「黃家駒 Wong Ka Kui」 | (aka: 鳳凰院 凶真 Hououin Kyouma)

#StopAsianHate


(He/Him/佢/他)

Gen-Z

Country of Origin: People’s Republic of China
原生国:中华人民共和国
Current Country of Nationality: United States of America 🇺🇸🏳️‍🌈
现国籍:美利坚合众国

Native Speaker of:
母语:

粵語/廣東話 Cantonese
国语/普通话 Mandarin
台山話 Taishanese
(I probably speak more languages than you do xD)


alts: @WongKaKui@piefed.social


消滅中共,建新中華!
Down with the CCP Regime!

  • 57 Posts
  • 565 Comments
Joined 8 months ago
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Cake day: June 23rd, 2025

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  • When I hear the word “America”, I always have the mental image of someone that speaks English in a non-American (or even non-Anglosphere) accent, and that this person either really likes America or really hates The US, no in between. Like sometimes I picture a person saying “America” in a heavy russian accent I think it just sounds so funny. I think I watched too many movies and I just like the russian accent… it sounds very intimidating and that’s why it had that sort of “cool factor”.

    Also, I kinda mix both depending on how my brain is thinking. Sometimes I think my thoughts in Chinese and the “美國” automatically converts into English as “America”, cuz nobody says “合眾國” (United States) in Chinese (at least not in the variants/“dialects” that I know of), cuz it feels like a generic term like “The Republic”, doesn’t make a lot of sense unless referring specifically to domestic politics.

    As a Naturalized American Citizen, I sometimes feel like the term “American Citizen” feels like a wrong term, and the term “US Citizen” feels more “correct” to say.

    I think that in Chinese, sometimes I hear “民國” (shortened from the full term 中華民國) to refer to ROC and I think “共和國” (shortened from the full term 中華人民共和國) can similarly be used similar to refer to PRC, when used in the context of Chinese history.

















  • I made the genious decision to run away from home… when I was 6 years old…

    idk what the fuck I was doing…

    probably 6 year old me was like: “Me scared, big brother scary, home is scary, me want my mommy”

    So I just went to her workplace… mom was so shocked that I knew which bus routes to take from the few times she took me to work…

    I’m still traumatized from that day…

    But yea I don’t remember what I was thinking, I could only guess from the circumstances…

    it was so spontaneous

    I saw the door, and I decided to run…

    Can’t believe its now like almost 2 decades gone by

    but that’s still deeply engraved in my hippocampus

    felt like it happened a month ago, I remember it as if it happened moments ago, I can feel those emotions, the atmosphere…



  • If China even is sending squads of state sponsored domestic terrorist masked goons to murder their own civilians like the US federal government is, people either aren’t making a lot of noise about it or their media control apparatus has kept a lid on it better than the US has.

    So here’s the thing: I’m reading all these anti-ICE news articles from within the US, but I go on baidu and qq news and can’t find a thing criticizing Xi Jinping… hmmm… weird right? Why is that you think?

    If China really is better than the United States in every metric, I sure hope more americans will realize it sooner rather than later. I’m still gathering information, though.

    As an Naturalized American citizen born in China, I’d say if you are white and have birthright citizenship, you are, on average, in a better position than an average Han Chinese born in China. Maybe this would change in the future, but I’d still say for the time being, US is still better, at least if you are white.

    There are edge scenarios where an Han Chinese could potentially have a better life in China, but that’s not the case for my family. I lived in a shitty part of Guangzhou that tourists don’t get to see, just like tourists visiting the US don’t typically go to Flint Michigan, or Kensington, Philadelphia, PA

    Also FUCKING HUKOU I was BORN IN GUANGZHOU and they never give me Guangzhou Hukou status… so my family are just treated as second class residents. Me and my brother were not allowed in Guangzhou Public schools. Our Hukou was inherited from parents, and they are from Taishan, its rural. So my parents ended up paying for privately-run schools that are lower quality of education in Guangzhou cuz otherwise we’d be left behind in the village and that would’ve been even more depressing.

    And my parents had to be either busy working all day, or be looking for work the entire day. Didn’t see them often, sometimes grandma wasn’t even available to look over us and mom took me to work.

    And don’t get me started on the One Child Policy that NEARLY resulted in me being forcibly aborted by the CCP against my mother’s wishes. Fuck them. They sterilized my mother for the policy violation.