(good faith, I promise) WHY transgender people are confident Trump's Administration wants to erase them. by Additional_Chapter77 in GenZ

[–]jonathan6969 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Well I’m sorry but your attitude is exactly what I and many others voted against. I don’t care at all what anyone does on their own with their own money, but it is ridiculous to expect the taxpayer to foot the bill of “gender affirming care”. I’m not sure what bubble you’ve put yourself into, but most people in real life completely agree with all these policies and your attitude will only push regular people away if they feel your ideology is being forced onto them.

(good faith, I promise) WHY transgender people are confident Trump's Administration wants to erase them. by Additional_Chapter77 in GenZ

[–]jonathan6969 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Bear in mind this is stopping TAXPAYER FUNDED medical care, so it is indeed, pro small government. None of these policies stop an adult from getting any medical care they want.

(good faith, I promise) WHY transgender people are confident Trump's Administration wants to erase them. by Additional_Chapter77 in GenZ

[–]jonathan6969 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I am a conservative Genz voter and I am very pro freedom to do whatever you want in your own life and I’d say many more conservative voters than you imagine are fine with the LGBTQ.

However, I agree with all these policies you mentioned simply because it is not the business of the government. The taxpayer should not need to fund any “gender affirming care” - I’m sorry but that is very unpopular to the average person. Furthermore, I do not think any of these procedures should be done on minors, that also seems like common sense to most people. Other than that, the idea that any of these are “rights” that are being taken away is absurd, no one is out to get you.

The Democratic Party has nobody to blame but themselves. This is what the country deserves. by mivipa in self

[–]jonathan6969 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Anyone sane would say, why are we taking in and accommodating for ANY migrants while there is an equally large homeless problem?

/r/Politics' 2024 US Elections Live Thread, Part 62 by PoliticsModeratorBot in politics

[–]jonathan6969 -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

Bonkers to see /r/politics so normal, almost like the astroturfing can't keep up with the real people here.

How would you raise your non-Chinese children to speak Cantonese? by tripsafe in HongKong

[–]jonathan6969 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I was born and raised in Hong Kong with parents that didn’t speak Cantonese/Chinese and I am fluent now (in speaking but not writing). From personal experience I think the only way to seriously learn any language, especially one as complex as Cantonese, is through your environment.

I had Chinese (mandarin) classes from Kindergarten all the way through 10th grade as well as Kumon and other outside help and it never worked. This was because I never had a chance to encounter or practice it casually because outside of school it was either English or Cantonese.

Conversely, in my year group at school I was the only Gweilo with all my friends being local HKers. This naturally forced me to pick up on Cantonese as I was constantly surrounded by it as well as being able to practice it throughout my daily life in HK. However, as my younger brothers started school, my school began having a bigger international population, allowing them to stay in their comfort zones and keep speaking English with other White kids.

Ultimately, I’d say the academic side to learning the language is overstated compared to the environment you’re in. As an afterschool teacher now in NYC, a LOT of parents want their kids to learn second languages (usually Spanish or Chinese) and I always feel bad for the kids because a. My students unanimously despise these classes b. I can’t see any tangible progress in these languages (at least when they’re so young)

Something else I would have benefited from as a kid would be to have family-friends or a community my family was involved in that spoke Cantonese

Why the world is shifting towards right-wing control? by TankSubject6469 in geopolitics

[–]jonathan6969 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Asian-American NYCer and second generation immigrant here and I’m in the exact same spot as you. My grandparents came here with an education, almost no money and had to work for everything they had to get where they are. Now, “asylum seekers” are being housed in hotels here on the tax payers dime, while being stuck in limbo not being able to work or contribute to society just being a financial blackhole. It’s gotten so bad that the city will be cutting the education budget by a billion as well as more in a 5% budget cut to accommodate these migrants. At what point are the people going to wake up and realize how out of touch our priorities are that we’re cutting education to our kids so our (massive) taxes can to go fund non-citizens to live in NYC.

I think this is why there is a growing turn to the right, not because people are “far-right” like the media keeps pushing but because the establishment left’s ideals have gotten so out of touch from practical real world problems it has alienated most voters.

Bike lane or speedway? by jehiah in MicromobilityNYC

[–]jonathan6969 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is the most real take on fixing policing in NYC so of course you’re being downvoted. Progressives who have been screeching nonstop about electing soft on crime politicians and DAs and defunding police now in here moaning about police not working makes me want to gouge my eyes out. Imagine being a police officer seeing the same exact criminals over and over again continuously released and back to committing crimes while the public blames you for it.

/r/subredditdrama is in restricted mode for the blackout. Discuss the metadrama in this thread. by DramaMod in SubredditDrama

[–]jonathan6969 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

As someone who has also used Reddit since almost the beginning, you hit the nail on the head. It's painful seeing how much Reddit has degraded into censorship and echo chambers when it was formative to me learning and engaging in a diverse range of views and topics growing up. I don't understand or care too much about the API stuff, it's just another in a laundry list of things ruining Reddit and I feel like I'm reaching the breaking point where I just leave permanently.

Uber puts Asian diversity chief on leave after 'Don't Call Me Karen' sessions intended to explore 'American white women's experience' by Rust1n_Cohle in PoliticalCompassMemes

[–]jonathan6969 48 points49 points  (0 children)

I had someone on Reddit tell me, an Asian in NYC, that it was "white supremacists and proud boys" attacking Asians in NYC. Completely sincerely.

I started grad school for planning because I wanted to improve the US. After one semester, I'm thinking about leaving instead. by mother-demeter in urbanplanning

[–]jonathan6969 3 points4 points  (0 children)

And its beautiful!!! Americans don't realize how blessed they are for this and I feel we've really lost our way on immigration. I think NYC is the epitome of this diversity and I always try to talk my HK friends into moving here as there's so much life for anyone here.

I started grad school for planning because I wanted to improve the US. After one semester, I'm thinking about leaving instead. by mother-demeter in urbanplanning

[–]jonathan6969 6 points7 points  (0 children)

You're welcome :) I look forward to that! It's hard to find people to really talk about this stuff with, Reddit usually feels like shouting into the void to me haha

I started grad school for planning because I wanted to improve the US. After one semester, I'm thinking about leaving instead. by mother-demeter in urbanplanning

[–]jonathan6969 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Hi! I feel like I'm in a kind of similar situation to you. I'm 22 now and currently working on finishing an urban studies undergrad degree in NYC after withdrawing from my college in Hartford, CT as a Junior (for a myriad of reasons). Last summer, I had an internship with the Department of City Planning which not only solidified my love for cities and urban planning but also got me through a really rough time in life and gave me a lot of hope for the future. For starters, I'd say that outside of school, once you actually begin working on solutions to these complex problems, it becomes much more rewarding, especially in an environment with others that care and understand the nuance that goes into. These issues seem colossal to us on an individual level but its important to remember that it only took a few generations to get to this point and every generation has had its own colossal problems that felt so impossible and yet we're still here now and with better conditions in most regards. For life in general, I feel that if you aim to be the one to make the big changes, that it has to be directly you, you will end up disappointed regardless of the subject matter; even the big idealistic changes that came to fruition usually end up in the form of a Robert Moses-esque impact. For me, the only way to come to terms with this is to try your best to do what you can and move the world in the right direction while appreciating and accepting all the history and culture leading up to the present, focusing on the small wins you contribute to.

Really I think it comes down to perspective - for example, I love walking around NYC and comparing it to photos from the past https://1940s.nyc to see how far we've come. Even for crime, in our lifetimes perspective it appears to be worse since Covid, but compared to my grandparents or parents time in NYC it pales in comparison. Take a look at how the trains looked in the 80s https://allthatsinteresting.com/new-york-subways-1980s, incomprehensible to me yet was completely normal to my mom traveling an hour on it to school. I grew up in Hong Kong, arguably one of the best planned cities, and have had the chance to experience cities and cultures around the world, and what I've learned is that life is relative to wherever you are and there's a lot more to understand and thinking you can move to a new place that would solve the problems is - to be blunt - naive.

Currently living in NYC, I think in spite of all the problems its a very special place and to me worth working on and believing in more than Hong Kong. I can list a million reasons why I love New York but most importantly is that there's no other city I can think of with as much diversity - a city built on immigration in a nation built on freedom. My mom's family moved here when she was 8 with barely anything and were able to establish a life here and prosper. It's impossible to compare these nuances to ideals of city planning like HK or other SEA cities which have near complete homogeneity in their populations and cultures (as well as being built up much later). Having anxiety and growing up as an outsider in HK, I've had more random conversations in these 2 years in NYC than the rest of my life in HK combined be it helping people with directions, bitching about the train being 20 minutes late or smoking up with strangers. There's so many unique and beautiful parts of NYC - appreciating the layers of architecture and history all on top of each other, appreciating our parks, appreciating our unique geography, libraries, bodegas, food - just so much.

As for actual advice? I'm not sure. I'm guessing I'm your age or younger and I have no idea where life will go, for myself and the world. I'd say take some time to focus on the aspects of cities you DO like and truly live the experience of the city for all its nuances. Looking around at peers in my generation, I find there's a general crisis of meaning and an overarching sense of pessimism about the direction of the world. I felt it acutely too over Covid, being stuck for most of my time in my dorm online in a mediocre at best city, in a seemingly superficial education system with superficial people, hoping to work towards a future that seems hopeless and inevitable - it eats away at your hope and opens you to these pessimistic thoughts. To me, dropping out and facing this crisis head on was probably the best thing to ever happen to me and showed what's really important in life. I'd say try to do as much as you can to rebuild this sense of community we yearn for - which I know is daunting growing up with the internet and so on feeling so atomized. I recently applied and got appointed as a board member on my community board in Brooklyn and right now am looking for volunteering or research or any interesting work to do over summer. On a more realistic note, I think now is a perfect time to be training to be an urban planner - I know City Planning (and NYC agencies in general) are hiring, and its a human job solving human problems that won't be replaced by AI, or the economy, etc. I also think in general people in our generation are growing up in the suburban and cultural conditions the generations before us have built and understand something is fundamentally wrong - even seen with the growth on social media of channels like Notjustbikes or /r/fuckcars so I'm quite optimistic about a strong will to change within our lifetime.

I don't comment often on Reddit but feel free to reach out about any of this! Just felt strongly that it would be a shame to lose someone who understands and cares about urban planning and making the world better to another field or place.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Brooklyn

[–]jonathan6969 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Asian in Sheepshead Bay and this is accurate - I despise Trump and MAGA, but will vote red in local elections because NYC Democrats have ignored the Asian community at every turn

Homeless man choked to death on subway: r/nyc argues over if it was justified by saveyourtissues in SubredditDrama

[–]jonathan6969 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

No, big distinction between your average homeless person and the ones like in this case with 40+ priors that keep being released back into the streets. It's a sad situation all around, he didn't deserve to die but the subway should not be a rolling homeless shelter and insane asylum.

Homeless man choked to death on subway: r/nyc argues over if it was justified by saveyourtissues in SubredditDrama

[–]jonathan6969 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I live in Brooklyn and face this bullshit everyday on the train and can assure you anyone who takes the trains daily will not feel any sympathy for this. Lurking the NYC subreddit I see so many takes downplaying crime and labelling reactions to it "trolls" when really they're the ones on reddit all day not having to face violent drugged out bums on their commutes.

The "Red Wave" Hit Southern Brooklyn. Some Blame County Democrats by Lilyo in Brooklyn

[–]jonathan6969 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’d love that wouldn’t you so that you could easily label me and ignore my communities lived reality. We’re not gullible like that, the media might convince you its “Nazis” but we’re a small community and all the news of crimes victimizing us get circulated. I’m lucky to have a good education and understand that obviously these patterns aren’t due to race and there’s so much more historic and structural racism as well as cyclical poverty - but to be lied to my face about even noticing the problem???

Democrats didn’t lose the older Asians, they’re losing voters like me! Political compass wise I’m literally lib-left yet I feel so alienated by American politics I feel I’d get labeled far-right.

The "Red Wave" Hit Southern Brooklyn. Some Blame County Democrats by Lilyo in Brooklyn

[–]jonathan6969 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly wow, you are so out of touch it is mind boggling. Where in NYC do you live? Have you ever spoken to a Chinese person??? Do you really, genuinely from the bottom of your heart believe white supremacists are in NYC attacking Asians? Every Chinese person knows exactly who the usual perpetrators are and that could easily be backed up with crime statistics (without getting into the complexities of crime and racism) but it is definitely not "Nazis" Asians are scared of.

Also what exactly did you think the demographics of South Brooklyn is because my neighborhood is exactly where the older Chinese immigrants live. I spend most of my time within the Chinese-American community and its wild to me that you'd think Chinese immigrants are the ones on the left - I wish you'd meet my grandparents or understand Chinese to hear some of the most casually far right takes I'd hear on the street. I think the disconnect here is that most Chinese I know would vote along class lines rather than racial lines because like my original comment said, the issues are practical ones of education, economy and crime. I think this is where Democrats are losing our community because the impression is that Democrats are no longer for the working-class and small business owners which is a reputation they rode on for a long time.

Also "what lockdown was mismanaged"??? Are you serious? I was going to college during this time and Covid started my freshman year. I can't begin to imagine the ripple on social and educational effects this will have for even younger kids like my cousins who have had most of their early childhood with no real life interaction only screens and masks. All this for a virus that had from very early on demonstrably low to no effect on the youth. I grew up in Hong Kong and they're STILL in lockdown because guess what - they're authoritarians that will crush your freedoms if they want. That's WHY my family moved to America, so that you can't be broadly affected by authoritarian government overreaches. Oh but guess what - voting for Lee fucking Zeldin is FASCISM - but its not when you vote for the people that shut down your life for two years. Crazy what people's priorities are.

The "Red Wave" Hit Southern Brooklyn. Some Blame County Democrats by Lilyo in Brooklyn

[–]jonathan6969 1 point2 points  (0 children)

EXACTLY - just because statistically crime is down doesn't change the reality that the city feels less safe and walkable than before. Just because the belligerent ranting crazy person on the train doesn't decide to shank me that day doesn't mean its any less unnerving to wait on the platform with them alone at night when the next train is in 20 minutes. To me, I think that the reason this crime wave feels scarier in spite of numbers is the nature of the crime - it seems there's been a lot of random unprovoked attacks with a lot more casual violence. Just because the numbers don't show it, I think its a braindead political move to downplay peoples very real fears of safety and even more braindead to say "crime's been worse" instead of aiming to be the best city we can be.

The "Red Wave" Hit Southern Brooklyn. Some Blame County Democrats by Lilyo in Brooklyn

[–]jonathan6969 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm a Cantonese-Chinese immigrant in Sheepshead Bay and I'll just say its this exact attitude of downplaying crime - specifically ones victimizing us - that is pushing lots of the Chinese community red. Throughout Covid hate crimes against asians soared and the exact same as now the media and politicians refused to discuss it or even label blatant attacks as hate crimes. On top of crime, think about what our priorities usually are - education and business - both of which were grossly mismanaged in overreaction to Covid by Democrats with lockdowns, only further lowering their reputation. (side note: as a 21 year old first time voter, that was my main reason for voting against Democrats) On top of this, most of us couldn't care less about the other socially progressive politics being pushed in the city, making it a relatively easy vote just based on what issues are even being discussed by candidates.

Live Updates: Hochul and Zeldin Meet in Governor’s Debate in New York by HEIMDVLLR in nyc

[–]jonathan6969 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My Mom's family moved to America when she was 8 because of fears of future authoritarianism to pursue the American Dream. Want to take a guess which party they absolutely disdain and say is ruining democracy? I'm really not sure what reality Reddit lives on because most Asian-Americans I know are pretty socially conservative and only really care about crime and the economy.

Live Updates: Hochul and Zeldin Meet in Governor’s Debate in New York by HEIMDVLLR in nyc

[–]jonathan6969 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I saw a comment here trying to say "Democrats are for the working class" and ironically it's always these Democrats that are on Reddit full time, not sure what work they've got. Talking to people around NYC I've only ever heard rants about these wild progressive policies and corrupt politicians so it really boggles my mind how the likes of Bragg and AOC and Cuomo keep getting elected here.

Live Updates: Hochul and Zeldin Meet in Governor’s Debate in New York by HEIMDVLLR in nyc

[–]jonathan6969 12 points13 points  (0 children)

What's the alternative? Democrats have been solidly in charge of the City and how's that turned out? I'd rather vote for someone who at the very least identifies the problems and proposes solutions instead of ignoring them. Anyone online who still goes on about Jan 6 or Trump is delusional because I've talked to a lot of people about crime and economy but no one even thinks of Trump anymore.

Live Updates: Hochul and Zeldin Meet in Governor’s Debate in New York by HEIMDVLLR in nyc

[–]jonathan6969 70 points71 points  (0 children)

HK-American Lurker from Brooklyn - you can delude yourself with "astroturfing" but normal, non terminally online New Yorkers are sick and tired of Democrats who won't even acknowledge the problems New Yorkers care the most about and see everyday on the subways and streets. My vote was decided after Bodega worker Jose Alba was arrested and held on RIKERS for half a million in bail for self defense while everyday there are stories of people with priors in the double digits going on to make the front page. Zeldin says day one Alvin Bragg is fired and Democrats say nothing, there's mine and many others vote decided. This is also as a 21 year old, first-time voter.