The Free Press Journal

‘Chinese are in the US to build army’

- AP / NEW YORK

It was 7 a.m. on a recent Friday when Wang Gang, a 36year-old Chinese immigrant, jostled for a day job in New York City’s Flushing neighbourh­ood.

When a potential employer pulled up near the street corner, Wang and dozens of other men swarmed around the car. They were hoping to be picked for work on a constructi­on site, at a farm, as a mover – anything that would pay.

Wang had no luck, even as he waited for two more hours. It would be another day without a job since he crossed the southern US border illegally in February.

The daily struggle of Chinese immigrants in Flushing is a far cry from the picture former President Donald Trump and other Republican­s have sought to paint of them as a coordinate­d group of “military-age” men who have come to the United States to build an “army” and attack America.

Since the start of the year, as the Chinese newcomers adjust to life in the US, Trump has alluded to “fighting age” or “military age” Chinese men at least six times and suggested at least twice that they were forming a migrant “army.” The talking point also appears in conservati­ve media and on social platforms.

“They’re coming in from China – 31, 32,000 over the last few months – and they’re all military age and they mostly are men,” Trump said during a campaign rally last month. “And it sounds like to me, are they trying to build a little army in our country?” Asian advocacy organisati­ons say they worry the rhetoric could encourage further harassment and violence toward the Asian community.

Wang, who travelled several weeks from Wuhan, China, to Ecuador, to the southern US border, said the idea that Chinese migrants were building a military “does not exist” among immigrants he has met.

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