H Mart Gate!?
When TikTok creator Madeline posted a video about side-eyeing white shoppers at H Mart, she described it as a reflection on respect and lived experience. The clip instead triggered a rapid response...
The Rebel Yellow - Issue #158
President Donald Trump is launching a new “gold card” visa that offers expedited U.S. residency for wealthy applicants. Global inequality data shows the richest 0.001% now control more wealth than the poorest half of humanity. Lawmakers are calling for the impeachment of the Department of Homeland Security secretary after a Korean American military veteran was deported. UC Berkeley is suspending a lecturer over pro-Palestinian remarks, while a survey finds international students in the U.S. are self-censoring amid visa fears. The coverage also includes the murder conviction of a U.S. man in the death of a Chinese graduate student in London, the sentencing of Terraform Labs founder Do Kwon, backlash in Finland after lawmakers posted slanted-eye gestures following Miss Finland’s removal, and a TikTok dispute that is expanding into a broader debate over race and cultural spaces.
Trump launches “gold card” visa that fast-tracks immigration for the rich
President Donald Trump has officially launched his “gold card” visa program, offering expedited U.S. residency for $1 million in a move that could significantly reshape immigration pathways for wealthy Asians even as broader restrictions tighten entry for students and tourists from the region.
What you need to know: The program, unveiled through the website trumpcard.gov, requires applicants to pay a $15,000 Department of Homeland Security (DHS) processing fee and then contribute $1 million after background approval to receive U.S. residency within weeks. Those who complete the process will obtain lawful permanent resident status as EB-1 or EB-2 visa holders, or employment-based categories for individuals with extraordinary or exceptional abilities. The card itself displays Trump’s portrait against an American flag with his signature.
Companies can purchase a corporate version for $2 million per employee, with the ability to transfer sponsorship between workers for a small fee. The website also previews a platinum option priced at $5 million, which would allow holders to spend up to 270 days annually in the U.S. without paying taxes on foreign income. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said 10,000 people have already pre-registered, predicting the program could raise billions of dollars.
What this means: The gold card presents a contradictory reality for Asian communities. Trump emphasized that companies could now retain graduates from elite institutions, noting the current requirement that students returning home to countries like China and India after graduation is “a shame.” Yet his administration simultaneously proposed last Wednesday that tourists from 42 visa waiver nations, including Japan, must provide five years of social media records before entering the U.S. The result is a two-tier system where wealthy Asians can buy fast-track entry while middle-class families face heightened scrutiny.
The policy’s broader implications become clearer when viewed alongside Trump’s announcement in late August about allowing 600,000 Chinese students into U.S. universities, which triggered backlash from his supporters. For Asian American communities, the gold card deepens wealth-based divisions in immigration policy while doing nothing to address visa delays affecting international students or the ideological screening now required for all visa applications.
Legal challenges: Immigration experts have raised serious questions about whether the program is legal. Trump first proposed the idea in February with a $5 million price tag, then signed an executive order in September directing its creation before launching last Wednesday’s $1 million version, which will likely face legal challenges. Additionally, critics have pointed out that such programs create a two-tier immigration system that disproportionately benefits wealthy individuals and can encourage corruption and money laundering.
Lutnick, however, has vigorously defended the program. In an interview with Fox News, he described it as a “much more powerful” version of the green card that will draw people who are “economically capable of driving our economy.” He also emphasized that the $15,000 vetting process would ensure applicants “absolutely qualify” to be in the U.S.
The program comes as the administration has intensified immigration enforcement in recent weeks following last month’s shooting of two National Guard members in Washington, D.C. The response has included ICE raids, a pause on asylum applications and expanded travel bans.
Ultra-rich 0.001% now control triple the wealth of the poorest half of humanity
Global wealth has reached a level of concentration that researchers describe as extreme, according to the World Inequality Report 2026.
The study, conducted by the World Inequality Lab, finds that fewer than 60,000 people, about 0.001% of the world’s population, now control three times more wealth than the entire bottom half of humanity combined. The authors say the concentration reflects decades in which the accumulation of assets at the top has far outpaced economic gains for most people.
The report shows that global economic growth has not translated into a more balanced distribution of wealth. The richest 10% of people own about 75% of global wealth, while the bottom 50% hold just 2%, a gap that has remained largely unchanged even as total global wealth has expanded. The report also highlights how inequality is reinforced through unequal access to education, public investment and labor income, particularly in developing regions (much of Asia, Africa and Latin America), limiting long-term mobility even as economies grow.
Recent U.S. figures further illustrate how wealth concentration plays out along racial lines within a single country. According to U.S. Census Bureau data released in 2024, White, non-Hispanic households held about 80% of all U.S. wealth, despite making up roughly two-thirds of households, while Black households held less than 5%.
Without policy shifts to address structural gaps in taxation and public investment, the authors warn, current patterns of wealth concentration are likely to persist for decades.
Noem faces impeachment calls after Korean American vet’s deportation
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Kristi Noem faced intense congressional scrutiny last Thursday after Rep. Seth Magaziner (D-R.I.) presented Purple Heart recipient Sae Joon Park via Zoom, an Army veteran who self-deported to South Korea in June following drug convictions from over 15 years ago.
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