AMagazine: Inside Asian America.Asian American A·sian A·mer·i·can also A·sian-A·mer·i·can n. A U.S. citizen or resident of Asian descent. See Usage Note at Amerasian. A teenagers who transform cars imported from Asia into low-riding hot rods with gold rims and powerful sound systems are often racially profiled by police, write Hua Hsu Hua Hsu (b. 1977) is an American music critic based in New York City. He is a frequent contributor to Slate, Blender and the Boston Globe Ideas section, as well as a former contributing editor to URB magazine and a columnist at The Wire. He maintains a blog, to here knows when and Diana H. Yoon in the June/July issue of aMagazine: Inside Asian America. In "Driving While Asian," the authors write that, 20 years ago, Asian American youth, especially on the West Coast, began fixing up Mazdas and Hondas as a way to assert their identities. One young man they interviewed explains, "It's almost like an Immigrant coming here, defeating all the odds and making it on his own. You take a Civic and make it as fast as a Mustang. It's that underdog theory--that you can do it just as well." Although "a lack of data collection has made It fairly difficult to track trends among young drivers," Hsu and Yoon write, police often pull over these cars for no reason. "Today's youth of color are under surveillance by a law enforcement establishment that sees FUBU FUBU For Us By Us (clothing brand) FUBU Fouled Up Beyond Understanding (polite form) FUBU Fouled Up Beyond Use (polite form) FUBU Fouled Up By User clothing, Adidas sneakers sneakers Noun, pl US, Canad, Austral & NZ canvas shoes with rubber soles sneakers npl (US) → zapatos mpl de lona; zapatillas fpl or spoken slang as potential markers of gang activity. One doesn't have to mobilize too much distrust against cops to see how a Civic with fancy rims or a modified exhaust could serve as circumstantial evidence circumstantial evidence In law, evidence that is drawn not from direct observation of a fact at issue but from events or circumstances that surround it. If a witness arrives at a crime scene seconds after hearing a gunshot to find someone standing over a corpse and holding a of a driver's criminality." |
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