That's an excellent question, as I have been involved in resisting racism for a number of years, mainly in trying to research it as well as to lobby for the recognition of that long history of discrimination against Chinese in B.C., for example. Through public knowledge, all three levels of government expressed formal apologies towards that. All of a sudden I dropped that subject, because I noticed that China was also using that subject to try to propagate their narrow sense of nationalism.
In other words, they are trying to project the image that the Chinese have been victims. They're using some sort of identity politics, as you mentioned in your former question, to try to invite the local Chinese Canadians into their embrace, trying to refer to them as Chinese “nationals”. That is done rather subtly. In my opinion, it is rather ironic, because if you look into the nationality law of China, it actually stipulates that it does not recognize dual citizenship. In other words, once you emigrate from China, technically you are no longer a Chinese national, but somehow, I guess they don't care about their laws. In recent years they have tried to make a new definition of it.