日本で、黄色い猿の癖に白人差別をするな、銭湯に入れさせろと騒いで金を稼ぐ、北海道情報大助教授で米国出身の帰化日本人、有道出人(あるどうでびと)の 出身地(Geneva, NY)で起きた日本人襲撃事件、この件について聞いても知りません、私は日本人と言う答えしか返って来ません。 last April 11, a group of mostly Japanese and Asian American Syracuse University students went to eat in the early morning hours at the Denny's restaurant on Erie Boulevard East just outside of campus. The students charge that they were denied seating, asked to leave the restaurant, and then were attacked by a gang of white patrons shouting anti-Asian epithets in the restaurant's parking lot. According to the students, the incident began when their group was forced to wait for nearly a half-hour. After watching white patrons who arrived after them be seated first, one of the students, Li Chiu, went to complain to the hostess about the discriminatory treatment. She replied, "Don't even go there!" A manager then asked the students to leave, and they were escorted outside by two armed security guards who were also off-duty deputy sheriffs, pushing and shoving two of the students, Derrick Lizardo and his white friend Sean Dugan, in the process. Outside the restaurant as they were approaching their cars to leave, the students say a group of white men who had been eating inside the restaurant came outside yelling racial slurs and, without provocation, attacked Yuya Hasegawa. As Lizardo and Dugan tried to come to their friend's aid, they too were attacked. Meanwhile, they charge, the two security guards watched without intervening as the attack continued. They also charge that one of the guards used pepper spray against Lizardo during the attack and threatened to use it against some of the others as well. "I stood by and watched as two armed and uniformed security guards began shoving my friends for no apparent reason
↑の続 But what was even worse, when we were attacked by a large group of white males, clearly outnumbered and out-muscled, the security guards did absolutely nothing to stop the attack," Yoshika Kusada tearfully told reporters at a press conference last month at the offices of the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund, the New York-based advocacy group that is representing the students. "I begged the security guards for help--'Do something, why aren't you doing anything?'--over and over." Kusada said she was knocked unconscious after trying to pull an attacker off of one of her friends. She said the fight only stopped when two black students, who were in a separate party, intervened to end the fight. Kyoko Hiraoka, one of the Japanese students, said, "I think that in this country there is no justice. I'm so disappointed that this report didn't tell the truth. I now have to live in fear of being attacked again because they're free." The district attorney's report contradicted the findings of a report by a federal Civil Rights Monitor who recommended that the manager who ordered the students to leave the restaurant be fired and the hostess be suspended without pay. The monitor also recommended that the deputies, who are no longer Denny's employees, not be rehired. The monitor found that the employees had not received necessary nondiscrimination training and recommended that Denny's develop a new video-based training program. http://www.asianweek.com/091997/dennys.html http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=2nd&navby=case&no=009015v2&exact=1 http://www.expressindia.com/ie/daily/19970606/15750843.html http://maps.yahoo.com/dd_result?ed=xTowJeV.wimQQVd6MsEKU7USFw--&csz=Geneva%2C+NY&country=us&tcsz=Syracuse%2C+NY&tcountry=us
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イエール大、日本の犯罪者の三分の二は、在日と部落民。 ここに書いて有る通り、日本ではタブー視されてる題材なので、この研究をしたのはアメリカ人。 これを話題に出さない日本は、物凄く人種差別に気を使った良い国 Yale University Research Today almost two-thirds of burakumin (pronounced boo-RAH-koo-min) say in opinion polls that they have never encountered discrimination. About 73 percent now marry non-burakumin, and most dismiss the possibility that the Japanese police might treat burakumin unfairly. Social workers say crime is a disproportionate problem among young burakumin, but the issue is so sensitive that no Japanese scholars have conducted research on it. One rare statistical study, conducted by Americans in the 1960's, found that burakumin youths were three times as likely as non-buraku youths to be arrested for crimes. In the buraku of Kobe, the nicest houses -- gaudy American-style homes with wide porches and Mercedes-Benzes in the driveway -- belong to yakuza bosses. As a result, the "success stories" whom children in the buraku see as they grow up are often mobsters. http://216.239.63.104/search?q=cache:nJz9zapwtEEJ:research.yale.edu/wwkelly/restricted/Japan_journalism/NYT_951130.htm+buraku+yakuza+&hl=ja
チョン出て行け! チョン校、チョン教会、チョンオフィス放火される! LA暴動と言い、チョンは本当に嫌われてるなw Friday, 12/31/04 Arson likely in fires at Korean group's buildings in Stewart County Authorities were investigating circumstances surrounding midnight fires Dec. 24 that destroyed a school, church and office in the Doalnara Restoration Society a Korean organization http://www.tennessean.com/local/archives/04/12/63528037.shtml?Element_ID=63528037
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-042702races.story LEGACY OF THE RIOTS: 1992-2002 We Can't All Get Along Yet There are definite signs of progress in mending the black-Korean divide exposed by burning shops, but tensions remain between the two very different cultures. By K. CONNIE KANG The progress in black-Korean relations since the 1992 riots
朝鮮人店主、黒人少女の頭を後から撃ち抜き処刑、LAで大暴動起きる、燃やされたのは朝鮮人が店主の店ばかり http://www.courttv.com/archive/casefiles/rodneyking/ the killing of Latasha Harlins, a black teenager, by a Korean grocer. The Korean grocer operated a store in the worst part of South Central. The grocer thought she was shoplifting. She wasn't and a fight began and she knocked the grocer down and she was killed with a shot to the back of her head. Now that was a big story to black people in South Central and it was covered in the Los Angeles Times, the trial was, but the story really never had any national impact. There were an awful lot of events that could've been triggers for a riot and that served to remind black people that there wasn't much justice for them. The Latasha Harlins killing was on videotape. It was an in-store videotape and it was grainy and the police seized it so it wasn't shown over and over again. http://hcs.harvard.edu/~yisei/issues/spring_92/ys92_6.html Ice Cube attempts to expose the alleged bigotry of Korean merchants in the ghetto through the same medium: explicit rap. "Black Korea" is his portrayal of the conflict between blacks and Koreans in the ghetto, his iteration of the black voice crying out against Korean misconduct. http://www.coreanism.org/content.cfm?cat=articles&file=grace One of the reasons for the L.A uprisings was because Soon Ja Du, a Korean American liquor store owner, killed Latasha Harlins, an African American girl who Soon Ja Du had thought was going to steal a bottle of orange juice. Even, if Latasha Harlins were stealing a bottle of orange juice, it still doesn't mean the owner of the store has to shoot the person in the back of the head. You can replace a bottle of orange juice, but you can never replace someone's life
http://hcs.harvard.edu/~yisei/issues/spring_99/feature1.html Earlier this year, poet Amy Uyematsu gave a reading of some of her work as part of the Asian American Studies "This Shame Called Joy." The poem explores the poet’s emotions about the killing of Latasha Harlins, a fifteen-year old Black girl, by Soon Ja Du, a Korean American store owner, over a carton of orange juice in a Los Angeles store: "This lust I cultivate for the ordinary,/the juice of an orange tasting more exquisite/than I ever remember,/cannot be separated from the brutal/death of a child who only wanted/ to drink from the same fruit. " Soon Ja Du claimed that she had shot Latasha Harlins in self-defense after the girl had attacked her, but the store videotape showed that she had shot Latasha in the back of the head as the girl walked away from their brief altercation over some orange juice. The entire incident outraged the Black community in Los Angeles and helped to pave the way for the Los Angeles rebellion of 1992, or what Korean Americans call Sa-I-Gu. After Uyematsu read the poem, it became clear that certain students, in particular, Korean American students, objected to it.
HumanTrafficking.com HUMAN TRAFFICKING 101 http://www.humantrafficking.com/humantrafficking/trafficking_ht3/who_traffickers.htm Brokers-> Brothel Operator In New York City and L.A., Korean brokers who have smuggled women illegally into the United States sell the women to a Korean massage parlor operator. The brothel operator buys the value of their smuggling debt, and will require the women to either pay it off, work it off, or a combination of both. Recruiters-> Brothel Operator In Flushings, NY, an area in Queens with a large Korean community, recruiters will go to legitimate Korean massage establishments for women, and may say that the women can make much more money at another job doing the same thing. The recruiter will arrange for the transportation of the women to a Korean massage parlor in another state. When the women arrives, she discovers from the brothel operator that she must pay back the value of the transportation, the lodging and food, and will only receive tips, forcing her to provide sex to customers to make enough money to pay off the debt. An alternate arrangement may involve a recent Korean immigrant arriving in New York or L.A., with thousands of dollars of debt to pay off. A Korean taxi service driver will advise her that the fastest way to pay off the debt is to work at a massage parlor. For a fee, he brings her to a massage parlor, where the woman is pressured strongly to provide commercial sex to the customers or risk being fired
イエール大、日本の犯罪者の三分の二は、在日と部落民によるもの。 ここに書いて有る通り、日本ではタブーとされてるサブジェクトなので、 この研究をしたのはアメリカ人。 Yale University Research Today almost two-thirds of burakumin (pronounced boo-RAH-koo-min) say in opinion polls that they have never encountered discrimination. About 73 percent now marry non-burakumin, and most dismiss the possibility that the Japanese police might treat burakumin unfairly. Social workers say crime is a disproportionate problem among young burakumin, but the issue is so sensitive that no Japanese scholars have conducted research on it. One rare statistical study, conducted by Americans in the 1960's, found that burakumin youths were three times as likely as non-buraku youths to be arrested for crimes. In the buraku of Kobe, the nicest houses -- gaudy American-style homes with wide porches and Mercedes-Benzes in the driveway -- belong to yakuza bosses. As a result, the "success stories" whom children in the buraku see as they grow up are often mobsters. http://216.239.63.104/search?q=cache:nJz9zapwtEEJ:research.yale.edu/wwkelly/restricted/Japan_journalism/NYT_951130.htm+buraku+yakuza+&hl=ja
Joji Obara was born in 1952 to an impoverished Korean family in postwar Osaka. His father had been a scrap collector, then a taxi driver who worked his way into owning a fleet of cars and a string of pachinko parlors from which he amassed a fortune. Obara, then known by his Korean name Kim. his mother, who still controlled the lucrative pachinko operations, helped bail her son out, at one point paying off a creditor nearly $33 million in cash. Following these business failings, Obara's company reportedly became a front for the Sumiyoshi yakuza. Copyright c 2004 Time Inc.
>>209 この人の事か? フォックスニュース Human Trafficking http://www.fox5dc.com/_ezpost/data/3568.shtml AN ESTIMATED 20,000 PEOPLE ARE TRAFFICKED EACH YEAR INTO THE UNITED STATES. SOME OF THEM WIND UP IN MASSAGE PARLORS IT IS THE KOREAN NETWORKS THAT ARE HEAVILY INVOLVED WITH MASSAGE PARLORS. ELLERMAN SAYS THE YOUNG KOREAN WOMEN BROUGHT OVER TO WORK IN THEM ARE OFTEN LURED WITH PHONY PROMISES. ELLERMAN: "WHEN THEY GET THERE THEY FIND OUT...ONE THEY HAVE TO PAY FOR THEIR TICKET... IT COMES OUT OF THEIR WAGES. TWO THEY HAVE TO PAY FOR THEIR ROOM AND BOARD AND THEY ARE GOING TO BE LIVING IN THE BROTHEL... SLEEPING ON THE SAME BEDS WHERE THEY HAVE TO SERVICE THE CUSTOMERS ON." AND, ELLERMAN SAYS, THE ONLY MONEY THE WOMEN GET TO KEEP ARE THEIR TIPS AND THE TIPS COME FROM PERFORMING SEXUAL SERVICES. THE POLARIS PROJECT HAS AN OUTREACH PROGRAM TO HELP THEM IN WHICH VOLUNTEERS GO INTO THE MASSAGE PARLORS INITIALLY POSING AS CUSTOMERS. ELLERMAN WENT INTO THREE OF THEM WITH A HIDDEN CAMERA. WHEN THE YOUNG WOMEN WERE BROUGHT TO HIM, ELLERMAN ENDED HIS RUSE.
"HI, MY NAME IS DEREK..." "NICE TO MEET YOU. I'M ACTUALLY FROM THE KOREAN ASSISTANCE HOT LINE." "WE'VE HELPED A LOT OF WOMEN..." "WE PROVIDE FREE LEGAL ASSISTANCE, FREE...MEDICAL ASSISTANCE."
SINCE MANY OF THE WOMEN SPEAK LITTLE ENGLISH, THEY ARE GIVEN A BROCHURE WRITTEN IN KOREAN... WHICH HAS THE HOT LINE PHONE NUMBER...WHERE A KOREAN SPEAKER WILL TRY TO HELP THEM.... OFFERING PHYSICAL PROTECTION, AND MEDICAL AND LEGAL..HELP...IF THEY WANT TO LEAVE THE MASSAGE PARLOR "ONE OF THE STRONGEST CONTROLLING...FACTORS THE BROTHEL KEEPERS USE IS SOCIAL ISOLATION BECAUSE THESE WOMEN DON'T SPEAL ANY ENGLISH, AND THEY CAN'T SPEAK TO ANYONE EXCEPT THE BROTHEL KEEPER AND THE OTHER WOMEN...IN THE BROTHEL."
The contrasts are detailed in the report, which provides data on such items as age, marital status, citizenship, language, education, earnings, poverty rates, occupation and home ownership among 11 Asian American groups. Median family income, for instance, ranged from $70,849 for Japanese and $70,708 for Asian Indians.
The median annual income of Asian families exceeded that of all U.S. families, and the percentage of Asians with at least a bachelor's degree was almost double that of the total population, according to the 2000 census. Median family Income Japanese (7.8%) $70,849 Asian Indian (16.2%) $70,708 Filipino (18.3%) $65,189 Chinese (23.8%) $60,058 **Asian Americans $59,324 **All U.S. families $50,046 poverty Thai (1.1%) $49,635 >>209 Korean (10.5%) $47,624 Vietnamese (10.9%) $47,103 Laotian (1.6%) $43,542 Source: U.S. Census Bureau The U.S. Census Bureau We the People: Asians in the United States scheduled for release the week of Dec. 12. http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/releases/archives/tip_sheets/003142.html
金の為には自分の子供をウリ飛ばしたり、売春したり、何でも平気でやる韓国人 November 28, 2004 Los Angeles Times http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/la-me-orphan28nov28,1,6479167.story Two men in dark suits waited. One, a chauffeur, pried the boy from her. Mee Yeon gave him the bag. Dong Koo screamed for his mother. He began to weep. He cried until he fell asleep in a limousine taking him to his father's mansion in Seoul. "I felt as if my heart was being ripped apart," Mee Yeon said. Then she went to a lawyer's office and collected a check for $68,000. Dong Koo's father was Won Man Lee, a leading Korean industrialist, adoption records show. He founded Kolon Industries Inc., a nylon manufacturer that grew into a conglomerate with annual sales of more than $1 billion. Won Man Lee met Mee Yeon in 1977, when she was a hostess at a yo-jung, the Korean equivalent of a Japanese geisha house. He was 72 and married. She was 18 — slender with long, dark hair and a childlike vulnerability. She became his mistress. Despite their intimacy, she called him "The Chairman." He provided an apartment for her in an exclusive neighborhood of Seoul. Servants brought whatever she desired. In return, she was expected to wear hanbok, the traditional Korean costume, a bell-shaped dress with petticoats and bloomers. She was also expected to be available to the Chairman at his whim. "I didn't start seeing the Chairman because I loved him," Mee Yeon said. "He was like a father figure to me; he just adored me all the time." The Chairman suffered a stroke in 1985, when the boy was 7. The assistant brought Dong Koo to the offices of Holt Children's Services in Seoul, which started Korean adoptions in the mid-1950s. Dong Koo remembers the assistant handing him a black leather bag and saying goodbye. In her early 30s, Mee Yeon became the mistress of a Korean-Japanese businessman.
http://www.idausa.org/news/currentnews/korean_language_ad.html Mill Valley, Calif. - In Defense of Animals (IDA) has placed its first-ever Korean language advertisement, designed to urge native Koreans and Korean-Americans to help dogs and cats killed for food investigations have found that dogs and cats are still killed for human consumption and in the most cruel and gruesome manners.
They are boiled alive, beaten to death, hung, and electrocuted.
Saturday, January 8, 2005 Korean national gets jail in brothel case A Korean national was sentenced to eight months in jail Friday for managing a brothel hidden in a Lisbon Falls massage parlor. Doo Ri Kim, 39, apologized in U.S. District Court for violating federal laws that prohibit interstate travel for the commission of crimes and said she welcomed her probable deportation to her home country. According to court documents, Kim entered the United States illegally in 1998 and lived in Flushing, N.Y. She moved to Lisbon Falls last January, where she worked at the Asia Acupressure Therapy Center at 578 Lisbon Road. She was arrested in June. The government charged that Kim collected money from customers who engaged in sex acts with three women who worked there, who were also illegal immigrants from Korea. http://pressherald.mainetoday.com/news/state/050108lisbon.shtml
That's so TRUE!! I'm in that situation. ...but I realized that actually asian guys tend to like me a lot but not white guys. Probably looking 'half' is good for asians.
白人は”Where are you from?”(どこ出身?)とよく質問するが、 相手が白人であれば、2世ともなれば親がどこの国からきたのかまで追求しない。 ところがハーフの場合は親がアジアのどの国か追及される。 おまけにハーフはアジア人であり白人だとは見なさないので、アメリカで生まれたと聞くと 驚いた顔までする。日本ではハーフ差別があるし、ハーフは強くなければ生きていけない。 がんばれ〜。
By FRED VARCOE Japanese and the Japanese themselves are basically no more or less prejudiced than Americans or Europeans. The Koreans, though, are a completely different matter. http://dentotsu.jp.land.to/irai42.html#42_4