A meetup for "Wasians" — people of mixed White and Asian heritage — went down on May 9th, and the internet had thoughts. As one local put it, "That's like putting up a bat signal in the Marina." Another SF resident noted it looked like "an ordinary day at Dolores Park."
Look, we're a liberty-minded publication. People voluntarily gathering in a park to celebrate a shared identity, without a single dollar of taxpayer money involved? That's community organizing we can actually get behind. No grants. No city commission. No $300,000 feasibility study on the intersectionality of mixed-race brunch culture. Just people showing up because they wanted to.
The discourse online was, predictably, entertaining. One Bay Area resident observed that "somehow everyone there has a white dad" — a statistical reality that launched a thousand sociology papers and roughly zero surprises. Another local wondered, "When did we go away from 'hapa'?" — a fair question about the ever-evolving lexicon of identity in a city that takes these things very seriously.
But here's what actually stood out: one parent pointed out that Wasian kids might be the largest ethnic group at their child's school. That's not just a fun meetup factoid — it's a demographic snapshot of the Bay Area in 2025. San Francisco's mixed-race population has been growing for years, and events like this reflect a city that, whatever its many governance failures, remains genuinely one of the most culturally blended places in the country.
No city funding was harmed in the making of this meetup. Just vibes, palm trees, and a park full of people who probably all have strong opinions about rice cookers. We love to see it.

