No more turning a blind eye to Chinese spies in our nuclear labs. No more keeping silent about Chinese slave labor camps.
I always thought that in modern history Chinese people are like a dish of sand, never really close together. But I think a dish of sand is a good metaphor because we have the Internet. We don't have to be physically united. You can be an individual and have your own set of values but join others in certain struggles. There is nothing more powerful than that.
They [Chinese] are taking our jobs, they're giving incentives, they're doing things that, frankly, we don't do.
China protects the Chinese, America protects the Americans, I don't see why Europe should not protect the Europeans.
We should not be borrowing money from the Chinese to bail out the Greeks. What's coming next? Intergalactic bailouts?
I wanted my children to have the best combination: American circumstances and Chinese character. How could I know these things do not mix?
Modern Chinese culture is weak and lackluster.
Most American Hispanics don't belong to one race, either. I keep telling kids that, when filling out forms, they should put "yes" to everything - yes, I am Chinese; yes, I am African; yes, I am white; yes, I am a Pacific Islander; yes, yes, yes - just to befuddle the bureaucrats who think we live separately from one another.
Chinese women are much more modest than American women when it comes to clothes. We tend to show less flesh.
The urge for Chinese food is always unpredictable: famous for no occasion, standard fare for no holiday, and the constant as to demand is either whim, the needy plebiscite of instantly famished drunks, or pregnancy.
As she read the ten commandments for the first time, a Chinese woman said, "I don't see how anyone can very well get on without them. "