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Choe's choice of hoodie.
"Harvard?" Trump asked. "You go to Harvard?"
He does. There was some silence before Choe got the microphone. Trump started to grow impatient, urging Choe to just shout out the question.
"He's choking!" Trump jabbed. Choe finally started to ask his question.
"Basically, you said that South Korea takes advantage of the United States in terms of the defense spending on the Korean Peninsula," he began. "I just want to get the facts straight."
Before he could finish, Trump interrupted.
"Are you from South Korea?" he wondered aloud.
"I'm not," Choe said. "I was born in Texas, raised in Colorado."
That prompted some in the audience to laugh.
He tried to go on, but wound up not getting out a question, but a statement instead. "No matter where I'm from, I like to get my facts straight," Choe said before being cut off.
Choe, a 20-year-old economics major whose parents were born in Korea, told NPR after the event that one of the main reasons he went to the convention was to ask Trump a question.
"I don't care who you are, whether you're the prime minister or Donald Trump, if you say something factually wrong or do something factually wrong, I'll call you out on it," Choe said. "[Trump] makes all these, like, weird accusations, whether it's toward Mexicans or women, or South Koreans; I just wanted to call him out on that."
A fellow conference attendee who walked by Choe joked, "You're gonna have to show him your birth certificate, man!"
Choe laughed it off. But questioning where someone is from can be loaded for Asian-Americans, said Jennifer Lee, a sociology professor at the University of California, Irvine who studies race, immigration and culture.
There's an implied sense of foreignness in how Trump treated Choe, Lee said.
"It seems like this innocuous question, like people are just asking your identity," Lee said, "but they're really challenging this idea of who is American, which is, at the core, an offensive question. It's this persistent perception that Asian-Americans are not American, that they are perpetual foreigners."
As far as Choe goes, he said he's not supporting Trump for president in 2016, but he wants him to know, "I'm as American as it gets."
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So did he even get to ask his question or get an answer, or was he just ridiculed for being Asian?
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He was never able to get his question out. It really doesn't matter if he did, because we all know Trump would have never even attempted to answer him honestly. He would have just thrown out more nonsense & insults while talking about his fortune in third person.
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Did you see this link that I posted yesterday? I have watched it a few times now. Totally cracks me up and puts things in perspective.
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DTidea of being our President is to insult people. No compassion in his soul towards anyone.
He is an embarrassment to his party and an insult to Americans....He won't scare any people from other countries they are laughing at him. ...
Now, he wants secret service protection...I guess he feels threatened, I wonder why?
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Spunky wrote:
DTidea of being our President is to insult people. No compassion in his soul towards anyone.
He is an embarrassment to his party and an insult to Americans....He won't scare any people from other countries they are laughing at him. ...
Now, he wants secret service protection...I guess he feels threatened, I wonder why?
I am starting to think he might get the nomination...which would make me the happiest bunny ever. If that happens, HIllary might as well start picking out china patterns and measuring Lincoln's room for curtains.
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That video is funny!