Public Agent Asian

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Public Agent (TV Series)
Asian Cutie Fucked by a Stranger
(2016)
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A demonstrator in New York holds up a photo of Christina Yuna Lee during a February 14 rally protesting violence against Asian Americans.
Published
12:48 PM EDT, Tue March 15, 2022
A demonstrator in New York holds up a photo of Christina Yuna Lee during a February 14 rally protesting violence against Asian Americans.
Hong Lee became an advocate for victims of anti-Asian violence after her own experience with racism.
This sign was seen at a March 19, 2021, vigil for victims of the Atlanta spa shooting in New York.
A police officer in New York's Chinatown hands out leaflets with information on how to report on hate crimes on March 17, 2021.
A crowd gathers in New York at a vigil for Michelle Go, who was killed in January after being pushed in front of an oncoming subway train.
Commuters wait for a train at the Times Square subway station days after Michelle Go was pushed from a subway platform there and killed.
A woman holds a candle during a January 18 vigil in San Francisco for Michelle Go.
A law enforcement officer in New York is seen at a subway station on March 30, 2021, in the largely Asian American neighborhood of Flushing.
New York Mayor Eric Adams joins local politicians, activists and residents at a vigil for Michelle Go.
Flowers adorn Gold Spa after a series of shootings at Atlanta-area spas that left eight people, six of them Asian women, dead.
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What hit Hong Lee so hard about the killing of Christina Yuna Lee was how easily it could have been her.
Late one night in February, Christina took a car back to her New York Chinatown apartment, where a man followed her up six flights of stairs and forced himself into her home. She cried out desperately for help, but before anyone could reach her, she was stabbed dozens of times to her death .
Christina was an Asian American woman around Hong’s age. They shared a mutual friend. And Hong, too, had an experience that left her afraid for her life – a memory that has been fresh on her mind lately given the string of Asian American women who have been killed in recent weeks.
Michelle Go was pushed to her death on the New York City subway tracks. GuiYing Ma died from her injuries after being struck repeatedly in the head with a rock last year in Queens. Julia Li was killed while driving in St. Paul, Minnesota. Mary Ye , a spa worker in Albuquerque, New Mexico, was shot and killed during an attempted robbery. Fang Sihui , a spa owner in the same city, was killed under similar circumstances just three weeks earlier. All the while, the trauma from last year’s Atlanta spa shootings still felt raw.
“It’s just odd to me that all these attacks are happening all at once,” Hong said.
The brutality and seeming frequency of these high-profile incidents have Hong and other Asian American women on edge. But making sense of the tragedies has proved especially difficult.
The victims have been from various class backgrounds – attacked on streets and subway platforms, at homes and workplaces. The perpetrators have been White, Black and Hispanic – their actions sometimes without expressing obvious anti-Asian bias. Meanwhile, rates of homicides and other violent crimes increased last year in cities nationwide.
As 74% of Asian American and Pacific Islander women report having personally experienced racism or discrimination in the past year, community members are pushing leaders to do more to address public safety. But without a clear, identifiable pattern to the attacks, advocates, elected officials and citizens are divided about the root of the problem – and what’s needed to solve it.
In August 2020, Hong was standing in line at a Los Angeles restaurant when she says a man handed her a business card and asked her to have lunch with him. When she politely declined, she said he snatched his card back and yelled at her to “go back to f**king Asia.” He proceeded to hurl profane and derogatory insults at her for the next several minutes. Effectively backed into a corner, Hong felt there was little she could do besides film the encounter while she waited for police to arrive.
“I honestly was preparing for the worst case scenario,” she said. “I thought, ‘If I walk out of this restaurant, what if he follows me? What if I get raped? What if I get murdered? What if he assaults me?’”
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