Yellow Fear. Stop Asian Hate

April 25, 2026
Jumbotron
Start the end of Fear. Stop Asian Hate.

By Nish (Karen) Nishimura
Originally published on April 11, 2021 on LinkedIn

The surge of Asian hate is another huge step back for civilization. As a society, we’ve taken too many steps backward, but in the United States, this contempt for Asians, Orientals, “yellow people,” has been around since at least the mid-1800s, when Chinese immigrants were being exploited to build the railroads and do other types of hard labor that others would not do.  “Orientals” back in the day weren’t even thought of as human beings, and certainly weren’t treated as such.  In the image below, the Oriental is depicted as a murderous monster.
yellowfearnewspaper

My father and his family (my family) were subjected to the most contemptible of hate crimes. The internment in concentration camps in the USA during World War II.  My dad was a natural-born American citizen, stripped of his civil rights, and sent to a prison camp without due process because he was of Japanese ancestry. The executive order for all Japanese to report for incarceration was signed by President Roosevelt.  Hate crimes towards citizens of all colors/races start from the leadership down and are motivated by fear. For more information about the experience that affected over 100,000 Japanese Americans, you can read my article published on The Good Men Project.

I am a third-generation Japanese American (Sansei) born in Los Angeles and grew up in a neighborhood composed mainly of minority races. In Mid City, now called Arlington Heights, there was a higher percentage of black families, mixed with Latino and many different races of Asians. There were very few white families in our neighborhood at that time, but with the current gentrification of Mid City, the ethnic mix is becoming more equalized. I’m also a baby boomer, so my life experience is markedly different from the millennial adults and other generations who grew up later in mid and central Los Angeles. In my day, there was Chinatown, Little Tokyo, and Koreatown was just starting to bloom.  Now there is Filipino Town, Thai Town, and there’s a Little Saigon in Orange County.  
yellowfearprotest

A sad aspect that has prevailed over the whole Asian community is that it’s not a whole community. By this, I mean Asians silo themselves by associating and identifying only with their race of origin, and view other Asian races as separate and not related ethnically. When I was growing up as a kid through to adulthood, there was friction between Japanese and just about every other Asian race. Groups of Asians were brought up with prejudice and were coached by their family and friends to hate other Asian races. These feelings stemmed from conflicts that can be traced to the ancient history of oppression, imperialism, wars, violence, and inequality of all kinds between the countries in Asia. I am not implying that the discord between various people in Asia wasn’t devastating to the victims involved.  My point to this is, we cannot hate one another if we want to stand in solidarity against discrimination, bigotry, and hate crimes.

For the sake of the current wave of “Asian Hate” cresting and crashing upon innocent people, Asians, all of us, need to stand up and be heard as one solid group of people. We all have one thing in common as an Asian community: our ancestors immigrated to the USA to establish a life as Americans. They came with dreams of freedom and to have the ability to forge a life that includes opportunities to prosper, along with the human and civil rights they could never have had in their country of birth.

Though the subject of this piece is Asian-focused, I believe solidarity should apply to everyone.  We all have different views and preferences about politics, religion, art, sports, music, etc., but we should all be for a united community. Each of us respects our rights to live here in the United States under peace and prosperity.

#stopasianhate #yellowfear #japaneseamericans #chineseamericans #filipinoamericans #thaiamericans #koreanamericans #peace #peace4theplanet








How It Works
1
Listen / Participate

ENTER a LIVE Session of your choice.

Listen in or request to become a speaker to share your story through links, photos, or screen sharing. Want to connect face-to-face? Turn on your camera to share your live video feed — whether as a small avatar or as part of a panel displayed on the jumbotron.

2
Host A Session

At the top of each page, click the Create Session button. Share the link with your newsletter subscribers, social media followers, or other intended attendees.

Bring your stories to life through links, photos, screen sharing, or your device's camera feed. Engage your audience with interactive polls.

You can make your session open to everyone, keep it private, or set an admission fee for exclusive access.

3
Become A Podcaster

Chatmosa streamlines podcast production, whether you're hosting solo or collaborating with others in your session. And the best part? You can publish your podcast directly from your mobile device—making it simple to record, manage, and share your content anytime, anywhere.

This feature is available exclusively to paid subscribers. Head to your Account Settings to set up your podcast—add the right information and upload the required artwork.

Once set up, an RSS feed will be generated for you and hosted by Chatmosa. Simply copy and paste the link into your preferred podcast platform. That's it — set it and forget it! Your public and recorded sessions will automatically be added to your podcast feed.