Originally posted by DanS
Likewise, there wasn't a backlash on a society-wide level to Korean immigrants in the wake of the LA riots. I'm guessing that most people understood them defending their stores against the rioters and were sympathetic that they were bearing the brunt of anger and opportunistic mayhem against society/whitey, f.e.
That said, I do not live in those neighborhoods, so I don't know what the situation was like there. Were the rioters holding it against all Korean immigrants that one too many hoodlum had been run off from the local corner grocery? That the corner grocery was charging too high of prices? The analogy seems a little strained, IMO.
Likewise, there wasn't a backlash on a society-wide level to Korean immigrants in the wake of the LA riots. I'm guessing that most people understood them defending their stores against the rioters and were sympathetic that they were bearing the brunt of anger and opportunistic mayhem against society/whitey, f.e.
That said, I do not live in those neighborhoods, so I don't know what the situation was like there. Were the rioters holding it against all Korean immigrants that one too many hoodlum had been run off from the local corner grocery? That the corner grocery was charging too high of prices? The analogy seems a little strained, IMO.
We haven't heard what kind of "backlash" specifically the koreans are expecting so I don't know if they are worried about a society wide backlash a more localized sort of backlash or both or what exactly.
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