"I want you to care when people are still alive": Yves Tong Nguyen of Red Canary Song

Published: March 19, 2021, 5:14 p.m.

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In light of the harrowing news out of Atlanta this week, we spoke with Yves Tong Nguyen, an organizer with Red Canary Song \\u7ea2\\u83ba\\u6b4c (@RedCanarySong), a grassroots collective of Asian sex workers & allies who push for for migrant justice, labor rights, and full decriminalization.\\xa0

Extended show notes after the break. First, here are some groups to learn about and support:

* Red Canary Song, New York City

* Butterfly: Asian and Migrant Sex Workers Network, Toronto

* SWAN, Vancouver

* Massage Parlor Outreach Project, API Chaya, Seattle

* Make the Road, greater New York

* Sex Workers Project, Urban Justice Center, New York City

0:00 \\u2013 Yves tells us about herself and Red Canary Song, and why they push for decriminalization rather than legalization. Plus: the material conditions, transnational history, and political rights of massage workers, sex workers, and other low-wage workers; and Red Canary Song\\u2019s connection to Song Yang, a Chinese migrant sex worker killed during a police raid in Flushing in 2017.

18:15 \\u2013 Yves\\u2019s criticism of anti-trafficking NGOs, most of which partner with the police; why arguing over the labels \\u201csex worker,\\u201d \\u201cmassage worker,\\u201d etc. distracts from a broader assessment of criminalization policies; the respectability politics of separating and ranking workers; and why massage workers have common cause with other low-wage migrant Asian workers in food, nail salons, and service and manufacturing.\\xa0

\\u201cWhether or not they are sex workers, they were harmed by the criminalization of sex work\\u201d

29:30 \\u2013 Long before Atlanta, workers in the massage industry experienced violence from neighbors, ICE, police, savior-complex NGOs, and clients. Yves responds to the argument that we need police to \\u201cprotect\\u201d Asian communities.

\\u201cThe system itself protects itself. It is white supremacy itself, and it is made to protect white supremacists.\\u201d\\xa0

38:30 \\u2013 What does \\u201cjustice\\u201d look like in Atlanta? Is calling murder a \\u201chate crime\\u201d or \\u201cterrorism\\u201d helpful? Plus: how migrant workers and sex workers have reacted to the news this week.

\\u201cI know that people really want to be like, \\u2018Oh, yeah, if we put them in prison, it\\u2019ll be justice. But then are we also owning that every member of our community put into prison is also justice?\\u2019\\u201d

43:30 \\u2013 Yves\\u2019s surprise at the media attention this week\\u2014and frustration about the status quo of ignoring this industry. And how we should all do better.

50:50 \\u2013 Does this week connect anti-Asian stigmatization during the pandemic? Plus: why blaming Trump and racist rhetoric is mostly unhelpful.\\xa0

\\u201cPeople want to say that that is the problem, that that is the root. But really it is a symptom. Trump\\u2019s rhetoric and people saying this and doing this is a symptom of things that have existed for such a long time. But people want to say that Trump is the problem, because then they can be like, if we can get rid of Trump then it\\u2019s good.

\\u201cWhich is partially what I fear. I think that people might stop caring and think that we\\u2019ve solved it until the next awful thing happens.

\\u201cWhen you asked me about what I would tell people to take away from it, I want us to stop building and organizing in reaction to when people die. I want us to organize to keep people alive.\\u201d

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