[TRẮNG NEWS] ANH TA KHÔNG THỂ THẮNG CUỘC ĐUA NHƯNG ANH TA ĐÃ THẮNG CUỘC ĐỜI
Vận động viên chạy bộ Abel Mutai người Kenya chỉ còn cách vạch đích vài mét thôi, nhưng anh ta bị rối bởi các bảng chỉ dẫn và dừng lại vì nghĩ rằng anh ta đã hoàn thành cuộc đua.
Vận động viên Ivan Fernandez người Tây Ban Nha chạy ngay phía sau anh ta, nhận thấy điều đó và đã hét lên để vận động viên Kenya chạy tiếp.
Nhưng anh Mutai không biết tiếng Tây Ban Nha và đã không hiểu.
Nhận ra điều đó, anh Fernandez đã đẩy Mutai về đích chiến thắng.
Một nhà báo đã phỏng vấn Ivan: "Tại sao anh lại làm thế?".
Ivan trả lời: "Tôi luôn ao ước một ngày nào đó chúng ta sẽ có 1 cộng đồng sinh sống mà chúng ta giúp đỡ nhau chiến thắng."
Nhà báo cứ tiếp tục hỏi: "Nhưng tại sao anh lại để anh ta chiến thắng?".
Ivan trả lời: "Tôi không có để anh ấy thắng, thực sự anh ta sẽ chiến thắng. Cuộc đua đã là của anh ấy rồi."
Người phóng viên cứ khăng khăng: "Nhưng lẽ ra anh đã có thể thắng rồi!".
Ivan nhìn người phóng viên và trả lời: "Vậy chiến thắng đó có ý nghĩa gì nữa? Còn gì là danh dự của chiếc huy chương? Mẹ của tôi sẽ nghĩ sao?
Những giá trị này được truyền từ đời này sang đời khác. Chúng ta dạy con mình những giá trị gì? Và bạn muốn khích lệ người khác đạt được gì?
Hầu hết chúng ta thường lợi dụng điểm yếu của người khác thay vì giúp đỡ họ khắc phục các điểm yếu đó."
Bài viết: fairplayinternational
Biên dịch: Trí Trần
#trangtv #tintuc
同時也有1部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過83萬的網紅serpentza,也在其Youtube影片中提到,My African friends are very unhappy, come and find out why... Stay Awesome China (my new documentary): https://vimeo.com/ondemand/stayawesomechina Di...
kenya news 在 Trắng TV Facebook 的最佳解答
[TRẮNG NEWS] CHI 7 TỶ VNĐ CHO LOGO MỚI, XIAOMI GÂY TRANH CÃI LỚN TRONG CĐM =))))
Mới đây trong sự kiện Mega Launch, thương hiệu điện tử Xiaomi đã công bố logo mới với hình dáng và phông chữ được bo tròn lại. Logo mới được thiết kế bởi Kenya Hara, một giáo sư của Đại học Nghệ thuật Musashino và là Chủ tịch của Trung tâm Thiết kế Nippon (NDC), được biết hãng đã tốn khoảng 2 triệu NDT (gần 7 tỉ VNĐ) để mời được Kenya HARA thiết kế.
#trangtv #tintuc #xiaomi
kenya news 在 Sam Tsang 曾思瀚 Facebook 的最讚貼文
The voice of Shaun King, a Black activist.
Hate crimes, violence, and harassment against Asian-Americans have dramatically skyrocketed in this country over the past year. This is not fake news. This is not a conspiracy theory. This is not propaganda. This is not Asian-Americans trying to steal the spotlight from African Americans. It’s math. And it matters. Let me explain why.
“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” --Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
I have tried to live by those words from Dr. King for the past 25 years. And I actually believe them. It’s really easy to think that what happens to one group of people that you aren’t a part of has NOTHING to do with you and won’t affect or impact you in any way at all, but that’s just not how this country works. Injustice against one group of people absolutely impacts justice for all of us.
Now, as a principle, I try to fight back against the mistreatment of people whether I think it impacts my world or not, but what I want to teach you today is that being permissive or dismissive of the mistreatment of people will ALWAYS make us all less safe. These words from Martin Niemöller come to mind…
"First they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out—because I was not a socialist.
Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out— because I was not a trade unionist.
Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out—because I was not a Jew.
Then they came for me—and there was no one left to speak for me."
When we allow one group of people to be spit on, called racist names, punched, slapped, pushed, and mauled - it lowers the bar of what’s acceptable in this country for all people - period. If you are OK with Asian American children or senior citizens being spit on and called “China virus” then just understand that it’s only a matter of time until that ugliness spreads to children and senior citizens that you know and love. We have to reject all of it. We have to fight back against all of it. We have to take all of it personally.
I posted about this on Instagram and Facebook earlier this morning - and I want to address a few recurring themes that I saw in the comments.
A lot of my Black followers said something to the effect of, “But when do they ever speak up or fight for us?”
Every day. I see Asian Americans fighting and advocating and speaking out for Black folk every single day. I see them marching. I see them posting about injustices against Black folk on social media. I see them in planning meetings. Everywhere - from coast to coast.
If you aren’t seeing what I’m seeing, this is because you likely aren’t following who I’m following and guess what? You see who and what you follow. You don’t see who and what you don’t follow. But I follow hundreds of Asian American activists and leaders because I have hundreds of Asian American friends - many are as close to me as family. But if you literally don’t have a single Asian American friend, it’s probably very much the case that you don’t see them speaking up for us - but that says more about you than it does to them.
A lot of my Black followers said something to the effect of, “But what about those horrible videos of Asian people mistreating Black people around the world.”
I’ve seen those videos. They are horrible. Do you know why? Some Asian people are horrible and bigoted. Do you know why? Because every ethnic group has people that are good, bad, ugly and everything in between. Period. I’ve also seen multiple videos of Black people horribly mistreating Asian people. Does that mean all Black people are bad? Of course it doesn’t. This world has BILLIONS of African and Asian people around the world. We can’t judge BILLIONS of people off of the actions of a few. And here’s the thing - I have consistently seen Asian-American people speak out against the injustices of Asians against Black people, but again, I see that, because of who I follow, know, and trust.
But let me be even more specific - if an Asian man in Kenya does something ugly to an African, that should never mean that we then turn a blind eye to an Asian-American child being spit on in New York City. That’s foolishness. And let’s be honest, we’d never want the reverse done to us.
Race and racism are both complex and painful. Our nation, and this whole world, honestly, are so deeply mired in a ping pong of racism and violence, that people’s nerves are rightly frayed. I understand. Mine are frayed as well, but I am choosing to interrupt the status quo by speaking out. And personally, I do this without the expectation of anything in return. I am speaking out because the mistreatment of people because of their race or ethnicity or national origin is always wrong.
kenya news 在 serpentza Youtube 的最讚貼文
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