I'm Chinese, and a lot of us are conditioned to put our head down and work hard and respect authority. So as a whole, we don't have an internal drive to drive change. Change requires community.
@SmallTownResident11 ай бұрын
Mainly because the Chinese community is quite diverse. For instance, what does a Cantonese speaking family from HK have anything to do with a Northern family from Beijing or a Taiwanese family? They are all technically "Han" but what does that even mean?
@BLSkyfire11 ай бұрын
It means they all celebrate Chinese holidays like the Spring Festival, Qingming, Mid-Autumn Festival, etc.
@tomsuh136211 ай бұрын
More like Hong Kong canton Chinese hated mainland Chinese and vice versa. You have many Chinese speaking different dialect from different village and different parts of China. Social economical class of Chinese like the well educated look down on the less educated Chinese villagers from rural parts of China.
@letsgowalk11 ай бұрын
Furthermore, it seems like Mainland Cantonese in the States (Toi San, Hoi Ping, Sun Dak, etc.) have much more solidarity with HK people than other non-Cantonese Mainlanders due to the common language and cultural connection.
@clownworld36011 ай бұрын
💯
@musafawundu67185 ай бұрын
You will have to read about the history of the entity called China that has existed for several thousand years to know and understand what Han means...
@ChillMan511 ай бұрын
"You can't really control your cards in life but you can control how you play them" The eternal truth right there. And a lot of the time doing what you need to do with what you have is the best route to go, often times is the way in which you'll find what's meant for you and what will bring you the most peace. Good quote Dave
@MedalionDS911 ай бұрын
Because they are taught to be independent, be ambitious, cut-throat, competitive, work hard, study hard, succeed at all costs
@carolinayu754011 ай бұрын
That’s why Chinese people don’t know how to have fun and be happy. I just find these values so one dimensional.
@wiikends11 ай бұрын
My 2 cents: most of it has to do with how Moa challenged the culture
@RR-lt8cm7 ай бұрын
This is so true. It leads to a very divided community. It’s sad. Wish that Chinese community drops this view and start helping each other out. This way, everyone in the community will succeed like the Latino/Jewish/etc group
@editorjohn880311 ай бұрын
My parents came from Taiwan, and my dad, a mechanical engineer from the top university in Taiwan, was making the equivalent of $200k/year managing factories after being trained in Japan. This was in the 1980s. They then decided to immigrate to the west because of his siblings and the prospect that things would be even better. Well, here, no one took his education and experience seriously, so he became a baker and then a car mechanic. We really struggled, and my parents never pushed us to study hard. My parents became fearful of everything, from arguing with neighbours, fighting for their rights, and investing their money in stocks. I think moving and losing everything was so traumatic and disenchanting that they just never wanted to take any more risks, and building a community does require risk-taking and making yourself vulnerable to others. Today, they're retired and renting the basement of some Taiwanese family's home, and they keep telling me I need to lower my standards and relax in life. I'm 38, built a strong social network, paid off my house, can retire off 5% interest from the bank, and am very, very happy. I think loss and fear from going away from your home country can destroy hope to the point that you only want to trust and depend on yourself
@gudrun55316 ай бұрын
Wow, thanks for sharing your family's story.
@dtitan199311 ай бұрын
We have been taught to put our head down and not cause trouble. This has to change! As for voting and having more asian political figures, We need to do a better job in raising awareness of the voting process, whats at stake, what voting power can do.
@cassiopeia30911 ай бұрын
The Koreans at my Midwestern high school seemed to love each other… and they were in love with themselves! 🤪 The Chinese hated each other. Secretive and backstabbing. They hated themselves too. 😮
@DenshaOtoko211 ай бұрын
I was taught to value money over people.
@carolinayu754011 ай бұрын
Seems like some f’ed up values.
@kimeli11 ай бұрын
@@carolinayu7540its the american way
@HerpaDerpaZX11 ай бұрын
Same but I fail on that front hence I'm the black sheep
@reapermadness719611 ай бұрын
So you were taught by white people?
@cassiopeia30911 ай бұрын
Money over family too?
@CliftonDon7411 ай бұрын
First! My parents are Chinese immigrants who eventually opened a couple of Szechuan style dine in restaurants in NJ. We went to NYC Chinatown 2x per week since moving to NJ in 1978. My parents only played Majong with their friends and our family. Food was the thing that brought us together. I remember a lot of family cookouts growing up. We pretty much just kept to ourselves
@ponuni11 ай бұрын
Bruh, Chinese people discriminate against each other depending on locality lmao. There's no hope for them man. When my dad arrived in NYC in the 90's he worked under an HK boss who treated him like he was subhuman all because he was a mainlander. On top of that in New York you have a lot of different Chinese people from your fjs to taishan to shanghai to wenzhou and they all to some extend are pretty negative about one another. On top of that, they only associate with Chinese people from their region of China. My parents do NOT have any friends who are not from their from region of China and I can say that is also the case for my extended family as well. China should just be a bunch of smaller countries because in the case of the Chinese less is definitely more. Look at Singapore or Taiwan and compare them to the Mainland it's just a huge difference in mannerisms.
@tomsuh136211 ай бұрын
You hit the bingo. Chinese hated each -other and you want these people to form a united community?
@nathanle102411 ай бұрын
I'm Viet and from my perspective and interactions with Chinese people, I agree that as a generalization Chinese people are way more open minded than their neighbors. In one sense, that is good bc it has allowed you guys to survive for thousands of years but in another sense, it also means the concept of "culture" and "community" is much more amorphous and harder to coalesce around.
@letsgowalk11 ай бұрын
I wouldn’t say that there is a lack of Chinese American community. I grew up in an area that didn’t have too many Chinese, but not too far from the enclaves, and my parents always had plenty of friends and family whom we met with frequently. The few Chinese people in our subdivision were also very close. I never had many Chinese classmates in school though. Of course, this was back in the day when everyone was Cantonese. Nowadays, I don’t feel a kinship with any Mainlanders. They might as well be a completely different ethnicity. Taiwanese, I am really cool with though.
@HerpaDerpaZX11 ай бұрын
I'm Chinese and I witness my ppl throwing each other under a bus to get ahead one too many times
@ResidualSelfImage11 ай бұрын
i have also seen super competitive Chinese abuse and climb over other ppl to get ahead too. Being Chinese wasn't a good test for friend or foe.
@joshjonson23686 ай бұрын
@@ResidualSelfImage this is why indians will surpass all other asian groups in america lol, vivek is just a sign hinduism is america's future and the chinese are gonna be reduced to coolies beneath them
@mtascp0511 ай бұрын
Wholeheartedly agree, I was brought up in the US to not rock the boat and work in the background. I think another thing is that the Chinese people are scattered among the population, and there needs to be a critical mass of Asian voters. You can have an awesome Chinese candidate but in a general election with voters of all ethnicities, the population as a whole sees them as exotic, strange, and that'll go for others like Indians, Africans, etc. I moved to California years ago, and it took me a long time to see Chinese-American politicans in different levels of society as normal bc there are so many voters here to support and vote for them, and that's not the norm for most of the US outside of CA and NYC.
@nuttyfrootie855011 ай бұрын
Let me tell you as a Chinese born somewhere in Latin America. The Chinese community is weak over here, despite the community having settled here for nearly 200 years. We only work, keep our business to ourselves, we do not complain, we do not blame, we stay silent most of the times no matter if it’s uncomfortable, annoying. Bad things had happened to the community, such as thefts, kidnappings , murders, but we don’t do much about it. We just keep working, as hard to keep a living, as taught since childhood. Most second generations don’t even care about their roots, not even the language. Some mock their own heritage, self hate their own skin. It’s sad
@tomsuh136211 ай бұрын
I have cousins from Latin America(Venezuela.Cuba) from my mother side of the family. They told me Chinese community over there are small and very isolated and one of them manage to migrate to US because US offers more opportunity.
@wiikends11 ай бұрын
One would expect that they would be like hispanics where they're usually united even if there from a different spanish country
@nuttyfrootie855011 ай бұрын
@@tomsuh1362 oh, here the community is big, and we’re not isolated. We’re just irrelevant most of the time. I heard from my relatives that migrated to the US is far better compared to here, as better jobs, more career opportunities and better pay.
@nuttyfrootie855011 ай бұрын
@@wiikends well, you’re not that wrong because there are many of the community that preferred to be around Hispanics, bond tied united with the latinos and they are proud calling themselves latinos and would defend this country doesn’t matter if this country has made fun of the community openly. Just ironic..
@vizsla857911 ай бұрын
That’s right when in foreign lands you respect the people and their lands and don’t get involved in politics. Keep your head down and know your place. The Chinese who didn’t listen paid the consequences in Torreón.
@UnstableYT-u7k11 ай бұрын
Everybody should learn from Koreans on building a community. They have the strongest communities.
@silveriver911 ай бұрын
You're confusing that with Xenophobia.
@ll.11111 ай бұрын
fakeness in the Korean culture and ulterior motives doesn’t = community.
@vanavana59311 ай бұрын
😅 do you know chongqing a city in China is almost the same size of whole South Korea? I think Chongqing ppl are pretty united themselves but hundreds thousands size of chongqing united is not realistic
@martinvanburen457811 ай бұрын
what about Chinatowns?
@saywhat499611 ай бұрын
@@silveriver9 No, Koreans are big chruch goers. Korean Churches play a big part in linking korean americans together.
@carolinayu754011 ай бұрын
My take on this is that Chinese American people have this tendency to one up each other as they are competitive and image conscious to have the best and be the best at something. I personally find it exhausting and it does not lead to any unity with one other. Ie, they have to have the best grades, get into the best school, have the nice house and be a doctor, lawyer or engineer. If you do not achieve these things, you are not as worthy, lol.
@dimedropper11 ай бұрын
It's a weird phenomenon that's hard to explain. Why aren't Koreans like this? They are arguably more hierarchal and fragile, but they are quite united
@harveylin354811 ай бұрын
My take is that Chinese Americans was the symbol of community during the railroad era, how else did Chinatown's got built, and Chinese gangs was one of the most fearsome gangs of that era? During the post WW2 era, that community was broken up by the US government, but at the same time, economic passage was also open for Chinese Americans to ascend to middle class status. Can you tell me one well to do individual that is also community minded? Not many, one truth in life I learned is that most economically successful people are the Ayn Rand type who strives to be great individually, only using community as a means to an end, not an end to itself.
@RollerBladingSuxs10 ай бұрын
The reason is that there are different dialects and ethnicities within Chinese Americans. For example, a mainlander and a cantonese person have no bond or interest in getting to know one another.
@nomasontomodisakeng-sb9sr11 ай бұрын
Wow I'm learning that humans are so similar yet equally as different😅 I thought that Black people didn't have a unified front and there is so much division and tribalism and we think Asians are unified and harmonious... Really shows that humans are very much alike and typically have similar experiences and problems as we're all humans but we stereotype and typecast each other unfortunately... Keep up the good work Fung bros... Love y'all's commentary💯😊
@harveylin354811 ай бұрын
This is why hispanics are kicking everyone's ass, their community seems to be the strongest at this time.
@corysmith436111 ай бұрын
Exactly 💯💯💯💯, us as black people, always think that we are the only community that is divided. At the end of the day, every race has more similarities than differences.
@dimedropper11 ай бұрын
Black people have solid representation in the media, hollywood, sports, and shared history in this nation. Not to say there's complete unity, but you can't compare it to Chinese American disunity
@corysmith436111 ай бұрын
@@dimedropper So you would say that there is no comparison at all?
@dimedropper11 ай бұрын
@@corysmith4361 The only proper comparison imo is that both our cultures are so divisive due to white supremacy, but in different ways. On the whole, blacks have a higher sense of unity because their culture is accepted, whereas the Chinese American subculture (and much of asian culture to that extent) is not.
@DapperArtImagery11 ай бұрын
As a whole I feel Chinese are very diverse. Most are hardworking and ambitious, but I have also experienced some level of classism and xenophobia towards myself and witnessed amongst each other.
@munjerkucci11 ай бұрын
Because Chinese are not homogeneous. Every region has their own distinct languages and customs, much like Europe.
@samkr22213 ай бұрын
a bit late but the SA community seems to do well , is it different in a way?
@cosmiceye206711 ай бұрын
Hmm, the Chinese diaspora around the world is decentralized but they are still very clannish and maintain strong business networks. Particularly SE Asia, where permeation of Chinese culture and tradition is done since 4-5 generations. Chinese also hire their own and don't really care that much about politics.
@manofsesame30245 ай бұрын
And don’t forget that church is the best place to form a community. And that’s how the Koreans and Filipinos form their communities in the States. The people who insist on being atheist will likely to live without a community no matter they are Chinese or white.
@cassiopeia30911 ай бұрын
Andrew is right about the joyful thing esp I believe with the mandarin speaking people. Chinese do not have a cohesive community bc it’s so diverse. In contrast, ever notice how much Koreans laugh and smile in general. Many of them are just smiley people. They seem over the top joyful when they’re in the company of their peers.
@harveylin354811 ай бұрын
Yup, every time I hear some naive Americans say diversity is our strength, I just kinda bleed inside.
@yabbagabb0011 ай бұрын
Well, it's a lie but at this point there's no other choice than to repeat the lie and play along.
@bigheadrhino11 ай бұрын
From what I’ve seen, Chinese Americans for better or for worse seem much more multigenerationally connected with family compared to other asians. I think you’re less likely to form a “community” with other people if you’re already closely knitted with your own family. Not much can occupy your time and energy more than family.
@biker94411 ай бұрын
Chinese parents are never involved in school board or pta
@henrytep888411 ай бұрын
The problem with this video is I don’t know how they measuring cultural cohesion within different Asian American groups relative to one another. How are we measuring it? Is it by how many people of a certain Asian ethnicity is being elected? Is based off geographic density? It just comes off a little hard to believe when there wasn’t any empirical or hard data backing to the idea that Chinese Americans are less community focused versus other Asian groups? Are they the most? Probably not, but I don’t think they are behind from what is normal.
@RR-lt8cm7 ай бұрын
Thanks for talking about this. Hopefully, this will trigger more future discussions
@DenshaOtoko211 ай бұрын
Other Asian Americans have group unity.
@thatvietguyonline7 ай бұрын
I have seen the Philo community gathering, they’re wild, and also in work.
@ResidualSelfImage11 ай бұрын
As a 4thgen ABC, I grew up knowing very few ABCs or FOB Chinese, but long ago, within Chinatown, poverty and discrimination kept the community weak. Outside Chinatown, physical distance and the lack of numbers kept the Chinese community from forming. Fast forward to current times, the internet can bridge distance, but many Chinese in America are still poor and not financially secure. China is traditionally an empire with multiple sub-ethnic groups with different languages and cultures that vary from the mainstream Han society. Chinese abroad have been targeted for racial discrimination and ethnic cleansing not just in the USA but in Canada, Mexico, and as faraway places like Uganda. Within China, there has been instances of subethnic strife and discrimination, too. I remember growing up how Mandarin and Cantonese Chinese didn't get along all that well. The lack of interest within the Chinese community pushed my ethnic POV to a more cross culture Asian POV. Historically, the lack of Chinese American participating in landownership made DC Chinatown mostly a cluster of renters who had no reason to invest into the Chinese community. Today most of DC Chinatown is now Non-Chinese. Most of the ABCs have moved to Northern Virginia or Maryland. and DC Chinatown might be said to be Chinese in name only.
@Group.B11 ай бұрын
Chinese aren’t being ethnic cleansed anywhere except Uyghurs in China
@cassiopeia30911 ай бұрын
I’m a 4th gen ABC too. Asian immigrants may not have much when they arrive in the U.S. but their kids tend to go to college and do well financially. Also, haven’t you heard of the Parachute kids in California? Arcadia, Cupertino, Monterey Park …lots of areas where wealthy Chinese are. Taiwanese and Hong Kong people immigrated in the 60’s ..bc of their professional backgrounds they were let in. They were not poor. You’ll have to look up the stats to see that overall, they have higher household incomes than the average American.
@ResidualSelfImage8 ай бұрын
@@cassiopeia309
@wiikends11 ай бұрын
The more i learn about Asian countries on east side the more it surprises me how they don get along much similar cultures & sometimes even their own kind. Im not mexican but theres a saying in MX that A Mexicans Worse Enemy Is A Mexican. We usually get along with similar cultures even though our spanish vocab isnt the same
@non-indexed289611 ай бұрын
Not sure where this comes from. I'm Mexican and I have always been support by the Mexican community. There's a sense of community when the national team play or on Mexican independence day.
@monchichipower633411 ай бұрын
I’m Chinese and was always told to just care about yourself
@cafezo8793411 ай бұрын
@darthvadeth6290 what about hispanics
@TBossant11 ай бұрын
@darthvadeth6290 the reason why hispanic girls are OK with marrying hispanic guys is bc they are taught to not be obsessed about validation from authority. Chinese girls flee from asians dudes in American bc from a young age the were taught to respect authority at all Costa which translates to white whorship
@ohnosmoarlulcatz11 ай бұрын
It doesn't help that a lot of Chinese seem to be divided ethnically as well. I've literally gotten shit from people for being from a different street of the same area of Guongzhou before.
@lp67211 ай бұрын
@@darthvadeth6290Hispanics aren't obsessed with valuing authority like Chinese are. Chinese are way too obedient. That's why Al the abc are running off with white guys lol
@cassiopeia30911 ай бұрын
Meanwhile Koreans have their “jeong” that feeling of attachment and looking out for each other thing just bc the other person is also Korean. I’ve seen it in action many times. It’s like the KA guy dislikes this other KA guy but he gives him all the answers for the test he already took. Why? Bc he’s a fellow Korean. Like what? Or they leaven a $10 tip for a $2 coffee bc they’re fellow Koreans. Do Chinese have an equivalent jeong loyalty thing between fellow Chinese? Ever notice that Korean Americans love to say the word Korean? It just seems to come up a lot. Back in the 80’s, they always seemed so proud about their ethnicity. They dressed well, drove cool cars, did sports and cheerleading, and hung out and had a great time with other Korean Americans. Chinese Americans seemed more ashamed of their culture. Tbh the ABC kids weren’t into fashion, weren’t allowed out of their house to socialize. They seemed depressed. Good luck if you’re sick and need to borrow notes. Every man for himself. Sad.
@bascal13311 ай бұрын
Can you do a while video on this concept that joy is antithetical to being Chinese? That’s a very like stunning thing to hear from and outside perspective and I’d like to understand that better.
@StephanieNocon-y7d11 ай бұрын
Ultra competitive culture
@alvinkuo77711 ай бұрын
Yeah I have to echo how Chinese communities are vastly different dependent on the region they are from. Certainly Cantonese, Taiwanese or say Malyasian chinese tend to have smaller and tighter communities. In the end of the day the only ties among us are business and food, with the occasional anti Asian smear or attack to unify us. I would say that the Korean and Japanese communities also have the cultural factor, being not only popular in the West but also cool and constantly producing new ideas and things to talk and like. Taiwan and Hong Kong used to do that, but not anymore. Mainland China doesn't know how to be cool or relevant, with a very insular culture.
@chimakalu4111 ай бұрын
6:25 Excellent point by andrew an absence of religious leaders may lead to more authoritarian government.
@jjstarrprod7 ай бұрын
I think one thing worth noticing is that compared to all other Asian countries, China is GIGANTIC ! It's by far the biggest country inthe whole of Asia (if you don't count Russia). The country is so vast it's bigger than the whole of Europe. Being a Chinese person could literally mean the Asian version of being white. And you don't see an Irish guy instantly connect with an Italian, or a Belgian. Being a Cantonese from HK is a complete different upbringing than being from Taiwan or Shanghai, or Sichuan, or Beijing. So obviously, when going abroad, there wouldn't be a particular incentive to gather under a same umbrella, not even mentioning all the ongoing political tensions (I frankly would have a hard time seeing Taiwanese people hanging out with Beijing people, for example). Also, tight communities are possible only with scarcity. When you're part of a smaller ethnical group, like Korean or Japanese, or even tighter, like Laos or Cambodia, of course you're gonna want to find friends from your own kin and build bridges. But Chinese diaspora is so vast, there's hardly scarcity anymore, making all Chinese abroad (but especially in America, since that's where probably more than 50% of the total chinese diaspora ended), taking each other for granted. Not helping is the fact that Chinese culture (especially abroad) is built more on face, and cut throat competition between each and every families rather than collaboration (of all the Asian cultures, Chinese culture is the most competitive among people and families), where it's always the game of whose kid's accomplishing more than the others, driving so many of the Chinese families crazy and ripping their own families apart from the inside because of the parents relentlessness and the childrens resentment towards their parents. In such an environment, it's hard to see any form of community at large building itself together when nuclear families disintegrate from within. Another thing that's not helping : Chinese patriarchy ! If white women are now openly rebelling and criticizing western patriarchy, BOY would they have a field day with Chinese patriarchy ! Where EVERYTHING is catered towards men : economical power, careers, prestige, names, you name it. Where women and girls are essentially just pretty gifts to marry up into a better family to get even more prestige to the family's name. In such an environment, no wonder so many chinese girls end up becoming ABG and self hate their own culture so much they end up throwing the baby with the bathwater by rejecting their entire chinese culture/asian heritage and start white male worshipping because HOLLYWOOD, BABY ! White whashing/savioring other cultures for generations ! I like David's pizza of reason analogy. It really is a giant messy pizza with messy melting cheese interconnecting all the slices all over the place.
@PricefieldPunk11 ай бұрын
Cause Chinese ppl low-key selfish. My own family whenever someone does something kind and I know they just want a favor in return. Even when they give you stuff, i know its just stuff they didn't want and trying to get rid of it. At least the older generation i know that just looking out for themselves over everything else.
@monchichipower633411 ай бұрын
Sounds right on point We got relatives that give us expired food and goods since they don’t want it If I was that broke I go food bank and get better stuff
@tomsuh136211 ай бұрын
Same with my own family and many of them are not poor. They are cheap because of envy and jealous of each-other families.
@monchichipower633411 ай бұрын
@@tomsuh1362 yep I can totally relate I’m Cantonese Chinese but born in USA It’s all about one upping another and your job and status
@PricefieldPunk11 ай бұрын
@@tomsuh1362same, most of the Chinese ppl I know who are like upper middle class are insanely cheap. But when they know someone else is picking up the bill they'll order sodas and the most expensive stuff on the menu. Nobody ever says anything but then we'll get home and my mom will go off on them for having no manners lol I don't think you can build a community when ppl are like that 😂
@cassiopeia30911 ай бұрын
I hate to agree but yeah it’s true. Not all but I’ve seen and experienced the selfishness and cheapness of Chinese. Weird how not all but definitely a trend of Korean Americans -by comparison -spending a lot of money and being generous with each other. I once told a Korean person yeah Asians are cheap and are savers. He said maybe Chinese but not Koreans. They overextend their credit. Good and bad in every culture I guess.
@anthonystayset39711 ай бұрын
I feel like it’s getting better with the younger generation!
@daisyhinojosa2311 ай бұрын
I never noticed this but I always assumed it was because they tend to become doctors, lawyers, & engineers!!
@harveylin354811 ай бұрын
It's the only economic passage that are wide open for us, have you see any Asians in entertainment that are actually meaningful?
@manofsesame30245 ай бұрын
That’s a good example of competing against each other instead of corporation
@charlestan79037 ай бұрын
I am Chinese American and I think we are just more out for ourselves. If we want to change, we probably can but it will be difficult and will likely take several generations.
@element2dd7 ай бұрын
The gap between the American born Chinese from Canton background and a mainland Chinese is larger than the gap between Cantonese mainlander and average mainlander
@bhlasvegas9909 ай бұрын
I'm Korean but grew up in SF. I was always a little confused why there wasn't much going with the Chinese community, and Japanese for that matter.
@wontononionslicer10045 ай бұрын
interesting...as a Chinese in Eu, I have a very different experience...for example, local people around here expect me to know thing from China ( food, culture even politics ) even when the last time I been there was like 5 y ago? But you be a comrade in Eu is not illegal, people still have bad prejudice about that but they allow you to be a comrade....in USA I guess it is not possible.
@manofsesame30245 ай бұрын
I do noticed the Cantonese speakers have strong community and not all of them are from HongKong. But the mandarin speakers? Not so much.
@KRF888HEI7 ай бұрын
Being in a Chinese home, right, there is no need for each other. Meanwhile, one needs to be self sufficient. You only ask for help or support only when the need is really pressing.
@Group.B11 ай бұрын
The oneupmanship in Chinese and some broader Asian culture stems back from strong state control government that forced citizens to compete for favor and resources without much dissent. Macro level group think with micro level intraracial sabotage. It’s 😞
@robotpanda632211 ай бұрын
Chinese Americans lacks community but is more self sovereign, looking out for number one also means you are also more alone.
@cassiopeia30911 ай бұрын
True
@unifieddynasty10 ай бұрын
I don't think the 'weak community' point is historically correct. It is true that China has preferred a highly centralized form of government for two millennia, but what we also see is that whenever the central authority weakens, there are decentralized community organizations that fill in the role. I.e., the Mohists, the Yellow Turbans, the White Lotus, the Red Turbans, the Taiping, the Tiandihui/Tongs/Triads, the Republican revolutionaries, and even the communists.
@leafsnation8211 ай бұрын
I agree, the Chinese people are not used to participating in politics and voting due to communism
@harveylin354811 ай бұрын
Yeah Chinese culture have exactly zero experience in building communities from ground up, it was erased from their own history. I am learning it the American way as we speak, and it is hard on my mind, it's something totally different.
@unifieddynasty10 ай бұрын
I think Chinese people are content not to interfere when they have peace and stability and prosperity. I think Chinese people are much more likely to band together when they feel threatened. This is the reason why the Chinese civilization still exists to this day.
@coreydarden848111 ай бұрын
I even have a Job at Chinatown : I will really be trying to help out the Asian Community : I'm really not Asian ⛩️🇹🇼🇺🇸🇨🇳🇺🇸❤️❤️
@chrissy49577 ай бұрын
Honestly I believe it is because we are too diverse. China is big and has hundreds of hundreds of different languages and cultures. Not once have I met someone who speaks my local mother tongue. If we were all mandarin speaking, then we might be able to talk about this topic better but we are all very different in culture and language.
@en-zh-lyrics11 ай бұрын
Malcolm X praised the Chinatown for its self-sufficient business model
@tomsuh136211 ай бұрын
Malcolm X would never realized how the Chinatown rich exploited the working poor Chinese with the help of the White master.
@manofsesame30245 ай бұрын
I bet he was talking about the Chinatown that was still run by Cantonese speakers.
@chimakalu4111 ай бұрын
5:51 Interesting again.
@jyoon01289 ай бұрын
Andrew, you should run for politics. You seem to understand things well and seem like a likable guy. 😂😊 Like the shirt too.
@walterguan50363 ай бұрын
There is an anarchist/dragon/natural Daoist in every chinese, suspicious of those in power. Don't ever lose that heritage.
@Userhandle73845 ай бұрын
So basically Chinese worship money. Sounds pretty accurate 😂
@chimakalu4111 ай бұрын
10:46 wow andrew.. man ..wow. What are we supposed to do with that statement?
@theodoreberbach95626 ай бұрын
If you treat all "Chinese" as the same you already don't understand Chinese culture, you are already seeing "Chinese" through an Americanized lens of cultural understanding. American love categorizing people based on their color or origins in an extremely broad and simplistic sense. But anyone who is actually back from Asia understand that this is not the case. There are mainland Chinese, Hong Konger, Macauan, Taiwanese, Singaporean, Malaysian etc etc. While all these nations and groups indeed originated from mainland China. But if you call a Taiwanese a Chinese they'd be insulted, same for HKer, same for Malaysian.
@jeretso11 ай бұрын
My Chinese friend invited me all the time to their house. Dude invite people to your house and hang out. I will give him a call.
@saeedhossain609911 ай бұрын
seriously? nah man, i see chinese people as showing alot of solidarity, not really mainstream politics, but definitely theres a cohesive parallel society in New York. it weakens out in the suburbs, but I've lived in manhattan chinatown, brooklyn chinatown and Elmhurst (the original queens chinatown), there's alot of team and collective behavior. frankly its that political power is an alternative to economic power, and chinese Americans in NY and the tristate just made bank.
@TheFlagUnit7 ай бұрын
No it’s because China is seen as a threat to America, unlike other groups. So if other groups band together, it’s activism. If Chinese band together, it’s seen as a hostile subversive force. Same thing with Iranians and other stigmatized groups.
@manofsesame30245 ай бұрын
There are very strong Persian communities in the states, but don’t call themselves Iranians
@chimakalu4111 ай бұрын
14:09 andrew is insane Lol
@TheFlagUnit7 ай бұрын
He’s not wrong. Pelosi got rich by insider trading. She buys the stocks and then makes the policies that support those stocks.
@Mike-cr2bc10 ай бұрын
I’m Chinese Korean. I think Chinese people just don’t naturally huddle together as much, also Chinese don’t have as strong a drinking culture in terms of fun.
@ENIGMA111-c2w8 ай бұрын
And why should we have a drinking culture? Alcohol is literal poison
@chimakalu4111 ай бұрын
14:54 That is a very valid point if chinese people have been accused a lot in the united states of espionage
@1113-f7o11 ай бұрын
Why no video on Bowen Yang????
@Deeeepsea-j5m4 ай бұрын
Go to China for the many happy dance circles!
@cbbcbb68034 ай бұрын
I think that may be why white refer to Chinese as a model minority. I could be wrong.
@حسینکریمی-ب8ل11 ай бұрын
My Honest Review On Social Rebel
@Willxdiana11 ай бұрын
Umm plz don’t talk like this. Fuzhou community is very big in community. It’s only the hkers who don’t have a community. Unless you are getting roast pork in Chinatown. I have my own brotherhood with Taiwanese and mainlanders. And I’m a hk dispora. When you grow up in nyc you lose your prejudice. Asian community is very collective, hk culture is not The only people hosting events are mainlanders and Taiwanese. What has hkers done for the community? Even Taiwan has a overseas office for overseas Chinese. And mainland embassy hosts a lot of events. Again what has hk done for the overseas community? Including it’s own people who don’t really host anything. Hk culture is more Western. Go find brotherhood in Japan, Korea. They want to find their own people. I never been turned away by Taiwanese or mainlanders looking for brotherhood aka 兄弟. Again though there are people who make a Cantonese community by making the organization save Cantonese
@rwar53111 ай бұрын
My childhood best friend, living with his parents with no prospects, still refuses to ask for advice or listen to anyone who isnt HK. I stopped letting him drag me down once we turned 34.
@Razear11 ай бұрын
I disagree that Chinese people don't feel a sense of joy upon seeing another Chinese person. Asians in general tend to be very tribal when greeting strangers, especially if they grew up in areas outside of an ethnic enclave. For instance, most Asian kids at school will ask another Asian student almost reflexively about their ethnicity because that identity can act as a potential bonding point. These types of interactions can open the floodgates to fostering community.
@useridcn11 ай бұрын
They are just so different from and can't fit into the narrow (wealthy white) political culture in the states.
@northyorksimonkim11 ай бұрын
chinese are way too diverse
@Tony-m4b11 ай бұрын
Because too many want to be white adjacent.
@chimakalu4111 ай бұрын
This doesn't sound right. As an african i've not noticed that. So outside of you I'll say it seems the American chinese. 0:21 Wait wait political power is one thing community is different. If they are talking about community for political purposes.. I just meant chinese community has a lot of support I don't know about politics community was strong.