@AllenMarquis
Marc A.
@AllenMarquis · 2:43

Is It Just Me???

These things seems obvious to me, but apparently for many in the United States and the world, it's not. So I just want to hear your thoughts on that, but I just find it odd that we literally have to categorize the stopping of hate targeted at any group. Why not just stop hating, period, regardless of what the person or the group is? Just don't hate opposed to stop Asian hate

#hate #stophating #love

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@Tim
Tim Ereneta
@Tim · 2:27

I wonder if specificity helps raise awareness & acknowledge pain

Mark, I hear you in the gateway you're coming from, and I totally understand why do we have to segregate hate into specific ethnic groups or categories when basic human decency says, you should just stop hating people, there's no a reason to do it. And I understand why it's happening because to be sensitive to the hate crime of the day
4
@bookishpodcast
Shahnaz Ahmed
@bookishpodcast · 4:57

I mumble again. Great swell @AllenMarquis

White rage, Carol Anderson, things like that really opened my mind to this whole Black Lives Matter thing. And I'm looking forward to more books with Asian concepts. And I mean, I've read one like, oh, Gosh Fuktran wrote his memoir Saigon, and I was talking about a Vietnamese immigrant family and their life and just the hate they experienced growing up
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@FryedOreo
Dewuan .
@FryedOreo · 4:12

My thoughts.

Ultimately, the story of Black Lives Matter stop Asian hate is profound and rings true within today's social media culture, if anything else. So I think one way of looking at it. Yes, we should just say Stop hating, but that just doesn't work. It's bland. It's vague. What does that mean? Can we even stop hating in terms of psychological wise, like psychology? Can our mental makeup even be capable of that? And the short answer is no
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