Hung Kao, the Virginia Republican's U.S. Senate candidate, offered an answer to this question in a debate with Sen. Tim Kaine (D-VA) on Wednesday night, and asked Kaine, “When Asians fight… The scene where he said, “Never disobey someone,” attracted a lot of attention. Come to math. ”
Cao criticized Cain while answering News Nation host Deanna Allbrittin's first question about the International Longshoremen's Association (ILA) strike on the East Coast. Mr. Cao said economic struggles among union members were the driving force behind the strikes, and that only illegal immigrants, criminals and political elites are now richer than when former President Donald Trump was in office. He said there was.
“The economy is hitting us all the same way. That's exactly why the ILA is boycotting and going on strike right now. It's because you ask yourself the following questions: 4 Are you living a better life now than you were a year ago?'' Cao Cao said.
“The overall answer is no. The only people who are better off today than they were four years ago are illegal aliens, criminals, and senators like Sen. Tim Kaine,” he added.
Answering follow-up questions, Cao said the United States spends $1 billion every day to “house and feed illegal aliens.”
“I want my students to like it.” [Norfolk State University] When they graduate, they know they have a future ahead of them,” Cao said. “They have access to the American Dream just like I did. Every American who came here legally, every American who grew up here, I'm going to fight for it.”
Cao, whose family fled Vietnam as a child days before the fall of Saigon to North Vietnamese forces in 1975, asked a question about mass deportations late in the debate, and his response went viral.
He emphasized that those who come to the United States seeking the American Dream must assimilate into American laws and culture, and that illegal immigration has a negative impact on immigrants seeking to enter the United States.
“Immigrants are very near and dear to me. When Vietnam collapsed, we had nowhere to go and America brought us. And my parents spent seven years trying to get citizenship. We all waited in line for seven years,” Cao explained.
After fleeing Vietnam and briefly staying in the United States for one year, the family lived in Niger, where Cao attended school in France. Seven years later, in 1982, Cao's family returned to the United States.
“When my father passed away two years ago, the last thing he hung over his bed was his naturalization certificate,” Cao, a retired U.S. Navy captain, said Wednesday. “I love this country so much that I would risk my life to write a black check to defend it for 25 years in Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia, and other parts of the world.”
Mr. Cao then had a message for those seeking to come to the United States in pursuit of the American Dream.
“So I say to people who want to come here, if you don't want to accept American laws and American culture, don't seek the American Dream, because that's what I did. That is the first criterion for entering this country,” he said, adding that illegal immigrants “need to leave.”
In a follow-up question, Cao emphasized that illegal immigrants are “basically ruining the whole system.”
“There are people like my family who have been waiting in line for seven years to apply for naturalization. So you can't just jump in line. I mean, if you go to Costco and wait in line, what happens? Do you think so?'' he added.
Cao Cao also gave several other answers, which became a hot topic on social media. This includes a rebuttal to Mr. Cain's comment, “Don't go against Asians in math,'' and a response to the military's low recruitment rate.
When Cao said that of the 227 bills Kaine had proposed so far, only three had passed, Kaine insisted that was “completely wrong.”
“Sir, there are two truths in the world, right? You should never walk into a Target store wearing a red shirt, and you should never go against an Asian person when it comes to math. Trust me on that.” said Mr. Cao, drawing laughter from the audience.
“What does that mean?” Kane replied.
In another moment, Cao criticized the U.S. Navy's use of drag queens for recruiting purposes.
“When we hire drag queens for the Navy, that's not the kind of person we're looking for,” Cao said. “What we need are alpha males and alpha females who will rip out their own internal organs and eat them, demanding seconds.”
“It's young men and women who will win the war,” he added, drawing applause.
