2013년 12월 4일 수요일

About 'american intercontinental university jobs'|Project Runway...Christian Siriano "Made It Work"







About 'american intercontinental university jobs'|Project Runway...Christian Siriano "Made It Work"








To               many               Americans               "Asians"               are               either               those               employed               in               restaurants,               offering               sushi               or               Chow               Mein               or               smoked               eel,               or               they               are               like               the               movies'               Charlie               Chan,               clever               and               always               with               a               philosophical               message.

To               others,               "Asians"               are               seldom               separated               into               Chinese,               Japanese,               Vietnamese,               or               Malay               because               to               us               "they               all               look               alike".

To               still               other               Americans               the               Asians               are               the               businessmen               who               have               helped               destroy               the               American               auto               industry               and               the               textile               business               by               importing               cheaper               products               (albeit               good               ones)_               made               by               workers               who               earn               a               fraction               of               what               unionized               Americans               earn.

The               truth,               of               course,               is               none               of               the               above.

As               a               matter               of               fact,               unlike               the               Europeans               and               Latin               Americans,               Asians               did               not               come               of               their               own               free               will               to               escape               religious               or               economic               problems.

"               American               economic,               military,               and               missionary               activities               profoundly               affected               the               pattern               of               Asian               and               Pacific               islanders'               emigration               to               the               United               States....Used               on               the               West               Coast               as               labor               competition               to               drive               down               wages               in               railroad               construction,               mining,               and               agriculture,               Chinese               and               then               Japanese               immigrant               workers               were               portrayed               by               European               Americans               as               a               "yellow               peril."               Asian               workers               were               recruited               in               three               successive               waves-Chinese               (1850-1882),               Japanese               (1890-1924),               and               Filipino               (1900-1935)-as               cheap               laborers               and               then               excluded               or               discriminated               against               as               they               came               to               be               perceived               as               a               threat"               (Daniels               2).
               Where               did               this               notion               of               "The               Yellow               Peril"               originate?
               "The               roots               of               the               "yellow               peril"               stem               from               the               time               of               Genghis               Khan               and               Mongolian               invasions               of               Europe.

According               to               (sociologists),               'the               yellow               peril               combines               racist               terror               of               alien               cultures,               sexual               anxieties,               and               the               belief               that               the               West               will               be               overpowered               and               enveloped               by               the               irresistible,               dark,               occult               forces               of               the               East.'               Since               Westerners               have               limited               access               to               knowledge               about               Asia               and               its               inhabitants,               Westerners               have               created               this               fantasy               that               projects               Euro-American               desires               and               dread               on               the               alien               other"               (Marchetti               2).
               While               there               were               many               problems               with               the               Chinese               laborers               brought               over               for               building               railroads               in               the               West,               and               then               the               following               immigration               wave               of               Japanese,               it               was               World               War               II               which               provided               perhaps               the               grimmest               version               of               the               fear               of               Americans               of               the               "yellow               race".

Over               100,000               Japanese               living               along               the               West               Coast               were               forcibly               removed               from               their               homes-               including               second               and               third               generation               Japanese-Americans,               whop               were               then               sent               to               concentration               camps               farther               inland,               in               fact               as               far               as               the               American               Midwest.
               The               mindset               of               many               Americans               changed               after               World               War               II,               including               the               law-makers               in               Washington.

New               legislation               permitted               immigration,               and               they               came-               but               not               necessarily               from               now-Communist               China               or               even               Japan.

"native-born               Asian               Americans               combined               with               extensive               new               Asian               immigration               to               create               one               of               the               fastest               growing               segments               of               the               U.S.

population.

A               clause               of               the               Immigration               Act               of               1965               encouraging               the               emigration               of               professionals               proved               pivotal,               not               only               increasing               Asian               immigration,               but               changing               the               profile               significantly               from               the               earlier               bachelor               laborers.

By               the               1970s,               many               migrants               from               the               Philippines,               Taiwan,               Korea,               and               India               were               emigrating               to               America               to               fill               jobs               in               the               burgeoning               economy"               (Oxford               4).
               Still               there               is               often               a               distrust               by               the               white               majority,               the               rising               Hispanics               and               the               African-American               minorities.

Some               of               the               reasoning               is               dubious               and               certainly               somewhat               antagonistic.

There               was               a               smattering               of               problems               several               years               ago               with               the               riser               of               Sun               Myung               Moon's               Unification               Church.

Not               only               were               travelers               accosted               for               donations               at               airports,               but               the               Church               funded               and               owned               hundreds               of               fruit               and               vegetable               stores               in               metropolitan               areas,               in               effect               forcing               out               the               one-time               Italian               fruit               and               vegetable               dominance.

Entire               families               were               brought               over,               and,               whether               by               force               or               subtle               intimidation,               these               stores               were               often               operated               24/7.

The               Church               also               got               a               lot               of               publicity               of               arranged               marriages               of               hundreds               of               couples               in               a               single               public               ceremony.
               Of               course,               the               arrival               of               the               Vietnamese               was               difficult               for               some               Americans               who               felt               stung               by               both               America's               participation               and               then               withdrawal               from               Viet               Nam.

The               Vietnamese               were               a               constant               reminder               of               American               setbacks.
               What               has               set               (and               continues               to               set)               many               Asians               apart               from               the               mainstream               of               America               is               the               desire               to               be               ghettoized.

While               originally               New               York's               and               San               Francisco's               Chinatowns               were               tourist               attractions,               Los               Angeles,               for               example               not               only               has               a               Chinatown,               a               Little               Tokyo               and               Little               Saigon.

But               also               Koreatown-               all               neighborhoods               in               habited               by               those               Nationals,               many               of               whom               speak               little               if               any               English,               and               therefore               the               stores               there               cater               to               the               native               tastes               and               customs               of               the               neighborhood.
               One               danger,               which               is               accelerating               in               some               areas,               is               the               growth               of               youth               gangs,               especially               in               Little               Saigon               and               Chinatown,               where               the               objective               is               to               threaten               store               owners               and               businessmen               to               force               them               to               pay               weekly               protection               money.

There               have               also               bee               gang               fights               between               Viet               gangs,               and               between               Vietnamese               and               other               Asian               gangs.
               Another               problem               which               continues               to               haunt               Asians               in               America               is               the               so-called               "spy               problem".

"In               the               early               1950s,               at               the               height               of               the               McCarthy               era,               "allegations               arose"               (as               the               Cox               report               so               vaguely               and               aptly               puts               it)               that               Qian               Xuesen,               a               Chinese-born               American               rocket               scientist,               was               a               spy               for               the               People's               Republic               of               China.

Qian               had               fled               the               Japanese               invasion               of               China               in               1935,               emigrated               to               the               United               States,               and               earned               a               master's               degree               from               the               Massachusetts               Institute               of               Technology               and               a               doctorate               from               the               California               Institute               of               Technology.

He               was               recognized               as               one               of               the               world's               foremost               experts               on               jet               propulsion,               commissioned               as               a               colonel               in               the               US               Air               Force,               and               honored               for               the               pioneering               work               he               had               done               for               his               adopted               country,               including               development               of               the               Titan               intercontinental               ballistic               missile"               (Nelson               1).
               More               recently               a               Los               Alamos               scientist,               Wen               Ho               Lee,               was               accused,               even               charged               and               jailed               as               being               a               spy               for               mainland               China.

The               case               was               never               proved,               and               he               was               exonerated,               even               though               he               and               his               family               suffered               embarrassment               and               vilification               that               none               of               them               will               ever               truly               forget.
               There               is               no               doubt               that               there               are               Chinese               "investigators"               in               the               U.S.,               determined               to               gain               access               to               some               weapons               secrets.
               "               
               "               Beijing               begins               to               try               to               leapfrog               its               weapons               development               with               a               view               to               developing               a               credible               threat               against               the               U.S.,               the               American               people               will               demand               a               response               that               could               end               up               being               very               costly               to               both               countries-and               the               United               States               starts               with               enormous               advantages.

In               the               intelligence               business,               they               call               this               'blowback'"               (Baal               5).
               Despite               some               lasting               attitudes,               Asian-Americans               get               a               "good"               rating               from               most               other               Americans.

"No               other               minority               population               is               viewed               more               favorably               than               the               nearly               8               million               Asian               and               Pacific               Islander               Americans               who               make               up               the               fastest               growing               ethnic               population               in               the               United               States...American's               belief               that               Asian               American               experience               few               difficulties               has               made               it               easy               to               overlook               anything               negative               within               the               Asian               American               community.

"There               are               problems               within               the               Asian               American               population,               just               like               any               other,"               said               Kit               Ng,               assistant               professor               in               the               department               of               behavioral               science               at               Messiah               College               in               Grantham,               Pa.

"There               are               gangs,               drug               abuse               and               there               are               kids               who               don't               do               so               well               in               school....None               of               these               is               being               addressed               because               of               the               model               minority               myth"               (Morrisssey               2005).
               Despite               economic               presence               and               population               growth               among               Asian-Americans,               stereotypical               views               still               persist.

".

Stereotypes               of               Asian               Americans               as               hard               workers,               technical               nerds,               uncomplaining,               docile,               and               quiet               have               lead               to               the               perception               of               Asian               Americans               as               a               good               labor               source.

It               also               leads               to               the               expectation               that               Asian               Americans               lack               the               ability               to               successfully               manage.

In               a               society               that               prizes               individuality,               where               leaders               are               exemplified               by               the               traditionally               WASP               prototype,               stereotypes               of               Asian               Americans               are               highly               disconcordant               with               these               ideals"               (Chen               2).
               Asian               American               children,               in               various               studies,               are               NOT               on               the               average               smarter               than               white               kids.

Asian               Americans               are               NOT               computer               or               other               forms               that               would               classify               them               as               nerds.

They,               however,               are               loath               to               assimilate.

They               often               remain               ghettoized,               and               this               alone               makes               them               the               object               of               suspicion               and               mistrust               by               whites               and               even               other               minorities,               not               to               mention               toe               arguments               among               various               Asian               ethnic               minorities.
               REFERENCES:
               Baal,               Douglas               H.:               "Insecurity               Complex               -               Chinese               espionage               from               US               laboratories"               National               Review,               May,               1999
               www.findarticles.com/p/articles/               mi_m1282/is_10_51/ai_54618885
               Chen,               Tina:               (2004)               Excerpted               from               "A               Longitudinal               Test               and               a               Qualitative               Field               Study               of               the               Glass               Ceiling               Effect               for               Asian               Americans"               modelminority.com/modules.php?name=News&new_topic=3
               Daniel,               Roger               (1988):,               AsianAmerica:               Chinese               and               Japanese               in               the               United               States               since               1850,               (excerpted               from               Oxford               Companion               to               American               History
               Marchetti,               Gina:               Romance               and               the               "Yellow               Peril"               University               of               California               Press,               1993.
               Morrisey,               Mary               (editor:               "The               Invisible               Minority:               Counseling               Asian               Americans"               American               Coounseling               Association               (1999)
               Nelson,               Lars-Erik:               Washington:               The               Yellow               Peril               (Report               of               the               Select               Committee               on               US               National               Security               and               Military/Commercial               Concerns               with               the               People's               Republic               of               China)               www.nybooks.com/articles/421
               No               author               listed               (2005)               "Asian               Americans"               excerpted               from
               Oxford               Companion               to               American               History






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    1. chezodysseus.blogspot.com/   11/03/2010
      ... in the December, 2010 issue of ‘The American Conservative’ magazine, here , entitled...9) entitled “Can you give my son a job?” Slavoj Zizek makes the interesting...
    2. thecreditreportwithbilllewis.wordpress.com/   10/27/2011
      ...Florida include: DiversityJobsUSA & Diversity Job Expos (USA), New York Life, AFLAC..., Colonial Life, Hispanic Unity, American Intercontinental University, The Flyer Publishing Company...
    3. onlinecollege-tips.blogspot.com/   11/27/2008
      ...include the University of Phoenix , The American InterContinental University, Strayer University and South... around to bag a modest job of an illustrator. Digital technology...
    4. ravenxxxx.blogspot.com/   03/06/2008
      ... from the Baltimore School for the Arts, he moved to London to attend American InterContinental University and landed jobs with extreme visionary, avant-garde designers such as Vivienne W estwood and Alexander...
    5. lacalaw2.wordpress.com/   03/13/2010
      ...Education program via the Internet at American Intercontinental University during that time. I now work in Gyeongsan...am an English teacher at the university. All of this seemed to put...
    6. whitereference.blogspot.com/   11/06/2007
      ...every single stratum of our society, from the Universities to the media. Islamic terrorism...hard” Marxists had intercontinental nuclear missiles and openly ...
    7. sizzillingfashion.wordpress.com/   12/07/2010
      ... College London College of Fashion American Intercontinental University (London Campus) – Fashion Thames Valley University Careers advice and jobs in fashion These sites...
    8. adesignstateofmind.wordpress.com/   08/02/2010
      ...sometimes you have to have enough business acumen for everyone to recover when a job goes wrong. As an African-American interior designer, do you feel that African-Americans are...
    9. attackonthelaborparty.wordpress.com/   04/17/2012
      ... you feel that you did a good job in this company? Anders Behring Breivik...franchise agreement you did with an American company, it was a call-back system that...
    10. smithfamilysiren.wordpress.com/   01/11/2011
      ...2010 I graduated from American Intercontinental University Online with a BFA in Visual Communication...Design. I’ve done a few jobs on Elance.com and sold a...



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