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  1. Amid a growing sense of online nationalism and anti-West sentiment in China, some have seized upon these advertisements as examples of racism towards Chinese people. By featuring models with...

  2. It was an insidious racist slur casually thrown around as they mocked her Asian ethnicity while pulling on the corner of their eyes. Upward for Japanese. To the side for Chinese.

  3. Discrimination based on skin tone, also known as colorism or shadeism, is a form of prejudice and discrimination in which people of certain ethnic groups, or people who are perceived as belonging to a different-skinned racial group, are treated differently based on their different skin tone.

  4. 16 wrz 2013 · The obsession with Asian eyes, especially the shape, dates back centuries. And it seems like the easiest way to describe an Asian person's eyes is by likening them to nuts. Specifically,...

  5. Why do people have different eye shapes? The main difference in eye shape is the way the upper eyelid meets the inner corner of the eye. In many ethnicities, including East Asians, Southeast Asians, Polynesians and Native Americans, there is commonly a slight fold at this point, called an ‘epicanthic fold’.

  6. 8 maj 2023 · From old discriminatory laws influenced by the “yellow peril” to more brazen acts of violence against “COVID spreaders,” Asian Americans barely had a break from being subjects of destructive...

  7. The Chinese were crushed by similar American hypocrisy. John Hay’s celebrated “Open Door Notes,” issued at the close of the nineteenth century, did nothing to halt foreign inroads on Chinese sovereignty, merely allowing Americans to perceive their country as China’s defender. Having thrilled to Woodrow Wilson’s call for