“Asian Americans have not been radicalized in a vacuum, isolated from other group; to the contrary, Asian Americans have been racializes relative to and through interaction with Whites and Blacks. A such, the respective radicalization trajectories of these groups are profoundly interrelated. The problem with the racial hierarchy approach, on the other hand, is that its notion of a single scale of status and privledghe is belied by the fact that Whites appear to have ordered other racial groups along at least two dimensional or axes historically”. This quote form The Racial Triangle Of Asian Americans illuminates the tension that Asian American feel from the rest of society. They feel isolated and ostracized as a indirect result of the White mans repression. The white man does not want them to be involved in the society’s social hierarchy. Rather the goal of the white community is to indirectly strip them of their social rights just as they did with opportunity for the black people. The only difference is that the white people did it to the Blacks directly. The white man does their best to keep the Asian community right where they want them and limit their social mobility by labeling them with a good stereotype that simultaneously has a negative connotation and allows them less opportunities to be successful on a social level. This is the cultural indifference withdrawn upon the Asian population as provided by The Racial Triangulation of Asian Americans in terms of social stature.