Culture Why San Francisco's Asians Voted to Recall "Progressive" Members of the School Board - 45 Minutes of an Asian Mother Politely Avoiding that her People were Called "House Niggers"

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On Tuesday, San Francisco residents voted overwhelmingly to recall three school board members—Gabriela López, Faauuga Moliga, and Alison Collins—after roughly two years of strife over school pandemic policies, admissions procedures, and renaming buildings. Though only 25 percent of the city’s population cast ballots, all three recall measures passed with at least 72 percent of votes in favor. Critics of the board argued that its members weren’t focused enough on reinstating in-person classes and were instead distracted by controversial racial justice initiatives, such as a failed and partially ahistorical proposal to remove the names of figures like Abraham Lincoln and Paul Revere from a third of the city’s schools in the name of dismantling racism. Another contested issue during the campaign was the board’s decision to base admissions at the prestigious Lowell High School on a lottery rather than grades and test scores. A superior court judge found that the board violated state law by giving parents and students inadequate notice before making the change. Conservatives framed the recall as an omen for progressivism nationwide, though other commentators have noted that the issues at play were fairly specific to the city.

Why those three members? López was the president of the board and had adamantly defended the renaming initiative, while Moliga was the vice president. Collins became the subject of public outrage after critics dug up crude tweets chastising Asian Americans that she posted before assuming her position.

Asian Americans in San Francisco, particularly those of Chinese descent, have become the public face of the recall effort, appearing frequently in media reports and rallies. A group called the Chinese/API Voter Outreach Taskforce claims that it was able to register 560 Asian American voters in its campaign to oust the board members while making the case for merit-based admissions and in-person classes. To get more insight into the role of Asian Americans in the election, I spoke to Bayard Fong, who serves as president of San Francisco’s Chinese American Democratic Club, which donated funds and bought ads to support the recall. Our conversation has been condensed and edited for clarity.

Slate: Why do you think we saw so much Asian American involvement in this recall effort?

Bayard Fong:
Education has always been dear to our heart for all of our communities. We’ve worked really hard on this. This era—this last 10, 15, 20 years in San Francisco—the education system has been getting tattered by a lot of stuff. It looked like it was the de-emphasizing of quality education, the de-emphasizing of classes that students could handle. Some kids are gifted. Some kids have higher sharpness or ability to do math, English reading and writing, or any other talents. All kids come from different backgrounds, all kids have different talents and skills that they are born with, but you’ve got to give them, regardless of ethnicity, the highest-caliber [education] to grow to their full potential. A lot of us felt that it was taking away a lot of that opportunity for maximizing potential.

What was the board doing that you think was hurting Asian Americans?

Number one is the process and procedures. You represent 54,000 students, 40 percent happen to be Asian, Pacific Islanders, but you don’t give them participation in the process. They make comments, they feel ignored. … The other part that aggravates us all is they took action, but no one did an investigation. They took action to try to remove the Lowell merit system permanently. We had parents that had to file lawsuits to say, “Hey, wait a minute. This is not due process.”

There were other things that they did that were ridiculous, like focusing on the renaming. They really should have had the schools, the teachers, and the students participate in that study. It would’ve been so much more in depth. … There was a lack of focus on making sure all of our kids were getting the best education given the dilemma of COVID, given the dilemma that some kids had to try to study at home without being in the classroom. That was much more important than all the other stuff.

The intent of the lottery at Lowell High School was to address what many saw as a lack of diversity at the school, particularly given the relatively low numbers of Black and Latino students. Do you think that diversity is an issue worth addressing there, even if you think the lottery wasn’t the right way to go about it?

The merit-based system, if you look at it very closely, had two elements to help promote diversity, and they were not being used to their fullest. One of them was that 15 percent of the new offers for ninth graders would be allocated to kids that attended middle schools in San Francisco that would be considered disadvantaged. Fifteen percent of the other slots would be open to students who would be from disadvantaged families throughout the city. Those actually were not utilized to their full potential.

How were those diversity elements not being used to their fullest?

Those have been in place for nine or 10 years now. What happens is people weren’t applying. Students of the different diversities weren’t necessarily applying. And even if they apply, and even if they’re offered the slot, they don’t come. It takes something else.

What do you think it takes to get underrepresented students to actually apply and attend?

Transportation to and from school is challenging. San Francisco has had a tough time with transportation issues because it affects a couple things. If you have to commute an hour to get your child to school, then that child has to commute an hour back. That’s less time for them to be doing homework, right? And if you have to commute an hour to get your daughter or son to school, it’s also less time for you to volunteer as a parent in that school.

What is a better solution to this diversity issue that the board was trying to address? To make other schools in the area better, or to improve transportation to Lowell?

San Francisco is 49 square miles. In elementary school, you want your kid to be able to walk to school and back. That might be four or five blocks at the most. If we had quality schools in every neighborhood, that would be just perfect. It’s not easy to get that. It’s not automatic. But if you can have that as a goal, as a focus.

Have you seen any signs that these educational issues are making Asian Americans more conservative in their politics?

That’s a tough discussion. Those of us who’ve been here for a number of generations, we’ve had the chance to experience a lot of how America’s grown up. There may be a lot of where we get to learn from being part of the democratic process and stepping up and using the democratic process to learn, and from that we all learn from each other. Those of us who are more recent immigrants may not have that experience.

So are you suggesting that recent immigrants don’t really fall on these partisan lines that have formed in America?

A lot of them don’t understand them very well yet. Right now, if you look at what’s happened in America in this last period of time, it is very confusing to anybody, even to me. Why are all these parties fighting? Why can’t they get together and pass laws in conjunction? It’s very distressing. Some of it doesn’t seem to make sense.

What are the next steps for this campaign? Are you looking now to find candidates for the board who will be more aligned with your priorities?

Yeah, I think that’s correct. The next good, responsible thing to do is to see if we can vet out some individuals who are interested and take a look at their ability to potentially be good candidates to serve in those roles.

What are you looking for in a candidate? What are you prioritizing when you look for candidates in these roles?

Basically to focus on quality education for all our kids, that’s number one. Number two is they’re responsible for finding a good superintendent that would serve the district at its highest level. That means a superintendent has experience that could demonstrate they have an ability to be broad-minded with different ethnicities, people of color, new immigrants.

I think it’s kind of helpful sometimes to have a person who is Asian or Pacific Islander, but that’s not by itself meaning that they’re going to be qualified. You want to have someone that is also experienced in working with teachers and parents. Now you’re starting to get into the list of all the nitty-gritty: dealing with the budget, being responsible. Also a superintendent that can understand how to work with their heads of high school, heads of middle schools, heads of elementary schools, and help to carry on a modern education system.
 
To be honest, the nigger was correct that Asians are house niggers, but for the wrong reason. They serve the democrats higher level thinking purposes such as white collar activist work, something you cannot let niggers handle at all costs.
This article seems to suggest that there is a growing movement of political consciousness among the Asian population, but I don't believe that it is happening. Most Asian immigrants around me lean conservative, but not everyone who is ethnically Asian can be considered an "Asian immigrant" imo.

When I was in high school there was this ethnically Chinese girl who was extremely into "social justice" and Asian advocacy. I remember the craziest thing she did being accusing our AP Literature teacher of not using enough texts from Asian authors.

The interesting part of this was the fact that she was an adopted child of white parents, and she was never genuinely a part of the Asian immigrant community in my high school. You see this very often among Hapas, second generation immigrants, and adopted Asian children. Most of them are hypersensitive to perceived anti-Asian racism and fetishize Asian culture. Sometimes ethnically Chinese examples of this would also be hypernationalistic about the mainland regime, but not in the same way that someone actually born in the mainland would act.

I'm not gonna analyze why it happens, tbf I don't talk enough with them to form anything more then a guess.

This is reason why you'd read an article by a Asian claiming to speak for the Asian community and pushing a point, and then an article by a different Asian, also claiming to speak for the community, pushing the exact opposite point. Make no mistake, I think that both individuals genuinely delude themselves into thinking they are speaking for the Asian community, but both are wrong.

I guess the moral of this story is that there is a pretty big divide, politically, between Asians that has lived a significant portion of their life in Asia, and Asians that haven't. Thus the Asian community will always be very divided, and that anyone claiming to "speak for the Asians" will have a very difficult time reconciling these conflicting worldviews.
The real story is that non whites overall vote Democrat despite whatever political leanings or social leanings. They are heavily turned off by the GOP when it comes to the lolbert muh low taxes individualistic bootstraps meme and the other reason that Trump had the balls to bring up, the visa system and chain migration. And most believe people should not own guns, as well.

Not all Asians think the same but they view the Republican Party as a threat in many different ways.
 
Sinoposting is cringe
It's all he has in life. China stopped advancing technologically 2000 years ago and have had to try to steal knowledge from everyone else because they couldn't figure out basic things needed for any technology from after the BC-AD change like glass. The Romans had glass. The Arabs had glass. Even the Vikings had glass. It's astounding what developments it is needed for.

Hell, Best Chinaman Mao starved tens of millions of other chinamen trying to figure out industrial steelmaking, something everyone else had been able to do for centuries and that was in the 20th century and it was pretty much a failure.
 
To be honest, the nigger was correct that Asians are house niggers, but for the wrong reason. They serve the democrats higher level thinking purposes such as white collar activist work, something you cannot let niggers handle at all costs.

The real story is that non whites overall vote Democrat despite whatever political leanings or social leanings. They are heavily turned off by the GOP when it comes to the lolbert muh low taxes individualistic bootstraps meme and the other reason that Trump had the balls to bring up, the visa system and chain migration. And most believe people should not own guns, as well.

Not all Asians think the same but they view the Republican Party as a threat in many different ways.
I think there’s definitely a realignment (slowly) happening. A lot of the distaste for Republicans among Asians is a holdover from when it was still the party of white Christians.
 
It's all he has in life. China stopped advancing technologically 2000 years ago and have had to try to steal knowledge from everyone else because they couldn't figure out basic things needed for any technology from after the BC-AD change like glass. The Romans had glass. The Arabs had glass. Even the Vikings had glass. It's astounding what developments it is needed for.

Hell, Best Chinaman Mao starved tens of millions of other chinamen trying to figure out industrial steelmaking, something everyone else had been able to do for centuries and that was in the 20th century and it was pretty much a failure.

I do wonder if due to the mass killings of various regimes and Emperors, the Chinese actively committed eugenics, since any free thinkers would instantly be targeted.
 
Nothing "progressive" about it, that very term is a linguistic weapon designed to put everyone not on the communist left on the back foot. What is REGRESSIVE is called progressive to make even the most heinous things seems like "inevitable advancement" on paper. Mutilating kid's dicks? It's "progressive". Anti-White racism, "progressive". Importing muslims to rape and replace the citizenry, "progressive". There's a reason why 1984 is so pertinent, because language or rather the manipulation of it, is a weapon.
 
Most Asian immigrants around me lean conservative
Same but LA and SF have a glut of east asians, namely Vietnamese and Korean? 1st generation people who's parents fled their homelands. These people have become insufferable and fetishize their parent's homeland, claiming it to be their own despite not wanting to live there. There is a mix of spoiled and LA/SF culture that creates the awful people. They never grew past highschool in terms of hollow identities but this time the anti-white movement rewards this childish behavior.
 

What Happens When Angry Asian American Parents Get Organized​

Our anxiety over the upcoming midterm and presidential elections has turned every vote, however local and peculiar, into a referendum on the future of the nation. Take last November’s governor’s race in Virginia. After the results came in for the Republican, Glenn Youngkin, hundreds of column inches were dedicated to how the result reflected a growing discontent among normally liberal voters about Covid school closures and critical race theory being taught in schools. This may have been the story of that particular election, but so many people seemed convinced that it was conclusive proof that Democrats had turned against their own party for good and would be summarily be sweeping progressives out of office in 2022 and 2024.

I am not immune to this style of political fortune telling, but what’s more interesting to me is what actually drives these predictions of doom for Democrats. Two assumptions seem to be lurking somewhere underneath the surface.
The first: School closures irreparably harmed the Democratic Party.
The second: There is a backlash against diversity and equity measures, many of which were established after the nationwide George Floyd protests.
So on Tuesday, when the deep blue city of San Francisco recalled three ultraprogressive, equity-focused members of the school board, ousting them in stunning three-to-one votes, what are we to make of it? Is it a harbinger of coming catastrophe for Democrats? Or are we dealing with a local election with local concerns?

Was the recall the result of parents who were frustrated by the extended closures of schools even when the city had low coronavirus positivity and death rates? At times, the board members had seemed more concerned with renaming schools, including one named after Abraham Lincoln, than with figuring out a plan to reopen.
Should the blame be placed on the board’s decision to change the admission policy at the elite Lowell High School from merit-based to lottery?
Or is Alison Collins, the most controversial of the three school board officials who were forced out, the reason for it all? The wife of a wealthy real estate developer, she was responsible for much-publicized and seemingly anti-Asian tweets, followed by an absurd $87 million lawsuit against the city, the school district and her fellow school board members.
If you connect any one of these factors with the landslide results, you can construct various narratives about the failure of the Democratic Party — overzealous Covid restrictions, out-of-control wokeness or being oblivious to an angry class of parents who just want their kids to be able to work hard and succeed.
The school board vote reflects all of these things, of course, but not in equal proportion. Parents may have been impatient with the length of the school closures, and many may point to the strangeness of the board’s obsession with renaming schools while students were sitting at home, but the Bay Area shut down earlier than most parts of the country, and many residents here are proud of the region’s relatively low Covid toll. Attitudes about closures have changed, but this isn’t a city that’s exactly bursting with anti-mask, anti-vaccine and anti-lockdown sentiment.

That hasn’t stopped some pundits from declaring that the recall signals the end of all progressive politics, especially in places that had extended school closures. A Republican lawmaker on Fox News declared that the results signaled a coming “red wave” in the midterms. This doesn’t mean that the shuttering of schools had no effect on the vote — I’m quite certain it had a large role — but it doesn’t seem to have been the catalyst. A recall requires people to go out and get signatures, file motions and keep up a lengthy campaign. Do we really believe that San Francisco, of all places, became so radicalized against school closures that they triggered the recall in the early months of 2021?
What’s far more likely — and supported by the voting data — is that the recall was mostly brought about by a coalition of parents who were mad about the changes at Lowell. On Feb. 2, 2021, members of the school board put forth a resolution to end test-based admissions at the school permanently and to use instead the district’s standard lottery system as a way to diversify the mostly white and Asian student body. On Feb. 9 the school board voted 5 to 2 to adopt the resolution. Ten days later, two parents began the campaign to recall the three school board members.
The vote capped a year of organizing by a mostly Asian American bloc of parents and citizens. Investors provided much of the campaign’s funding. The large amount — over $2 million in total — has raised questions about whether the effort was just an attempt by Silicon Valley and Wall Street to beat back equity efforts in public schools.
But this sort of dismissal belies the actual organizing that went into the effort and the work of hundreds of volunteers who collected signatures for the recall election throughout the city. It also ignores relatively high turnout rates in Asian neighborhoods and the overwhelming majority of those residents who voted to recall.
As a resident of the Bay Area, I first came across these activists last year while waiting in line outside H Mart, a Korean grocery chain whose San Francisco location is in the southern part of the city. I go to H Mart quite regularly, and for months, nearly every time I went, I would see the same people — mostly elderly Chinese American men and women — standing out front with their fliers and petitions. Asian Americans who normally might not have been involved in the political process started standing in front of restaurants and on corners to collect signatures. This was true in Asian and even non-Asian neighborhoods throughout the city.
They reminded me of the efforts of Richard Close, who, before his recent death, was the president of the Sherman Oaks Homeowners Association in Los Angeles. I wrote about his grass-roots successes in an earlier edition of the newsletter. He was behind monumental changes to California’s landscape, including Proposition 13, the landmark property tax bill, which may very well be the most consequential law on the state books.
Throughout his career, progressives dismissed Close’s activism and his remarkable organizing skills. Instead, they pointed to the fact that he represented a largely wealthy and white constituency and suggested that he had somehow used his power and influence to get undemocratic results. This may have been true, but he had a talent for collecting converts in grocery store parking lots and strip malls, building voting blocs that showed up to every seemingly unimportant election.

The activists behind the recall effort in San Francisco may not have known who Close was, but they seem to have followed his playbook of organizing within neighborhoods, flexing voting power in low-turnout elections and putting together a platform based entirely on self-interest.
Along the way, they picked up important political endorsements — Mayor London Breed and State Senator Scott Wiener supported the recall (Wiener announced his support the day after Youngkin won in Virginia) — and built connections with existing community groups. Before long, they had a full-fledged political coalition that took down three members of a local school board.
If you want another example of what a group like this can do, consider the leaders of the Asian American organizations that allied with the conservative legal activist Edward Blum to sue Harvard over affirmative action. The case, now before the Supreme Court, will likely bring about an end to race-based college admissions throughout the country. The origins of this group don’t lie in Republican dark money or disinformation campaigns. Instead, they first organized in 2013 because they wanted to protest what they felt was a racist sketch on the Jimmy Kimmel show. They got Kimmel to apologize and moved on to fight affirmative action in California before turning their attention to Harvard and the Supreme Court.
When all the narratives about the recall of the three board members and what it means for Democrats wind to their end, that foundation of organized Asian Americans will still be there. In San Francisco they provided a glimpse of reality amid all the theorizing on wokeness, Covid fatigue and red waves in the midterms and beyond. It’s hard to imagine that any result in a blue city within a blue state will tell us all that much about what’s coming in 2022 or 2024; not all politics take place on such grand, national stages. A lot of times, it’s just angry citizens organizing out of pure self-interest — in this case in opposition to equity efforts at a magnet school — and then drawing in others who might be mad at the same people about Covid closures, school renamings or whatever else. The San Francisco outcome should remind us that politics is still local.
 
I'd rather live in world ruled by Asians than by liberal faggots. I lived in Japan and Korea while I was enlsited. I'm rooting for the Asians on this one.
You'll end up homeless or paying 10x rent for the privilege of being tormented by a boss 6 inches shorter than you and 60 lbs lighter.

Living in an Asian homeland where they're secure in power and you're a guest: pretty nice.
Living in an Asian colony where they're insecure: dogshit, though the slanted pussy is nice.
 
Asian Americans in San Francisco, particularly those of Chinese descent, have become the public face of the recall effort, appearing frequently in media reports and rallies. A group called the Chinese/API Voter Outreach Taskforce claims that it was able to register 560 Asian American voters in its campaign to oust the board members while making the case for merit-based admissions and in-person classes. To get more insight into the role of Asian Americans in the election, I spoke to Bayard Fong, who serves as president of San Francisco’s Chinese American Democratic Club, which donated funds and bought ads to support the recall. Our conversation has been condensed and edited for clarity.

The Asian takeover of America is the best Americans can hope for, it is either the New Asian colony or Jogger People's State, no other option for whitecels
 
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My favorite part about sino posters is they're completely ignorant or hand wave away China's serious demographic problems. Between whitey stealing their women (something like 70% of Asian women in relationships in the US are with white dudes) and being materialistic bugs not having children they're slowly killing themselves off.
It is ok, you will keep receiving your Neet bucks in the colony of New China of America. You don't need to be afraid
 
What are you on about; there's more Pedros than Changs and Jamals combined.

Unless they are the Mayan or Aztec speaking variant hispanics are white, they are simply just not WASP. That is how the Americans of the past differentiated from Latin America. Catholic Romance speaking amigos vs Protestant Anglo-Saxon brotherhood
 
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The Asian takeover of America is the best Americans can hope for, it is either the New Asian colony or Jogger People's State, no other option for whitecels
People in China literally burn dogs alive to improve the flavor, eat street food cooked in oil scooped from sewers, and their idea of recycling is BBQing a motherboard to get the precious metals. I'm not making any of this up. If we let them take over here they'll destroy everything we give them just like every other non-White ethnic group, only in a slightly less dramatic manner.

The issue isn't Asians, Joggers, Mexicans, or any other ethnic group, it's the psychotic parasitic bureaucrats who would rather be vassals of foreign powers than give up their do-nothing email jobs and work for a living alongside other Americans. The only reason you exist is because other White people have their boots on our necks and are physically preventing us from doing anything about it, and as soon as you oust them from power they'll have no choice but to join us (assuming we don't rebuff them and let them starve). You need insane libtards to protect you from us, and they need you to do the work that we would be foolish to do as it sustains them.

What will really happen is that China will get it's feminist revolution, a lot of Chinese men will die in war, kill themselves out of loneliness, OD, or spend their entire lives playing video games, and the Chinese women who actually run China will import White men to knock them up.

California is a joke, if things go hot we can simply cut off the power and water from hydroelectric dams in the Republican controlled interior and let them die of dehydration or go home, then reclaim it.

It is ok, you will keep receiving your Neet bucks in the colony of New China of America. You don't need to be afraid
What are you on about with this "New China of America"? The CCP offered Biden troops to secure his inauguration, prominent party members bragged on camera that they helped get him elected, and Biden's crackhead son is more blackmailable than the Clintons. We are already living in "New China of America", it's Joe Biden's America. This is it.

Unless they are the Mayan or Aztec speaking variant hispanics are white, they are simply just not WASP. That is how the Americans of the past differentiated from Latin America. Catholic Romance speaking amigos vs Protestant Anglo-Saxon brotherhood
This is just dumb, you don't even know the difference between Cavaliers, Borderers, Quakers, and Pilgrims.

I can't get over how hamfisted and lacking in social graces Han apologists are. Even their demoralization propaganda misses the point. Truly the most autistic race on the planet.
 
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People in China literally burn dogs alive to improve the flavor, eat street food cooked in oil scooped from sewers, and their idea of recycling is BBQing a motherboard to get the precious metals.
Omg literally me, eat your chihuahua fried with street oil for extra flavor
 
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