The Day

This must stop

- This editorial appeared in the Los Angeles Times.

A91-year-old man shoved to the ground in Oakland’s Chinatown. A dead cat left at a family-run butcher shop in Sacramento. A 51-year-old teacher’s aide beaten with his own cane in Rosemead. A fire and vandalism at a Buddhist temple in Little Tokyo. The harassment of an immigrant family in Ladera Ranch. A Sacramento high-school teacher making disparagin­g slant-eyed gestures during a Zoom call.

These horrific incidents all occurred within the last month. And the trend isn’t limited to California. Attacks on Asian Americans have drawn an outcry in New York City as well. Voice of America has documented similar surges in hate crimes in Boston, Seattle and other cities.

The increase in attacks over the past year has no single cause. But there can be no doubt that former President Donald Trump’s invective against immigrants and against China — he referred to the coronaviru­s as “the Chinese virus” and COVID-19 as “kung flu” — contribute­d to an atmosphere of xenophobia and scapegoati­ng. It is only the latest in a long and ugly history of hostility toward Asians, marked by such outrages as the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 and the incarcerat­ion of Japanese Americans during World War II.

Today, Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders are the fastest-growing minority group in America, and they have become pivotal voters in some elections. The community is characteri­zed by staggering diversity.

One of the few things that unites this group’s members, sadly, is being the target of hate crimes. The anti-Asian violence does not discrimina­te by national origin; for example, a 27-year-old Korean American was assaulted last month in Koreatown by two men who allegedly accused him of carrying COVID-19 and told him to “go back to China.”

And there is more hate than we know. Hate crimes have been underrepor­ted by Asian Americans because many have limited English ability or do not trust the police.

There is some good news that activists and entertaine­rs, such as Daniel Dae Kim, have spoken out against anti-Asian hate. But more leadership will be needed to prevent this latest trend from getting worse — or turning deadly.

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