Anti-immigrant tales of eaten pets... Halve; you sseen thelg)(;xmper Es;stitckerR tl;at R T R S T B R A R e Y5 For another, these stories have all the proclaims, “Save a Dog — Eat a Refu- earmarks of urban legends. As with most gee”? Or have you heard the joke about the Ur ban Iegends such legends, the stor%es told about eaten Vietnamese cookbook called “101 Ways to by Jan Harold B q pets are spread by word-of-mouth, and are Wok your Dog”? Y Jan. FIgioid BIunvan unauthenticated by actual, traceable Neither of them would make much sense details. As we've seen so often, the stories if you've missed the rumors that accuse pensive puppies or kittens. usually consist of variations on a few basi¢ Oriental immigrants of using their new Essentially the same stories and jokes themes. neighbors’ pet cats and dogs for food. But about pets turned into meals have surfaced ; h 56 Aant judging from the popularity of these anti- all over the United States, especially 1P resur rectmfg e ds_tones‘ . immigrant jokes, few people have missed where Asian immigrants have been reset- Project a set ohpreju 1€es Sgalqst these these stories. tled. Local police, humane societies, news- }‘rpmlgrar’n'ts, t:N f’. ars a solf 1smlss§d a3 Since the late 1970s, when Southeast papers and refugee-aid groups have denied lmva ersl » ‘i e O“I wel.a.re. 4N V‘°E Asian refugees began arriving in large the claims. Statements countering the...
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