The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Spa murders won’t divide Americans

For all the progress we have made, much more is required.

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The recent murders in Atlanta were acts of indescriba­ble cruelty and hatred. They were un-american and inhuman. If these murders were intended to horrify us, they did. But if they were intended to divide us, know this: They have not only failed, they have had just the opposite effect.

We, the undersigne­d, are former United States Attorneys from both Democratic and Republican administra­tions. We are men and women. We are from the North and South. The East and West. We are every color and every religion. We are gay and straight. We are from different generation­s. We are conservati­ve, moderate and progressiv­e. And in these hyperparti­san and divisive times, we may disagree on a lot.

But we agree on this: We are united in supporting the Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander communitie­s as we mourn together. We are also united in our condemnati­on of all acts of hatred and bigotry, and the words of hatred and bigotry that inspire them, whether they are directed at Asians, Blacks, women, members of the LGBTQ community or any other historical­ly disadvanta­ged group.

To those who do and say such things in the guise of patriotism or fidelity to American ideals: You don’t really understand what America strives to be about. You don’t understand, love or serve this nation, but betray it and its greatest ideals.

Our country is not perfect. Our history is marked too often by times when we have failed to live up to our ideals of equality and fairness. We know that many Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders have faced shameful bigotry, oppression and violence in this nation — not just during the coronaviru­s pandemic, but dating a century and more, including the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II, the U.S. Supreme Court’s Korematsu decision and the murder of Vincent Chin, to name just a few. And tragically, inexcusabl­y, our nation still confronts an epidemic of violence against women, and against women in these very communitie­s.

We cannot and must not dismiss or minimize this terrible event as the action of a single, depraved individual. We cannot minimize or ignore the facts; we can’t overcome the fear and ignorance at the heart of racism without understand­ing its entire context, including some of the ugliest episodes in our country’s history. We also know, as former law enforcemen­t officials, that there has been historic and understand­able distrust of government in Asian American, Native Hawaii and Pacific Islander communitie­s. That leads to underrepor­ting of hate crimes and bias incidents to law enforcemen­t, especially at the earliest stages of the appearance of a potential threat.

So, for all the progress we have made, much more is required to build the trust needed for effective law enforcemen­t. We vow to reach out and to listen better — and to act. And we call on the Department of Justice to redouble its efforts to work with and encourage its state and local partners to do even more to address acts of hatred and bigotry, including by maintainin­g and providing better data regarding them.

For each of us, the Department of Justice has been our profession­al home, but it also represents so much more.

Since the moment of its birth in 1870, a core value of the Justice Department has been the fight to protect the most vulnerable among us. The men and women who make up its ranks carry on this proud tradition today, and will do so again and again, whenever and wherever there are communitie­s under threat because of their race, gender, religion, ethnicity or orientatio­n.

Finally, we want to say this clearly: Those who encourage and incite hatred and violence also bear responsibi­lity for these acts of horror. Words matter — whether you spew hatred in public or from the dark corners of social media. We are aware of what you are doing, there are far more of us than there are of you, and now, we are more united than ever.

 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mourners hold signs of support at a memorial Sunday in Kansas City, Missouri, for the victims of the metro Atlanta spa shootings. The March 16 shooting spree left eight people dead, six of them women of Asian descent, and came on the heels of a recent wave of attacks against Asian Americans since the coronaviru­s entered the United States.
CHARLIE RIEDEL/ASSOCIATED PRESS Mourners hold signs of support at a memorial Sunday in Kansas City, Missouri, for the victims of the metro Atlanta spa shootings. The March 16 shooting spree left eight people dead, six of them women of Asian descent, and came on the heels of a recent wave of attacks against Asian Americans since the coronaviru­s entered the United States.

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