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18 MILLION RISING

Activating Asian America.

Just thought I'd drop by and say how much I appreciate y'all and your work.

Aww, thanks! We’re glad you like it!

Pharrell's ELLE cover shoot makes us anything but happy.
Pharrell's ELLE cover shoot makes us anything but happy.

Touch Hak (right, with his sister) could save his brother’s life by donating his kidney. But he’s in ICE detention in Tacoma, at risk of deportation, for a crime he already served time for. Is this justice? - CM
Touch Hak (right, with his sister) could save his brother’s life by donating his kidney. But he’s in ICE detention in Tacoma, at risk of deportation, for a crime he already served time for. Is this justice? - CM

18mr:
“ A lot of folks are posting about the Tiananmen Square massacre today, of course. I thought we should share it too, but I wanted to write a little bit about what was explained to me about what happened in the spring of 1989 that the western...
18mr:

A lot of folks are posting about the Tiananmen Square massacre today, of course. I thought we should share it too, but I wanted to write a little bit about what was explained to me about what happened in the spring of 1989 that the western media often overlooks.

I am a 1.5 generation Chinese American leftist. I was two when the massacre happened. My sister had just been born. My father, who immigrated from China to Hong Kong when he was a toddler to escape the Cultural Revolution, and then Hong Kong to the United States to go to college, tells me he was seeking work in China around this time.

Several summers ago, when we were traveling together in China, he told me about what he understood about Tiananmen Square from his perspective as a young, newly naturalized American citizen who still had deep ties to the motherland. He told me the sense of unrest was not just about state control of the media and politics, but a sense that the state was also imposing capitalist reforms on the Chinese economy without input from the people, and with clear preferential treatment for party cadres and others who had an “in” with the powers that be. Students were upset and anxious about what looked like unilateral decisions about the future that weren’t just about opening markets, they were about neoliberalising the country.

When I think about what’s happening in Istanbul, Turkey, I can’t help but think about this. When we remember Tiananmen Square, I hope we remember that this wasn’t necessarily about the struggle of democracy versus Communism, but that it was about people who wanted to take part in determining the future of their country, and who rejected nepotistic neoliberal reforms. Just like with the media narrative around Gezi, American audiences risk being turned around. A million people don’t turn out and go on hunger strikes against their own self-interest. There’s more to this story than meets the eye.

Remember Tiananmen, but remember it for what it was: young Chinese students and workers resisting their country “modernizing” in the age of Reagan, the godfather of neoliberalism. This is the same ideology that young Turkish students and workers are resisting in Istanbul. It’s the same ideology that has decimated the U.S. economy and that we resist when we say “another world is possible.”

When we ask why the Chinese government still hasn’t admitted that Tiananmen even happened, we should remember that China today is just as cutthroat and capitalistic in some ways as the United States is. They have delivered on neoliberalism, but in the style of an autocratic state, where nepotism and party connections had more to do with business success than anything. Students and workers in China in 1989 were emphatically saying no to this system.

So reblogging because this, because still relevant. Thank for sharing this reflection because the…capitalism-washing (?) of Tiananmen Square still grinds my gears.

becauseofyuri:

A little bit over a decade ago, I was in a church in Harlem at an event honoring her. As soon as she stepped in the room all you heard for 10 minutes straight was her name shaking the foundation of the church, “Yuri! Yuri! Yuri!” As if she was running for office or something. But she wasn’t running for office, she was just being herself. Just one of the many elders that fought for justice but have been written out of the mainstream narratives of what is generically referred to as “the Civil Rights Movement.” One of the few that was still standing tall as her contemporaries were assassinated, imprisoned, absorbed by the poverty pimp complex or eviscerated by the war on drugs. I can say that I exist because of her, because of people like her. I do what I do because of her and people like her. When I was confused about what justice meant or how to fight for it, it was the story of Yuri Kochiyama as told to me by my mentor at the time, Maggie Chen Hernandez, that gave me more clarity. But now she is gone. This year so many like her have left us, so many that fought and taught folks like me how to fight. I always call them “humble lights” because when you meet them and talk to them, they never played themselves or carried themselves like they were much. But Yuri, people like you meant so much to folks like me, who were trying to be soldiers, who were trying to fight for justice, trying to build a better world, even though I never met you personally. Now, so many people that I grew up studying about, analyzing their life, learning their lessons, etc. are gone. And I simultaneously feel lost and found. I have said too much already and said this too many times this year. But Yuri Kochiyama, may the Spirit of Love, Truth and Justice bless you and keep you. May you rest until risen and may all those that you have inspired by your strength and presence do right by your memory.

Subhash Kateel is a writer, communicator, and the host of the radio show Let’s Talk About It!

“Drew has helped me truly accept that I am loveworthy, deserving of being loved for all of who I am. He has shown me that I have been and always will be more than enough for someone.”
Andy Marra writes today in the Huffington Post about finding love...
Drew has helped me truly accept that I am loveworthy, deserving of being loved for all of who I am. He has shown me that I have been and always will be more than enough for someone.

Andy Marra writes today in the Huffington Post about finding love and affirmation as a transgender woman. Also, follow her & Drew at iamloveworthy!

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