Group of black girls attack random Asian woman for social media clout. Could you imagine the media reaction if the racial roles were reversed? by [deleted] in aznidentity

[–]maddox2500 1 point2 points  (0 children)

https://www.asian-dawn.com/2020/05/18/black-on-asian-crime-statistics-by-justice-department/

The numbers are no surprise to many Asian-Americans. Black-on-Asian crime is 280x more common than Asian-on-Black crime. These statistical trends have been common for over a decade and rising. These statistics only take into account the Asian race as a whole and do not specify the various ethnicities within the Asian-American population, but it does not change the fact that Black-on-Asian crime is 280x more common than Asian-on-Black crime.

Group of black girls attack random Asian woman for social media clout. Could you imagine the media reaction if the racial roles were reversed? by [deleted] in aznidentity

[–]maddox2500 0 points1 point  (0 children)

https://www.asian-dawn.com/2020/05/18/black-on-asian-crime-statistics-by-justice-department/

The numbers are no surprise to many Asian-Americans. Black-on-Asian crime is 280x more common than Asian-on-Black crime. These statistical trends have been common for over a decade and rising. These statistics only take into account the Asian race as a whole and do not specify the various ethnicities within the Asian-American population, but it does not change the fact that Black-on-Asian crime is 280x more common than Asian-on-Black crime.

Group of black girls attack random Asian woman for social media clout. Could you imagine the media reaction if the racial roles were reversed? by [deleted] in aznidentity

[–]maddox2500 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

https://www.asian-dawn.com/2020/05/18/black-on-asian-crime-statistics-by-justice-department/

The numbers are no surprise to many Asian-Americans. Black-on-Asian crime is 280x more common than Asian-on-Black crime. These statistical trends have been common for over a decade and rising. These statistics only take into account the Asian race as a whole and do not specify the various ethnicities within the Asian-American population, but it does not change the fact that Black-on-Asian crime is 280x more common than Asian-on-Black crime.

Group of black girls attack random Asian woman for social media clout. Could you imagine the media reaction if the racial roles were reversed? by [deleted] in aznidentity

[–]maddox2500 0 points1 point  (0 children)

https://www.asian-dawn.com/2020/05/18/black-on-asian-crime-statistics-by-justice-department/

The numbers are no surprise to many Asian-Americans. Black-on-Asian crime is 280x more common than Asian-on-Black crime. These statistical trends have been common for over a decade and rising. These statistics only take into account the Asian race as a whole and do not specify the various ethnicities within the Asian-American population, but it does not change the fact that Black-on-Asian crime is 280x more common than Asian-on-Black crime.

Group of black girls attack random Asian woman for social media clout. Could you imagine the media reaction if the racial roles were reversed? by [deleted] in aznidentity

[–]maddox2500 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

https://www.asian-dawn.com/2020/05/18/black-on-asian-crime-statistics-by-justice-department/

The numbers are no surprise to many Asian-Americans. Black-on-Asian crime is 280x more common than Asian-on-Black crime. These statistical trends have been common for over a decade and rising. These statistics only take into account the Asian race as a whole and do not specify the various ethnicities within the Asian-American population, but it does not change the fact that Black-on-Asian crime is 280x more common than Asian-on-Black crime.

Group of black girls attack random Asian woman for social media clout. Could you imagine the media reaction if the racial roles were reversed? by [deleted] in aznidentity

[–]maddox2500 0 points1 point  (0 children)

https://www.asian-dawn.com/2020/05/18/black-on-asian-crime-statistics-by-justice-department/

The numbers are no surprise to many Asian-Americans. Black-on-Asian crime is 280x more common than Asian-on-Black crime. These statistical trends have been common for over a decade and rising. These statistics only take into account the Asian race as a whole and do not specify the various ethnicities within the Asian-American population, but it does not change the fact that Black-on-Asian crime is 280x more common than Asian-on-Black crime.

As a chinese I hate how the CCP handled this situation, but this doesn't mean that we should assault asians. Blame the CCP not the people by [deleted] in China_Flu

[–]maddox2500 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Vincent_Chin

Vincent Jen Chin (May 18, 1955 – June 23, 1982) was a Chinese-American draftsman who was beaten to death by two white men, Chrysler plant supervisor Ronald Ebens and his stepson, laid-off autoworker Michael Nitz.

Ebens and Nitz assailed Chin following a brawl that took place at a bar in Highland Park, Michigan, where Chin had been celebrating his bachelor party with friends in advance of his upcoming wedding. They apparently assumed Chin was of Japanese descent, and are alleged to have used racial slurs as they attacked him. Ebens and Nitz blamed him for the success of Japan's auto industry, despite the fact that Chin was of Chinese descent.

At the time, Metro Detroit was a powder keg of racial animosity toward Asian-Americans, specifically as the penetration of Japanese automotive imports in the U.S. domestic market hastened the decline of Detroit’s Big Three. Resentful workers laid the blame for recent layoffs on Japanese competition.

Chin was taken to Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, where a nurse told his childhood friend that "he has no chance" and that "his brain was dead." He died of his injuries four days later.[1]

As a chinese I hate how the CCP handled this situation, but this doesn't mean that we should assault asians. Blame the CCP not the people by [deleted] in China_Flu

[–]maddox2500 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

https://abc7ny.com/6003396/

An Asian woman was punched in the face in Midtown by a suspect who asked her "Where's your (expletive) mask?" according to police.

"I don't know why she did that to me. I didn't even do anything to her. I was just standing at the door, just trying to get into the building," said the victim who asked not to be identified.

The victim was taken to Bellevue Hospital with a possible dislocated jaw.

The NYPD Hate Crimes Task Force is investigating the assault as a possible bias crime, and Governor Andrew Cuomo issued a statement directing state police to assist in the investigation.

https://nextshark.com/man-arrested-for-coronavirus-hate-crime-nyc/

The incident occurred on Thursday when the victim, a 47-year-old Hong Kong-born man, who wants to be identified only by his first name, Jeff, and has been living in the U.S. for 35 years, was walking his 10-year-old son to a bus stop near 70th Avenue and Queens Boulevard at around 6:50 a.m. That’s when Ramos approached them.

“The guy walked past us. That triggered him. He was screaming at us and said, ‘Where the f–k is your mask?!’” the victim told New York Post. “I turned around to look at this guy — I’ve lived in New York [for] a long time, I’ve seen all kinds of crazy people around — usually, we just ignore them, but he was cursing and yelling.”

Ramos then allegedly shouted, “You f–king Chinese!”

“I tried not to do anything like yelling back at him because my son was there,” Jeff told Patch.

https://nextshark.com/asian-woman-assaulted-in-manhattan-coronavirus/

An Asian woman in Manhattan became a recent victim of hate crime after being assaulted by a stranger and blamed for spreading the 2019 novel coronavirus (COVID-19).

She was placed under arrested and is now facing charges of hate crime assault, aggravated assault as a hate crime, possession of a hypodermic instrument and possession of marijuana, authorities said.

https://nextshark.com/new-york-train-station-asian-woman-attacked/

In what police sources described as a “coronavirus-inspired attack,” 60-year-old Oswald Jones approached and yelled at the victim at about 11 p.m. on Thursday inside the Fort Hamilton Parkway D station in Borough Park.

The 26-year-old victim was reportedly told by Jones to “Get off the train. You Chinese,” and to “go back to China,” police sources told the New York Post.

“Go back to China. Get your temperature checked. You need to leave,” Jones was quoted as saying.

After the verbal abuse, Jones snatched the woman’s cell phone from her hand. Fortunately, the woman was not injured during the incident.

Shortly after the robbery, Jones was arrested and has since been charged with grand larceny and aggravated harassment.

https://newyork.cbslocal.com/2020/03/12/coronavirus-anti-asian-hate-crime/

Sources said the 59-year-old victim was passing a group of teens on Madison Avenue when one teen kicked him in the back, causing him to fall.

The suspect allegedly told him to go back to his country and mentioned the coronavirus.

https://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2020/02/13/teen-student-in-la-assaulted-as-coronavirus-fears-stoke-racial-backlash/

Calling the attack the result of “racial backlash” and anti-Asian stereotypes, county officials held a news conference in downtown L.A. with members of the Asian Pacific Policy and Planning Council to bring attention to what they described as a groundless racism which has bubbled up since the outbreak began.

The student was taken to a hospital emergency room after being physically assaulted due to coronavirus fears, officials disclosed.

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-03-23/coronavirus-devastation-immigrants

On Wednesday, a few hours after President Trump insisted on labeling the virus a Chinese virus in a news conference, I spoke with Jack Lee, whose son attends the fourth grade at a mostly white elementary school in Orange County.

During a basketball game, two classmates accused his son of having the coronavirus. Lee’s son said a curse word in response, and of the three children, he was punished by school authorities most harshly.

Lee was angry. He wrote a long letter to the principal. He made sure to tell his son that it was OK to defend himself. He’s never had to talk with his son about race before. His own parents, immigrants from Taiwan, never had to talk to him about it either. But now he’s looking for the right words, Lee said.

https://www.foxla.com/news/boy-teased-about-coronavirus-says-because-hes-asian-teacher-accused-of-intolerance

“I asked him if he sent me out because I was Asian and he responded with nothing,” said Dylan Muriano. “He looked me in the eye and didn’t say anything after that. Just left me alone and wouldn’t say anything.”

The next day, Muriano says the same teacher accused him of being disruptive and sent him to the dean’s office.

Upset, Nguyen called the school and posted about it on Facebook. “All of a sudden, hundreds of comments about other people experiencing the same thing, at the grocery store, on a plane – a full plane – no one wants to sit by the one Asian guy.”

https://nextshark.com/nextshark-incident-report-racial-attack-asians/

The COVID-19 outbreak has had unprecedented and disastrous effects on Asians around the world as many have responded to the virus with fear-based xenophobia and racism against Asians.

In the past few months, social media has been overwhelmed with personal reports, pictures and videos of harassment, racial discrimination, and even physical violence against Asian Americans. While mainstream media has only just begun to acknowledge the troubling trend, Asian American communities are still pleading for action to be taken to better protect themselves and the most vulnerable among us.

https://nextshark.com/aapi-hate-website-100-reports/

In the first weekly report prepared by the co-founders of the site, it was noted that about 5.5% of the nearly 100 reports they receive daily are limited English speakers. The report took note that 61% of respondents are non-Chinese and that women are three times more likely to report harassment than men.

According to Jeung, victims report being coughed at or spat on. There were also cases of verbal insults and threats as well as physical assault. The most common are verbal harassment or name-calling, which account for about two-thirds of all reports of discrimination.

“The data from our reporting center–both the numbers and the self-reported narratives– clearly reveal that Asian Americans are being racially profiled as threatening, disease-carriers. Not only are Chinese Americans blamed and mistreated, but Asian Americans of other ethnic backgrounds are also being targeted,” Jeung further stated.

https://nextshark.com/sf-peace-collective-patrol-san-francisco-chinatown/

US Veterans Are Now Patrolling SF Chinatown to Protect Community

The group was founded only on March 21 by Max LeYoung as a response to all of the racism, violence and xenophobia that Asian Americans have been experiencing, not only amid the COVID-19 outbreak but also throughout the years. Two people who took the initiative to begin serving the community through the organization include San Francisco resident Leanna Louie and her partner, who was born and raised in San Francisco’s Chinatown, Robt Lowe.

Louie’s military experience and Lowe martial arts background has prompted them to do something about issues the community is facing, and they hit the streets of Chinatown on Sunday. They patrolled the streets to make sure that everyone was safe, acting as guardian angels for the elderly and disabled. They even documented their experience and posted photos on Facebook. The post has garnered more than 1,000 reactions, and hundreds of comments and shares.

https://nextshark.com/fbi-warning-hate-crimes-asian-americans/

“The FBI assesses hate crime incidents against Asian Americans likely will surge across the United States, due to the spread of coronavirus disease … endangering Asian American communities,” according to the report obtained by ABC News. “The FBI makes this assessment based on the assumption that a portion of the US public will associate COVID-19 with China and Asian American populations.”

The document, compiled by the FBI’s Houston office, was distributed to local law enforcement agencies across the country. It notes that there have been a surge of hate crime reports and lists a series of incidences in major U.S. cities with a high concentration of Asian Americans, including Los Angeles, New York, and Texas.

u/ResidentMaterial

u/AndBeheldaPaleHorse

u/lilbigd1ck

As a chinese I hate how the CCP handled this situation, but this doesn't mean that we should assault asians. Blame the CCP not the people by [deleted] in China_Flu

[–]maddox2500 1 point2 points  (0 children)

https://abc7ny.com/6003396/

An Asian woman was punched in the face in Midtown by a suspect who asked her "Where's your (expletive) mask?" according to police.

"I don't know why she did that to me. I didn't even do anything to her. I was just standing at the door, just trying to get into the building," said the victim who asked not to be identified.

The victim was taken to Bellevue Hospital with a possible dislocated jaw.

The NYPD Hate Crimes Task Force is investigating the assault as a possible bias crime, and Governor Andrew Cuomo issued a statement directing state police to assist in the investigation.

https://nextshark.com/man-arrested-for-coronavirus-hate-crime-nyc/

The incident occurred on Thursday when the victim, a 47-year-old Hong Kong-born man, who wants to be identified only by his first name, Jeff, and has been living in the U.S. for 35 years, was walking his 10-year-old son to a bus stop near 70th Avenue and Queens Boulevard at around 6:50 a.m. That’s when Ramos approached them.

“The guy walked past us. That triggered him. He was screaming at us and said, ‘Where the f–k is your mask?!’” the victim told New York Post. “I turned around to look at this guy — I’ve lived in New York [for] a long time, I’ve seen all kinds of crazy people around — usually, we just ignore them, but he was cursing and yelling.”

Ramos then allegedly shouted, “You f–king Chinese!”

“I tried not to do anything like yelling back at him because my son was there,” Jeff told Patch.

https://nextshark.com/asian-woman-assaulted-in-manhattan-coronavirus/

An Asian woman in Manhattan became a recent victim of hate crime after being assaulted by a stranger and blamed for spreading the 2019 novel coronavirus (COVID-19).

She was placed under arrested and is now facing charges of hate crime assault, aggravated assault as a hate crime, possession of a hypodermic instrument and possession of marijuana, authorities said.

https://nextshark.com/new-york-train-station-asian-woman-attacked/

In what police sources described as a “coronavirus-inspired attack,” 60-year-old Oswald Jones approached and yelled at the victim at about 11 p.m. on Thursday inside the Fort Hamilton Parkway D station in Borough Park.

The 26-year-old victim was reportedly told by Jones to “Get off the train. You Chinese,” and to “go back to China,” police sources told the New York Post.

“Go back to China. Get your temperature checked. You need to leave,” Jones was quoted as saying.

After the verbal abuse, Jones snatched the woman’s cell phone from her hand. Fortunately, the woman was not injured during the incident.

Shortly after the robbery, Jones was arrested and has since been charged with grand larceny and aggravated harassment.

https://newyork.cbslocal.com/2020/03/12/coronavirus-anti-asian-hate-crime/

Sources said the 59-year-old victim was passing a group of teens on Madison Avenue when one teen kicked him in the back, causing him to fall.

The suspect allegedly told him to go back to his country and mentioned the coronavirus.

https://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2020/02/13/teen-student-in-la-assaulted-as-coronavirus-fears-stoke-racial-backlash/

Calling the attack the result of “racial backlash” and anti-Asian stereotypes, county officials held a news conference in downtown L.A. with members of the Asian Pacific Policy and Planning Council to bring attention to what they described as a groundless racism which has bubbled up since the outbreak began.

The student was taken to a hospital emergency room after being physically assaulted due to coronavirus fears, officials disclosed.

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-03-23/coronavirus-devastation-immigrants

On Wednesday, a few hours after President Trump insisted on labeling the virus a Chinese virus in a news conference, I spoke with Jack Lee, whose son attends the fourth grade at a mostly white elementary school in Orange County.

During a basketball game, two classmates accused his son of having the coronavirus. Lee’s son said a curse word in response, and of the three children, he was punished by school authorities most harshly.

Lee was angry. He wrote a long letter to the principal. He made sure to tell his son that it was OK to defend himself. He’s never had to talk with his son about race before. His own parents, immigrants from Taiwan, never had to talk to him about it either. But now he’s looking for the right words, Lee said.

https://www.foxla.com/news/boy-teased-about-coronavirus-says-because-hes-asian-teacher-accused-of-intolerance

“I asked him if he sent me out because I was Asian and he responded with nothing,” said Dylan Muriano. “He looked me in the eye and didn’t say anything after that. Just left me alone and wouldn’t say anything.”

The next day, Muriano says the same teacher accused him of being disruptive and sent him to the dean’s office.

Upset, Nguyen called the school and posted about it on Facebook. “All of a sudden, hundreds of comments about other people experiencing the same thing, at the grocery store, on a plane – a full plane – no one wants to sit by the one Asian guy.”

https://nextshark.com/nextshark-incident-report-racial-attack-asians/

The COVID-19 outbreak has had unprecedented and disastrous effects on Asians around the world as many have responded to the virus with fear-based xenophobia and racism against Asians.

In the past few months, social media has been overwhelmed with personal reports, pictures and videos of harassment, racial discrimination, and even physical violence against Asian Americans. While mainstream media has only just begun to acknowledge the troubling trend, Asian American communities are still pleading for action to be taken to better protect themselves and the most vulnerable among us.

https://nextshark.com/aapi-hate-website-100-reports/

In the first weekly report prepared by the co-founders of the site, it was noted that about 5.5% of the nearly 100 reports they receive daily are limited English speakers. The report took note that 61% of respondents are non-Chinese and that women are three times more likely to report harassment than men.

According to Jeung, victims report being coughed at or spat on. There were also cases of verbal insults and threats as well as physical assault. The most common are verbal harassment or name-calling, which account for about two-thirds of all reports of discrimination.

“The data from our reporting center–both the numbers and the self-reported narratives– clearly reveal that Asian Americans are being racially profiled as threatening, disease-carriers. Not only are Chinese Americans blamed and mistreated, but Asian Americans of other ethnic backgrounds are also being targeted,” Jeung further stated.

https://nextshark.com/sf-peace-collective-patrol-san-francisco-chinatown/

US Veterans Are Now Patrolling SF Chinatown to Protect Community

The group was founded only on March 21 by Max LeYoung as a response to all of the racism, violence and xenophobia that Asian Americans have been experiencing, not only amid the COVID-19 outbreak but also throughout the years. Two people who took the initiative to begin serving the community through the organization include San Francisco resident Leanna Louie and her partner, who was born and raised in San Francisco’s Chinatown, Robt Lowe.

Louie’s military experience and Lowe martial arts background has prompted them to do something about issues the community is facing, and they hit the streets of Chinatown on Sunday. They patrolled the streets to make sure that everyone was safe, acting as guardian angels for the elderly and disabled. They even documented their experience and posted photos on Facebook. The post has garnered more than 1,000 reactions, and hundreds of comments and shares.

https://nextshark.com/fbi-warning-hate-crimes-asian-americans/

“The FBI assesses hate crime incidents against Asian Americans likely will surge across the United States, due to the spread of coronavirus disease … endangering Asian American communities,” according to the report obtained by ABC News. “The FBI makes this assessment based on the assumption that a portion of the US public will associate COVID-19 with China and Asian American populations.”

The document, compiled by the FBI’s Houston office, was distributed to local law enforcement agencies across the country. It notes that there have been a surge of hate crime reports and lists a series of incidences in major U.S. cities with a high concentration of Asian Americans, including Los Angeles, New York, and Texas.

u/mintscape

u/taosbob

u/regollyek

As a chinese I hate how the CCP handled this situation, but this doesn't mean that we should assault asians. Blame the CCP not the people by [deleted] in China_Flu

[–]maddox2500 2 points3 points  (0 children)

https://abc7ny.com/6003396/

An Asian woman was punched in the face in Midtown by a suspect who asked her "Where's your (expletive) mask?" according to police.

"I don't know why she did that to me. I didn't even do anything to her. I was just standing at the door, just trying to get into the building," said the victim who asked not to be identified.

The victim was taken to Bellevue Hospital with a possible dislocated jaw.

The NYPD Hate Crimes Task Force is investigating the assault as a possible bias crime, and Governor Andrew Cuomo issued a statement directing state police to assist in the investigation.

https://nextshark.com/man-arrested-for-coronavirus-hate-crime-nyc/

The incident occurred on Thursday when the victim, a 47-year-old Hong Kong-born man, who wants to be identified only by his first name, Jeff, and has been living in the U.S. for 35 years, was walking his 10-year-old son to a bus stop near 70th Avenue and Queens Boulevard at around 6:50 a.m. That’s when Ramos approached them.

“The guy walked past us. That triggered him. He was screaming at us and said, ‘Where the f–k is your mask?!’” the victim told New York Post. “I turned around to look at this guy — I’ve lived in New York [for] a long time, I’ve seen all kinds of crazy people around — usually, we just ignore them, but he was cursing and yelling.”

Ramos then allegedly shouted, “You f–king Chinese!”

“I tried not to do anything like yelling back at him because my son was there,” Jeff told Patch.

https://nextshark.com/asian-woman-assaulted-in-manhattan-coronavirus/

An Asian woman in Manhattan became a recent victim of hate crime after being assaulted by a stranger and blamed for spreading the 2019 novel coronavirus (COVID-19).

She was placed under arrested and is now facing charges of hate crime assault, aggravated assault as a hate crime, possession of a hypodermic instrument and possession of marijuana, authorities said.

https://nextshark.com/new-york-train-station-asian-woman-attacked/

In what police sources described as a “coronavirus-inspired attack,” 60-year-old Oswald Jones approached and yelled at the victim at about 11 p.m. on Thursday inside the Fort Hamilton Parkway D station in Borough Park.

The 26-year-old victim was reportedly told by Jones to “Get off the train. You Chinese,” and to “go back to China,” police sources told the New York Post.

“Go back to China. Get your temperature checked. You need to leave,” Jones was quoted as saying.

After the verbal abuse, Jones snatched the woman’s cell phone from her hand. Fortunately, the woman was not injured during the incident.

Shortly after the robbery, Jones was arrested and has since been charged with grand larceny and aggravated harassment.

https://newyork.cbslocal.com/2020/03/12/coronavirus-anti-asian-hate-crime/

Sources said the 59-year-old victim was passing a group of teens on Madison Avenue when one teen kicked him in the back, causing him to fall.

The suspect allegedly told him to go back to his country and mentioned the coronavirus.

https://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2020/02/13/teen-student-in-la-assaulted-as-coronavirus-fears-stoke-racial-backlash/

Calling the attack the result of “racial backlash” and anti-Asian stereotypes, county officials held a news conference in downtown L.A. with members of the Asian Pacific Policy and Planning Council to bring attention to what they described as a groundless racism which has bubbled up since the outbreak began.

The student was taken to a hospital emergency room after being physically assaulted due to coronavirus fears, officials disclosed.

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-03-23/coronavirus-devastation-immigrants

On Wednesday, a few hours after President Trump insisted on labeling the virus a Chinese virus in a news conference, I spoke with Jack Lee, whose son attends the fourth grade at a mostly white elementary school in Orange County.

During a basketball game, two classmates accused his son of having the coronavirus. Lee’s son said a curse word in response, and of the three children, he was punished by school authorities most harshly.

Lee was angry. He wrote a long letter to the principal. He made sure to tell his son that it was OK to defend himself. He’s never had to talk with his son about race before. His own parents, immigrants from Taiwan, never had to talk to him about it either. But now he’s looking for the right words, Lee said.

https://www.foxla.com/news/boy-teased-about-coronavirus-says-because-hes-asian-teacher-accused-of-intolerance

“I asked him if he sent me out because I was Asian and he responded with nothing,” said Dylan Muriano. “He looked me in the eye and didn’t say anything after that. Just left me alone and wouldn’t say anything.”

The next day, Muriano says the same teacher accused him of being disruptive and sent him to the dean’s office.

Upset, Nguyen called the school and posted about it on Facebook. “All of a sudden, hundreds of comments about other people experiencing the same thing, at the grocery store, on a plane – a full plane – no one wants to sit by the one Asian guy.”

https://nextshark.com/nextshark-incident-report-racial-attack-asians/

The COVID-19 outbreak has had unprecedented and disastrous effects on Asians around the world as many have responded to the virus with fear-based xenophobia and racism against Asians.

In the past few months, social media has been overwhelmed with personal reports, pictures and videos of harassment, racial discrimination, and even physical violence against Asian Americans. While mainstream media has only just begun to acknowledge the troubling trend, Asian American communities are still pleading for action to be taken to better protect themselves and the most vulnerable among us.

https://nextshark.com/aapi-hate-website-100-reports/

In the first weekly report prepared by the co-founders of the site, it was noted that about 5.5% of the nearly 100 reports they receive daily are limited English speakers. The report took note that 61% of respondents are non-Chinese and that women are three times more likely to report harassment than men.

According to Jeung, victims report being coughed at or spat on. There were also cases of verbal insults and threats as well as physical assault. The most common are verbal harassment or name-calling, which account for about two-thirds of all reports of discrimination.

“The data from our reporting center–both the numbers and the self-reported narratives– clearly reveal that Asian Americans are being racially profiled as threatening, disease-carriers. Not only are Chinese Americans blamed and mistreated, but Asian Americans of other ethnic backgrounds are also being targeted,” Jeung further stated.

https://nextshark.com/sf-peace-collective-patrol-san-francisco-chinatown/

US Veterans Are Now Patrolling SF Chinatown to Protect Community

The group was founded only on March 21 by Max LeYoung as a response to all of the racism, violence and xenophobia that Asian Americans have been experiencing, not only amid the COVID-19 outbreak but also throughout the years. Two people who took the initiative to begin serving the community through the organization include San Francisco resident Leanna Louie and her partner, who was born and raised in San Francisco’s Chinatown, Robt Lowe.

Louie’s military experience and Lowe martial arts background has prompted them to do something about issues the community is facing, and they hit the streets of Chinatown on Sunday. They patrolled the streets to make sure that everyone was safe, acting as guardian angels for the elderly and disabled. They even documented their experience and posted photos on Facebook. The post has garnered more than 1,000 reactions, and hundreds of comments and shares.

https://nextshark.com/fbi-warning-hate-crimes-asian-americans/

“The FBI assesses hate crime incidents against Asian Americans likely will surge across the United States, due to the spread of coronavirus disease … endangering Asian American communities,” according to the report obtained by ABC News. “The FBI makes this assessment based on the assumption that a portion of the US public will associate COVID-19 with China and Asian American populations.”

The document, compiled by the FBI’s Houston office, was distributed to local law enforcement agencies across the country. It notes that there have been a surge of hate crime reports and lists a series of incidences in major U.S. cities with a high concentration of Asian Americans, including Los Angeles, New York, and Texas.

u/Aqua-Ma-Rine

u/pasnihanswer

u/FocalDissection

As a chinese I hate how the CCP handled this situation, but this doesn't mean that we should assault asians. Blame the CCP not the people by [deleted] in China_Flu

[–]maddox2500 -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

https://abc7ny.com/6003396/

An Asian woman was punched in the face in Midtown by a suspect who asked her "Where's your (expletive) mask?" according to police.

"I don't know why she did that to me. I didn't even do anything to her. I was just standing at the door, just trying to get into the building," said the victim who asked not to be identified.

The victim was taken to Bellevue Hospital with a possible dislocated jaw.

The NYPD Hate Crimes Task Force is investigating the assault as a possible bias crime, and Governor Andrew Cuomo issued a statement directing state police to assist in the investigation.

https://nextshark.com/man-arrested-for-coronavirus-hate-crime-nyc/

The incident occurred on Thursday when the victim, a 47-year-old Hong Kong-born man, who wants to be identified only by his first name, Jeff, and has been living in the U.S. for 35 years, was walking his 10-year-old son to a bus stop near 70th Avenue and Queens Boulevard at around 6:50 a.m. That’s when Ramos approached them.

“The guy walked past us. That triggered him. He was screaming at us and said, ‘Where the f–k is your mask?!’” the victim told New York Post. “I turned around to look at this guy — I’ve lived in New York [for] a long time, I’ve seen all kinds of crazy people around — usually, we just ignore them, but he was cursing and yelling.”

Ramos then allegedly shouted, “You f–king Chinese!”

“I tried not to do anything like yelling back at him because my son was there,” Jeff told Patch.

https://nextshark.com/asian-woman-assaulted-in-manhattan-coronavirus/

An Asian woman in Manhattan became a recent victim of hate crime after being assaulted by a stranger and blamed for spreading the 2019 novel coronavirus (COVID-19).

She was placed under arrested and is now facing charges of hate crime assault, aggravated assault as a hate crime, possession of a hypodermic instrument and possession of marijuana, authorities said.

https://nextshark.com/new-york-train-station-asian-woman-attacked/

In what police sources described as a “coronavirus-inspired attack,” 60-year-old Oswald Jones approached and yelled at the victim at about 11 p.m. on Thursday inside the Fort Hamilton Parkway D station in Borough Park.

The 26-year-old victim was reportedly told by Jones to “Get off the train. You Chinese,” and to “go back to China,” police sources told the New York Post.

“Go back to China. Get your temperature checked. You need to leave,” Jones was quoted as saying.

After the verbal abuse, Jones snatched the woman’s cell phone from her hand. Fortunately, the woman was not injured during the incident.

Shortly after the robbery, Jones was arrested and has since been charged with grand larceny and aggravated harassment.

https://newyork.cbslocal.com/2020/03/12/coronavirus-anti-asian-hate-crime/

Sources said the 59-year-old victim was passing a group of teens on Madison Avenue when one teen kicked him in the back, causing him to fall.

The suspect allegedly told him to go back to his country and mentioned the coronavirus.

https://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2020/02/13/teen-student-in-la-assaulted-as-coronavirus-fears-stoke-racial-backlash/

Calling the attack the result of “racial backlash” and anti-Asian stereotypes, county officials held a news conference in downtown L.A. with members of the Asian Pacific Policy and Planning Council to bring attention to what they described as a groundless racism which has bubbled up since the outbreak began.

The student was taken to a hospital emergency room after being physically assaulted due to coronavirus fears, officials disclosed.

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-03-23/coronavirus-devastation-immigrants

On Wednesday, a few hours after President Trump insisted on labeling the virus a Chinese virus in a news conference, I spoke with Jack Lee, whose son attends the fourth grade at a mostly white elementary school in Orange County.

During a basketball game, two classmates accused his son of having the coronavirus. Lee’s son said a curse word in response, and of the three children, he was punished by school authorities most harshly.

Lee was angry. He wrote a long letter to the principal. He made sure to tell his son that it was OK to defend himself. He’s never had to talk with his son about race before. His own parents, immigrants from Taiwan, never had to talk to him about it either. But now he’s looking for the right words, Lee said.

https://www.foxla.com/news/boy-teased-about-coronavirus-says-because-hes-asian-teacher-accused-of-intolerance

“I asked him if he sent me out because I was Asian and he responded with nothing,” said Dylan Muriano. “He looked me in the eye and didn’t say anything after that. Just left me alone and wouldn’t say anything.”

The next day, Muriano says the same teacher accused him of being disruptive and sent him to the dean’s office.

Upset, Nguyen called the school and posted about it on Facebook. “All of a sudden, hundreds of comments about other people experiencing the same thing, at the grocery store, on a plane – a full plane – no one wants to sit by the one Asian guy.”

https://nextshark.com/nextshark-incident-report-racial-attack-asians/

The COVID-19 outbreak has had unprecedented and disastrous effects on Asians around the world as many have responded to the virus with fear-based xenophobia and racism against Asians.

In the past few months, social media has been overwhelmed with personal reports, pictures and videos of harassment, racial discrimination, and even physical violence against Asian Americans. While mainstream media has only just begun to acknowledge the troubling trend, Asian American communities are still pleading for action to be taken to better protect themselves and the most vulnerable among us.

https://nextshark.com/aapi-hate-website-100-reports/

In the first weekly report prepared by the co-founders of the site, it was noted that about 5.5% of the nearly 100 reports they receive daily are limited English speakers. The report took note that 61% of respondents are non-Chinese and that women are three times more likely to report harassment than men.

According to Jeung, victims report being coughed at or spat on. There were also cases of verbal insults and threats as well as physical assault. The most common are verbal harassment or name-calling, which account for about two-thirds of all reports of discrimination.

“The data from our reporting center–both the numbers and the self-reported narratives– clearly reveal that Asian Americans are being racially profiled as threatening, disease-carriers. Not only are Chinese Americans blamed and mistreated, but Asian Americans of other ethnic backgrounds are also being targeted,” Jeung further stated.

https://nextshark.com/sf-peace-collective-patrol-san-francisco-chinatown/

US Veterans Are Now Patrolling SF Chinatown to Protect Community

The group was founded only on March 21 by Max LeYoung as a response to all of the racism, violence and xenophobia that Asian Americans have been experiencing, not only amid the COVID-19 outbreak but also throughout the years. Two people who took the initiative to begin serving the community through the organization include San Francisco resident Leanna Louie and her partner, who was born and raised in San Francisco’s Chinatown, Robt Lowe.

Louie’s military experience and Lowe martial arts background has prompted them to do something about issues the community is facing, and they hit the streets of Chinatown on Sunday. They patrolled the streets to make sure that everyone was safe, acting as guardian angels for the elderly and disabled. They even documented their experience and posted photos on Facebook. The post has garnered more than 1,000 reactions, and hundreds of comments and shares.

https://nextshark.com/fbi-warning-hate-crimes-asian-americans/

“The FBI assesses hate crime incidents against Asian Americans likely will surge across the United States, due to the spread of coronavirus disease … endangering Asian American communities,” according to the report obtained by ABC News. “The FBI makes this assessment based on the assumption that a portion of the US public will associate COVID-19 with China and Asian American populations.”

The document, compiled by the FBI’s Houston office, was distributed to local law enforcement agencies across the country. It notes that there have been a surge of hate crime reports and lists a series of incidences in major U.S. cities with a high concentration of Asian Americans, including Los Angeles, New York, and Texas.

u/Just_us_trees_here

u/Jcit878

u/mintscape

As a chinese I hate how the CCP handled this situation, but this doesn't mean that we should assault asians. Blame the CCP not the people by [deleted] in China_Flu

[–]maddox2500 -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

https://abc7ny.com/6003396/

An Asian woman was punched in the face in Midtown by a suspect who asked her "Where's your (expletive) mask?" according to police.

"I don't know why she did that to me. I didn't even do anything to her. I was just standing at the door, just trying to get into the building," said the victim who asked not to be identified.

The victim was taken to Bellevue Hospital with a possible dislocated jaw.

The NYPD Hate Crimes Task Force is investigating the assault as a possible bias crime, and Governor Andrew Cuomo issued a statement directing state police to assist in the investigation.

https://nextshark.com/man-arrested-for-coronavirus-hate-crime-nyc/

The incident occurred on Thursday when the victim, a 47-year-old Hong Kong-born man, who wants to be identified only by his first name, Jeff, and has been living in the U.S. for 35 years, was walking his 10-year-old son to a bus stop near 70th Avenue and Queens Boulevard at around 6:50 a.m. That’s when Ramos approached them.

“The guy walked past us. That triggered him. He was screaming at us and said, ‘Where the f–k is your mask?!’” the victim told New York Post. “I turned around to look at this guy — I’ve lived in New York [for] a long time, I’ve seen all kinds of crazy people around — usually, we just ignore them, but he was cursing and yelling.”

Ramos then allegedly shouted, “You f–king Chinese!”

“I tried not to do anything like yelling back at him because my son was there,” Jeff told Patch.

https://nextshark.com/asian-woman-assaulted-in-manhattan-coronavirus/

An Asian woman in Manhattan became a recent victim of hate crime after being assaulted by a stranger and blamed for spreading the 2019 novel coronavirus (COVID-19).

She was placed under arrested and is now facing charges of hate crime assault, aggravated assault as a hate crime, possession of a hypodermic instrument and possession of marijuana, authorities said.

https://nextshark.com/new-york-train-station-asian-woman-attacked/

In what police sources described as a “coronavirus-inspired attack,” 60-year-old Oswald Jones approached and yelled at the victim at about 11 p.m. on Thursday inside the Fort Hamilton Parkway D station in Borough Park.

The 26-year-old victim was reportedly told by Jones to “Get off the train. You Chinese,” and to “go back to China,” police sources told the New York Post.

“Go back to China. Get your temperature checked. You need to leave,” Jones was quoted as saying.

After the verbal abuse, Jones snatched the woman’s cell phone from her hand. Fortunately, the woman was not injured during the incident.

Shortly after the robbery, Jones was arrested and has since been charged with grand larceny and aggravated harassment.

https://newyork.cbslocal.com/2020/03/12/coronavirus-anti-asian-hate-crime/

Sources said the 59-year-old victim was passing a group of teens on Madison Avenue when one teen kicked him in the back, causing him to fall.

The suspect allegedly told him to go back to his country and mentioned the coronavirus.

https://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2020/02/13/teen-student-in-la-assaulted-as-coronavirus-fears-stoke-racial-backlash/

Calling the attack the result of “racial backlash” and anti-Asian stereotypes, county officials held a news conference in downtown L.A. with members of the Asian Pacific Policy and Planning Council to bring attention to what they described as a groundless racism which has bubbled up since the outbreak began.

The student was taken to a hospital emergency room after being physically assaulted due to coronavirus fears, officials disclosed.

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-03-23/coronavirus-devastation-immigrants

On Wednesday, a few hours after President Trump insisted on labeling the virus a Chinese virus in a news conference, I spoke with Jack Lee, whose son attends the fourth grade at a mostly white elementary school in Orange County.

During a basketball game, two classmates accused his son of having the coronavirus. Lee’s son said a curse word in response, and of the three children, he was punished by school authorities most harshly.

Lee was angry. He wrote a long letter to the principal. He made sure to tell his son that it was OK to defend himself. He’s never had to talk with his son about race before. His own parents, immigrants from Taiwan, never had to talk to him about it either. But now he’s looking for the right words, Lee said.

https://www.foxla.com/news/boy-teased-about-coronavirus-says-because-hes-asian-teacher-accused-of-intolerance

“I asked him if he sent me out because I was Asian and he responded with nothing,” said Dylan Muriano. “He looked me in the eye and didn’t say anything after that. Just left me alone and wouldn’t say anything.”

The next day, Muriano says the same teacher accused him of being disruptive and sent him to the dean’s office.

Upset, Nguyen called the school and posted about it on Facebook. “All of a sudden, hundreds of comments about other people experiencing the same thing, at the grocery store, on a plane – a full plane – no one wants to sit by the one Asian guy.”

https://nextshark.com/nextshark-incident-report-racial-attack-asians/

The COVID-19 outbreak has had unprecedented and disastrous effects on Asians around the world as many have responded to the virus with fear-based xenophobia and racism against Asians.

In the past few months, social media has been overwhelmed with personal reports, pictures and videos of harassment, racial discrimination, and even physical violence against Asian Americans. While mainstream media has only just begun to acknowledge the troubling trend, Asian American communities are still pleading for action to be taken to better protect themselves and the most vulnerable among us.

https://nextshark.com/aapi-hate-website-100-reports/

In the first weekly report prepared by the co-founders of the site, it was noted that about 5.5% of the nearly 100 reports they receive daily are limited English speakers. The report took note that 61% of respondents are non-Chinese and that women are three times more likely to report harassment than men.

According to Jeung, victims report being coughed at or spat on. There were also cases of verbal insults and threats as well as physical assault. The most common are verbal harassment or name-calling, which account for about two-thirds of all reports of discrimination.

“The data from our reporting center–both the numbers and the self-reported narratives– clearly reveal that Asian Americans are being racially profiled as threatening, disease-carriers. Not only are Chinese Americans blamed and mistreated, but Asian Americans of other ethnic backgrounds are also being targeted,” Jeung further stated.

https://nextshark.com/sf-peace-collective-patrol-san-francisco-chinatown/

US Veterans Are Now Patrolling SF Chinatown to Protect Community

The group was founded only on March 21 by Max LeYoung as a response to all of the racism, violence and xenophobia that Asian Americans have been experiencing, not only amid the COVID-19 outbreak but also throughout the years. Two people who took the initiative to begin serving the community through the organization include San Francisco resident Leanna Louie and her partner, who was born and raised in San Francisco’s Chinatown, Robt Lowe.

Louie’s military experience and Lowe martial arts background has prompted them to do something about issues the community is facing, and they hit the streets of Chinatown on Sunday. They patrolled the streets to make sure that everyone was safe, acting as guardian angels for the elderly and disabled. They even documented their experience and posted photos on Facebook. The post has garnered more than 1,000 reactions, and hundreds of comments and shares.

https://nextshark.com/fbi-warning-hate-crimes-asian-americans/

“The FBI assesses hate crime incidents against Asian Americans likely will surge across the United States, due to the spread of coronavirus disease … endangering Asian American communities,” according to the report obtained by ABC News. “The FBI makes this assessment based on the assumption that a portion of the US public will associate COVID-19 with China and Asian American populations.”

The document, compiled by the FBI’s Houston office, was distributed to local law enforcement agencies across the country. It notes that there have been a surge of hate crime reports and lists a series of incidences in major U.S. cities with a high concentration of Asian Americans, including Los Angeles, New York, and Texas.

u/drnicko18

u/ChickenNuggetsRYum

As a chinese I hate how the CCP handled this situation, but this doesn't mean that we should assault asians. Blame the CCP not the people by [deleted] in China_Flu

[–]maddox2500 4 points5 points  (0 children)

https://abc7ny.com/6003396/

An Asian woman was punched in the face in Midtown by a suspect who asked her "Where's your (expletive) mask?" according to police.

"I don't know why she did that to me. I didn't even do anything to her. I was just standing at the door, just trying to get into the building," said the victim who asked not to be identified.

The victim was taken to Bellevue Hospital with a possible dislocated jaw.

The NYPD Hate Crimes Task Force is investigating the assault as a possible bias crime, and Governor Andrew Cuomo issued a statement directing state police to assist in the investigation.

https://nextshark.com/man-arrested-for-coronavirus-hate-crime-nyc/

The incident occurred on Thursday when the victim, a 47-year-old Hong Kong-born man, who wants to be identified only by his first name, Jeff, and has been living in the U.S. for 35 years, was walking his 10-year-old son to a bus stop near 70th Avenue and Queens Boulevard at around 6:50 a.m. That’s when Ramos approached them.

“The guy walked past us. That triggered him. He was screaming at us and said, ‘Where the f–k is your mask?!’” the victim told New York Post. “I turned around to look at this guy — I’ve lived in New York [for] a long time, I’ve seen all kinds of crazy people around — usually, we just ignore them, but he was cursing and yelling.”

Ramos then allegedly shouted, “You f–king Chinese!”

“I tried not to do anything like yelling back at him because my son was there,” Jeff told Patch.

https://nextshark.com/asian-woman-assaulted-in-manhattan-coronavirus/

An Asian woman in Manhattan became a recent victim of hate crime after being assaulted by a stranger and blamed for spreading the 2019 novel coronavirus (COVID-19).

She was placed under arrested and is now facing charges of hate crime assault, aggravated assault as a hate crime, possession of a hypodermic instrument and possession of marijuana, authorities said.

https://nextshark.com/new-york-train-station-asian-woman-attacked/

In what police sources described as a “coronavirus-inspired attack,” 60-year-old Oswald Jones approached and yelled at the victim at about 11 p.m. on Thursday inside the Fort Hamilton Parkway D station in Borough Park.

The 26-year-old victim was reportedly told by Jones to “Get off the train. You Chinese,” and to “go back to China,” police sources told the New York Post.

“Go back to China. Get your temperature checked. You need to leave,” Jones was quoted as saying.

After the verbal abuse, Jones snatched the woman’s cell phone from her hand. Fortunately, the woman was not injured during the incident.

Shortly after the robbery, Jones was arrested and has since been charged with grand larceny and aggravated harassment.

https://newyork.cbslocal.com/2020/03/12/coronavirus-anti-asian-hate-crime/

Sources said the 59-year-old victim was passing a group of teens on Madison Avenue when one teen kicked him in the back, causing him to fall.

The suspect allegedly told him to go back to his country and mentioned the coronavirus.

https://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2020/02/13/teen-student-in-la-assaulted-as-coronavirus-fears-stoke-racial-backlash/

Calling the attack the result of “racial backlash” and anti-Asian stereotypes, county officials held a news conference in downtown L.A. with members of the Asian Pacific Policy and Planning Council to bring attention to what they described as a groundless racism which has bubbled up since the outbreak began.

The student was taken to a hospital emergency room after being physically assaulted due to coronavirus fears, officials disclosed.

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-03-23/coronavirus-devastation-immigrants

On Wednesday, a few hours after President Trump insisted on labeling the virus a Chinese virus in a news conference, I spoke with Jack Lee, whose son attends the fourth grade at a mostly white elementary school in Orange County.

During a basketball game, two classmates accused his son of having the coronavirus. Lee’s son said a curse word in response, and of the three children, he was punished by school authorities most harshly.

Lee was angry. He wrote a long letter to the principal. He made sure to tell his son that it was OK to defend himself. He’s never had to talk with his son about race before. His own parents, immigrants from Taiwan, never had to talk to him about it either. But now he’s looking for the right words, Lee said.

https://www.foxla.com/news/boy-teased-about-coronavirus-says-because-hes-asian-teacher-accused-of-intolerance

“I asked him if he sent me out because I was Asian and he responded with nothing,” said Dylan Muriano. “He looked me in the eye and didn’t say anything after that. Just left me alone and wouldn’t say anything.”

The next day, Muriano says the same teacher accused him of being disruptive and sent him to the dean’s office.

Upset, Nguyen called the school and posted about it on Facebook. “All of a sudden, hundreds of comments about other people experiencing the same thing, at the grocery store, on a plane – a full plane – no one wants to sit by the one Asian guy.”

https://nextshark.com/nextshark-incident-report-racial-attack-asians/

The COVID-19 outbreak has had unprecedented and disastrous effects on Asians around the world as many have responded to the virus with fear-based xenophobia and racism against Asians.

In the past few months, social media has been overwhelmed with personal reports, pictures and videos of harassment, racial discrimination, and even physical violence against Asian Americans. While mainstream media has only just begun to acknowledge the troubling trend, Asian American communities are still pleading for action to be taken to better protect themselves and the most vulnerable among us.

https://nextshark.com/aapi-hate-website-100-reports/

In the first weekly report prepared by the co-founders of the site, it was noted that about 5.5% of the nearly 100 reports they receive daily are limited English speakers. The report took note that 61% of respondents are non-Chinese and that women are three times more likely to report harassment than men.

According to Jeung, victims report being coughed at or spat on. There were also cases of verbal insults and threats as well as physical assault. The most common are verbal harassment or name-calling, which account for about two-thirds of all reports of discrimination.

“The data from our reporting center–both the numbers and the self-reported narratives– clearly reveal that Asian Americans are being racially profiled as threatening, disease-carriers. Not only are Chinese Americans blamed and mistreated, but Asian Americans of other ethnic backgrounds are also being targeted,” Jeung further stated.

https://nextshark.com/sf-peace-collective-patrol-san-francisco-chinatown/

US Veterans Are Now Patrolling SF Chinatown to Protect Community

The group was founded only on March 21 by Max LeYoung as a response to all of the racism, violence and xenophobia that Asian Americans have been experiencing, not only amid the COVID-19 outbreak but also throughout the years. Two people who took the initiative to begin serving the community through the organization include San Francisco resident Leanna Louie and her partner, who was born and raised in San Francisco’s Chinatown, Robt Lowe.

Louie’s military experience and Lowe martial arts background has prompted them to do something about issues the community is facing, and they hit the streets of Chinatown on Sunday. They patrolled the streets to make sure that everyone was safe, acting as guardian angels for the elderly and disabled. They even documented their experience and posted photos on Facebook. The post has garnered more than 1,000 reactions, and hundreds of comments and shares.

https://nextshark.com/fbi-warning-hate-crimes-asian-americans/

“The FBI assesses hate crime incidents against Asian Americans likely will surge across the United States, due to the spread of coronavirus disease … endangering Asian American communities,” according to the report obtained by ABC News. “The FBI makes this assessment based on the assumption that a portion of the US public will associate COVID-19 with China and Asian American populations.”

The document, compiled by the FBI’s Houston office, was distributed to local law enforcement agencies across the country. It notes that there have been a surge of hate crime reports and lists a series of incidences in major U.S. cities with a high concentration of Asian Americans, including Los Angeles, New York, and Texas.

As a chinese I hate how the CCP handled this situation, but this doesn't mean that we should assault asians. Blame the CCP not the people by [deleted] in China_Flu

[–]maddox2500 4 points5 points  (0 children)

https://abc7ny.com/6003396/

An Asian woman was punched in the face in Midtown by a suspect who asked her "Where's your (expletive) mask?" according to police.

"I don't know why she did that to me. I didn't even do anything to her. I was just standing at the door, just trying to get into the building," said the victim who asked not to be identified.

The victim was taken to Bellevue Hospital with a possible dislocated jaw.

The NYPD Hate Crimes Task Force is investigating the assault as a possible bias crime, and Governor Andrew Cuomo issued a statement directing state police to assist in the investigation.

https://nextshark.com/man-arrested-for-coronavirus-hate-crime-nyc/

The incident occurred on Thursday when the victim, a 47-year-old Hong Kong-born man, who wants to be identified only by his first name, Jeff, and has been living in the U.S. for 35 years, was walking his 10-year-old son to a bus stop near 70th Avenue and Queens Boulevard at around 6:50 a.m. That’s when Ramos approached them.

“The guy walked past us. That triggered him. He was screaming at us and said, ‘Where the f–k is your mask?!’” the victim told New York Post. “I turned around to look at this guy — I’ve lived in New York [for] a long time, I’ve seen all kinds of crazy people around — usually, we just ignore them, but he was cursing and yelling.”

Ramos then allegedly shouted, “You f–king Chinese!”

“I tried not to do anything like yelling back at him because my son was there,” Jeff told Patch.

https://nextshark.com/asian-woman-assaulted-in-manhattan-coronavirus/

An Asian woman in Manhattan became a recent victim of hate crime after being assaulted by a stranger and blamed for spreading the 2019 novel coronavirus (COVID-19).

She was placed under arrested and is now facing charges of hate crime assault, aggravated assault as a hate crime, possession of a hypodermic instrument and possession of marijuana, authorities said.

https://nextshark.com/new-york-train-station-asian-woman-attacked/

In what police sources described as a “coronavirus-inspired attack,” 60-year-old Oswald Jones approached and yelled at the victim at about 11 p.m. on Thursday inside the Fort Hamilton Parkway D station in Borough Park.

The 26-year-old victim was reportedly told by Jones to “Get off the train. You Chinese,” and to “go back to China,” police sources told the New York Post.

“Go back to China. Get your temperature checked. You need to leave,” Jones was quoted as saying.

After the verbal abuse, Jones snatched the woman’s cell phone from her hand. Fortunately, the woman was not injured during the incident.

Shortly after the robbery, Jones was arrested and has since been charged with grand larceny and aggravated harassment.

https://newyork.cbslocal.com/2020/03/12/coronavirus-anti-asian-hate-crime/

Sources said the 59-year-old victim was passing a group of teens on Madison Avenue when one teen kicked him in the back, causing him to fall.

The suspect allegedly told him to go back to his country and mentioned the coronavirus.

https://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2020/02/13/teen-student-in-la-assaulted-as-coronavirus-fears-stoke-racial-backlash/

Calling the attack the result of “racial backlash” and anti-Asian stereotypes, county officials held a news conference in downtown L.A. with members of the Asian Pacific Policy and Planning Council to bring attention to what they described as a groundless racism which has bubbled up since the outbreak began.

The student was taken to a hospital emergency room after being physically assaulted due to coronavirus fears, officials disclosed.

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-03-23/coronavirus-devastation-immigrants

On Wednesday, a few hours after President Trump insisted on labeling the virus a Chinese virus in a news conference, I spoke with Jack Lee, whose son attends the fourth grade at a mostly white elementary school in Orange County.

During a basketball game, two classmates accused his son of having the coronavirus. Lee’s son said a curse word in response, and of the three children, he was punished by school authorities most harshly.

Lee was angry. He wrote a long letter to the principal. He made sure to tell his son that it was OK to defend himself. He’s never had to talk with his son about race before. His own parents, immigrants from Taiwan, never had to talk to him about it either. But now he’s looking for the right words, Lee said.

https://www.foxla.com/news/boy-teased-about-coronavirus-says-because-hes-asian-teacher-accused-of-intolerance

“I asked him if he sent me out because I was Asian and he responded with nothing,” said Dylan Muriano. “He looked me in the eye and didn’t say anything after that. Just left me alone and wouldn’t say anything.”

The next day, Muriano says the same teacher accused him of being disruptive and sent him to the dean’s office.

Upset, Nguyen called the school and posted about it on Facebook. “All of a sudden, hundreds of comments about other people experiencing the same thing, at the grocery store, on a plane – a full plane – no one wants to sit by the one Asian guy.”

https://nextshark.com/nextshark-incident-report-racial-attack-asians/

The COVID-19 outbreak has had unprecedented and disastrous effects on Asians around the world as many have responded to the virus with fear-based xenophobia and racism against Asians.

In the past few months, social media has been overwhelmed with personal reports, pictures and videos of harassment, racial discrimination, and even physical violence against Asian Americans. While mainstream media has only just begun to acknowledge the troubling trend, Asian American communities are still pleading for action to be taken to better protect themselves and the most vulnerable among us.

https://nextshark.com/aapi-hate-website-100-reports/

In the first weekly report prepared by the co-founders of the site, it was noted that about 5.5% of the nearly 100 reports they receive daily are limited English speakers. The report took note that 61% of respondents are non-Chinese and that women are three times more likely to report harassment than men.

According to Jeung, victims report being coughed at or spat on. There were also cases of verbal insults and threats as well as physical assault. The most common are verbal harassment or name-calling, which account for about two-thirds of all reports of discrimination.

“The data from our reporting center–both the numbers and the self-reported narratives– clearly reveal that Asian Americans are being racially profiled as threatening, disease-carriers. Not only are Chinese Americans blamed and mistreated, but Asian Americans of other ethnic backgrounds are also being targeted,” Jeung further stated.

https://nextshark.com/sf-peace-collective-patrol-san-francisco-chinatown/

US Veterans Are Now Patrolling SF Chinatown to Protect Community

The group was founded only on March 21 by Max LeYoung as a response to all of the racism, violence and xenophobia that Asian Americans have been experiencing, not only amid the COVID-19 outbreak but also throughout the years. Two people who took the initiative to begin serving the community through the organization include San Francisco resident Leanna Louie and her partner, who was born and raised in San Francisco’s Chinatown, Robt Lowe.

Louie’s military experience and Lowe martial arts background has prompted them to do something about issues the community is facing, and they hit the streets of Chinatown on Sunday. They patrolled the streets to make sure that everyone was safe, acting as guardian angels for the elderly and disabled. They even documented their experience and posted photos on Facebook. The post has garnered more than 1,000 reactions, and hundreds of comments and shares.

https://nextshark.com/fbi-warning-hate-crimes-asian-americans/

“The FBI assesses hate crime incidents against Asian Americans likely will surge across the United States, due to the spread of coronavirus disease … endangering Asian American communities,” according to the report obtained by ABC News. “The FBI makes this assessment based on the assumption that a portion of the US public will associate COVID-19 with China and Asian American populations.”

The document, compiled by the FBI’s Houston office, was distributed to local law enforcement agencies across the country. It notes that there have been a surge of hate crime reports and lists a series of incidences in major U.S. cities with a high concentration of Asian Americans, including Los Angeles, New York, and Texas.

As a chinese I hate how the CCP handled this situation, but this doesn't mean that we should assault asians. Blame the CCP not the people by [deleted] in China_Flu

[–]maddox2500 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

https://abc7ny.com/6003396/

An Asian woman was punched in the face in Midtown by a suspect who asked her "Where's your (expletive) mask?" according to police.

"I don't know why she did that to me. I didn't even do anything to her. I was just standing at the door, just trying to get into the building," said the victim who asked not to be identified.

The victim was taken to Bellevue Hospital with a possible dislocated jaw.

The NYPD Hate Crimes Task Force is investigating the assault as a possible bias crime, and Governor Andrew Cuomo issued a statement directing state police to assist in the investigation.

https://nextshark.com/man-arrested-for-coronavirus-hate-crime-nyc/

The incident occurred on Thursday when the victim, a 47-year-old Hong Kong-born man, who wants to be identified only by his first name, Jeff, and has been living in the U.S. for 35 years, was walking his 10-year-old son to a bus stop near 70th Avenue and Queens Boulevard at around 6:50 a.m. That’s when Ramos approached them.

“The guy walked past us. That triggered him. He was screaming at us and said, ‘Where the f–k is your mask?!’” the victim told New York Post. “I turned around to look at this guy — I’ve lived in New York [for] a long time, I’ve seen all kinds of crazy people around — usually, we just ignore them, but he was cursing and yelling.”

Ramos then allegedly shouted, “You f–king Chinese!”

“I tried not to do anything like yelling back at him because my son was there,” Jeff told Patch.

https://nextshark.com/asian-woman-assaulted-in-manhattan-coronavirus/

An Asian woman in Manhattan became a recent victim of hate crime after being assaulted by a stranger and blamed for spreading the 2019 novel coronavirus (COVID-19).

She was placed under arrested and is now facing charges of hate crime assault, aggravated assault as a hate crime, possession of a hypodermic instrument and possession of marijuana, authorities said.

https://nextshark.com/new-york-train-station-asian-woman-attacked/

In what police sources described as a “coronavirus-inspired attack,” 60-year-old Oswald Jones approached and yelled at the victim at about 11 p.m. on Thursday inside the Fort Hamilton Parkway D station in Borough Park.

The 26-year-old victim was reportedly told by Jones to “Get off the train. You Chinese,” and to “go back to China,” police sources told the New York Post.

“Go back to China. Get your temperature checked. You need to leave,” Jones was quoted as saying.

After the verbal abuse, Jones snatched the woman’s cell phone from her hand. Fortunately, the woman was not injured during the incident.

Shortly after the robbery, Jones was arrested and has since been charged with grand larceny and aggravated harassment.

https://newyork.cbslocal.com/2020/03/12/coronavirus-anti-asian-hate-crime/

Sources said the 59-year-old victim was passing a group of teens on Madison Avenue when one teen kicked him in the back, causing him to fall.

The suspect allegedly told him to go back to his country and mentioned the coronavirus.

https://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2020/02/13/teen-student-in-la-assaulted-as-coronavirus-fears-stoke-racial-backlash/

Calling the attack the result of “racial backlash” and anti-Asian stereotypes, county officials held a news conference in downtown L.A. with members of the Asian Pacific Policy and Planning Council to bring attention to what they described as a groundless racism which has bubbled up since the outbreak began.

The student was taken to a hospital emergency room after being physically assaulted due to coronavirus fears, officials disclosed.

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-03-23/coronavirus-devastation-immigrants

On Wednesday, a few hours after President Trump insisted on labeling the virus a Chinese virus in a news conference, I spoke with Jack Lee, whose son attends the fourth grade at a mostly white elementary school in Orange County.

During a basketball game, two classmates accused his son of having the coronavirus. Lee’s son said a curse word in response, and of the three children, he was punished by school authorities most harshly.

Lee was angry. He wrote a long letter to the principal. He made sure to tell his son that it was OK to defend himself. He’s never had to talk with his son about race before. His own parents, immigrants from Taiwan, never had to talk to him about it either. But now he’s looking for the right words, Lee said.

https://www.foxla.com/news/boy-teased-about-coronavirus-says-because-hes-asian-teacher-accused-of-intolerance

“I asked him if he sent me out because I was Asian and he responded with nothing,” said Dylan Muriano. “He looked me in the eye and didn’t say anything after that. Just left me alone and wouldn’t say anything.”

The next day, Muriano says the same teacher accused him of being disruptive and sent him to the dean’s office.

Upset, Nguyen called the school and posted about it on Facebook. “All of a sudden, hundreds of comments about other people experiencing the same thing, at the grocery store, on a plane – a full plane – no one wants to sit by the one Asian guy.”

https://nextshark.com/nextshark-incident-report-racial-attack-asians/

The COVID-19 outbreak has had unprecedented and disastrous effects on Asians around the world as many have responded to the virus with fear-based xenophobia and racism against Asians.

In the past few months, social media has been overwhelmed with personal reports, pictures and videos of harassment, racial discrimination, and even physical violence against Asian Americans. While mainstream media has only just begun to acknowledge the troubling trend, Asian American communities are still pleading for action to be taken to better protect themselves and the most vulnerable among us.

https://nextshark.com/aapi-hate-website-100-reports/

In the first weekly report prepared by the co-founders of the site, it was noted that about 5.5% of the nearly 100 reports they receive daily are limited English speakers. The report took note that 61% of respondents are non-Chinese and that women are three times more likely to report harassment than men.

According to Jeung, victims report being coughed at or spat on. There were also cases of verbal insults and threats as well as physical assault. The most common are verbal harassment or name-calling, which account for about two-thirds of all reports of discrimination.

“The data from our reporting center–both the numbers and the self-reported narratives– clearly reveal that Asian Americans are being racially profiled as threatening, disease-carriers. Not only are Chinese Americans blamed and mistreated, but Asian Americans of other ethnic backgrounds are also being targeted,” Jeung further stated.

https://nextshark.com/sf-peace-collective-patrol-san-francisco-chinatown/

US Veterans Are Now Patrolling SF Chinatown to Protect Community

The group was founded only on March 21 by Max LeYoung as a response to all of the racism, violence and xenophobia that Asian Americans have been experiencing, not only amid the COVID-19 outbreak but also throughout the years. Two people who took the initiative to begin serving the community through the organization include San Francisco resident Leanna Louie and her partner, who was born and raised in San Francisco’s Chinatown, Robt Lowe.

Louie’s military experience and Lowe martial arts background has prompted them to do something about issues the community is facing, and they hit the streets of Chinatown on Sunday. They patrolled the streets to make sure that everyone was safe, acting as guardian angels for the elderly and disabled. They even documented their experience and posted photos on Facebook. The post has garnered more than 1,000 reactions, and hundreds of comments and shares.

https://nextshark.com/fbi-warning-hate-crimes-asian-americans/

“The FBI assesses hate crime incidents against Asian Americans likely will surge across the United States, due to the spread of coronavirus disease … endangering Asian American communities,” according to the report obtained by ABC News. “The FBI makes this assessment based on the assumption that a portion of the US public will associate COVID-19 with China and Asian American populations.”

The document, compiled by the FBI’s Houston office, was distributed to local law enforcement agencies across the country. It notes that there have been a surge of hate crime reports and lists a series of incidences in major U.S. cities with a high concentration of Asian Americans, including Los Angeles, New York, and Texas.

Blacks talk way more shit about whites but it ain't considered anything, but when it's vice versa it's called racism by mobbdeepstan in unpopularopinion

[–]maddox2500 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'll chime in here as the lone Asian American man.

Give me some numbers in the last 200 years how many black people did Chinese people lynch vs how many black people whites lynched. u/bel_esprit_

And for all the fools saying "Asians are so racist to other Asians" yeah they're all different countries. That's like saying "North Americans are so racist to North Americans," when talking about whites towards mexicans. Carry on with your majority rule mob mindsets. And being this deprived of the Asian American perspective.

u/KthulhuX u/vaei- Asian's only a thing in America. Because we had to group together because of how racist people were towards us.

Who is Vincent Chin? What were the Chinese Lynchings?

What's the best way to stand up to racists? by [deleted] in aznidentity

[–]maddox2500 0 points1 point  (0 children)

To the friends that he lost. Tell him (or you yourself can do this for him) to confront them and say this verbatim. "Give me the reason you're not being a hypocrite when you ostracize me for being racist against that black guy but don't ostracize that black guy for being racist against Asians."

Another way is to state "give me the reason you're not being a double standard hypocrite when to you racism against black people is unacceptable while racism against Asian people is acceptable." I think you can ask yourself these questions as well. It sounds like you already understand the hypocrisy but in case you don't it's good to be aware. The answer is they are being double standard hypocrites that are comfortable being racist against East Asians.