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Many Asian Americans are moving “back” to Asia, citing job opportunities, the desire to experience life in Asia, anti-Asian racism and social problems at home.
Lucy Gazmararian is the founder and managing partner of Token Bay Capital, a Hong Kong based early-stage venture fund that invests in digital assets and blockchain companies with a focus on APAC. She’s also a co-chair of the Blockchain Committee of the Fintech Association of Hong Kong, and the founder of Women in Crypto, Hong Kong.
Prior to founding Token Bay Capital, Gazmararian was a senior leader of PwC’s global crypto team where she advised entrepreneurs, startups and financial institutions on their crypto and blockchain projects. She also worked with many of the world’s central banks and other regulatory bodies to help formulate their crypto asset policies and launch proof of concepts.
They’re not like the others : Breaking down the dangers of the model minority myth
The seemingly positive stereotypes commonly associated with the model minority myth that are regarded as harmless have silenced the struggles of Asian Americans. Author: Katie Kim, Kayla Key Published: 2:07 PM PDT May 17, 2021 Updated: 2:07 PM PDT May 17, 2021
The model minority myth – it’s a phrase familiar to many in the Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) community. It describes the flawed belief that all Asian Americans must be inherently successful, overachieving and law-abiding. It’s something Helen Li, a Han Chinese American, had early exposure to while attending Chinese school on the weekends.
by Ken Kingery May 20, 2021 .
DURHAM – Look, up in the sky! It’s a bird! It’s a plane! It’s…actually pretty easy for radar to tell the difference. Flying aliens from Krypton notwithstanding, there are simply not many things moving through the mostly empty, wide-open skies that are as big and fast as an airplane.
But if radar signals move down from the clouds and into a city’s streets, there are suddenly many objects that can be mistaken for one another. With only distance, speed and direction to go on, drones can easily be “hidden in plain sight” on radar displays among slowly moving cars, bicyclists, a person jogging or even the spinning blades of an air conditioning unit.