Stop blaming everything on ‘white supremacy’

Blackleaf

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Stop blaming everything on ‘white supremacy’

The Atlanta and Boulder shootings were swiftly pinned on racism. The reality was very different.

Stop blaming everything on ‘white supremacy’

WILFRED REILLY

31st March 2021
Spiked

Recently, two terrible crimes occurred which had either almost or entirely nothing to do with racism. The mainstream mass media reaction to both was telling and troubling.

First, on 16 March 2021, 21-year-old Robert Long opened fire inside three Atlanta-area massage parlours – Young’s Asian Massage, Gold Massage Spa, and Aromatherapy Spa – with a semi-automatic nine-millimetre handgun. Long killed eight people, six of them Asian-American, and wounded another.

Far too soon after this, on 23 March 2021, another male walked into a King Soopers market in outdoorsy Boulder, Colorado, and opened fire with a pair of guns. Ten people were killed on this occasion, including an on-duty police officer, and the gunman was himself shot in the leg and hospitalised for several days before being jailed.

The reaction to both shootings was immediate, frenzied, and – to those who follow modern ‘discourse’ in the United States – sadly predictable: journalists and celebrities rushed to blame white men, white racism, ‘white supremacy’ and ‘whiteness’ itself for the violence. The headline on a major New York Times article about the Long case read: ‘How Racism and Sexism Intertwine to Torment Asian Women.’ The Root went with the simpler and more Covid-relevant ‘Whiteness Is a Pandemic’.

A sombre Trevor Noah dedicated part of a Daily Show monologue to the violence in Atlanta, saying: ‘[the] shooter blamed a specific race of people for his problems, and then murdered them because of it. If that’s not racism, then the word has no meaning.’ Some activists and media figures attempted to link the Atlanta attack to a pre-existing narrative blaming the rhetoric of former President Trump for a genuine recent increase in violence against Asian Americans, with the organiser of a California solidarity protest telling the Los Angeles Times: ‘It’s important for black and Asian communities to work together on this because… it’s about dismantling white supremacy.’

The Boulder shooting caused, if anything, a more dramatic reaction, at least on social media – although, again, one primarily directed at ‘whiteness’ rather than crime. In a popular tweet – ‘Call it what it is!’ – the actress Rosanna Arquette immediately labelled the attack ‘white supremacist domestic terrorism’. Meena Harris, the niece of the vice president Kamala Harris, posted an even more widely circulated message claiming that ‘violent white men are the greatest terrorist threat to our country’. Perhaps most notably, Qasim Rashid, once a serious contender for one of the Virginia seats in the US Congress, compared the ‘white’ killer – who was apprehended alive, if wounded – to black victims of police violence. He said: ‘Tamir Rice was a 12-year-old Black child. Police shot him in 1.7 seconds and let him… die. Colorado terrorist is a grown white man who killed 10 people including a cop. Cops arrested him alive.’

As the old debater’s caveat goes, all of this would be troubling if true. However, both shootings – while horrific and disgusting tragedies – turned out to bear almost no resemblance to the racialised picture initially painted of them. Long, as it turns out, specifically told police that ‘he had targeted the three Atlanta spas to purge himself of his lust and his addiction to pornography’. As the Manhattan Institute’s Heather Mac Donald points out, this explanation is ‘wholly credible’. Every one of the establishments targeted had recently been investigated for prostitution, and at least two are reviewed on an internet site frequently used by men seeking sex for money.

According to both Long and acquaintances of his, the young murderer was tormented by his inability to control his own sexual desires and behaviour, which he saw as pulling him away from God. While there is an uncorroborated report that Long said he planned to kill ‘Asians’ at one of the three massage parlours, he also shot at least two individuals of non-Asian origin – who are mentioned surprisingly rarely in many articles discussing this case – and apparently planned on attacking a non-Asian American Florida business involved with the production of pornography as his next target.

While some level of sub-surface racism could at least theoretically have been a tertiary motivator for the troubled Long, the same cannot be said for the King Soopers shooter. As things turn out, that individual was a first-generation Syrian immigrant named Ahmad Al Aliwi Al-Issa. What little information could be gleaned from his social-media accounts before these rather mysteriously disappeared indicates that he was a practising Muslim who absolutely loathed Donald Trump. Further – if we must engage in this sort of crass bean-counting – every one of his victims was white, including a uniformed Boulder cop. In simple, factually accurate demographic terms, a ‘MENA’ (Middle Eastern and North African) Arab immigrant killed two car-loads of white people.

Not only does the micro-scale Long and Al-Issa narrative collapse under any investigation – an hour of research also reveals that this is true for the background macro-narrative that was dishonestly pegged to it as well. First, mass shooters as a group are not disproportionately white. Per the quick-access but quite solid empirical resource Statista, 66 of 121 mass-casualty shooters between 1982 and 2021 (54.5 per cent) were white, while 21 (17.3 per cent) were black, 10 were Latino or Hispanic, eight Asian, five ‘other’ or mixed-race, and nine unknown. This figure for whites actually indicates some degree of under-representation, given that non-Hispanic Caucasians make up 61 to 63 per cent of the US population (although it is certainly possible that one or more of the nine ‘unknown’ killers was a white man).

Similar – and, if anything more striking – data about anti-Asian violence can also easily be found. To put this mildly, US crime statistics do not indicate that the driving force behind the unfortunate recent spate of attacks on Asian-Americans is ‘white supremacy’. According to the 2019 Bureau of Justice Statistics report, 27.5 per cent of serious violent crimes against Asians during the most recent year on record involved a black attacker, roughly 25 per cent involved a white attacker, 21.4 per cent involved a Hispanic or ‘other’ race attacker, and just 24.1 per cent involved an Asian attacker. This last statistic is truly remarkable, given that crime tends to be massively intra-racial, and the person most likely to kill you is generally your husband or wife. During the same year, 62.1 per cent of all violent crimes against whites had a white perpetrator, and 70.3 per cent of violent crimes against blacks had a black perp.
The reality of a diverse mob of goons picking on ‘model minority’ Asian-Americans is disturbing and unusual, but not much contested by serious scholars – and it appears to have continued from 2018-19 until today. I and a research associate are currently assembling a spreadsheet documenting dozens of widely publicised recent attacks on Asian-Americans. So far, not only are white supremacists sparse among the culprits, but more than 60 per cent of those identified are black. To give a typical example, the sole suspect in the well-known Oakland Chinatown attacks earlier this year turned out to be a young African-American man named Yaya Muslim.

All this data and wonkery matters. If the sole goal of the Twitterati and future cub reporters assigned to this topic is harmless virtue-signalling, there may seem no real downside to pretending that Muslim Arab immigrants are neo-Nazis, or that MAGA-hatted Trumpers rather than young black guys are robbing Asian grandmothers in Oakland. But if the goal is actually solving problems, then real-world solutions like enhanced policing of Asian neighbourhoods by diverse officers trained to recognise likely suspects will be required – and silly ideas like defunding police while paying neighbourhood Black Lives Matter chapters more to fight ‘white supremacy’ are revealed to be counterproductive. My take? Put aside the goofy pre-set narratives, and start listening to and dealing with the actual stories we hear in America today.

Wilfred Reilly is a spiked columnist and the author of Taboo: 10 Facts You Can’t Talk About, published by Regnery. Follow him on Twitter: @wil_da_beast630

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Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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Why do Lefties get everything so wrong? Why are they qeomg on almost everything?

Low IQ is my reasoning. How dumb do you have to be to blame a certain section of society for committing a crime before you even have proof on who the perpetrator is? It's just made them look stupid.

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Twin_Moose

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F*cking white supremacists oh wait what's this you say?

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HATE HOAX: Black student responsible for racist graffiti at American college

This graffiti, which included messages such as "white lives matter" and "white power," turned out to have been allegedly created by a 21-year-old black male.

Behind a pay wall

Sharon Williams arrested for allegedly harassing Asian salon employees near Manhattan's Chinatown - The Washington Post
 

Twin_Moose

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Apr 17, 2017
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Another mass shooting that started out assumed white shooter ends up another failure by law enforcement and mental issues


FedEx shooter ID’d as 19-year-old former employee Brandon Scott Hole

By Lia Eustachewich and Craig McCarthy
April 16, 2021 | 2:16pm

The man who killed eight people at an Indianapolis FedEx facility was identified Friday as 19-year-old former employee Brandon Scott Hole — who authorities said was questioned last year by the FBI.

Hole’s mother had called police in 2020 saying she was worried he might try to commit suicide by cop, said Paul Keenan, special agent in charge at the FBI’s Indianapolis field office.

According to a police report, Hole was arrested on March 3, 2020, when police “seized shotgun from dangerous person,” local station WTHR-TV reported.

“Behavioral health unit initiated immediate detention,” according to the report.

Hole had bought the shotgun shortly before he was arrested and taken to the hospital, the report said.

A search of Hole’s bedroom after his arrest turned up some items that prompted federal agents to question him, Keenan said without elaborating on what was found.

But the FBI eventually determined no that crime had been committed, nor that Hole had been talking about any racially motivated idology. He was not given back the shotgun, authorities said.

Officials said the killer was last employed by FedEx in 2020. The company confirmed his previous employment.

A body is taken from the scene where multiple people were shot at a FedEx Ground facility in Indianapolis on April 16, 2021.AP
Authorities are still scrambling to figure out why Hole opened fire with a rifle at the plant near the Indianapolis International Airport, killing eight and wounding five others.

“I wish we can answer that,” Deputy Chief Craig McCartt said when asked about the motive.

At a press conference Friday afternoon, authorities said Hole also had a prior arrest in 2013. It was not clear what for.

Law enforcement at the scene on April 16, 2021, in IndianapolisAP
Federal agents on Friday were seen hauling evidence including a large box and computer equipment from Hole’s home in a neighborhood on the east side of Indianapolis, 13News reported.

Neighbors said more than 30 law enforcement vehicles arrived at the block Friday morning.

Indianapolis Police Chief Randal Taylor noted that a “significant” number of employees at the facility are members of the Sikh community, although it is unclear if that had anything to do with the shooting.

The fatal victims have not yet been identified, police said.

Neighbors said more than 30 law enforcement vehicles arrived at the block Friday morning.

With AP
 

Twin_Moose

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FedEx shooter was known to authorities before tragedy took place: sources

The gunman, who after murdering 8 people committed suicide, was flagged by a family member to law enforcement before the attack took place.

The shooter in the FedEx facility incident that killed 8 people was previously known to authorities, according to a New York Post report.

The gunman, who after murdering 8 people committed suicide, was flagged by a family member to law enforcement before the attack took place. Journalist John Cardillo tweeted that "the FBI dropped the ball on another one."

The gunman's identity was released today as 19-year-old Brandon Scott Hole. The motive for this act of violence, however, is so far unclear.

The FedEx facility was located in Indianapolis, Indiana and the suspect has not yet been made public to the press. CNN, however, has reported that the gunman was known to authorities.....More