Reader's response to 'Do Vietnamese
like picking on foreigners?'
Editor’s note: Annie
Nguyen, 29, works in PR management. She was born and grew up in Vietnam. She
graduated from a university in Australia, and is currently residing in Ho Chi
Minh City. She wrote this email to us in response to our article "Do Vietnamese like picking on foreigners?"
We
believe that constructive opinions from readers are crucial in keeping us in
check and our journalism as open as possible. Thus, we publish Nguyen’s email
with her prior permission. Don’t hesitate to send yours to
ttn@tuoitre.com.vn.
A foreigner (in red) is
seen engaging in a fist fight with two locals in a road rage in Hanoi on June
24, 2017
Dear
Tuoi Tre News,
As a
loyal reader of your articles, this is the first time I’ve written to express
my distress towards the article "Do Vietnamese like picking on
foreigners?" due to its inappropriateness and
misguidance.
First,
you raised an ethnicity/nationality issue that directly aims at Vietnamese –
your main readers, those you wish to inform and educate. Whether this was
intentional or unintentional, this kind of title will make readers assume
that it is actually an existing issue.
Second,
there has been a subtly uninformed discontent between Vietnamese men and
Western men. The false belief of "foreign is better/nicer than
local" has created a trend that draws Vietnamese women to date Western
men blindly, without knowing that they may be used, emotionally abused, discriminated
and manipulated. Such a lack of awareness not only creates unfairness for
Vietnamese men, but also fuels the belief of supremacy (or "white male
privilege") in some individuals.
Hence,
such a title neither created fairness for both sides nor erase the
stereotypes, but it gave rise to a label that Vietnamese men are violent,
gangsters and misogynists. The outcome of this kind of article will only
make Vietnamese women binding to the misjudgment that "dating
Westerners is better", encourage Vietnamese men to stay opposed to
Western men and lead Westerners to believe in the existence of this
bias.
Thirdly,
as a Vietnamese media outlet, you run to serve Vietnamese readers and deliver
the news as objectively and fairly as possible. As a news publisher, you are
expected to be neutral in the way you provide the contents and make people
change their thinking, instead of creating hatred and prejudice.
If
you actually watched the clip and reported it objectively, you would see that
the woman was also hit by those men. Then why didn't you mention the fact
that road rage in Vietnam includes everyone, regardless of their gender, race
or nationality? Why didn't you mention that men need to learn how to control
their temper and to behave appropriately? Why didn't you mention that public
violence between genders is alarming because it is not the only case during
the recent years that a man hit/beat mercilessly a woman and nobody did
anything. No hard punishment was made, no viral clip has been done, and we
women are given 2 days per year (National Women’s Day and International
Women’s Day) to take care of our wounds and bruises?!
However,
I hereby attach a comment of a Westerner under an article on The New York
Times about the truth of living and dating in Vietnam. This is what you
should be concerned about, to awake and to raise awareness and also to
educate Vietnamese men to stop picking on "Women", not
"Westerners".
Sincerely,
Annie
Nguyen
TUOI TRE
NEWS
|
Thứ Tư, 28 tháng 6, 2017
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