly white-owned local establishments. Our past, present, and futures have always been bound up together. I honestly think real change is possible, but maybe the only impactful way forward is for us to look within and interrogate all the ways this white-supremacist society has traumatized us into hating ourselves and each other.

  • @Killerwhale760

    @Killerwhale760

    Жыл бұрын

    white-supremacist?

  • @parrishharris3008

    @parrishharris3008

    8 ай бұрын

    Even back then White people was KINDA smart because since day 1 Whites said to themselves - hell if we let ALL these other races combine and let them ALL flourish we Whites will go extinct in no time.

  • @TeeMarty0824
    @TeeMarty08248 ай бұрын

    I listened to your entire video. You are so right from the beginning to the end. More people should hear what you and others on this video have said.

  • @MyOwnBummer
    @MyOwnBummer Жыл бұрын

    I feel the prime example for dividing populations of color by white institutions could be seen in colonial and post-revolutionary latin america where the white spaniards/portuguese would create a racial hierarchy for the african & native american people. I see the “racial hierarchy” in America being loosely based on the iberian caste system. I dunno food for thought!

  • @Daniel-ih4zh

    @Daniel-ih4zh

    Жыл бұрын

    "Loosely based on", what??

  • @Udontkno7

    @Udontkno7

    Жыл бұрын

    They’re relatively identical. Both places were colonized at the same time by similar western European nations. Anglo America (including Canada, the US, Jamaica, etc) had their own racial caste system that can mirror those in Latin America.

  • @Ian-pn1ff

    @Ian-pn1ff

    Жыл бұрын

    @Naikomi you’re painting europe as an amazing anti racist or less racist place when in reality they’re both shit and ass arguably europe is worse also spain and the brits worked hand in hand during colonialism

  • @Snowboard4

    @Snowboard4

    10 ай бұрын

    Sim! Eu sou brasileira, e aqui a etnia está sempre relacionada à cor de pele. A minha mãe é preta, com traços negroides e o meu pai é branco com "traços" de branquelo mesmo. Quando eu era menor, meus cabelos eram quase crespos e minha pele era "parda" e com o tempo foi clareando e o meu cabelo foi cacheando! Bom, eu fico imaginando que se eu morasse nos EUA, seria considerada facilmente birracial, mas no meu país, eu sou branca. Vejo muitos invalidando o racismo amarelo usando a questão do colorismo (e advinhe, muitos amarelos não tem pele branca) com a ideiade minoria-modelo e para continuar a zuar seus traços e sua cultura...

  • @shayshayshayshayshayshayshay
    @shayshayshayshayshayshayshay Жыл бұрын

    i think for a while i wasnt giving you enough credit as a creator, these videos are always very comprehensive and i like that youre trying to bring in relevant perspectives too. i like your very diy look for all of it most of all, you inspire me to create as well.

  • @supersonicfan3522
    @supersonicfan352210 ай бұрын

    Some of these comments are just showing the points of the video

  • @kant.68

    @kant.68

    10 ай бұрын

    Some of the comments are showing people have different opinions. And no, discrminating X race for another is racism. You either support racism or you’re against it

  • @dropyourself

    @dropyourself

    10 ай бұрын

    @@kant.68 Some comments are also racist (and you just can't not defend them can you?)

  • @rizwanamir1138
    @rizwanamir11386 ай бұрын

    Amazing analysis!! Your videos never cease to inform about complex topics in a meaningful and objective manner. Keep up the great work!

  • @tacrewgirl
    @tacrewgirl Жыл бұрын

    I came here from Foreign's video. New sub. Great analysis Olivia. Thanks for the video. I appreciate your research and facts.

  • @oliSUNvia

    @oliSUNvia

    Жыл бұрын

    thank you for watching!

  • @josho5860
    @josho5860 Жыл бұрын

    I really appreciate you this video. I especially appreciate you pointing out how some amongst non-black people of color express resentment for a perceived benefit or attention that African Americans are getting as if that attention, definitely not benefit, is the result of some benevolence of whites and not actually linked to the proportion of black suffering and the profound amount of work and courage demonstrated by black folk and their allies. I always find it interesting and infuriating when someone non-black (even poor whites) express frustration with black folks calling out their oppression. They are pretty much saying “we got it bad to.” “Why are you complaining”. When what they really should be saying is “we getting our ass kicked too, let’s fight side by side”.

  • @mangakdramagamer1153

    @mangakdramagamer1153

    Жыл бұрын

    Because asian don't you guys agree with white

  • @dancewithme2969
    @dancewithme29699 ай бұрын

    this video is so good, thank you for taking on complex things like this and saying the harsh truths.

  • @clairephenix
    @clairephenix10 ай бұрын

    I swear this channel is so underrated, I love your videos ❤❤

  • @songsbydae
    @songsbydae Жыл бұрын

    KZread is working HARD to keep folks from seeing this video. Excellent work, fam. Thank you for continuing to speak truth to power.

  • @saxviars9749
    @saxviars9749 Жыл бұрын

    ~12:00 is an interesting point, and something I would have never realized as a black person. Whether I liked it or not there was always a option for me. I could not imagine having to choose between two binaries created by white supremacy, neither of them a fit.

  • @Daniel-ih4zh

    @Daniel-ih4zh

    Жыл бұрын

    "two binaries [whatever that means) created by white supremacy" you say as olivia declares someone saying the nword is result of them trying to claim black identity (a dichotomy *she* imposes) and not just someone using language they group up around. Real high iq social commentary right here.

  • @oreradovanovi5204

    @oreradovanovi5204

    Жыл бұрын

    This is a big problem in Mexico, and people are oblivious to it, they have no sense of belonging if they have any trace of native genes, that only Mexicans can spot...

  • @lukecarlson4710
    @lukecarlson4710 Жыл бұрын

    So I’m late getting to this video but I just wanted to say that it was really good and that it’s an interesting addition to the ongoing conversation about racism in America and I think you did a good job. Also a bit of a side note but it’s really weird that KZread had me confirm twice in order to proceed with the video. I didn’t see anything wrong in the video so I’m confused on why it’s age restricted.

  • @sethobregon4100
    @sethobregon410010 ай бұрын

    This video was fantastic! I've shared it with my Asian posse back in Oregon. ✌️ You do such a great job with your videos. Keep up the good work. You touched on some very important issues and enlightened me a bit as well. I try to constantly educate myself in these matter. I'm glad I have a reputable and intellectual source to learn from.🫵😉 I'll continue to browse through your playlist and look forward to future content.❤

  • @moonoverstars.00
    @moonoverstars.00 Жыл бұрын

    as someone who asian AND mexican, i have never been associated with any mexican stereotypes other a few comments about a border, because most people assume im a darker skinned asian and few know im mexican. sometimes i am very confused on when people start talking about skin colors and white and black being the only two groups. cause that has happened to me before.

  • @grandsome1
    @grandsome1 Жыл бұрын

    Foreign sent me here, but I was already here because I have excellent KZread taste ;-). Thank you guys for making this collaboration, from a long time subscriber. May it help bridge our ostracized communities.

  • @lolkayleen2757
    @lolkayleen2757 Жыл бұрын

    29:32 dude that’s literally a mic drop 😭 that was so good what an understandable way to put it Fantastic video as always Olivia I love all the points u made especially abt the critical race theory segment u always seem to put the thoughts I have into words wonderfully

  • @trevorb8333
    @trevorb83338 ай бұрын

    Very well put-together and reasoned piece. Loved your searing insights and perspective. I am now subscribed and look forward to further discussion pieces from you.

  • @vjj7515
    @vjj75159 ай бұрын

    I really appreciate the information shared in this video. Thank you for reminding us that there is so much more that unites not divides us.

  • @milliewilson5894
    @milliewilson5894 Жыл бұрын

    This is so thought provoking. This is a life a experience that I can't relate to from my back ground but it's eyes opening. Thank you for sharing this

  • @nname9289
    @nname9289 Жыл бұрын

    17:44 this quote hit hard. as a child of filipino immigrants, i fear that i will live as unfulfilled as they did. that their merit will amount of nothing, and i will be left with this burden. the burden that i’m the reason they lived to be unfulfilled. that they willingly traversed adversity and exploitation to ensure my betterment for me to turn out the same way they did. :(((

  • @anthonyhicks9201
    @anthonyhicks92019 ай бұрын

    All i can say is Wow! Wow! And Wow! What a well researched, well delivered and truth full lecture on this topic. I was educated a lot more on the overall top of what it really means when I hear the terms Black, Colored and Minority. I have had a superficial understanding of them in the political sense as you mentioned and clarified but you gave me a more concise and profound understanding of the terms as you did with the whole topic In essence you have re-educated me. From now on, I will move forward better equipped when discussing this topic. You were also very engaging and captivating. Thank you

  • @nathanmarlow2270
    @nathanmarlow22708 ай бұрын

    "BEAUTIFUL" commentary... Thank you for your spot-on, in-depth analysis!

  • @asiancutie0310
    @asiancutie0310 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for putting this video out!! I experienced this minority hatred between Asian and blacks all my life. I grew up dominantly in an Asian household but have never been fully welcomed into the Asian community. I am supposed to identify as a first generation Asian American, however, my Black mix has constantly prevented me from fully fitting into my family’s culture and the Asian community. I am always seen as less and unpure by the Asian community and viewed as a commodity or labeled “exotic” by others. As a child who always just wanted to fit in somewhere, I tried joining the Black community. The Black community was definitely more welcoming, however, I have always felt some sort of distance or more like I didn’t fully belong there and that I was intruding.. My family didn’t like when I got close to my Black side even my mother who was half black. I still struggle with finding a community or culture that I can truly belong to and be fully welcomed.. it sure doesn’t help that the two minority communities has racist thoughts against one another. Thank you again!!

  • @lordblazer

    @lordblazer

    Жыл бұрын

    welcome to the black indigenous community....... we deal with the same thing.. though we just blend into the larger black community like some secret society ish yo.. only time we're vocal is if our family band is suing the tribal gov't for a treaty/law violation cuz yea pure blood natives hate black natives lol. they wanna be white too.. that's basically the situation for all POCs it's a race to be king of the bottom all while shitting on black folks... choose your side precisely... Go with the side that lacks a certain solidarity towards handling white supremacy or choose the side that has historically dealt with it and despite the setbacks, have managed to do more with less. I won't explain which side is asian and which side is black but I think you can figure it out.

  • @nick-w
    @nick-w Жыл бұрын

    Appreciate the work and effort you put into every video!

  • @barockman1798
    @barockman1798 Жыл бұрын

    Insightful, really materialised a lot of thoughts that I had for some time

  • @codyshi4743
    @codyshi47439 ай бұрын

    Ever since I was a kid back in elementary school, I had always been taught that back then there’s segregation based on race especially between the whites and blacks. As a fellow Chinese American I’ve always wonder to myself, had that racist segregation law still been legal today, where would people like me and other Asian American be allow to stand and which place can we be at? If neither place were willing to accept us? And the part where you mentions that Japanese American who was really confused as to which restaurant he can be allowed to go to, it really reflects and highlights that confusion that I had as a kid. And regardless of what they say, I still believe that us Asian American are people of color like most other minorities group, and that we are not model minorities.

  • @dancer6452
    @dancer6452 Жыл бұрын

    The information you provide is always well supplemented with direct interviews of people directly involved with your topics, I think that is a great addition to your newer videos,

  • @ferring.2154
    @ferring.2154 Жыл бұрын

    This video deserves so much more attention!! Amazingly well done!!!

  • @williebrinson4699
    @williebrinson46999 ай бұрын

    I really appreciate the effort you put in this video. Thx

  • @anthonygibbs4707
    @anthonygibbs47079 ай бұрын

    This was well structured and very honest. Great information.

  • @bcpersonalprofessional687
    @bcpersonalprofessional687 Жыл бұрын

    This video served as an amazing reminder as I’ve been familiar with at least half of the terms and historical struggles mentioned in the video, but just viewed them as facts. I think I am still dealing with internalized racism as I think “no one’s really interested in my (filipino) culture, and it’s not as interesting or mainstream compared to Korean or Japanese film, animation, manga, and food.” I think I like learning about different cultures and languages, which I do to a small extent. But, I think I like the ideas of finding the “best” cultures to learn about, and I end up mentally diving and simplifying which ethnicities are interesting and which ones are “boring” or “lacking.” I think it definitely goes back to white supremacy, the notion that “white is average, and black is the the antithesis of white.” Also I don’t really know what filipino “is”, as it’s been influenced and abused by both Spanish and American and Chinese cultures at different time periods. I even cringe at the language, tagalog, which is a byproduct of internalized racism.

  • @Abshir1it1is

    @Abshir1it1is

    Жыл бұрын

    Out of curiosity, how is Tagalog a byproduct of internalised racism?

  • @joshuanguyen259

    @joshuanguyen259

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Abshir1it1is he means his reaction is a byproduct not the language itself