The video offers a piercing analysis of the systemic exclusion hidden behind the model minority myth, revealing why economic success fails to bridge the gap to cultural belonging. It masterfully deconstructs the "perpetual foreigner" paradox that continues to haunt the Asian American experience.
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Asians Will Never Be Truly AmericanAjouté :
Asians will never be truly American.
That sounds cruel until you realize America has been saying the same thing for 150 years with better manners. Learn English, get the degree, eat McDonald's daily, watch the Super Bowl like every true American. Doesn't matter that nobody outside this nation care about it. Still, somebody will look at your face and ask where are you from? And of course, they won't accept any answer that doesn't point you as a foreign, even if you are not. This is the Asian-American glitch. You can be born in America, raised in America, educated in America, employed in America, taxed by America, and still get treated like America is a hotel they are overstaying in. Will Asians ever be true Americans?
Perhaps there is a better question. What are the odds of Americans acknowledging Asians outside of the funny Chang people thing?
>> We ought to start by mentioning that United States is a country of migration.
And I need to remark this. I don't give a rice whether you think it is something good or bad. It is an objective truth.
The clash of cultures this territory experimented is not something that appeared after globalization or after they became the most important global power. It happened since the first time a British foot stepped into it. The massive never-before-seen cultural clash in this country is part of what makes it what it is. So, the average American adult actually thinks that being born in the United States matters to being truly American. Yet, lots of Asian-Americans disagree because they learned early that birth is not enough. Birth gives you a passport. It does not stop a substitute teacher from pausing at your name like she just found a capture. The contradiction is that America loves Asians as evidence that the country works. But the moment national identity gets emotional, the same people become temporary guests again. Every country has an entrance exam for belonging. Half of which are the official paperworks.
The rest is more like do you sound American? Do you dress American? Do you understand football? No, not that football. We are really bad at that one.
You know the one where your foot don't touch the ball. Even so, most Asian-Americans can pass that too. But remember that you are Asian and with great power comes great monolid chong eyes and that's perceived as weird. In reality, your culture isn't that far by sea, but on the map it looks like your kind comes from the other end of the planet.
>> That's quite big.
>> The committee of 100 and found in 2026 that 55% of Asian-Americans regularly encounter assumed foreigness. More importantly, US-born and foreignb born Asian-Americans were perceived as outsiders at nearly the same rate. The most famous Asian-American conversation is more like a customer service cue. Are you Chinese? How do you pronounce your name? Wow, your English is so good.
Where are you from? No. Where are you really from? Do you know kung fu?
>> Can you read this tattoo my cousin got in 2009? He says it means warrior, but his ex said it means soup.
>> Stupid American.
>> Every Asian-American has heard some version of this. Pew found that 78% of Asian-American adults have experienced at least one form of being treated like a foreigner. 39% said people acted as if they did not speak English. 32% said someone told them to go back to their home country which is impressive because sometimes the home country is New Jersey. The question where are you from is not automatically evil. People ask each other where they are from all the time. Call it ignorance, interest or curiosity. It just is what it is. But after a while where are you really from stops feeling like curiosity. It starts feeling like paperwork. Every time you answer, Ohio keeps getting rejected. But America does not only reject Asians, it praises them, too.
The myth of the model minority is the only stereotype endorsed by LinkedIn.
Good at math, hardworking, quiet, respectful, family oriented, economically successful, never complains, great neighbors, terrible at parking, depending on which uncle is talking. Q found that 63% of Asian-American adults had experienced at least one model minority stereotype.
More than half said someone assumed they were good at math or science. And I'm not looking to explain here why you feel like Asians are smart and better than you on pretty much everything.
Basically, because I already made a video on that if you want to have a look. But being ordinary, that is harder. This is why the model minority myth does not cancel out the foreigner stereotype. They work together. One says Asians are useful. The other says they are not fully part of the house. It is like being hired as the perfect employee in a company where security still asks for your badge every morning. But I mean, can we blame them? After all, the maps make them look like they're pretty much too far away. They might as well come from another planet. And don't get me started. On average, American geography knowledge.
>> Oh, yeah. The country of Asia.
>> Nope. That's a continent. And that's Russia.
>> Oh, damn.
>> Plus, Asian languages look like this, and most of them sound like Ching Chong Chuancho to them. Then Asian-Americans become too successful to deserve sympathy, too non-white to become default, too alien to become fully trusted, and too convenient to be left alone. Shreddinger's minority. Open the box, and America will decide what Asians are depending on what argument it needs that day. To make this funnier, Americans are actually obsessed with lots of Asian culture. Sushi, ramen, boba. I mean, don't you feel hungry after seeing those images? K-pop sells out arenas. Korean skincare has American manly men putting snail mucus on their faces and calling it self-care. And not to mention anime. Everybody want to have a sexy pillow of hinata from Naruto. But I don't see people doing the same with Debbie Thornberry. America has absolutely learned to consume Asian culture. It just has not fully learned to treat Asian-Americans as ordinary Americans. That is the difference. The 2026 Stadius index found that 53% of US adults could not name a significant Asian-American historical event or policy. Only 7% said AAPI communities have a great deal of influence on American culture. 7%. In a country where boba tea went from Taiwanese drink to suburban teenager blood type, only 7% thought Asian-Americans have a major cultural influence. It is not that Asian-Americans are invisible. It's almost like Americans were specifically choosing what Asian things they want to see and which they want to unsee. On top of that, the sense of belonging also has a real estate market. For many Asian-Americans, where to live is not just jobs, schools, weather, and whether the local target has enough parking to prevent spiritual collapse. There is a hidden fifth variable. How often do I want to explain myself? That is why Asian inclaves matter. Not because Asian-Americans hate everyone else. For once, Asians are not the weird background detail. They are part of the default setting. This is something normal. If you were to live in a country that is considered foreign, you would like people to be as similar to you as possible. This is what ends up creating those Chinatowns and what segregates populations in America as we all know by this point. They might even be willing to pay more than they would on any other place just in the exchange of choosing the school where their kids will not be the only Asian child or choosing the city where dating does not feel like a museum exhibit. Most Americans choose where to live based on opportunity.
Asian-Americans often choose based on how much extra social friction they are willing to stand. And yes, this creates its own bubble. Asian enclaves can be insular, competitive, snobby, ridiculous, and full of aunties who know your SAT score before you know it yourself. But that is the point. An enclave is not paradise. It is just the place where your difference becomes boring. That is the Asian tax. Paying extra to be less interesting. Now, let me set some context on a bit of history about this situation.
Chinese workers helped build the transcontinental railroad. Then the country passed the Chinese Exclusion Act in 1882, restricting Chinese immigration and making Chinese people the first major group targeted by federal exclusion because of nationality and race. That is a wild sentence when you slow it down. America used Asian labor to help stitch the country together, then treated the laborers like scaffolding after construction. Useful during the build, embarrassing once the photo was taken. For decades, Asian immigrants face citizenship restrictions, exclusion laws, and legal categories designed to keep them outside the full American family. Then during World War II, Japanese Americans were incarcerated by the US government, including citizens. People with American birth certificates suddenly discovered their Americanness had an emergency off switch. The country looked at its own citizens and said, "Under normal conditions, American under panic, Japanese." Then came the 1965 immigration reforms, which reshaped Asian immigration and helped create the modern Asian-American population.
>> I'm American.
>> I think I'll use my credit card. That is one reason Asian America is often treated as recent. But the reason it looks recent is partly because America spent a century making sure it would be.
Vincent Chin was killed in 1982 during a wave of anti-Japanese economic resentment. Even though he was Chinese American, post 911 backlash hit South Asian, Muslim, Sik, and Middle Eastern looking communities because panic does not read passports carefully.
During COVID, Asian faces became attached to disease panic. As if every grandmother in Queens personally ran a laboratory in Wuhan. That is the foreigner machine. It does not need accuracy. It needs a face, a crisis, and a public looking for somewhere to put its fear. The cruel thing is that go back to Asia does not even make sense for a lot of Asian-Americans. Asia is not a waiting room with their name on a chair. For many, Asia is heritage, family, food, language fragments, vacations where relatives inspect your body like customs officers. A grandmother who loves you but cannot understand why you talk like a Disney Channel side character. In America, they are told they are too Asian. In Asia, they are told they are too American. In America, where are you really from? In Asia, why is your accent like that? Not half of two identities. One complete identity that formed because neither side knew what to do with the people standing in the middle. What I want you all to understand is that Asian-Americans often came from already established families in America. They might be American than you are with your anime chick pillow and your boba in your hands and they don't belong back in Asia pretty much because they are already as incompatible with them as you. An American Japanese is just another gajjun. And once you see it that way, the question are Asians truly American starts to sound more like a childish tantrum. Here's my final message.
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