Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a teacher in FCPS and I never saw any anti-Asian bigotry and I haven't as a parent either. Other prejudices, yes - racism against black and brown people, anti-semitism occasionally, anti-Muslim, but not anti-Asian, unless you count the stupid "where are you from" comments that ignorant people sometimes make.
Then you never sat in the IEP meeting with an Indian family that had a kid with learning disabilities and the school suggested that the parent just step up and do more at home and hire a tutor while continuing to deny services to their child.
Anonymous wrote:OP - I grew up and lived in MoCo and then to te SF Bay Area. My observations - east coast Asians are more recent and expected to assimilate. West coast Asians have been around for generations, have activist groups and are more outspoken. That was 20 years ago when I made that observation, I think things are more even now on the east coast in terms of activism. Expect micro aggressions and ignorance everywhere. But I’ve never experienced outright hostility. I wonder if the pandemic has changed things though - i’d still rather be in the DMV over the south any day... you couldn’t pay me to move there, unless it was a major hub.
Anonymous wrote:I was a teacher in FCPS and I never saw any anti-Asian bigotry and I haven't as a parent either. Other prejudices, yes - racism against black and brown people, anti-semitism occasionally, anti-Muslim, but not anti-Asian, unless you count the stupid "where are you from" comments that ignorant people sometimes make.
Anonymous wrote:
LOL You forgot to add that everyone's a lawyer or married to a lawyer in FCPS. This area has the most educated population in the country. Unless you have a dual PhD/JD or PhD/MD - you aren't special. And even then, you're one among thousands.
Anonymous wrote:My kids are part Asian and the only race-based bullying any of them encountered in school was from Asian kids who claimed for various reasons they couldn’t really be part Asian.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op again. This thread sort of took a turn...systemic and institutional racism in the US is a problem, and it affects all marginalized populations. It needs to be addressed for sure, and we all need to vote to put decent human beings in public offices, so policies can change for the better - less discrimination, less violence, less poverty.
However, I started this post because I was seeing COVID-induced anti-Asian hate crimes, my white American husband was very worried that our half Asian children might be subjected to this kind of hate and aggression. What can we do to protect them? What can we do to prepare to deal with issues, if/when they come up? We've had a very bad experience in the past, and we don't want to make the same mistake again meaning, wasting a bunch of time and our emotional energy dancing around with the school administration and teachers to not hurt these ignorant, racist white perpetrators' feelings. One example of the dance - one kid thought our son was black and used the slur for black people, told him to go back to his country, go back to Africa. My son called him an idiot, he wasn't from Africa, Africa isn't a country. Asst. Principal wanted my son to apologize to the kid for calling him an idiot. We said hell no, have that other kid apologize to him for using the slur - they said, well, he didn't "mean it" plus your son is not black, so what's the big deal? Ugh. Makes my blood boil just remembering that day.
Sorry to hear this. It’s the reality in America no matter where you go. Maybe less blatant here but still present.
I’ve got your back and know many others do too. Ignore those who will pressure you to be “reasonable” or who try to minimize things. I’m not sure how FCPS will handle things, they are somewhat progressive but many white people as evidenced here have no knowledge of their bias and blind spots. FCPS fairly clumsily handled the George Floyd and BLM movement amount students. This is typically a white liberal area and so they’ll acknowledge and talk about race up until it starts being uncomfortable or inconvenient.
Anonymous wrote:Op again. This thread sort of took a turn...systemic and institutional racism in the US is a problem, and it affects all marginalized populations. It needs to be addressed for sure, and we all need to vote to put decent human beings in public offices, so policies can change for the better - less discrimination, less violence, less poverty.
However, I started this post because I was seeing COVID-induced anti-Asian hate crimes, my white American husband was very worried that our half Asian children might be subjected to this kind of hate and aggression. What can we do to protect them? What can we do to prepare to deal with issues, if/when they come up? We've had a very bad experience in the past, and we don't want to make the same mistake again meaning, wasting a bunch of time and our emotional energy dancing around with the school administration and teachers to not hurt these ignorant, racist white perpetrators' feelings. One example of the dance - one kid thought our son was black and used the slur for black people, told him to go back to his country, go back to Africa. My son called him an idiot, he wasn't from Africa, Africa isn't a country. Asst. Principal wanted my son to apologize to the kid for calling him an idiot. We said hell no, have that other kid apologize to him for using the slur - they said, well, he didn't "mean it" plus your son is not black, so what's the big deal? Ugh. Makes my blood boil just remembering that day.
Anonymous wrote:People don't take Asian or white racial grievance seriously OP. I'm not saying it's right or wrong but just some practical advice would be to teach your children how to react when faced with common trash who sling racial slurs at you. Being the "white man with a lawyer" won't get you anywhere with FCPS as they will just buckle down and ride your money out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP in this area you’re going to see “nice white” racism. People won’t call your kids slurs and won’t physically harm them. But if your kids do well in school, they’re going to assume it was because you had a Tiger mom stance with them and they do kumon and tons of outside enrichment. They’ll place model minority expectations on your kids. In this area, I have had women say to my face they moved out of their perfectly nice neighborhood because it was predominantly south Asian and they didn’t want their kids in a school with no white peer group and where they would struggle to academically stand out against Asian kids. That’s the kind of BS that passes for acceptable among the parents in this area.
In this area, which is deep blue and filled with “All are Welcome” signs.
I mean you see that in Red areas too. Its not uncommon.
https://psmag.com/news/ghosts-of-white-people-past-witnessing-white-flight-from-an-asian-ethnoburb