Attacks against Asian Americans reported in various parts of the country.
President Trump has been criticized for
referring to the "China virus"
By Minnie Bruce Pratt
Workers World
As the coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic
accelerates in the U.S. — amid appeals for the population to “work together” —
hateful anti-Chinese and anti-Asian racism is being incited at the highest
level of government.
In a March 8 press conference, President Donald
Trump claimed his repeated use of “Chinese virus” — instead of the World Health
Organization-designated name — was “not racist at all.” When asked if the term
might put Asian Americans at risk, Trump replied, “No, not at all.” A CBS News
reporter tweeted that another “White House official referred to the virus as
the “Kung-Flu” to her face. (Washington Post, March 17)
WHO officials emphasized the naming of COVID-19
was done specifically “to prevent the use of other names that can be inaccurate
or stigmatizing.” (globalbiodefense.com, Feb. 11)
Trump’s response is not surprising, given his
arrogant consistency in using racist language to damn African-American
political figures, Latinx immigrants, African countries and all Muslims.
His anti-Asian racism is also linked to a vile
“American First” history of white supremacy and anti-Chinese discrimination.
Mass assaults by white mobs on Chinese communities were common in the 19th
century, including a Los Angeles attack in 1871 when at least 20 Chinese
immigrants were lynched.
Racist slanders that Chinese people carried
diseases — from syphilis to the bubonic plague — were constantly used to
justify discrimination. Legislators, capitalist bosses, whites-only
conservative unions and “liberal” white women suffragists used this accusation
to pass the infamous 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act banning Chinese workers from
coming to the U.S.
Division incited between oppressed peoples and
workers by this racism resulted in the 1982 murder of young Chinese American
Vincent Chin, beaten to death by unemployed white autoworkers.
Impact on Asian people — and resistance
As Trump’s economic and political campaign against People’s China continues, his racism has unleashed a new round of vicious discrimination and physical attacks.
As Trump’s economic and political campaign against People’s China continues, his racism has unleashed a new round of vicious discrimination and physical attacks.
People of Asian descent have been attacked on
public transportation in New York City and denied motel rooms in Indiana.
(Workers World, March 3) In Los Angeles, a middle school Asian student was
recently sent to the emergency room after he was assaulted by bullies accusing
him of having the coronavirus. On a busy San Francisco street, a Chinese woman
was cursed at and spit on by a man who yelled at a passing vehicle to “run them
[Chinese people] all over.” (NBC Bay Area, March 20)
A website, Stop AAPI Hate, has been set up to
report incidents by the Asian Pacific Policy and Planning Council, Chinese for
Affirmative Action and the Department of Asian American Studies at San
Francisco State University. Report forms are available in Chinese traditional
and simplified, Korean, Thai, Japanese and English.
Jeremy Lin, National Basketball Association
player, has launched his own twitter campaign against Trump’s racism. Lin, a
California native of Taiwanese descent, became the first Asian-American player
to help a team win an NBA championship as a member of the 2019 Toronto Raptors.
Lin posted several tweets accusing Trump of
racism, saying, “The U.S. will be powerfully supporting those industries, like
airlines and others, that are particularly affected by the ‘Chinese virus’ . .
. I wish you [Trump] would powerfully support the vulnerable people that will
suffer due to our mismanagement of this virus, including those [who] will be
affected by the racism you’re empowering.” (Washington Post, March 18)
Lin added in a later post: “Every day, Asian
Americans I know are threatened and physically attacked. … This subtle
anti-Chinese message only empowers more hate towards Asians.” In an Instagram
post, Lin announced he was donating $150,000 for medical equipment to the
Chinese city of Wuhan, where the virus first came into view, and an additional
$150,000 to other anti-COVID-19 efforts, praising “doctors and nurses fighting
[on] the front lines” against the pandemic.
China’s success against COVID-19
China has succeeded in containing and subduing
the virus in four months. Thanks to centralized planning, a strong
socialist-oriented system put in place since its 1949 revolution and a
dedicated people’s base of workers, as of March 22, only 39 new cases and 9 new
deaths had been reported in the entire country. China currently has a
population of 1.43 billion people. (worldometer.info)
China’s success is in stark contrast to the
chaotic response in the capitalistic bastions of Europe, where life-and-death
health care is being rationed, and in the U.S., where the country’s president
asserts companies-for-profit will “volunteer” to meet crisis medical needs.
The current surge of anti-Asian racism in the
U.S. calls for oppressed people and workers of all backgrounds to step up in
solidarity against the slurs and violence. Deadly capitalism can only continue
if workers turn against each other, distorted by the bosses’ propaganda,
instead of uniting to fight against exploitation by the system.
Capitalism is not going to save us — from a
deadly virus, from climate crisis or from any of the local assaults that profit
taking makes on our lives.
Solidarity is survival — and the essential step
on the road to socialism for the people.
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