Friday, July 3, 2026

California officially honors Bruce Lee with his own day

The late Bruce Lee became a cultural icon.

Bruce Lee was much more than a martial artist. He was a cultural game changer and now his impact will get the recognition he deserves. California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill officially declaring May 17 as annual Bruce Lee Day, establishing the first-ever state namesake day dedicated to a Chinese American.

Lee’s daughter, Shannon, who is CEO of the San Francisco-based Bruce Lee Foundation, said the honor is a testament to her father’s enduring legacy as a bridge between cultures.

“From young people who found confidence and possibility in his philosophy, to families who finally saw themselves represented on screen, to athletes who still draw on his teachings of discipline and inner strength, his reach is profound,” Shannon Lee said in a statement.

Introduced by San Francisco Assemblymember Matt Haney, the measure isn’t just a nod to martial arts cinema — it’s an institutional recognition of an icon who fundamentally dismantled how Asian American men are viewed in this country.

“At a time when Asian Americans were too often absent from or stereotyped on screen, Bruce Lee helped generations see themselves represented with strength and dignity,” Haney said in a statement.

Bay Area roots

Born in 1940 to Chinese parents who were touring with an opera in San Francisco. Because of the birthright citizenship provision of the 14th Amendment, he was officially recognized as an American citizen. After the tour, his parents returned to Hong kong with their newborn son.

While the world claims Bruce Lee, the Bay Area holds his foundation. The selection of May 17 is intentionally tied to his return to California.

On May 17, 1959, an 18-year-old Lee stepped off a ship in San Francisco with just $100 in his pocket, fleeing a turbulent youth in Hong Kong. 

Oakland named an intersection near his
first studio after Bruce Lee.
Lee went to high school and the University of Washington  in Seattle where he met his future wife. He dropped out of UW to return to the Bay Area in 1964. Lee took root in the East Bay, opening his foundational Jun Fan Gung Fu institute on Broadway in Oakland, where he developed his revolutionary Jeet Kune Do philosophy.

Today, the Chinese Historical Society of America honors this footprint with its major exhibit in San Francisco's Chinatown, "We Are Bruce Lee: Under the Sky, One Family."

Dismantling the emasculated Asian male stereotype

For a over a century, Hollywood and American media weaponized a dual stereotype against Asian American men. They were either cast as the effeminate, quiet, and subservient caricatures designed to be laughed at, or as the diabolical, faceless "Yellow Peril" villains. Studio executives systematically stripped Asian men of agency, sensuality and leadership and this affected the way Asian men were viewed in the real world, in schools, in the board room, and the work place.
Bruce Lee shattered that framework. When Hollywood forced him to hide behind a mask as Kato in The Green Hornet and paid him a fraction of his white peers' salaries, he refused to stay marginalized.
By demanding the spotlight, Lee injected an unapologetic, fierce masculinity into the American consciousness. He was vocal, incredibly charismatic, fiercely intelligent, and physically unmatched. He forced western audiences to look at an Asian man not as a prop, but as a dominant, leading hero.

View from the edge

In a survey of American attitudes towards AAPI, hardly anyone could name the best known Asian America today. Even though he died in 1973, Bruce Lee is among the popular answers to that question. Decades after his death, Lee continues to be popular. 
The new law strongly encourages public schools to integrate Lee's life and cultural contributions into their lesson plans. Future generations won't just see him as a martial arts movie icon—they'll learn about his fierce advocacy for equal representation, his fight against Hollywood stereotyping, and his demands for racial tolerance.
At a time when our community continues to fight visibility battles and combat systemic bias, remembering a pioneer who refused to bow to Hollywood's racist boxes is a necessary blueprint.
A day making his story an official part of California's story cements his place in popular culture and in a quiet way, helped shape the development of Asian Americana. It ensures his lessons on overcoming institutional barriers remain highly relevant for the struggles of tomorrow.
This is how we anchor our stories into the center of American history, ensuring we are never treated as footnotes again.
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Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Trump thwarted, birthright citizenship upheld by Supreme Court

CHINATOWN / FACEBOOK
San Francisco's Chinatown unveiled its newest mural hooring Wong Kim Ark.

The historic 128-year-old legacy of a San Francisco Chinatown cook has been vindicated, as the US Supreme Court ruled 6–3 to reject a white nationalist-fueled executive order, firmly upholding constitutional birthright citizenship for all children born on American soil.
For Norman Wong and Sandra Wong, the great-grandchildren of civil rights icon Wong Kim Ark, the high court's decision was a moment of profound relief—and a stark reminder of the perpetual fight against the "forever foreigner" stereotype that still haunts Asian Americans.

The high-stakes legal battle erupted after Donald Trump tried to unilaterally dismantle the 14th Amendment. His executive order sought to strip automatic citizenship from children born in the US to temporary visitors and undocumented immigrants—a move that would have upended the lives of over 250,000 babies born each year.
Writing for the majority, Chief Justice John Roberts made it clear that a president cannot rewrite the Constitution by executive decree. The court squarely reaffirmed the very precedent established by the Wongs' ancestor in the landmark 1898 case, United States v. Wong Kim Ark.

Trump vows to continue fight to restrict immigration

Celebrate while you can. Although the Supreme Court struck down Trump’s executive order restricting birthright citizenship, other crucial Supreme Court victories for the administration are adversely affecting millions of legal visa-holders from Asia, the country's fastest-growing immigrant group.

The fact that the SCOTUS ruling wasn't unanimous in what legal experts thought would be a slam-dunk gives the Trump regime an open door to achieve what his weaponized DOJ sought to do.

Trump criticized the Supreme Court’s 6-3 ruling striking down his executive order on birthright citizenship, calling the decision "too bad for our Country" but pivoting immediately to demand a legislative workaround through Congress.
In a series of posts on Truth Social, Trump expressed deep disappointment, stating that while the court upheld the policy, "we can easily make it up in Congress through Legislation."
He urged Congress to begin drafting legislation "today" to dismantle birthright citizenship, labeling the practice "expensive and unfair to our country" and promising lawmakers his "Complete and Total Support!."
Though Trump lost his fight against the 14th Amendment's birthright protections, immigration experts warn that the cumulative effect of the other Supreme Court decisions will heavily disrupt the lives of millions of lawful visa holders and employment-based immigrants.
Trump achieved his broader agenda against immigrants of color through the following wins at the Supreme Court: 
  • TPS Terminations: In Mullin v. Doe, the Court ruled 6-3 to bar judicial review of Temporary Protected Status (TPS) determinations. This greenlit the termination of TPS for Haiti and Syria, immediately placing roughly 350,000 work-authorized individuals at risk of deportation and the loss of their legal status. While the case specifically involved Haitian and Syrian immigrants, the ruling has broad implications for all immigrants, including those from Asia, such as Nepal, Burma (Myanmar) and Afghanistan.
  • Asylum Restrictions: In Mullin v. Al Otro Lado, the Court determined that migrants attempting to seek asylum while standing outside the US border are not considered to have legally "arrived" in the country.
  • Lawful Permanent Resident Admissibility: In Blanche v. Muk Choi Lau, the Court ruled 6-3 that US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) can defer the inspection of Lawful Permanent Residents who committed crimes until after their conviction, making it significantly easier to deport green card holders.

View from the edge

Immigrants from Asia make up the fastest-growing minority and racial demographic in the US, and they are disproportionately affected by the broader shifting legal landscape. While ending birthright citizenship would have primarily affected the US-born children of undocumented Latinos, studies have shown that the fastest relative growth of "unauthorized" births would have occurred among Asian families who are lawfully in the US on student and work visas. Many Asian immigrants face massive green card backlogs — often stretching over a decade — and thus rely on these temporary, nonimmigrant statuses for long periods.
The original battle began when Wong Kim Ark, a cook born in San Francisco, traveled to China and was blocked from re-entering his own country by racist immigration officials wielding the Chinese Exclusion Act. He refused to back down, forcing the Supreme Court to declare in 1898 that birth on U.S. soil equals citizenship, period.
In a poetic twist of continuity, the case defending our foundational rights was argued before the high court by ACLU national director Cecillia Wang — an American-born daughter of Taiwanese immigrants. Norman Wong, a 76-year-old Bay Area resident and veteran activist of the 1970s Third World Liberation Front at UC Berkeley, noted how "sweet" it was to see a Chinese American woman who herself is a US citizen by virtue of birthright citizenship, leading the defense at the frontlines of anti-Asian discrimination.

Norman Wong spent the morning of the decision at his Bay Area home, eating a bowl of oatmeal and anxiously tracking the news. Speaking with AsAmNews, he emphasized that this wasn't just a win for one community.

“Today's ruling shows that his victory remains as important now as it was in 1898... We’re fighting for rights for all Americans because these are fundamental rights.”

His sister, Sandra Wong, expressed disbelief that they even had to fight this battle in 2026. "This is Wong Kim Ark's legacy," she stated. "It is our legacy."

Just weeks before this modern victory, a vibrant new mural honoring Wong Kim Ark was unveiled and blessed with a lion dance in San Francisco's Chinatown. It stands as a permanent reminder that Asian Americans have never been passive bystanders in the story of American democracy—we built the legal bedrock that protects everyone.

"His fight was not just his own, it was for me and for generations to come," Norman Wong said in an earlier speech at a rally outside the Supreme Court building. "This is Wong Kim Ark's legacy. This is my legacy. It is our legacy, and now it is our responsibility to protect it for our children and for generations yet to come."
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Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Asian and Asian American players advance at Wimbledon


At Wimbledon, from left, clockwise: Jessica Pegula, Alex Eala and Naomi Osaka.
Led by Jessica Pegula, Asian and Asian American netters are setting Wmbledon's grass courts ablaze. 
Stepping onto the historic London courts as the formidable No. 4 seed, Pegula, the highest-ranked American woman in the world is on a mission to rewrite her Wimbledon narrative after a frustratingly early exit last year.
For a player who often flies under the mainstream media radar despite her top-tier status, the Korean American’s opening performance sent a loud, undeniable message to the rest of the Wimbledon field.
On Monday, June 29, Pegula stepped onto Court 2 and completely dismantled Czech qualifier Darja Vidmanova in a commanding 7-5, 6-3 in straight-sets.
Pegula openly admitted to battling some heavy first-round anxiety. But true to her resilient form, she channeled that nervous energy into pure power—breaking her opponent six times, dominating from the baseline, and reminding everyone why she is one of the most dangerous hard-court and grass-court threats in the game.
Pegula has zero intention of slowing down as she eyes a deep run to eclipse her historic 2023 quarterfinal appearance.
She is set to clash with Spain’s gritty veteran Sara Sorribes Tormo in a second-round showdown on Wednesday, July 1
Eala's historic win
Filipina tennis sensation Alex Eala just shattered another glass ceiling at the All England Club, delivering a historic masterclass to claim her first-ever Grand Slam singles main-draw victory.

Representing Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPI) globally, the 21-year-old tennis phenom dismantled Mexico’s Renata Zarazúa 6-1, 6-2 today on Court 12 to cement her status as a legitimate presence on the world stage.

Eala entered the tournament having already disrupted the status quo as the first player from the Philippines to secure a seeded spot (No. 29) in a Grand Slam singles
draw. 

Backed by a roaring, flag-waving Filipino contingent, Eala took absolute control of the baseline early, securing five straight games to close the opening set in just minutes.

Winning a dominant 83% of her first-serve points, she easily consolidated an early break in the second set before comfortably serving out the match.

For the global Filipino diaspora and marginalized communities watching elite spaces like Wimbledon, Eala's victory represents a monumental shift in representation. 

After battling through a heartbreaking, learning-curve exit against the defending champion last year, her bounce-back performance today marks the first-ever singles main-draw win by a Filipino player in the tournament's history. 

Eala returns to the courts on Thursday, July 2, for a highly anticipated rematch against Australia's Maya Joint who ruined Serena Williams return to competitive tennis by beating the 7-time Wimbledon champion Tuesday. 

Wednesday blitz

The tournament organizers packed Wednesday's schedule with a heavy dose of Asian and Asian American talent:
  • Naomi Osaka: The 14th seed takes her iconic style to No. 2 Court for a first-time clash against Russian qualifier Anastasia Gasanova. They kick things off bright and early at 1 AM local time.
  • Michael Zheng: Fresh off silencing Great Britain, the New Jersey sensation hits Court 17 at 11 AM EDT to battle Colombia's Nicolás Mejía.
  • Janice Tjen: Looking to add another high-profile scalp to her resume, Indonesia’s rising force meets Australia's Daria Kasatkina on Court 16 around 12:30 PM local time (following the morning match).
  • Mananchaya Sawangkaew: Thailand's history-maker will clash with American powerhouse Alycia Parks on Court 8. Their showdown starts right at 11 AM local time.
  • Lanlana Tararudee: Facing a monumental test, Tararudee draws 18th seed Ekaterina Alexandrova. They anchor Court 4 with an 11:00 AM local time start. 
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Sunday, June 28, 2026

A looming mandate: Why the High Court won’t let Trump erase birthright citizenshi[


UPDATED: 
6/29/2026, Corrected  time frame for  the SCOTUS ruling.


The tension is palpable as the nation braces for this week’s expected Supreme Court order on birthright citizenship. 


For immigrant families and communities of color, the question at the heart of Trump v. Barbara is nothing short of existential: Will this deeply conservative bench deploy its usual legal gymnastics to validate Donald Trump’s executive order and dismantle birthright citizenship?

Despite a track record of letting the administration run roughshod over asylum seekers, court watchers broadly agree that even this right-leaning bench will draw the line at tearing up the 14th Amendment. 

After previous decision by the Robert's court, a decision on birthright citizenship will probably be issued in time for the United States' 250th anniversary.

Cecillia Wang’s Constitutional masterclass

The turning point came during April's oral arguments when ACLU National Legal Director Cecillia Wang stepped up to the podium. Wang, a daughter of immigrants herself, didn't just argue a case — she delivered a masterclass on the separation of powers and stare decisis.

Wang dismantled the administration's overreach, arguing that birthright citizenship is unequivocally mandated by the text of the 14th Amendment and backed by ironclad precedent. She anchored her defense in the landmark 1898 ruling United States v. Wong Kim Ark, which firmly established that citizenship hinges on birth location, not parental status.

Wang warned the justices that allowing an executive order to override a constitutional right would unleash legal chaos, effectively creating a retroactive, second-class tier of citizens. Her message was clear: A fundamental constitutional right cannot be wiped away by a president's Executive Order.

Skepticism from the bench

Wang’s arguments clearly resonated across a divided bench. Chief Justice John Roberts openly mocked the administration's reliance on "quirky" and "idiosyncratic" historical exceptions—like the children of foreign diplomats or invading soldiers—to justify denying citizenship to millions.

Justice Elena Kagan slammed the government's use of "obscure sources," while Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson targeted the logistical absurdity of the policy, imagining a reality where parents are forced to produce immigration papers in delivery rooms. Even conservative Justice Neil Gorsuch expressed profound skepticism toward the administration's reliance on outdated Roman law concepts.

While this Supreme Court has repeatedly shown its willingness to bend the rules for Trump's conservative agenda, rewriting the very fabric of American citizenship appears to be a bridge too fa
r.


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