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post
March 6, 2020

Coronavirus Alarm Blends Yellow Peril and Red Scare

Joshua Cho
Coronavirus Alarm Blends Yellow Peril and Red Scare

 

As an Asian-American, I’m not surprised that there are numerous reports surfacing of racist and xenophobic responses arising in the US (and elsewhere) as a result of the coronavirus outbreak, where “coughing while Asian” is being compared to “driving while black.” In case there are any doubts that media coverage is being racialized, reports about new coronavirus updates in the US, particularly in areas like New York City, are using unrelated header images of East Asian people wearing face masks to drive the impression that Chinese people are unique carriers of disease, even when they aren’t Chinese.

NYT: To Tame Coronavirus, Mao-Style Social Control Blankets China

The New York Times (2/15/20) likened efforts to control the spread of the coronavirus to “Mao-style mass crusades.”

Watching corporate media’s sensationalist and racist coverage of the COVID-19 coronavirus, it’s clear that everything from the naming of the “Wuhan coronavirus,” to the false narrative and timeline propagated by corporate media to demonize China’s handling of the coronavirus outbreak, does more to stoke mass hysteria and undermine a US adversary than to show support and solidarity with the Chinese people. In short, it’s the same old Yellow Peril and redbaiting nonsense US media have always engaged in.

Corporate media’s typical framing of Chinese government actions to combat the virus verged on parody, portraying uncontroversial moves in the most insidious terms possible. For example, instead of reporting that Hubei government officials were fired for withholding information about the coronavirus outbreak from higher-ups, outlets like CNN (2/13/20) and Business Insider (2/11/20) claimed they were “purged.” Discussing volunteer efforts to assist China’s effective quarantine efforts, the New York Times’ “To Tame Coronavirus, Mao-Style Social Control Blankets China” (2/15/20) framed it as “one of the biggest social control campaigns in history,” and described “neighborhood busybodies” and “uniformed volunteers” aiding the quarantine efforts as “Mao-style mass crusades.”

 

Corporate media bombarded Western audiences with loaded headlines whose point was that Communism was evil and the coronavirus outbreak the inevitable result of peculiar Asian attachments to authoritarianism.

WSJ: A Communist Coronavirus

The Wall Street Journal‘s Daniel Henninger (1/29/20) warned that China is likely “to do significant damage to the rest the world, by accident or intent.”

The Wall Street Journal ran op-eds like “A Communist Coronavirus” (1/29/20) and “China Is the Real Sick Man of Asia” (2/3/20), which gleefully claimed that the “mighty Chinese juggernaut has been humbled” by a “species-hopping bat virus,” and argued that the “Wuhan coronavirus is a metaphor” for “the Communist Party of China” and “American isolationism” being ideas that are “incompatible with the modern world.”

Another Times report, “Coronavirus Crisis Exposes Cracks in China’s Facade of Unity” (1/28/20), played into the ludicrous “imminent collapse” of the Chinese government trope, by claiming that the coronavirus outbreak has “blown up” the “facade” of a “gradually unifying society,” and that the “cracks” showing in “China’s veneer of stability” reveal that China “remains riddled with vulnerabilities that no amount of censorship or strong-arming can hide.”

The Times’s Nicholas Kristof (1/29/20) argued that “we’re seeing the dangers of Xi’s authoritarian model, for China and the world,” because of “Xi’s China” systematically gutting institutions like journalism, social media and NGOs (avenues typically exploited by the US to subvert targeted governments and spread pro-American propaganda).

The Times (1/25/20) reported that “officials in Wuhan and around the country withheld critical information, played down the threat and rebuked doctors who tried to raise the alarm,” which should raise questions about “weaknesses at the very heart of the Chinese system”: China’s “rigidly hierarchical bureaucracy” and “quasi-imperial system” discourage “local officials from raising bad news with central bosses,” as “top party bosses in Beijing” have “little direct power over what happens in the provinces.”

Because a novel virus emerged in a rival state, it doesn’t logically follow that that government should collapse, or that the US should therefore be more imperialist. But corporate media use these tortured syllogisms, serving as mouthpieces for the US government.

 

USA Today ran an op-ed (2/12/20) by Republican Sen. Ben Sasse claiming that the “coronavirus disaster” is the “deadly consequence” of Xi and the Chinese Communist Party’s “malfeasance and misrule,” with “Communism” being the “perfect incubator for the coronavirus.” Both Sasse and the Times’ Kristof claim that this is so because the Chinese government allegedly silenced “whistleblowers” like Dr. Li Wenliang, which prevented him from alerting the public about the novel coronavirus. (Meanwhile, the United States has held Chelsea Manning, perhaps its most prominent whistleblower, in jail for nearly a year for refusing to testify in the case of Julian Assange, who the US has indicted as a spy for publishing government secrets.)

Virtually all of corporate media’s false narrative of the coronavirus outbreak hinge upon the story of Li being a “martyr” and “whistleblower” who allegedly “discovered” the coronavirus, but was silenced and “arrested” by government officials before he could alert the public.

LAT: A doctor was arrested for warning China about the coronavirus. Then he died of it

The LA Times has not corrected its report (2/6/20) that Dr. Li Wenliang was arrested for telling people about the coronavirus—as the Wall Street Journal (2/7/20) has.

But as several people have already documented at length, while Dr. Li’s death is tragic, he was not a whistleblower. In fact, the Times’ own “reconstruction of the crucial seven weeks between the appearance of the first symptoms in early December and the government’s decision to lock down the city” (2/1/20) disproves the corporate media narrative of authoritarian secrecy to maintain “control” over unrest. Li wasn’t a virologist or epidemiologist treating affected patients; he was an ophthalmologist who treated eye problems, which might be why he incorrectly claimed that the new virus was SARS, a related but different coronavirus.

A whistleblower is someone who tries to alert the public about wrongdoing on the part of individuals or an organization;  Li didn’t consider himself to be one, and didn’t want his December 30 posting in a private WeChat group to be shared with anyone else. Neither were Li and his colleagues “arrested,” as several sensationalist reports falsely claimed without issuing retractions, as the Wall Street Journal (2/7/20) did:

Dr. Li Wenliang was taken in by police and questioned after telling former classmates about a cluster of pneumonia cases. An earlier version of this article mistakenly said Dr. Li Wenliang had been arrested.

Li  was told by the police on January 3 not to spread unverifiable rumors—after a screenshot was leaked on December 31—because false information could set off unnecessary panic during the Spring Festival (one of the busiest and most important holidays of the year), as at the time there had been no fatalities and no clear evidence of human-to-human transmission. According to the prestigious New England Journal of Medicine’s timeline (1/29/20), the full genomic sequence wasn’t isolated and shared until January 10, and the first fatality occurred on January 9—with most of the fatalities occurring among older people with co-morbidities—and the first confirmed case outside China was reported on January 13.

More importantly, the Red Scare coverage above completely erased the fact that the “whistle” had already been blown by Dr. Zhang Jixian, the first doctor to report the novel coronavirus to health authorities on December 27, which resulted in an announcement by the Chinese Center for Disease Control (CDC) and the Wuhan Health Commission (WHC) earlier on December 30, the same day Li texted his seven colleagues (Global Times, 2/6/20). Zhang wasn’t suppressed by the government, but rather commended for her efforts.

 

The Los Angeles Times (2/16/20) seemed to imply that the coronavirus epidemic was a positive development, insofar as it stripped Xi Jinping’s “aura of invincibility in ways that no political dissident, opposition party or revolutionary movement ever could,” and because “his inability to contain it” could lead to growing dissent and skepticism towards his “form of techno-authoritarianism.”

The LA Times even managed to sneak in references to “ancient notions” of a “mandate of heaven construct,” with “Confucian thinking and forms of deeply rooted superstition” holding “widespread sway,” as a potential explanation for why Chinese people might not realize that Xi and the Communist Party don’t have the support of “mysterious forces in heaven.”

A less racist and propagandistic explanation for why more Chinese people aren’t rebelling against the Chinese government would be the fact that, alongside its repressive institutions, it has continually raised their standards of living, an accomplishment reflected in the high levels of public trust expressed in surveys.

Time: The Coronavirus Outbreak Could Derail Xi Jinping’s Dreams of a Chinese Century

Like Time (2/6/20), numerous outlets presented the coronavirus as a problem for Xi Jinping or the Chinese Communist Party—rather than for humanity.

As Michael Parenti noted in Against Empire, corporate media demonize the leaders of official enemy states as an evil personification of the entire population, who is then used to justify US hostility against them. This is readily apparent in corporate media’s predominant framing of the coronavirus as a problem for “Xi Jinping,” or the “Communist Party” (New York Times, 1/26/20; Time, 2/6/20; Wall Street Journal, 2/7/20; Foreign Policy, 2/10/20; Foreign Affairs, 2/10/20), rather than for the Chinese people and those suffering from the virus abroad, or as a problem for the international community to solve cooperatively with China.

CNN (2/11/20) criticized Xi’s visit to treatment centers as a  “stage-managed outing,” scorning the president for never “being at any risk of infection,” and refusing to place himself in a situation “where his health was under threat,” based solely on the kind of face mask he was using! Apparently, the proper way for a foreign head of state to seriously deal with an epidemic is to contract and overcome the disease themselves at the risk of their own life.

The New York Times’ “Coronavirus Outbreak Risks Reviving Stigma for China” (2/10/20) offered plausible deniability by claiming that “old stereotypes” of China being a “source of contagion” are “unfounded” and “outdated,” before subtly playing into the racist trope of dirty Asians by retaining claims that “China’s recent history of what are known as zoonotic infections” raise “questions about public-health practices in the world’s most populous country,” because, “China remains somewhat of a laboratory itself,” according to the RAND Corporation’s Dr. Jennifer Huang Bouey:

“There is quite a fair amount of epidemics originating in China or passing through China,” she said…. Two of the devastating flu pandemics of the 20th century — the Asian flu of 1957 and the Hong Kong flu of 1968 — both originated in China and left a trail of about 3 million deaths worldwide.

International authorities and leading medical professionals don’t share US corporate media’s negative assessment. UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres praised China’s efforts to contain the epidemic as “remarkable,” and warned against stigmatizing the country. The World Health Organization (WHO) has repeatedly lauded China’s remarkable transparency and mobilization of resources, despite corporate media flak, and declared China to be setting “a new standard” for its “unprecedented” response, and has criticized what it called an “infodemic” of overabundant and false information.

The Lancet (1/24/20), a leading British medical journal, shared this positive assessment of China’s efforts, praising WHO for not bowing to the “pressure” of “massive attention and conjecture” to declare a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) “until necessary.” It published an open letter expressing solidarity with Chinese officials and health professionals combating the disease.

Journalist Patrick Cockburn (Independent, 1/24/20) observed that the need to blame somebody, the spread of misinformation and suspicion of assurances provided by authorities, are common features of epidemics, because it’s difficult for governments to convey a sense of calm and emergency at the same time.

Corporate media provide relentless reports on new outbreak and mortality figures without providing comparisons to other common diseases and previous epidemics, with headlines like the Washington Post’s “South Korea Coronavirus Cases Surge as Italy Confirms First Death From the Virus” (2/21/20), the New York Times’ “Deaths in China Surpass Toll From SARS” (2/9/20) and USA Today’s “Death Toll From Coronavirus Surpasses 1,100; US Confirms 13th Case” (2/19/20). Virtually all of these kinds of reports include comparisons with previous epidemics surfacing in China, like SARS, but scrupulously avoid making comparisons with more familiar—and devastating—diseases like influenza, and epidemics originating in the US like the H1N1 swine flu.

For example, when Business Insider (3/6/20) reported that there are over 100,000 cases of people infected with the coronavirus, with over 3,400 fatalities worldwide, it omitted that the flu infects and kills far more people every year. Although it’s true that the coronavirus has a higher fatality rate (about 0.1%, compared to coronavirus’ 3.4%), it’s also true that the flu is much more infectious and kills far more people. In the winter of 2017–18 for the US alone, a worse than usual year, it’s estimated that the flu killed 80,000. So far in the 2019–20 season, there have been at least 32 million to 45 million flu infections in the US, and 18,000 to 46,000 deaths. Worldwide, the flu kills around 650,000 people every year, yet many US adults are so complacent about the flu that only 45% of them bother to get the annual flu vaccination.

When US media criticize China for taking a month to declare an emergency, they omit that when H1N1 first appeared in the US in 2009, it took the US government six months to declare an emergency, and is estimated to have killed between 150,000 and 575,000 people worldwide in its first year. Curiously, corporate media didn’t consider that an opportunity to question the legitimacy of capitalism or the US government for their handling of these diseases, or raise criticisms of US censorship (FAIR.org, 4/16/19).

NYT: Pence Will Control All Coronavirus Messaging From Health Officials

Centralization of coronavirus information was seen as an attempt to “display a more disciplined strategy” (New York Times, 2/28/20)—rather than a sign of dangerous authoritarianism, as in China.

Nor do outlets like the New York Times (2/27/20) raise alarms about US “authoritarianism” when it reported on the Trump administration’s censorship of leading scientists warning about coronavirus, like it previously has on climate change, in order to “tighten control of coronavirus messaging by government health officials and scientists,” and having them “coordinate all statements and public appearance with the office of Vice President Mike Pence.”

US media hysteria is especially hypocritical, as virtually all of these reports condemning China’s response omit criticisms of US preparedness for epidemics (which is far worse), and the Trump administration previously firing the US government’s pandemic response chain of command, while cutting funding for disease prevention programs.

However, this threat inflation and opportunistic fearmongering toward official enemies is par for the course for corporate media. Oxford’s Our World in Data project found huge discrepancies between what Americans actually die from (cancer and heart disease), and what media reports emphasize as the cause  of US deaths (homicide and terrorism). Perhaps this sensationalist Yellow Peril and Red Scare coverage over the coronavirus are the result of the US government seeing China itself and its challenging socialist system as viruses that need to be “contained.”


EDITOR’S NOTE: This article includes comparisons between Covid-19 and the seasonal flu that were premature at the time, and in hindsight plainly wrong: Covid-19 is both much more infectious and much more lethal than the flu.

Featured image: Gothamist photo (1/31/20) of Asian Americans wearing surgical masks, illustrating a story about the absence of coronavirus (at that point) in New York City.

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Filed under: China, Coronavirus, Healthcare, Race & Racism

Joshua Cho

Joshua Cho

Joshua Cho (@JoshC0301) is a writer based in Virginia.

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Comments

  1. AvatarWondering Woman

    March 6, 2020 at 5:12 pm

    Oh American BIG MEDIA—-how sad you are. Everything you accuse China of, America has done too. It was pretty amazing that China built a lot of hospitals so quickly–and they truly are ramping up corrections. Oh, and by the way, America—since China apparently makes 80 % of the drugs Americans use—what is the plan for possibly returning a lot of these medical items to being produced in America___IN CASE THERE”S ANOTHER VIRUS OR DISEASE.? This would really help Americans with better jobs too. Maybe American corporations and Wall St. etc. have to figure out who there are working for—-it does appear that so many corporations do not care what happens to American citizens after all. Profits should not be more important than lives!

  2. AvatarRon Garrison

    March 6, 2020 at 7:10 pm

    Coronavirus Alarm Blends Yellow Peril and Red Scare . . . and Orange Menace.

  3. AvatarMartin

    March 7, 2020 at 6:36 am

    Yes, there is racism and rampant hypocrisy and malevolent hatred in the US political and corporate media response to the coronavirus, but this long tendentious piece by a Xi apologist go too far the other way.
    What is “racist,” to use the scare quotes tactic employed ad nauseum by the writer, about noting China’s locus of zoonotic outbreaks? What is “racist” about noting the hold of “ancient notions” in China? What is “socialist” about destroying the earth’s biosphere and the immediate environment of China to produce cheap goods for worldwide export?

  4. AvatarRael Nidess, M.D.

    March 8, 2020 at 9:30 pm

    An exceedingly well-written & researched condemnation of U.S. media’s propagandistic fear-mongering in the service of Empire. As a U.S. citizen I cannot help but be ashamed.

  5. AvatarMark Weaver

    March 10, 2020 at 9:30 am

    The NYT also did a despicable hit piece blaming Iran’s Islamic “system “ for the outbreak there and basically calling for it’s overthrow. And of course nary a criticism of South Korea or of course Netanyahoo’s crackdown.

  6. Avatarmacgyver

    March 11, 2020 at 7:22 am

    Yet another example of an article that seems fair at first glance… it “drives the impression” that it is factual. However, if a rational person checked the sources, it will found to be full of logically fallacious assumptions. fair.org facebook clickbait.

  7. AvatarKevin

    March 14, 2020 at 5:28 pm

    People don’t mistrust CCP China because they are xenophobic.

    They mistrust CCP China because 20% of world IP is stolen by them empirically.

    They mistrust CCP China because Mao murdered millions of them and that is what the Chinese government is to its core.

    They mistrust CCP China because they lie about every single thing they do in their government.

    They mistrust CCP China because it’s done nothing to earn trust.

    They mistrust CCP China because they have much pride and where there is too much pride there always lies.

    They mistrust CCP China because their leaders are on record in private mumbling about this bullshit about a hundred years of shame or whatever dumb stuff they care about.

    They mistrust CCP China because their Olympians get caught doping like Russians.

    They mistrust CCP China because its neighboring countries hate it to the core and no one knows China better than its neighbors.

    They mistrust CCP China because the FBI has a thousand investigations underway with nationalistic morons engaged in theft.

    They mistrust CCP China because they dehumanize the individual by rallying cries of a disapora collective.

    They mistrust CCP China because the worst thing that ever happened to it was Chiang kai-shek not conquering it and liberating it earlier.

    They mistrust CCP China because they have 1 million human beings in internment camps in 2020 and this is not 1945 so there are zero excuses and nothing to understand.

    They mistrust CCP China because pride is not important and neither is dignity because these are privileges we are earned by how we conduct ourselves even when poverty is upon us.

  8. AvatarKevin

    March 14, 2020 at 5:56 pm

    People don’t mistrust CCP China because they are xenophobic.

    They mistrust CCP China because 20% of world IP is stolen by them empirically. People that steal are inhumane. It doesn’t matter what our ancestors did. We are only accountable for what we do while living.

    They mistrust CCP China because Mao murdered millions of them and that is what the Chinese government is to its core: barbaric murderers that do not respect 20 million Chinese lives. They murder people for their speech on the internet.

    People do not trust nationalistic CCP China because rather than admit their wrong doings like children they point fingers back and say will you do this and that.

    They mistrust CCP China because they lie about every single thing they do in their government.

    They mistrust CCP China because it’s done nothing to earn trust with all of the widespread seft of everything around the world.

    They mistrust CCP China because they have much pride and where there is too much pride there always lies.

    They mistrust CCP China because their leaders are on record in private mumbling about this bullshit about a hundred years of shame or whatever dumb stuff they care about.

    They mistrust CCP China because their Olympians get caught doping like Russians.

    They mistrust CCP China because its neighboring countries hate it to the core and no one knows China better than its neighbors.

    They mistrust CCP China because the FBI has a thousand investigations underway with nationalistic morons engaged in theft.

    They mistrust CCP China because they dehumanize the individual by rallying cries of a disapora collective.

    They mistrust CCP China because the worst thing that ever happened to it was Chiang kai-shek not conquering it and liberating it earlier.

    They mistrust CCP China because they have 1 million human beings in internment camps in 2020 and this is not 1945 so there are zero excuses and nothing to understand.

    They mistrust CCP China because pride is not important and neither is dignity because these are privileges we are earned by how we conduct ourselves even when poverty is upon us.

    They mistrust CCP China because if I said this while living there the government would kidnap and murder me. How can you trust people who are not allowed to say but only what the government says.

    It is not xenophobic to naturally mistrust and disbelieve everything a people say when their government will kidnap, censor, or lower their social credit score for saying anything else. It is infallible logic to view them with mistrust in light of the above.

  9. AvatarSusan Dost

    March 19, 2020 at 12:36 pm

    Joshua Cho,

    Dr. Li Wenliang was taken in by police and questioned after telling former classmates about a cluster of pneumonia cases. An earlier version of this article mistakenly said Dr. Li Wenliang had been arrested. << Not a question of been arrested or been questioned, it is a clear fact which demonstated "Freedom Of Speech" is ill practiced in that part of the world.

    According to info. which you'd provided , "…. Dr. Li had "incorrectly claimed that the new virus was SARS, a related but different coronavirus….". << FYI, Covid19 is in fact a cluster of pneumonia case, that being said, your accusation had no solid evidence to link Dr. Li had mistaken Covid-19 with SARS.
    It was called Wuhan Virus during the breakout in Wuhan, later WHO called it COVID19 to avoid further racial slurs, now the official medical term is SARS-CoV-2, do you see the connection yet?

    You should be grateful that you have the freedom to blah about anything you like on THIS PART OF A GLOBE. "A PERFECT COUNTRY" doesn't exist no matter where you live, if you must examine every word, every move.. …etc. under a magnifying glass. You are as biased as rest of trolls on internet!

    Have a good day at Virginia.

  10. AvatarMike Liston

    March 26, 2020 at 9:45 pm

    Thanks for this, I live in Beijing and have been here for 20 years and lived here through SARS as well and I can assure you the level of safety I feel here and the confidence I enjoy in the leadership far exceeds any safety or confidence I would feel back in the US. In fact, our biggrest problem now in China is overseas Chinese and others trying to escape the West for safe haven in China.

  11. AvatarSteve Saunders

    April 2, 2020 at 7:35 pm

    Nobody cares fag.

  12. AvatarFang

    April 3, 2020 at 11:56 am

    Fake news.

    Can’t believe this article is citing Global Times as one of its source for defending CCP. We all know Global Times is a CCP’s propaganda media. And all other statements and sources are very bias toward paralleling CCP’s propaganda. Allowing this kind of CCP propaganda fake news published on this website citing China’s propaganda source will hurt this website’s credibility

  13. AvatarFang

    April 3, 2020 at 12:19 pm

    “For example, instead of reporting that Hubei government officials were fired for withholding information about the coronavirus outbreak from higher-ups, outlets like CNN (2/13/20) and Business Insider (2/11/20) claimed they were “purged.””

    How did you do the fact check?

    https://www.bbc.com/zhongwen/simp/chinese-news-51276069

    The Hubei government officials said in a live stream TV show, that he cannot disclose the situation without permission from the time. What’s your source to confirm that he’s not “purged”?

    “the first doctor to report the novel coronavirus to health authorities on December 27, which resulted in an announcement by the Chinese Center for Disease Control (CDC) and the Wuhan Health Commission (WHC) earlier on December 30”

    This “announcement” link is a paper published about the virus, now you call it “announcement”, how would public know? As far as I know, there’s a paper published, and it is the way Chinese scientists trying to workaround the censorship imposed by CCP to warn people. I don’t know why you make it sounds like Chinese government is not trying to block anything and is doing all the good things.

    There are just way too many other stuff obviously you didn’t check source or write it on purpose to favor CCP. Just too many I don’t want to point it out one by one.

    Seriously, are you sure you are on fair.org payroll instead of CCP payroll?

  14. AvatarAl

    April 7, 2020 at 10:27 am

    Thank you for providing a healthy viewpoint while looking objectively at all that is going on. True media coverage and news reporting is critical around tough times, not just as an information base but as a perspective builder and reaffirms beliefs within; a nation, community, and society. The lens with which we see the world is lit by those that carry the torch of truth, yet in the latter years we’ve been often deluded by a false light. Thank you for your service and due diligence.

  15. AvatarBob

    April 9, 2020 at 4:44 am

    Uhmm, so what happen here, Another prove FAIR isnt that FAIR and conceal the truth and works for CCP? Some guy point out to check this news to open my eyes about your fairness. Just liers. Lies kill people you know so be ashamed. There is corruption everywhere but the worst of all communism.

  16. AvatarJordan

    April 17, 2020 at 11:09 am

    Thank you for writing this, Joshua. It is very courageous of you to publicly stand up against the nonstop propaganda campaign in America that is brainwashing everyone to hate China. I truly believe that the US desires a military war with China, and it is ramping up the hit-pieces and blame-pieces on China to manufacture public consent. Every rational person needs to see the US media for what it is — a warmongering mouthpiece of the US military industrial complex. Stay safe and keep speaking out.

  17. AvatarChristina Ponsot

    April 19, 2020 at 3:25 am

    Dear Joshua, I for one do not have a TV nor have any Interest in the reporting of MSM on any level be it TV, radio, print of any kind. I’m on Facebook and listen/watch strictly to real/true news on the internet. I’ve always loved Asians , have had many friends and my mentor for 12 years was Mongolian /Chinese/ Caribe Indian/ Spanish and a God realized being. I also had a Korean Sensai when I pursued Aikido. I prayed for the Chinese people being treated the way they were during the epidemic. I cried for them. I love Asian food as well. I am American and am also a citizen of Mexico where I’ve lived for 46 years. There are realized people on this planet. You are finding them. I wish you the best, fellow Spirit, living as a human.

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