Part of the problem is Asians don’t vote as a block, so who will protect them? If for a group of people, votes are split, who will look out for their needs?
Yep, Asian Americans are ridiculously diverse and divided compared to other racial groups in America. Conflicts back in the old world keep AAs divided here, and even when older AAs stay long enough in America to develop a purely AA identity they get swamped by newer immigrants that don't have that same sense of identity and political unity with other AA groups. Despite being in the US since the 1800s, the bulk of the AA population doesn't actually have that much history in the US or experience with how the US political system works. When Asian Americans start putting their Asian identity over their Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese, Filipino, India, Pakistani, Bangladeshi, or wherever their ancestors were from is when you'll see an actual political bloc.
That wasn't at all the point in my opinion. I'm pretty sure the intent was just to point out the political dysfunction of our system that's basically denying Asian Americans a voice on the issue that can actually impact policy.
So should black people stop organizing along lines of race, because that doesn't seem like an effective way to fight racism? That just means less black representation.
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