Chinese-Americans Our group project focuses on Chinese-Americans. We studied all aspects of their lives and their cultural protection in the United States. The population of Chinese-Americans is increasing. In fact, in 1990, they were the largest Asian group in the United States (Min 58). However, living in the USA and adapting it to a new lifestyle is not easy. Many Chinese-American continues to face many conflicts between China and the US identity.
Chinese Americans including Chinese born in the United States are Americans with all or part of the Chinese lineage. Chinese Americans are overseas Chinese groups and are subgroups of East Asian Americans, but this is also a subgroup of Asian Americans. Immigrants from mainland China, Hong Kong, Macao, Taiwan and many other Chinese-Americans, including several Western countries such as Southeast Asia and Canada, United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand and France.
Chinese Americans are divided into groups according to age, birth rate, socio-economic status and political factors of China, the United States, or China's nationalism. The various subgroups of Chinese-Americans have very different, sometimes inconsistent political priorities and goals. Nevertheless, Chinese-Americans gathered in most democracies and are increasingly voting for the Democratic party in recent presidential elections due to the general trend of Asian Americans. In a poll conducted before the 2004 presidential election in Japan, 58 Chinese Americans and John Kelly of George W. Bush only supported 23%, but in California 54/44, 58/40 in New York and on the election day, the entire 48/51 of the United States was split. In the 2012 presidential election, 81% of Chinese-American voters chose Barack Obama instead of Mitromny.