Culture 42% In The U.S. Can't Name A Single Prominent Asian American, A Survey Finds

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A recent survey found that nearly 80% of Asian Americans don't feel respected and say they are discriminated against by their fellow Americans. Additionally, a significant portion of respondents of multiple races said they were unaware of an increase in hate crimes and racism against Asian Americans over the past year.

The survey, commissioned by the new nonprofit Leading Asian Americans to Unite for Change (LAAUNCH), was based on responses from 2,766 U.S. residents between March 29 and April 14.

Other results found 90% of Black Americans and 73% of Hispanic/Latino Americans say they are discriminated against in the U.S.

The survey found 55% of respondents that identify as Republican said Asian Americans are either treated fairly or better than others. Conversely, 77% of those who identified as Democrats believe Asian Americans are discriminated against.

Hate crimes against Asian Americans, ranging from verbal abuse to violent attacks, increased in several cities in 2020 from 2019. And six Asian American women were killed on March 16 in spa shootings in Atlanta.

According to the survey, 37% of white Americans, 30% of Black Americans, 24% of Hispanic Americans and 13% of Asian Americans said they are unaware of an uptick in hate crimes against Asian Americans.


"We thought maybe some people were unaware, but after the Atlanta attacks, everyone should be aware," LAAUNCH CEO Norman Chen tells NPR.

Chen says he was caught off guard by one answer: 42% of respondents couldn't name a prominent Asian American.

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When asked if they could name a prominent Asian American in the United States, 42% of respondents couldn't name one. Other top answers were Jackie Chan and Bruce Lee.
LAAUNCH

The survey also asked about how people perceive Asian Americans in television and movies.

"Most Asian Americans are still in stereotypical roles — waiters, sex workers, kung fu guys — the roles are always one dimensional and stereotypical," Chen says. "Our data just really reinforced the opportunity for us to create well-rounded, prominent characters in movies and TV."

Chen says this is the first survey of American sentiments regarding Asian Americans in 20 years. The organization plans to conduct the survey every year to track progress of attitudes toward Asian Americans.

"The trajectory of Asian American sentiment is going in a direction that we don't want to see," Chen says. "We want to shape that trajectory in a more favorable direction. We can have more role models of Asian Americans for people to see and emulate."
 
And we all know if you can't immediately name a random Asian-American that means you're super raciss!

Fuck off, you aren't going to make Asians the new blacks. You're gonna try but you'll never steal the gibs crown.
 
And we all know if you can't immediately name a random Asian-American that means you're super raciss!

Fuck off, you aren't going to make Asians the new blacks. You're gonna try but you'll never steal the gibs crown.
I mean you could, but you would have to work at it for 50 years, starting by destroying the Asian Family Structure.
 
I mean you could, but you wild have to work at it for 50 years, starting by destroying the Asian Family Structure.
It will also require a complete and utter reshuffling of their cultural views on success and familial obligation. It will take more than 50 years of slagging to break down something that has existed in most asian societies since the start of recorded history.
 
It will also require a complete and utter reshuffling of their cultural views on success and familial obligation. It will take more than 50 years of slagging to break down something that has existed in most asian societies since the start of recorded history.
Somewhere the Democrats are saying "Challenge Accepted"
 
If 42% of the population can't name one, does that mean that they're "prominent?"
Exactly. 42% is a massive percentage, and if they're all killing themselves then maybe we should finally realize that it's a mental illness and not be subjecting these poor, mentally-ill people to debilitating, life-wrecking surgeries.

...Wait, what thread is this? Did I win?
 
How hard is it to just say "Jackie Chan"?
They complained about them doing that as well.
When asked if they could name a prominent Asian American in the United States, 42% of respondents couldn't name one. Other top answers were Jackie Chan and Bruce Lee.
You have to answer with the right kind of prominent Asian American, otherwise you're still racist.
 
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