logo
How ‘Cali' became a slur among Vietnam's growing army of nationalists

How ‘Cali' became a slur among Vietnam's growing army of nationalists

HANOI, Vietnam — Last fall, Vietnam opened a sprawling new military museum here, and among thousands of artifacts in the four-story building and a courtyard filled with tanks and aircrafts, one exhibit quickly became the star attraction: the flag of South Vietnam.
The government regards the yellow banner with three red stripes as a sign of resistance to the communist regime, violating laws about inciting dissent. With few exceptions, it is not displayed.
Reactions to the rare sighting soon went viral. Young visitors at the Vietnam Military History Museum posted photos of themselves next to the flag with deep frowns, thumbs down or middle fingers raised. As the photos drew unwanted attention, the flag was unpinned from a wall and folded within a display case. Social media content featuring rude hand gestures was scrubbed from the internet.
But the phenomenon persisted.
Several weeks ago, schoolchildren who were on tour made it a point to check out the flag. Every few minutes, a new group crowded around the banner — also known online as the 'Cali' flag — holding up middle fingers or crossing their hands to form an 'X.'
In Vietnam, Cali — sometimes written as 'kali' — has long been a reference to the Vietnamese diaspora in California, where many Vietnamese-Americans still fly the flag of the south to represent the fight against communism and the nation they lost with the war.
People who live in Vietnam, however, are more likely to view it as a symbol of American imperialism, and as nationalistic sentiment here has swelled in recent years, evoking the Golden State has become a shorthand of sorts to criticize those opponents.
'They use that as a label against anyone who disagrees with state policy,' says Nguyen Khac Giang, a research fellow at Singapore's Yusof Ishak Institute, known for its political and socioeconomic research on Southeast Asia.
There have been other signs of growing nationalism in the past year, often in response to perceptions of American influence. In addition to animosity toward the 'Cali' flag, a U.S.-backed university in Ho Chi Minh City was attacked over suspicions of foreign interference. And an aspiring Vietnamese pop star who'd been a contestant on 'American Idol' was savaged on social media last summer after footage of her singing at the U.S. memorial service of an anti-communist activist surfaced.
Vietnamese nationalism, Giang said, is bolstered at every level by the country's one-party rule.
The government controls education and public media; independent journalists and bloggers who have criticized the government have been imprisoned. In addition, the party's ability to influence social media narratives has improved over the last several years, particularly among the nation's youth.
Since 2017, Vietnamese authorities have employed thousands of cyber troops to police content online, forming a military unit under the defense ministry known as Force 47. In 2018, the country passed a cybersecurity law that enabled it to demand social media platforms take down any content that it deems anti-state. The resulting one-sided discourse means that views that don't align with official propaganda often draw harassment and ostracism.
At times, the government has also used that power to try and rein in nationalism when it grows too extreme — though banning posts about the South Vietnam flag did little to quell enthusiasm at the museum.
Some visitors who were making hand signs said they were expressing their disapproval of a regime that, they'd been taught, oppressed Vietnamese people. One teenager unfurled and held up the national flag — red with a yellow star — for a photo.
'It's hard to say if I agree or disagree with the rude gestures,' said Dang Thi Bich Hanh, a 25-year-old coffee shop manager who was among the visitors. 'Those young people's gestures were not quite right, but I think they reflect their feelings when looking at the flag and thinking about that part of history and what previous generations had to endure.'
Before she left, she took a selfie with her middle finger raised to the folded cloth.
:::
Five years ago, when a student from a rural region of the Mekong Delta earned a full scholarship to an international university in Ho Chi Minh City, it seemed like a dream come true. But last August, when the school was caught up in the growing wave of nationalism, he began to worry that his association with Fulbright University Vietnam could affect his safety and his future.
'I was scared,' said the recent graduate, who requested anonymity for fear of retribution. He had just started a new job in education and avoided mentioning his alma mater to coworkers and wearing shirts marked with the school name.
'You had all kinds of narratives. Especially with the disinformation spreading at the time, it had some negative impacts on my mental health.'
The attacks included allegations that Fulbright, which opened in 2016 with partial funding from the U.S. government, was cultivating Western liberal and democratic values that could undermine the Vietnamese government.
Nationalists criticized any possible hint of anti-communist leanings at the school, such as not prominently displaying the Vietnamese flag at commencement. Even last year's graduation slogan, 'Fearless,' sparked suspicions that students could be plotting a political movement.
'You are seeing new heights of nationalism for sure, and it's hard to measure,' said Vu Minh Hoang, a diplomatic historian and professor at the university.
Hoang said the online allegations — none of which were true — led to threats of violence against the university, and there was talk that some parents withdrew their children because of them. Several students said their affiliation drew hate speech from strangers and distrustful questions from family members and employers.
Academics said the Vietnamese government likely acted quickly to shut down the backlash against Fulbright in order to prevent the anti-American sentiment from harming its ties with the U.S., its largest trade partner. But some of the original accusations were propagated by state media and bots associated with the Ministry of Defense, hinting at a schism within the party.
Hoang said that while nationalism is often utilized as a uniting force in Vietnam and beyond, it also has the potential to create instability if it grows beyond the government's estimation or control. 'For a long time, it has been the official policy to make peace with the overseas Vietnamese community and the United States,' Hoang said. 'So this wave of online ultranationalism is seen by the Vietnamese state as unhelpful, inaccurate and, to some extent, going against official directions.'
:::
Last summer, footage of Myra Tran singing at the Westminster funeral of Ly Tong, an anti-communist activist, surfaced online. She'd achieved a degree of fame by winning a singing reality show in Vietnam and appearing on 'American Idol' in 2019, but she received harsh condemnation from online nationalists and state media when the video from several years ago went viral.
Facebook and TikTok users labeled Tran, now 25, as traitorous, anti-Vietnam — and Cali.
The controversy prompted a more broadly-based movement to ferret out other Vietnamese celebrities suspected of conspiring against the country. Internet sleuths scoured the web for anyone who, like Tran, had appeared alongside the flag of South Vietnam and attacked them.
An entertainment writer in Ho Chi Minh City, who did not want to be identified for fear of being targeted, says that as Vietnamese youth have become more nationalistic online, musicians and other artists have felt pressure to actively demonstrate their patriotism or risk the wrath of cancel culture.
He added that the scrutiny of symbols like the South Vietnam flag has given those with connections to the U.S. greater reason to worry about being attacked online or losing job opportunities. That could discourage Vietnamese who live overseas — a demographic that the government has long sought to attract back to the country — from pursuing business or careers in Vietnam.
'There used to be a time when artists were very chill and careless, even though they know there has been this rivalry and this history,' he said. 'I think everybody is getting more sensitive now. Everyone is nervous and trying to be more careful.'
Tran was bullied online and cut from a music television program for her 'transgression.' She issued a public apology in which she expressed gratitude to be Vietnamese, denied any intention of harming national security and promised to learn from her mistakes.
Two months later, Tran was allowed to perform again. She returned to the stage at a concert in Ho Chi Minh City, where she cried and thanked fans for forgiving her.
But not everyone was willing to excuse her. From the crowd, several viewers jeered and yelled at Tran to 'go home.' Videos of the concert sparked fierce debate on Facebook among Tran's defenders and her critics.
'The patriotic youth are so chaotic now,' one Vietnamese user complained after denouncing the hate that Tran was receiving online.
Another shot back: 'Then go back to Cali.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lutnick: US ‘going to love the deals that President Trump and I are doing'
Lutnick: US ‘going to love the deals that President Trump and I are doing'

The Hill

timea minute ago

  • The Hill

Lutnick: US ‘going to love the deals that President Trump and I are doing'

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said on Sunday that the public is 'going to love the deals that President Trump and I are doing' as the administration promises forthcoming breakthroughs on tariffs. 'Well, you heard in our polling some of the perceptions of the economy,' CBS News' Margaret Brennan told Lutnick on 'Face the Nation.' 'Sixty-one percent of Americans believe the administration is putting too much focus on tariffs, 70 percent say the administration is not doing enough to lower prices and 60 percent oppose new tariffs on imported goods.' 'This is a centerpiece to your policy plan. How do you reverse public opposition?' she asked. 'Oh, they're going to love the deals that President Trump and I are doing. I mean, they're just going to love them. You know, the president figured out the right answer, and sent letters to these countries, said this is going to fix the trade deficit,' Lutnick responded. 'This will go a long way to fixing the trade deficit, and that's gotten these countries to the table and they're going to open their markets or they're going to pay the tariff,' he added. Trump's whiplash approach to threatening and imposing tariffs has at times rattled the markets. The president has sent letters to dozens of countries warning of tariffs ranging from 20 to 50 percent to be imposed beginning Aug. 1 unless new deals are reached. 'For 80 years, America's leaders let countries put tariffs on our products and we did nothing,' Lutnick said Tuesday in a post on the social platform X. 'Now under President Trump's leadership, American consumers and businesses are going to be competing on a level playing field. America will come out ahead,' he added.

Everyone Had Same Reaction To President Trump's Golf Trip Announcement
Everyone Had Same Reaction To President Trump's Golf Trip Announcement

Yahoo

time4 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Everyone Had Same Reaction To President Trump's Golf Trip Announcement

Everyone Had Same Reaction To President Trump's Golf Trip Announcement originally appeared on The Spun. President Trump's golf trip total is trending on social media following a report by the Associated Press. The President of the United States likes to golf. Everyone knows that. But how many golf trips has the President of the United States actually taken in 2025? President Trump, 79, took office in late January. Since then, he's taken close to 40 golf trips. That averages out to about 7 trips per month, more or less. From the report: When Trump hits the road, it's most often to his properties for weekend trips built around golf in Palm Beach, Florida; Bedminster, New Jersey; or Sterling, Virginia, near Washington's Dulles International Airport and close enough to motorcade from the White House. The president has logged 14 Florida trips, 13 to Virginia and eight to New Jersey. After summer arrived, he has favored Bedminster or day trips to Sterling over steamy Mar-a-Lago in Florida. Biden headed to his home in Wilmington, Delaware, many weekends early in his term. He sometimes went to a golf club, but attended Mass nearly every weekend. That's a lot of golf, though no one is surprised by it. One source close to President Trump said he might love golf more than anything else. Unsurprisingly, he's taking heat from some. "Trump's golf trips cost taxpayers millions. Why doesn't he cut those instead of the National Weather Service?" one fan wrote. "The same admin that slashed $59M for migrant housing in May spends $3.4M per golf trip. Priorities: punish the vulnerable, pamper the powerful. Fiscal theater with human costs," one fan added. "In his first administration it cost over $150 million. And the right said things when once per month Biden went back to Delaware," one fan added. "The amount Trump golfs he should be in the PGA mopping up Rory McElroy. Maybe that's how we get the money back..... Make him train and then hand over the prize money to the American taxpayer?" one fan added. What do you make of President Trump's golf trips number? Everyone Had Same Reaction To President Trump's Golf Trip Announcement first appeared on The Spun on Jul 20, 2025 This story was originally reported by The Spun on Jul 20, 2025, where it first appeared.

Desperate Trump Tries to Get MAGA Not to Care About Epstein
Desperate Trump Tries to Get MAGA Not to Care About Epstein

Yahoo

time22 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Desperate Trump Tries to Get MAGA Not to Care About Epstein

President Donald Trump says the Epstein files drama has only made him more popular. 'My Poll Numbers within the Republican Party, and MAGA, have gone up, significantly, since the Jeffrey Epstein Hoax was exposed by the Radical Left Democrats and, just plain 'troublemakers,'' Trump wrote. 'They have hit 90%, 92%, 93%, and 95%, in various polls, and are all Republican Party records.' The president's remark further comes as a new CBS/YouGov poll found 75 percent of Americans disapprove of how the Trump administration has handled the Epstein files, and 89 percent want the Justice Department to release everything it has on the case. While Trump's approval rating among Republicans indeed remains close to 90 percent, according to polls from CNN (88 percent) and Quinnipiac University (89 percent) released last week, the story is very different with the public at large. According to data guru Nate Silver, Trump's approval rating has fallen nearly 9 points to an abysmal 44 percent since July 10 as the Epstein drama unfolds—just barely above its lowest point during Trump's first term. His disapproval rating, on the other hand, has climbed to 53 percent. The Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation released a memo earlier this month finding that the disgraced financier kept no 'client list' and affirmed that Epstein died by suicide while in federal custody in 2019. The admissions sent the MAGA sphere into a tailspin, with many accusing Trump of a further cover-up intended to protect himself. To quell the controversy, Trump said last week his administration would move to unseal grand jury testimony regarding the case. Trump's ire over the focus on his friendship with Epstein reached a new peak last week after The Wall Street Journal reported on a graphic letter Trump gave to Epstein for the financier's 50th birthday in 2003, which was written inside a drawing of a naked woman. The text of the letter seemed to imply a deeper connection and shared history between the two wealthy socialites. 'We have certain things in common, Jeffrey,' Trump allegedly wrote, according to the Journal. 'Enigmas never age, have you noticed that? … Happy Birthday—and may every day be another wonderful secret.' Trump tried repeatedly to color—and then kill—the story, denying he ever drew the image. After the Journal approached the White House on Tuesday for comment, Trump dismissed the Epstein as a 'hoax'; linked it to Democrats, speculating they had tried to tamper with files to make him look bad; and called the story a 'bulls--t' tale before attacking MAGA 'weaklings' who broke with him over it. He then threatened in a phone call with the paper's editor in chief, Emma Tucker, to sue the Journal should it publish the story. Trump made good on that threat and sued the paper and its 94-year-old billionaire owner, Rupert Murdoch, on Friday for $10 billion. Still, Trump tried his best to remain cheery in his Sunday screed. He claimed the public backed his agenda and took yet another opportunity to highlight his 2024 electoral win. 'The General Election numbers are my highest, EVER! People like Strong Borders, and all of the many other things I have done,' he wrote. 'GOD BLESS AMERICA. MAGA!' In another Trump social post Sunday, Trump also patted himself on the back for 'a lot of good and great things done' during the first six months of his term: 'One year ago our Country was DEAD, with almost no hope of revival. Today the USA is the 'hottest' and most respected Country anywhere in the World.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store