Young Vietnamese American Survey

Young Vietnamese American Survey

June 12, 2017
Welcome to the Young Vietnamese American Voter Survey!
The purpose of this survey is to gather information on what young, Vietnamese Americans care about in relation to social issues within their communities. The PIVOT Young Vietnamese Americans (YVA) Committee will use this information to create resources and implement programs that will empower young people to become more civically engaged. 

Terms of the incentive for completing the survey:  To thank you for your time, upon completion of the survey, you will get a chance to enter in a weekly raffle. Each week for the next four weeks, a winner will be drawn from our survey pool for a chance to win a $25 gift card. You may prefer to not participate and have the option to remain anonymous.

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Celebrate Asian Pacific American Heritage Month by Making History

Celebrate Asian Pacific American Heritage Month by Making History

May 31, 2017
By Tung Thanh Nguyen, MD

People used to talk about America as the melting pot, which sounded either scary or unappetizing. Immigrants were supposed to assimilate, which meant becoming white. I call it the bleaching of America. Asian Pacific American Heritage Month means we can celebrate what makes us different. The diversity, not the singularity, is what makes us stronger. As a scientist, I can say that this is true. Species that do not have diversity cannot adapt, and will become extinct.

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PIVOT Endorses Bee Nguyen for State Representative for the 89th District in Georgia

PIVOT Endorses Bee Nguyen for State Representative for the 89th District in Georgia

PIVOT (The Progressive Vietnamese American Organization) endorses Bee Nguyen as State Representative for the 89th District in Georgia.  Nguyen currently serves as the Chief of Staff for State Representative Sam Park, a Korean-American whom she helped to defeat a three-term Republican incumbent to be the first openly gay man to serve on the Georgia General Assembly. Nguyen is also the founder and Executive Director at Athena’s Warehouse, a nonprofit that helps educate and empower underserved teenage girls, many of whom are immigrants or daughters of immigrants, in the Atlanta community.

It is now more important than ever to elect a woman of color, and the first Vietnamese American, to the Georgia legislature.  Nguyen will use her platform to further expand progressive causes in Georgia that are aligned with PIVOT’s, including mobilizing minorities and young voters, and taking a relentless stand in support of immigrant and refugee rights.

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Pivotal Days, Pivot Times

Pivotal Days, Pivot Times

May 15, 2017
By Kimberly Ngo

This year is a pivotal moment in my life, as I transition into medical school. At age 23, I am now the same age as my dad when he arrived in America almost 40 years ago. Although the world’s memory may only recall the images of people cramming onto boats or into overflowing helicopters after the fall of Saigon on April 30th, 1975, our Vietnamese diaspora never forgets our refugee history or how it impacts our lives today.

Thus, as we celebrate Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Month (AAPIHM) this May, I want to honor my family’s journey to America and reflect on how their struggles and successes have shaped my own identity as both a Vietnamese American and an Asian American woman.  

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Let’s Talk About It Together – A Vietnamese American Perspective on Mental Health

Let’s Talk About It Together – A Vietnamese American Perspective on Mental Health

May 14, 2017
By Anh Thu Bui, M.D.

Mental illness sounds like a curse, something horrible, inescapable.

We have a hard time talking about it, perhaps because the symptoms of mental illness are bound to expressions of speech and behavior, and at times, almost indistinguishable from one’s personality, or that we cannot help but respond negatively when we see the human mind, the organ of consciousness, lost in the grip of such fearsome ills.

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Not in Our Best Interest: How our So-Called Leaders Failed our Vietnamese American Community

Not in Our Best Interest: How our So-Called Leaders Failed our Vietnamese American Community

May 9, 2017
What do we call people who create a plan that may lead to our bankruptcy, threaten our health and the health of our loved ones, and that will eventually kill some of us? Surely, not our leaders because they don’t represent our best interest. On May 4, 2017, there were 217 members of the U.S. House of Representatives voted to do all that to Vietnamese Americans and all Americans in order to give a tax cut to the very rich by passing the American Health Care Act (AHCA).  The Vietnamese have a well known saying that “health is gold!” because we know that good health is invaluable. The 217 representatives who voted for the AHCA also believe that our health is gold--in the sense that they cashed in our health to make actual gold for billionaires.

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America at War

America at War

April 30, 2017
Day of Remembrance, PIVOT's Statement on War

April 30th, 1975 marked the end of the Vietnam War, a day that ultimately led Lady Liberty, with Lazarus' iconic lines in hand, to welcoming  over 1 million Vietnamese cascading in waves through various refugee and migration policies.  Ripples from that day were felt throughout the world as millions of Vietnamese ultimately sought refuge on foreign shores. 

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Reflecting on April 30th

Reflecting on April 30th

April 27, 2017
By Uyen Nguyen

“A bomb dropped so close to us that I got very scared and ran off,” my Mom said as she reminisced about her absent-mindedness in the midst of a battle storm. “Only after I ran 30 meters or so that I realized I was holding a pillow, and not you,” she smiled with an embarrassed chuckle. It was around April 30th, 1975, in Da Nang, Vietnam, one of the cities most affected by the Viet Nam War. I listened to her in delight. There was never a second of my life when I ever felt neglected or unloved by my Mom, so the part about being left behind never fazed me. It was always about my Mom running back into the bombed zone, risking her own life to grab her 2-month old daughter that amazed me. This was the first story that I know about my life—a life of a child caught in the crossroad; a life about the unconditional love between a mother and her children; and a life caught in power transition, living out the consequences of war.

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