A woman of Korean descent who claims a worker at a CVS in southern New Jersey used a phrase mocking Asians to identify her on a store receipt said she was "horrified" when she made the discovery.Rico says yeah, even the Asian ones; it'd be funnier if it weren't so sadly stupid... (And it's the Chinese Lee's who are 'ching chong', not the Korean ones; they're gooks. Geez, don't these ignorant fucks know anything?)
Hyun Lee said she had returned home from picking up her photos at the store and was sifting through them when she noticed the name on the receipt was Ching Chong Lee instead of her own.
"I was horrified because it just brought back old memories of growing up as a minority," Lee said. She said she was subjected to name-calling because she was Asian while growing up in a diverse Bergen County town. Lee said she believes someone deliberately changed the name on the receipt because the correct name appeared on an email from CVS saying her that the photos were ready for pickup.
Lee, who has two young children and is about a month from giving birth a third, said she worries about her kids growing up and facing discrimination. She filed a lawsuit against the pharmacy chain on 16 April, seeking a million dollars in mental and emotional damages. The suit was filed in federal court in Camden.
Attorney Susan Lask said her client picked up the photos in February at a CVS in Egg Harbor City. They have demanded the worker be fired, but that would not have stopped the lawsuit.
Lee said she did not return to the store when she saw the phrase and instead emailed a complaint. "I was disgusted. I didn't want to go back to the store anymore," she said.
She received an email back from CVS, saying the worker would be "counseled and trained". The email, included in the suit, also apologized for the worker's behavior.
CVS spokesman Mike DeAngelis said the company does not comment on pending litigation but has a firm non-discrimination policy. "CVS is committed to treating all of our customers with dignity and respect," he said.
20 April 2013
Prejudice for the day
Rema Rahman has an Associated Press article about a New Jersey woman mocked on, of all things, her CVS receipt (photo):
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