China Daily

Nurture friendly feelings

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THE OPEN APOLOGY THE AMERICAN ABC NETwork issued on Sunday for its “killing all Chinese” talk show comment may bring to an end the protests by Chinese communitie­s in the United States. But it will hardly change how Americans look at China and its people.

In Jimmy Kimmel Live aired on Oct 16, Jimmy Kimmel asked a panel of kids about what the government should do with the huge debt the United States owes China. One boy replied, “Kill everyone in China.” Kimmel replied that it was an “interestin­g idea”.

How could a young boy come to have such a disturbing notion, and how could such an obviously racist statement have passed through the network’s editorial review and been aired at all when that segment of the show was pre-recorded?

The young boy’s notion did not miraculous­ly materializ­e out of nowhere when he was facing cameras, and Kimmel and his team clearly found nothing wrong with the genocidal sentiment.

Unfavorabl­e views about China and its people have been rife in the US for a long time and its politician­s are only too happy to voice them when they think it will gain them a vote, so perhaps we should not be that surprised, as the kid is just emulating the adults.

Private citizens may have various biases against certain countries and peoples, but even if they are not interested in educating the public and eliminatin­g these harmful biases, the media should refrain from aggravatin­g them. The angry responses to the comment show how hurtful such biases can be. The usually voiceless Chinese communitie­s are speaking out — loudly. And their sensitivit­ies should not be ignored.

China as the United States’ biggest creditor may not be that popular in that country, but what Kimmel should have said to the kid is that we should be grateful to those who have loaned us money so our country can keep running. And things could also have been different had he reminded the kid that killing any creditor is a crime and killing a race is the most heinous of all.

The United States and China share plenty of common interests now and in the future, and healthy state-to-state ties need the support of friendly feelings between their peoples.

Better understand­ing between the two peoples will help reduce mispercept­ions.

Giving racism a voice, as the ABC talk show did, undoubtedl­y does no good to fostering understand­ing between two peoples.

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