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Asian man, 56, is attacked entering a Lower East Side station

As pandemic-era attacks on Asians rise, past victims look back

As pandemic-era attacks on Asians rise, past victims look back Share Updated: 4:41 PM PST Mar 2, 2021 By TERRY TANG, Associated Press As pandemic-era attacks on Asians rise, past victims look back Share Updated: 4:41 PM PST Mar 2, 2021 Hide Transcript Show Transcript As they approached me, they pulled me to the ground. They punched me. Um, you know, I was resisting with them. I was yelling, I was screaming Help! And stop what I had learned the next day. Later that evening, they had attacked another Asian American woman. That same night, Asian American women and elders were being targeted often for cultural reasons. They re reluctant to speak out to press charges since the pandemic. Uh, it got so much, so much worse and what we re seeing, you know, not only increasing of the numbers, but I guess, uh, the seriousness of the tax getting, uh, more and more violence. Even though they live inside China town, they are telling me that they re afrai

As virus-era attacks on Asians rise, past victims look back

Nearly a year after they were almost stabbed to death inside a Midland, Texas, Sam’s Club, Bawi Cung and his two sons all have visible scars. It’s the unseen ones though that are harder to get over. Cung can’t walk through any store without constantly looking in all directions. His

UCLA In the News March 3, 2021

Majority white areas of California received more money from the federal Paycheck Protection Program for small businesses than majority Latino areas did, according to a study by UCLA researchers. The disparities arose primarily because the loans, which are awarded to businesses affected by the coronavirus pandemic, were distributed on a first-come, first-served basis by big banks, said Rodrigo Dominguez-Villegas, director of research for the UCLA Latino Policy and Politics Initiative. In fact, the types of big storms that can batter California with heavy rain and snow are projected to increase in intensity in upcoming years because of climate change, UCLA climate scientist Daniel Swain said. “There’s a lot of evidence that atmospheric rivers will become more intense as the climate warms,” Swain said.

As virus-era attacks on Asians rise, past victims look back | News, Sports, Jobs

As virus-era attacks on Asians rise, past victims look back | News, Sports, Jobs
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