Trump’s War on China Catches Silicon Valley’s Chinese Community in the Crossfire

Silicon Valley is increasingly uncomfortable for Chinese immigrants and Chinese Americans. That’s a problem for the United States.

Andrew Leonard
OneZero

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Photo Illustration: Tessa Modi, Images: Getty Images

OnOn a Sunday afternoon in July, Spoon, a Korean bistro in a strip mall in Fremont, California, offers a snapshot of Silicon Valley diversity. The restaurant is a jumble of languages, packed to capacity with people of South Asian and East Asian descent digging into bowls of kimchi fried rice and spicy pork belly.

I am here to speak with a young woman who works for a Chinese technology firm with offices in the Valley, about the impact of Trump’s trade war on Chinese American and Chinese immigrant tech workers. Because she’s concerned about protecting her identity, I’ve agreed not to name her employer, and refer to her as Susan. Born in China, Susan is a naturalized American citizen who moved to the Valley as a child in the 1990s when her father came here to work in the chip industry. She considers herself both an immigrant and a Chinese American. And like many Chinese tech workers caught in the crossfire of geopolitical tensions, she is not particularly enthusiastic about talking to a reporter.

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Andrew Leonard
OneZero

20-year veteran of online journalism. On Twitter @koxinga21. Curious about how Sichuan food explains the world? Check out andrewleonard.substack.com