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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/wp_mjgj8c/racefiles.com/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114In the U.S. and worldwide, a hashtag devised by @SueyPark<\/a>, #NotYourAsianSidekick<\/a> was trending* since Sunday, prompting the largest scale–and most visible–public conversation related to Asian American\/Pacific Islander\/Native Hawai\u2019ian** feminism I\u2019ve seen in my lifetime. With the sheer volume of tweets (over 45,000 in less than 24 hours) and no real analysis conducted yet, I\u2019ve only seen what has appeared on my timeline, the BBC, CNN, Buzzfeed<\/a> and Slate articles that have emerged, and I\u2019ve checked in with some of the fiercest feminists I know and have been digesting all the Twitter furor as best I can.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n #NotYourAsianSidekick prompted the plainest of observations: APIAs require visibility and political power in a context that has rendered us invisible. That invisibility has been reproduced in the mainstream media, academic institutions, the workplace, and even so-called feminist or multiracial social justice spaces. Even the backlash, tweets, and trolls meant to undermine these thousands of voices are doing a great job reinforcing this need. For instance, comments made by so-called feminists of color about #NYAS that say APIAs are complaining about being told they\u2019re good at math, or gross White supremacists including #asiantits in their tweets (seriously!!!), or the concerted effort to counter-trend #AsianPrivilege, attempted to derail the conversation by delivering the very racist configurations that made this conversation explode across the globe.<\/p>\n In asking fellow feminists of color to share their reactions to #NYAS, I discovered many shared themes, concerns, hopes. To quote Sukjong Hong, brilliant APIA artist, organizer, and writer, at length:\u00a0\u201cThe hashtag conversation, overall, reflected very little of the working class and immigrant struggles and was a lot more about representation and identity politics. What I hope this conversation ignites is a movement away from talking only\u00a0about representation and identity politics, i.e. in Hollywood, to one more centered in a critique of White supremacy, capitalism, and other oppressive ideologies. A feminism that fights for liberation for all. It doesn’t have to be either\/or–fighting against sexual objectification and the model minority myth, while also fighting for fair wages and conditions for Asian\/American women working in the service sector at nail salons and restaurants, and against gentrification and militarism, can be part of one movement.\u201d<\/p>\n