all autocompletes were screenshots of actual searches on 12/3/2013

photo credit: Mike Allen

This Photoshoot

The idea was inspired by the UN Women campaign by Memac Ogilvy & Mather Dubai

Racism from Absence

In my 19 years in America, I’ve never been stopped and frisked. Cops are always nice to me. People have no problems sitting next to me on the bus. No one’s scared of me no matter what direction I pointed my cap. 

The kind of Asian racism that makes headlines is cultural misappropriation -when some “insensitive” entertainer wears silk kimonos and painted faces to look exotic.

This never bothered me.

It’s the subtle, slippery racism that’s far more sinister. The absence of Asian leads in a non-martial arts movie or TV shows means I grew up knowing only non-Asian celebrities and role models. And if you’re an Asian guy, you are not the stuff of fantasies girls grew up dreaming about.

The absence of Asians from politics and upper management means that Asians can be hard workers and geniuses but never leaders.

Above all, there seems to be some perma-foreignness about Asians. It’s not unusual to be told to “go back to China” and to be mocked for an accent we don’t have. The manifestations of this viewpoint range from the seemingly harmless to the outright hostile. But the underlying message is the same. Asians are not real Americans.

Inspirational Racism

I vividly remember seeing this racism first-hand in a conversation with one of my former business partners. I wanted to create a mentoring program in a predominantly Asian school organization.

He flat out told me he had no interest in helping Asians succeed in America. I asked him, “Are you serious?” He said, “Yeah.” He laughed a little.

He was serious.

It was a wtf moment for many reasons and was a major factor behind my decision to leave my position as a co-founder. I eventually heard from a mutual friend that he said I was a follower not a leader.

In retrospect, I’m fortunate to have heard him verbalize something that others keep to themselves. It allowed me to move on to bigger and better things instead of wasting time working with someone who never saw me as a partner. 

Confessions of an ABC Banana Twinky

I’ve been uncomfortable being Asian since the 2nd grade. Back then I was the foreign kid who didn’t speak any English who became the butt of every joke.

This bullying motivated me to learn English fast. By 3rd grade, I was nearly fluent and huge chunk of my vocabulary were insults and comebacks.

In 4th grade I started seeing my race as a handicap. I thought the only way to be accepted is to break every Asian stereotype. As a result, I avoided the other Asian kids. I stopped caring about my grades. Then there was the denial. For a period of my life I was Chinese Clayton Bigsby. I actually felt like I was white. 

In the 6th grade one of my friends picked a fight with me for no reason and told me to go back to China. In retrospect, I shouldn’t have taken it so hard. But I did. I couldn’t look past the fact he was just some 12-year old taking medication for hyperactive aggression. At the time I felt the full weight of my racial identity and caused me to stray further away.

—-

When I moved to a better school district in the 8th grade, a lot of the overt forms of bullying disappeared. Despite this, I still scoffed at Asian cliques and was embarrassed to speak Chinese in public or do anything which reminded people of who I really was. 

The only time I referenced my race was through self-deprecating humor. 

—-

In college, I became “ok” with being Asian. I didn’t feel embarrassed to speak Chinese in public anymore. I also started to see some value in Asian culture and re-developed interest in the history.

I was also in a serious relationship with someone who accepted me fully. I also joined a business fraternity that was predominantly Asian.

I took a lot of steps in the right direction, but I still felt divided. It wasn’t until  my second time meditating with a Shaman that I finally confronted the self-loathing I built up through the years. 

—-

I learned that by acting opposite to my stereotypes, I’m still letting ignorance control my life. Instead, the only thing that matters is figuring out who I want to be, and seeing if my actions are consistent with that version of myself.

The challenge is being honest with myself and admitting when my actions come from a place of insecurity and defensiveness. Committing to change that behavior is one of the purest expression of “self” stripped of delusion and denial.

—-

Note: I’m just a guy with a Finance background who rescues cats and makes videos. I’ve never had diversity and sensitivity training. I just know my own experience and how it shaped the way I think today.

But, I do hope some parts of this resonates. 

If you have any comments, agreements, or disagreements please drop me a line via the confirm/deny link on the upper left corner. I’m also reachable by email here. Or tweet @stevesdrop. 

unsensuality-blog asked:

I really appreciate your post about the racism towards Asians. It is rarely seen as racism in this society because people focus mainly on African Americans and Latinos as the minorities. I know African Americans probably go through more harsher stereotypes than Asians, but that doesn't mean it's not negative. There have been countless times people have looked down upon me and said "oh it's because you're asian". What makes me so angry is that I work as hard as any other person for my grade

Any kind of racial profiling is wrong. Reinforcing racial stereotypes takes a little bit away from people’s individuality. I think the best way to combat this is reaching out to people and making strong connections.

Profiling is the substitute for lack of understanding. If people really knew you, they would know you’re more than the sum of your stereotypes.

watugnadoulilfgt-deactivated201 asked:

as an asian myself, i must say i really your post made me think a little, as i suffer from racism. it is true, we can be a part, but never be on the top. it inspired me to try make a change. however i can't, because i doubt i will have any followers. but i support you.

Never is a strong word friend. I also don’t think the idea of “being on top” is the right one. I think it’s really about moving together towards a post-gender, post-race, post-discrimination world. 

When I first posted, one of the first people to reach out to me was my Israeli friend Tal. I think what we’re struggling with resonates with people in ways that might be surprising. If you radiate positive energy and orient your life towards making a difference, you’ll attract the kind of people who will support you. 

x-post from Scratching Pad

chuqlumba asked:

Hey, I just wanted to tell you that I really liked that post you wrote about racism by abstinence. I’m middle eastern and I relate very, very much to your experiences! Grew up in North America, had all those phases growing up, finally kind of finding my identity as a Canadian AND an Iraqi… I think my general goal is to fill the gap of successful leaders with my background that are represented in society, ya know? :p or just to defy the negative stereotypes. I’m glad I can relate to someone :)

toast-mookie-deactivated2014081 asked:

I'm bi-racial, black and white. I'm starting to shut down by people when I tell them this. They're like 'You're not REALLY black since you're only 1/4.' or 'You don't look black so it doesn't matter' Like why! Why shouldn't it matter? I'd be ignoring my grandfather a man who I've never met so my "blackness" is all I have to honor him by, and how can I not "really" be black when my grandfather is black! I'm not sure if this is racism since I never understood racism to start with, TBH.

Racism is a combination of so many things. It’s a vestige of our tribal roots. It’s also just a category in the human tendency to reduce reality to a consumable form. 

We reduce other people down to stereotypes so we can make fast decisions, to befriend or dismiss, approach or avoid. It happens inevitably. The only way to counter this is by seeking these common experiences so that we can understand each other’s complexities the same way we understand our own. 

mrcookieman2 asked:

I just read the post about the autocompletes of Asian racism headlines, and I reblogged it with a reply that's too long for this confirm or deny thing. I just wanted to say thank you for putting that together, it's perfect and really helped me realize how severe some of the things were that I heard when I was growing up.

I don’t know about perfect. Because of me, some guy had a bathroom covered in baby powder.

yozora-wo-kakeru asked:

Hi! I'm a 17yo Japanese person living in America and I wanted to thank you for making this post: /post/71131501802/all-autocompletes-were-screenshots-of-actual << I was surprised at myself when tears started trickling down from my eyes, but all of those things are true--save for differences on WHEN some of the things mentioned in the last section happened to me, I went through all of the same events, just switch "Chinese" to "Japanese" and that is basically my life until now. (cont)

(the rest of the message)

(2) I’m not afraid to express my opinions and call people out on their shit now, but I’m still afraid of speaking Japanese in public because I don’t want to be made fun of. I was really rude and mean during my younger grade school years because I didn’t know any other way to defend myself. I even used to look down on the other few Asians of my town because they were “acting so Asian.” A lot of that subsided as I (and the people around me) grew up, but the remnants of events past are still there.

(3) I couldn’t fit this last part in haha anyway, thank you again for that post. It’s really amazing how non-Asians (I can’t just say “white people” because my school is 60% black) manage to scar me so deeply, but I hope that as I grow up, I can overcome some of my fears and not let the past get the best of me.

Subway Kittens

image

What happened

On August 30th, I received an email from Sonja of the AC&C with the subject “Take home the kittens who stopped the entire subway line!”

I responded to the email and got Arthur and August two days later, along with two additional kittens for Animal Planet’s Kitty Halftime Show, Alice and Ralph. 

On September 4th, I contacted New York Daily News to see if they wanted to do a followup story on the kittens. One day later, the media floodgate opened and I got to take the kittens on the Colbert Report.

“The Kitten in the Iron Mask”

Every photo of the subway kittens and their TV appearance was only 50% correct. Basically, Arthur and Ralph were almost identical twins. You can figure out the rest. The truth was only revealed when Ralph unfortunately passed away from an acute bout of pneumonia. 

To this day I’m not 100% sure whether it was Ralph or Arthur who actually passed. The only ID is a code on their collar that’s synced up to the AC&C database. 

Conspiracy theorists rejoice.

Blog

http://www.scratchingpad.org/post/60253752379/meet-arthur-and-august-these-cats-made-local-news

Colbert Report

http://on.cc.com/18HsKij

New York Daily News

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/brooklyn/subway-kittens-find-home-brooklyn-article-1.1446404

Gothamist

http://gothamist.com/2013/09/05/subway_kittens_living_it_up_in_broo.php

Village Voice

http://blogs.villagevoice.com/runninscared/2013/09/subway_kittens.php

People Pets

http://www.peoplepets.com/people/pets/article/0,,20731700,00.html

WNYC

http://www.wnyc.org/story/316509-subway-kittens/

Perez Hilton

http://perezhilton.com/teddyhilton/2013-09-06-subway-train-delay-kittens-find-a-foster-home

CBS Local

http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2013/09/05/subway-kittens-find-new-home-in-brooklyn/

Pawnation

http://www.pawnation.com/2013/09/06/new-york-city-subway-kittens-find-a-foster-home/3

Hurricane Sandy

What happened

On October 28th, 2012 I woke up to a lot of commotion. I was living with about a dozen people at the time and every one was running around the apartment packing and talking about a hurricane and how we had to evacuate. 

There was government run website where you typed in your address and it tells you whether or not you have to evacuate. We happened to be in Zone A (mandatory evacuation). This made sense, because we were literally a few blocks away from the water in all directions. 

At first I planned to hide out in my parents’ place in NJ and offered to take any and all refugees. Then I talked to my Canadian friend Tim, who decided he was going to stay and watch the storm of the decade. Soon after, we were running to Duane Reade to buy cases of beer and an inadequate amount of dry food. 

The rest is detailed below.

Blog

http://zoneasurvivor.tumblr.com

SourceFed

http://sourcefed.com/two-guys-make-their-own-fun-in-hurricane-sandy/

Forever Alone Involuntary Flash Mob

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What happened

My friend Walter showed me a jpg flyer about a Forever Alone Involuntary Flashmob, where people would lure unsuspecting suitors to a place in Time Square in front of a public camera so everyone can laugh at them.

I thought this was hilarious. (Sorry internet.)

On the day of the “involuntary flash mob” I thought about camping out by the camera and watching the results of the prank. Then I got a better idea.

I called up Walter and got him to bring his video camera. Then I called up some female friends until I found two who could meet us. 

The plan was to troll everyone by showing up pretending to be duped, but then having our dates actually meet us - in front of presumably the entire population of 4chan and Reddit. 

What really happened

More than 50% of the people standing in that 10 x 10 feet block of sidewalk worked for an online newspaper.

For this reason alone, the prank was a fail.

I still remember the writer from the Daily Dot scurrying to every single person who walked by to ask “HOW DOES IT FEEL TO GET PRANKED?”

Unsurprisingly, almost no one showed up except the confederates. And if anyone was actually duped, they didn’t stand around long enough for a crowd to build.

“Forever Alone Rose Guy”

Then the most amusing misunderstanding happened, because I happened to be friends with Adrianne from Betabeat. More importantly, she DIDN’T know Walter or that I was friends with him. 

Since the prank was failing miserably, Walter and I decided to salvage by getting the girls to come and pick him up while I record it on video - so at least we have some usable footage.

While I was waiting, Adrianne started interviewing me about the prank. And I told her, “this is the end of forever alone.”

This is how she interpreted the situation:

But the internet isn’t all cruel. Steven Liu of Lean Startup Machine had brought roses for the forever loners and recruited three girls to replace their misfired dates. “It seems like everyone here is in on the joke,” he said, as he filmed the scene with a Flip cam.

Around 8 p.m. a cute redhead in braids approached a confused, brown haired 20-something who was BlackBerrying in the cave of one of the payphones. She spoke to him, he smiled, and they walked off awkwardly hand-in-hand. “This is the end of ‘forever alone,’” Mr. Liu whispered

BetaBeat

http://betabeat.com/2011/05/sociopaths-meet/

Reddit

http://www.reddit.com/r/pics/comments/hbwss/well_they_fucking_did_it_4chan_involuntary/

The Village Voice

http://blogs.villagevoice.com/runninscared/2011/05/4chan_forever_a.php

Vice

http://www.vice.com/en_uk/read/forever-alone-involuntary-flashmob