RACISM: TRUMP’S THE CHINESE VIRUS SYNDROME:

NBA: Jeremy Lin slams Donald Trump’s ‘racism’ in calling coronavirus ‘Chinese virus’

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He says ethnicity does not cause the virus.
Trump defends calling COVID-19 the ‘Chinese virus’
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Yahoo News Video

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As Asian Americans are being stigmatized during the coronavirus pandemic, President Donald Trump has begun referring to the outbreak as the “Chinese Virus” when speaking about it publicly.

Former NBA player Jeremy Lin, one of the most prominent Chinese Americans to ever play in the league, criticized Trump in response. Lin tweeted his thoughts on Tuesday blasting Trump for “empowering” racism and mismanaging the crisis that continues to amplify in the United States.

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Lin responded directly to a tweet from Trump that refereed to COVID-19 as the “Chinese Virus.”

Lin shot down detractors who argued about German measles and Spanish flu, noting that Asian Americans are under attack in the United States during the pandemic.

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‘Subtle anti-Chinese message’

“And I don’t wanna hear about no German measles/Spanish flu bc everyday Asian-Americans inc ppl I know are threatened and physically attacked,” Lin wrote. “I don’t give a crap about the history of names rn [right now]. What I do know is this subtle anti-Chinese message only empowers more hate towards Asians.”

Jeremy Lin accused Donald Trump of "empowering" racism and amplifying the stigmatization of Asian-Americans during the coronavirus pandemic. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II)
Jeremy Lin accused Donald Trump of “empowering” racism and amplifying the stigmatization of Asian-Americans during the coronavirus pandemic. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II)

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Attacks, confrontations against Asian Americans

Police in New York have made two hate-crime arrests for attacks on Asian Americans, while there are nationwide reports of harassment directed at the community and Asian American businesses suffering.

From CBS News:

New York City’s Asian communities have seen a rise in attacks, including on the subways. Videos posted to social media appear to show people violently confronting Asian-Americans. One appears to show a man yelling “tell him to move,” referring to an Asian man standing in front of the train car’s doors.

Trump has defended his use of the term “Chinese virus” as a response to a Chinese diplomat floating a conspiracy theory that the U.S. military brought the virus to the Wuhan province of China.

“China was putting out information which was false that our military gave this to them. That was false,” Trump said Tuesday. “Rather than having an argument, I said, ‘I have to call it where it came from, it did come from China.’ ”

Wednesday, Trump again defended using the phrase “Chinese Virus” during a news conference addressing COVID-19.

“It’s not racist at all,” Trump told reporters. “Not at all. It comes from China, that’s why. It comes from China. I want to be accurate.”

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[ Coronavirus: How the sports world is responding to the pandemic ]

Lin called for a united front from the community to stand up for itself while advocating social distancing protocols during the pandemic.

“I’m not good with the old school Asian model minority stigma where we won’t speak up or stand up for ourselves,” Lin wrote. “In times like now, we truly truly need to stay united. Let’s fight this virus TOGETHER!! Wash your hands, practice social distancing, take this seriously, stay safe.”

Lin, a point guard, played in the NBA from 2010-19. He won an NBA championship playing as a reserve with the Toronto Raptors last season.

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TRIVIA

A caricature of a Chinese worker wearing a queue an 1899 editorial cartoon titled “The Yellow Terror In All His Glory”

 Anti-Chinese sentiment has existed since the mid 19th century shortly after Chinese emigrants arrived on the shores of the United States.[1] It surfaced in the 1860s, when the Chinese helped build the First Transcontinental Railroad. It was made manifest in the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, shutting down not only further immigration but also naturalization. Its origins can be traced to the American merchants, missionaries, and diplomats who sent home from China “relentlessly negative” reports of the people they encountered there.[2] These attitudes were transmitted to Americans who never left North America, triggering talk of the Yellow Peril, and continued through the Cold War during McCarthyism. Some modern anti-Chinese sentiment may be the result of China’s rise as a major world power seen to be at the expense of countries outside of China. Anti-Chinese sentiment or sinophobia is a broad opposition or hostility to the policies, culture, the politics of the People’s Republic of China and, at times, towards specific groups of Chinese people.

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 A defiant Columbia in an 1871 Thomas Nast cartoon, shown protecting a defenseless Chinese man from an angry Irish lynch mob that has just burned down an orphanage. The billboard behind is full of inflammatory anti-Chinese broadsheets

The President was challenged on his choice of words by media representatives, who pointed out many Asians have been attacked over the health crisis, but Trump insisted his phrase was correct as the virus began in China.

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All photographs, news, editorials, opinions, information, data, others have been taken from the Internet.. Teddy ‘Bear’ Look-SiN

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