Oh teh noes! A Chinese depicted with a Chinese hairstyle, and eating with sticks (as the Chinese are known to do)! What's their problem with it? That his clothing isn't quite correct?
More social justice warrioring at work. We have any number of fast food Chinese restaurants around here (as I suspect is the case in most parts of the U.S., although perhaps a bit farther apart in flyover country). They hand out plastic knives and forks for the customers, but when the staff sits down to eat they always use chopsticks. Is it racist for me to have observed that?
A good forty years ago was when the flap first began about not calling Native Americans "Indians." The secretary in the office where I was working at the time was an enrolled member of the Flathead Tribe in Montana. She had no use for that argument. She showed me an article in a newspaper put out by some organization of Native American tribes. The author was a Sioux -- don't recall if Rosebud or Ogallalah, and it doesn't matter. His take on the subject? "Only non-Native Americans worry about stuff like that, because we Indians don't mind being called "Indians," and we know that we weren't native to here anyway, so we're not native Americans." (paraphrased)