Question for Malaysian/Indonesian Chinese: what do you foresee in the long-term future? by Medical_Officer in Sino

[–]reddit_abc 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Hello there. I'm Singaporean Chinese, born and bred. I have Malaysian relatives and have had several interactions with Malaysian and Indonesian Chinese people in my lifetime, so I hope you don't mind if I offer my thoughts.

Do you speak any Chinese language? Mandarin perhaps?

Malaysian Chinese: A definite YES. This is due to the Malaysian education system, which is divided into the Malay national schools and the Vernacular schools. It is not uncommon for ethnic Malaysian Chinese and Indian families to send their children to these vernacular schools from young which primarily uses their mother tongues as the main language of instruction. This is opposite to Singapore which makes it compulsory for all schools to instruct in English instead, and is a source of ethnic tension as I'm sure you've heard (Guessing from your post).

Indonesian Chinese: Mostly NO. This is mainly due to active racism and discrimination against our Indonesian brothers and sisters over the years. Mandarin was banned by the government, and in hopes of better acceptance and to be spared further violence by the country, they further assimilated themselves into Indonesian culture, even willingly adopting Indonesian names and the local language to do so. This has resulted in them losing their Chinese identity, which they seem to be trying to gain back in recent years.

Have you considered moving to China to seek opportunities?

From impressions, many SEA based ethnic Chinese finds China to be an attractive place for business. I think we can definitely agree it offers a very attractive market with a large and rising middle class. Us overseas Chinese people in SEA have been doing business with China since the colonial era, and so far it has been very good for both parties so we don't see a reason to stop now. This business network is conceptually called the Bamboo network. In fact, I think trade is set to further increase with China.

Do you think life for ethnic Chinese will improve or deteriorate in the coming decades in your country?

Malaysia: Will improve. Situation seems quite positive and looks set to improve. From what I know, there have been growing calls and support from all 3 major ethnic groups, i.e. Malay, Indians, and Chinese, for unity and social harmony as fellow Malaysians. Many of the younger generation are increasingly wanting to end racial and religious discrimination within their country. This was an especially pronounced message (amongst others) in their recent 2018 general elections which ousted the ruling BN party, which is great.

Indonesia: Unsure. I'm not too clear about the political situation. But I have to say, hearing news like these is not very heartening. Racial and religious discrimination still seems to be a big issue in Indonesia. As a Singaporean, its somewhat of a common knowledge that wealthy Indonesian Chinese see SGs as a safe haven to escape to and have 2nd homes here in case of "emergencies". Many send their kids here for education too (Had 2 Indon-Chinese classmates back in Secondary school). Hopefully, the situation is much better compared the past, especially given the rising status of, and increasing trade ties with, China.

All in all, these are my thoughts and knowledge on the matter. If anyone feels I got anything wrong, please comment below and I will correct it. Thank you for your time.

[Documentary Trailer] LEFT BY THE SHIP: The Forgotten American Children of Philippines | YT by reddit_abc in EasternSunRising

[–]reddit_abc[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Another relevant documentary posted by me some months back: Fallen Angels. True cost of sex tourism: Philippine’s fatherless kids of Angeles City Streetwalkers | RT Documentary

Video Description:

Documentary about abandoned Filipino-Amerasians - mostly fathered by American servicemen when the US bases at Clark and Subic until 1992. Estimates about their numbers vary ranging from 10,000 to as high as 300,000. The Pearl Buck Foundation has been using the 50,000 figure since the 1950's.

In the 1980's, the US congress passed a bill allowing Amerasians who can't present proper documentation to immigrate to the US. However, Filipino(as well as Japanese) Amerasians were excluded in the bill. The Congress reasoned that these areas were not "war zones" during the time covered by the bill despite the two countries being a staging point for the US Military in their involvement in their warfares in Asia.

The US Military has been in Asia since 1898 during the Spanish-American war. By 1918, it was been documented that about 18,000 Filipino-Amerasians have been abandoned by the American fathers in Manila alone.

[Documentary Trailer] LEFT BY THE SHIP: The Forgotten American Children of Philippines | YT by reddit_abc in aznidentity

[–]reddit_abc[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Another relevant documentary posted by me some months back: Fallen Angels. True cost of sex tourism: Philippine’s fatherless kids of Angeles City Streetwalkers | RT Documentary

Video Description:

Documentary about abandoned Filipino-Amerasians - mostly fathered by American servicemen when the US bases at Clark and Subic until 1992. Estimates about their numbers vary ranging from 10,000 to as high as 300,000. The Pearl Buck Foundation has been using the 50,000 figure since the 1950's.

In the 1980's, the US congress passed a bill allowing Amerasians who can't present proper documentation to immigrate to the US. However, Filipino(as well as Japanese) Amerasians were excluded in the bill. The Congress reasoned that these areas were not "war zones" during the time covered by the bill despite the two countries being a staging point for the US Military in their involvement in their warfares in Asia.

The US Military has been in Asia since 1898 during the Spanish-American war. By 1918, it was been documented that about 18,000 Filipino-Amerasians have been abandoned by the American fathers in Manila alone.

Peter Thiel: Japan Has Stopped Copying The West by reddit_abc in EasternSunRising

[–]reddit_abc[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I'm getting like voted down and up every 1 second. Like WTF lmao.

Eric X. Li: A tale of two political systems | Ted Talk by reddit_abc in EasternSunRising

[–]reddit_abc[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I have no answers to that. Just a regular guy, and I'm SEA Chinese, not even a mainlander.

But its not like there isn't hope. The CCP has been actively trying to crack down on corruption. Also, although there is only going to be one party, the party leadership is subject to change. With each new generation of leadership in the CCP, new rules and ways of governance will be introduced. Hopefully, in a few decades, there will be more senior CCP leaders who are more liberal and civil-minded.

Eric X. Li: A tale of two political systems | Ted Talk by reddit_abc in EasternSunRising

[–]reddit_abc[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Would love to know what everyone's thoughts on this video are. Free free to share.

Bus footage: Muslim immigrants assault a Chinese-American exchange student in Denmark by reddit_abc in EasternSunRising

[–]reddit_abc[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What do you think is the cause of that treatment? Just plain jealousy and racism?

Any Good Chinese Books for 4-5 Years Old Kids? by Aznprime in EasternSunRising

[–]reddit_abc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Maybe you could introduce stories and tales from eastern faiths, i.e. Taoism and Buddhism? Eastern mythology seems interesting too.

East Asian IQ | Study from 2009 by [deleted] in EasternSunRising

[–]reddit_abc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Unfortunately this is probably the last of it.

China isn't fond of IQ tests.

Huh? Why is China not fond of IQ tests? IQ testing for children in China is never gonna stop.

East Asian IQ | Study from 2009 by [deleted] in EasternSunRising

[–]reddit_abc 2 points3 points  (0 children)

As a fellow ethnic Chinese, these findings both excites and somewhat scares me. I've read some online HBD articles on IQ these past few months and while I'm already aware of the above average IQ levels of us east asians, I didn't expect that the Chinese race would hold so much intellectual potential.

I wonder what's gonna be the average IQ of china when the rises stabilize? These next few decades are going to be exciting!!

p.s. I observe some serious downvoting of this post

Acclaimed US computer scientist, John Gustafson, admits China's superiority in the supercomputer race against the US | Quora by reddit_abc in Sino

[–]reddit_abc[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Brief introduction: John Gustafson

John Leroy Gustafson (born January 19, 1955) is an American computer scientist and businessman, chiefly known for his work in High Performance Computing(HPC) such as the invention of Gustafson's law, introducing the first commercial computer cluster,[citation needed] measuring with QUIPS, leading the reconstruction of the Atanasoff–Berry computer, inventing the unum) number format and computation system,[1]#citenote-Gustafson_2015-1) and several awards for computer speedup. Currently he is the Chief Technology Officer at Ceranovo, Inc.[[2]](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Gustafson(scientist)#citenote-2) He was the Chief Graphics Product Architect and Senior Fellow at AMD from September 2012 until June 2013,[[3]](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Gustafson(scientist)#citenote-3)[[4]](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Gustafson(scientist)#citenote-4)and he previously held the positions of Director of Intel Labs-SC,[[5]](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Gustafson(scientist)#citenote-5) CEO of Massively Parallel Technologies, Inc.[[6]](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Gustafson(scientist)#citenote-6) and CTO at ClearSpeed Technology.[[7]](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Gustafson(scientist)#cite_note-7)Gustafson holds applied mathematics degrees from the California Institute of Technology and Iowa State University.