Andrew Yang: We Asian Americans are not the virus, but we can be part of the cure
作者:Andrew Yang 来源:Washington Post
Andrew Yang was a Democratic candidate for
president and is founder of Humanity Forward.
Last week I was shopping
for groceries and preparing to hole up at home with my wife, Evelyn, and our
two boys. There was an eerie, peculiar aura in the parking lot in upstate New
York as night fell and shoppers wheeled out essentials and snacks.
Three middle-aged men in hoodies and
sweatshirts stood outside the entrance of the grocery store. They huddled
together talking. One looked up at me and frowned. There was something accusatory
in his eyes. And then, for the first time in years, I felt it.
I felt self-conscious — even a bit ashamed — of being Asian.
It had been years since I felt that way. I grew
up with semi-regular visitations of that sense of racially tinged self-consciousness.
It didn’t help that I was an awkward kid. But after adulthood, marriage, a
career, parenthood, positions of leadership and even a presidential run, that
feeling had disappeared — I thought.
My place in this country felt assured. I have it
better than the vast majority of Americans of any background. When comedian
Shane Gillis slurred me by name, I did not think he deserved to lose his job.
It barely registered when a teenager yelled “Chink” at me from the window of
his car in New Hampshire a number of months ago. My only reaction was to think,
“Well, I’m glad that neither of my sons was around because then I might have to
explain to them what that word means.”
But things have changed.
In the past few weeks, the number of reported
physical and verbal attacks on Asian Americans has increased
dramatically. The percentage of
Asians who use the not-for-profit Crisis
Text Line to speak with a
counselor has shot up from 5 percent of callers — about in line with our share
of the population — to 13 percent, an increase of 160 percent. Some level of
background disdain or alienation has grown into outright hostility and even aggression.
And we all know why. The coronavirus is devastating communities and lives. People’s livelihoods
and families are being destroyed. And people are looking for someone to blame.
Before covid-19, too many Americans were already
living paycheck to paycheck, working long hours just to get by. Now, we all are
even more fearful for the future, worried about our parents, grandparents and
children. We are anxious about our jobs, bills and next month’s rent or
mortgage payment.
In early February, when I was still running for president,
someone asked me, “How do we keep the coronavirus from inciting hostility
toward Asians in this country?”
I responded, “The truth is that people are wired
to make attributions based on appearance, including race. The best thing that
could happen for Asians would be to get this virus under control so it isn’t a
problem anymore. Then any racism would likely fade.” This was weeks before
“Chinese Virus” became a thing.
Now it is, and we have to figure out how to
combat that, too. I’m an entrepreneur. In general, negative responses don’t
work. I obviously think that being racist is not a good thing. But saying
“Don’t be racist toward Asians” won’t work.
I have been thinking about ways to improve that
encounter at the grocery store. People are hurting. They look up and see
someone who is different from them, whom they wrongly associate with the
upheaval of their way of life.
Natalie
Chou, a UCLA basketball
player, said that she felt better when she wore
her UCLA gear, in part because the
association reminded people that she was an American.
During World War II, Japanese Americans
volunteered for military duty at the highest possible levels to demonstrate
that they were Americans. Now many in the Asian American community are stepping
up, trying to demonstrate that we can be part of the solution. Some 17 percent
of U.S. doctors are Asian and rushing to the front lines.
We Asian Americans need to embrace and show our
American-ness in ways we never have before. We need to step up, help our
neighbors, donate gear, vote, wear red white and blue, volunteer, fund aid
organizations, and do everything in our power to accelerate the end of this
crisis. We should show without a shadow of a doubt that we are Americans who
will do our part for our country in this time of need.
Demonstrate that we are part of the solution. We
are not the virus, but we can be part of the cure.
来源时间:2020/4/2 发布时间:2020/4/1
旧文章ID:21159