白人现在什么话都敢说了 a 'Chinky, chinky China lady,' a 'f*cking c*nt,'
Disturbing moment a white woman spews vile racial slurs and xenophobic taunts at an Asian motorist during a parking lot dispute in Canada
- The accused bigot has been identified on social media as Carla Waldman, a Canadian retiree who lives in Richmond, British Columbia
- The video was shot by Amy Xu, who brought her three-year-old daughter with her on a trip to the local mall to take Xu's mother to the doctor on Friday
- After returning to her vehicle in the parking lot, Xu saw someone's bumper was touching hers and waited to confront the driver of the other car
- Waldman admitted to the Canadian Broadcasting Network that she was the woman in the video
- She is seen in the footage calling Xu, a 'Chinky, chinky China lady,' a 'f**king c**t,' and telling her to, 'Go back to China where you belong'
- Xu said the disgusting incident greatly upset her daughter, who is now having trouble sleeping
- Her husband, Fang Xu, reported the encounter to police, who told reporters they are investigating and considering possible criminal charges
A Canadian woman who launched a disturbing racist tirade at an Asian motorist during a Friday parking lot dispute may soon face criminal charges.
Carla Waldman, of Richmond, British Columbia, admitted she is the white retiree who yelled racial and xenophobic slurs at Amy Xu on Friday afternoon, according to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.
Xu told the CBC she and her three-year-old daughter took Xu's mother to a doctor's appointment at an office at the mall before returning to find someone had parked their car over the designated space and was touching her vehicle's bumper.
Xu waited for the driver of the other vehicle, who turned out to be Waldman, to confront her about her poor parking.
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A Canadian woman who launched a disturbing racist tirade on an Asian motorist during a Friday parking lot dispute may soon face criminal charges

Carla Waldman (top), of Richmond, British Columbia, admits she is the white retiree who yelled racial slurs at an Asian woman named Amy Xu on Friday afternoon

After returning to their vehicle in the parking lot, Xu saw someone's bumper was touching hers and waited to confront the driver of the other car

Waldman admitted to the Canadian Broadcasting Network that she was the other driver

Waldman is seen on video calling Xu, a 'Chinky, chinky China lady,' a 'f*cking c*nt,' and telling her to, 'Go back to China where you belong'
She recorded the ensuing argument on cellphone video before it was uploaded on the mobile app WeChat where it went viral and ended up on YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
The video starts with Waldman insulting Xu while walking back to her car.
'We don't want you here because you can't drive,' Waldman paradoxically tells Xu before using her tongue and lips to blow a raspberry.
Xu pans the camera to Waldman's front bumper, which is seen extended over her parking space's marker and touching Xu's vehicle.
'You see? You crossed the line,' Xu tells Waldman.
'I crossed the line!' Waldman replies in a mocking high-pitched voice.
'You don't know a damn thing. Go back to China where you belong, you f*cking a**hole,' she continues.
Waldman also calls Xu a, 'Chinky, chinky, China lady,' during the video.
'You know what? You give these people a bad name here. We hate you people. Go back where you belong. F*ck you, you f*cking c*nt!' she adds before finally getting into her car and starting to drive away.
Xu declines to respond on camera to Waldman's bigoted barrage, telling a reporter she instead opted to tend to her startled child.
'My daughter was so frightened,' she told CBC. 'The first thing for me to do was calm down my daughter, not argue with her... I'm still mad about this. My kid was there and this is a really bad example for her. She was frightened and can't sleep now.'
Xu's husband, Fang Xu, said he filed a formal complaint with Richmond police Saturday morning.
The police said they are investigating the incident.
A woman who identified herself as Waldman confessed over the phone to CBC that she was the one in the video and admitted her car was touching Xu's license plate.
But the retiree also denied being a racist and said she doesn't regret the language she used.
'I do not regret anything I said to her because she was a very mean person,' Waldman said. 'I don't care what they're calling me. I am not a racist person.'