them, he looks at them in their crumpled piles and says we are not sick men. as a kid in the 80s, when i saw that, hoo, i felt it. i wasn t chinese. i had no idea of the history of japan and china, but as a black kid in america i understood the need to stand up to your oppressors. and just since the beginning i understand that all people s struggles are connected. it felt like me and bruce were the same. of course, he meant way more to asian americans than he meant to me. but bruce s fights onscreen were nothing compared to his fights offscreen, a fight for representation in media, a fight to end racism by teaching martial arts to everybody, a fight to stand up for his people. anti-asian attacks and hate crimes as we know have been rising sharply thinking episode is about how asian americans are still fighting those fights. no more hate! is it happening? it s happening. oh my god. that s mine. don t touch it. i think we re eating family-style. that s mine
looks at them in the crumbled aisles and says as a kid in the 80s, when i saw that, i felt it. i wasn t chinese. i had no idea of the history of japan and china. but as a black kid in america, i understood the need to stand up to your old pressers. i eventually understood that all oppressed people struggles are connected. but like me, and bruises or the same. but of course, way more to asian than it meant to me. but his fight on screen were nothing compared to his fights off screen, a fight for representation and media, a fight to end racism by featuring march large to everybody. a fight to stand up for his people. anti asian attack hate crimes, as we, know they ve been rising sharply. this episode is about asian americans, how they re still fighting those fights. no more height! no more hate! is this happening? it s happening. oh my god. don t touch it. that s all mine. don t touch it. oh, you knew at the end of the table, i was that. sh
Ambulance and fire truck sirens wailed outside as Elsie Rosales stripped linens from king-sized mattresses at a beachfront resort in Lahaina. “All our hard work burned,” Rosales told The Associated Press in an interview conducted in Ilocano, her native language.
Filipino business owners are pushing for San Francisco’s South of Market (SoMa) neighborhood to be officially designated as a Filipino cultural district. It honors more than a hundred years of Filipino history in San Francisco, dating back to the immigration of Filipinos to the city during the Philippine-American War from 1899 to 1902.