Story at a glance
- Eight people were killed in a series of shootings in Atlanta massage parlors on Tuesday, six of whom were Asian women.
- The attacks follow a steady rise in hate crimes against Asians in the United States over the last year.
- While the coronavirus pandemic has played a role in the anti-Asian sentiment, many online pointed to a longer history of racism.
Eight people were killed in a series of shootings at massage parlors in the Atlanta area on Tuesday, including six Asian women, raising concerns that the crimes were racially motivated. While police are still investigating a connection and motivation, the attacks shook the Asian American and Pacific Islander community, which has been targeted in a surge of hate crimes.
Online, the hashtags “#AsianLivesMatter,” modeled after the Black Lives Matter movement, and variations of “#StopAsianHate” were trending as many members of the community spoke out against racism. Other people of color, including Black activists, joined them in solidarity against white supremacist rhetoric that has spiked in the last year.
One year ago, we had a former President and White House officials inflaming hate against Asian Americans. Some elected officials continue to use ethnic identifiers in describing the virus, which adds fuel to the hate. If you are one of those officials, please stop.#StopAsianHate https://t.co/Bb92pULMTX
— Ted Lieu (@tedlieu) March 17, 2021
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I was once on a train platform where a man suddenly started yelling at me out of the blue. “You little Chinese piece of shit!” he kept screaming over & over. Nobody said or did anything to step in, they either watched or ignored it entirely.
None of this is new. #StopAsianHate
— Wendy Lu (@wendyluwrites) March 17, 2021
Last night’s shooting & the appalling rise of anti-Asian violence stem frm a sick society where nationalism has again been stoked & normalized. Anti-Black & anti-Asian racism & violence run in tandem in the U.S. Both grps were brought here for labor but never meant to be citizens
— Ida Bae Wells (@nhannahjones) March 17, 2021
Locking arms with Asian Americans facing this lethal wave of anti-Asian terror. Their struggle is my struggle. Our struggle is against racism and White supremacist domestic terror. https://t.co/CGFpdk4K9t
— Ibram X. Kendi (@DrIbram) March 17, 2021
“This latest attack will only exacerbate the fear and pain that the Asian American community continues to endure,” said Stop AAPI Hate, a coalition tracking and fighting anti-Asian hate and discrimination, in a statement that went on to say, “Not enough has been done to protect Asian Americans from heightened levels of hate, discrimination and violence. Concrete action must be taken now. Anything else is unacceptable.”
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There were 3,800 anti-Asian racist incidents in the last year, mostly against women, who are the target of a combined racism and sexism that objectifies the “model minority.” The attacks have not let up as hate crimes hit record levels, prompting President Biden to sign an executive memorandum last month acknowledging that “inflammatory and xenophobic rhetoric has put Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) persons, families, communities, and businesses at risk.”
Both during his tenure and since, former President Trump has used derogatory language to blame China and the Chinese for the coronavirus pandemic without evidence, calling it the “Chinese virus” and “Kung Flu.” Experts have drawn a link between the start of the coronavirus pandemic and the increase in harmful actions against Asian Americans, but some online pointed out that the history goes further back.
The rise in hate crimes against Asian-Americans is recent since the start of COVID, but the marginalization is embedded in this country’s history
— joon (@joonlee) March 17, 2021
From the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, the first and only law in American history banning a specific ethnic group from immigrating to the United States, to Japanese Concentration Camps, anti-Asian discrimination has been present throughout American history. Even as Asian Americans were granted rights, their status as a model minority — used to divide them from other minority groups — hasn’t protected them from hate crimes and even killings. Asian women, who are exoticized and fetishized in racist and sexist stereotypes, are most often the targets of this violence. Last night in Atlanta, there were six of them.
Six Asian American women were killed in Atlanta today. We’re still learning about the motive. However, you should know this: most racist attacks against Asian Americans this past year have targeted women, and Asian American women are on edge. (1/15)
— Dr. Melissa May Borja (@MelissaMayBorja) March 17, 2021
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