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Chu: We Still Need Racial Preferences Because of ‘Years of Anti-Asian Hate’

Monday on MTP Now, Rep. Judy Chu (D-CA) argued that the Supreme Court was wrong to strike down racial preferences in college admissions because discrimination hasn’t ended because there have “been three years of anti-Asian hate.” And “even amongst AAPIs, we see great disparities in education between those on the high end and Pacific Islanders as well as southeast Asians, who have very low numbers with regard to completing a college degree.”

In response to a question on whether racial preferences are supposed to be a temporary measure whose time has passed, Chu said, “Well, can we say that discrimination has ended in this country? I mean, look there [have] been three years of anti-Asian hate. We’ve seen hate crimes on the rise in this country. We have seen very polarized kinds of actions taken against communities of color. No, discrimination has not ended in this country, and there are great disparities, even amongst AAPIs, we see great disparities in education between those on the high end and Pacific Islanders as well as southeast Asians, who have very low numbers with regard to completing a college degree. So, no, discrimination has not ended in this country and there are many, many ways in which we can show it.”

Translation: As a Democrat politician, I have to maintain the fiction among my constituents that they are oppressed victims of a systemically racist society. Otherwise I have nothing to offer them.

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Judy Chu

17 Known Connections
https://www.discoverthenetworks.org/individuals/judy-chu/

In 1982 Chu became an Interim Executive Committee member of the now-defunct Federation For Progress (FFP), a Marxist united front organization created by the highly militant Communist Workers Party (CWP). According to author/blogger Trevor Loudon, CWP not only “followed the policies of Mao Tse Tung, Joseph Stalin and … Pol Pot,” but also “originally gave some support to the Islamists of the Iranian Revolution.”

When CWP in 1985 changed its name to the New Democratic Movement and began trying to infiltrate the highest levels of the Democratic Party, Chu remained loyal to the group’s agendas. As Trevor Loudon explains: “The CWP never abandoned Marxist revolution as its goal. It merely exchanged the subtle long-term infiltration of the institutions as recommended by Italian Communist Party leader, Antonio Gramsci, for the outdated, confrontational street-marching tactics of Mao Tse Tung.” Specifically, the new strategy sought to achieve power by exploiting racial and ethnic divisions. Chu demonstrated her allegiance to this approach in 1986, when she opposed a Monterrey Park City Council resolution endorsing English as the nation’s official language.