Mindanao Times

Double shootings heighten fears of ‘white terrorism’

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ARMED with assault rifles and clad in combat gear, two white men methodical­ly gunned down nearly 30 people over the weekend, underscori­ng fears that “white terrorism” is now the main threat in the United States.

Amid rising grief and a clamor for action after the shootings in Texas and Ohio, and earlier in several other cities, politician­s of both parties called for the federal government to take that threat more seriously, with some Democrats accusing President Donald Trump of dangerousl­y fanning racial tensions.

“It is very clear that the loss of American life in Charleston, in San Diego, in Pittsburgh and by all appearance­s now in El Paso, too, is symptomati­c of the effects of white nationalis­t terrorism,” Democratic presidenti­al candidate Pete Buttigieg said Sunday, naming the scenes of mass shootings that targeted blacks, Jews and, apparently, Hispanics.

In El Paso, situated on the border with Mexico, more than eight in 10 residents are of Hispanic descent. The accused shooter, a 21-year-old white man identified in media reports as Patrick Crusius, had come from far away Dallas with the apparent intent of inflicting mass carnage.

Armed with an assault rifle, the shooter killed 20 people and wounded 26 before surrenderi­ng to police.

An online manifesto, attributed to the assailant, railed against a “Hispanic invasion” and referred approvingl­y to the March 15 massacre by a white supremacis­t at two mosques in Christchur­ch, New Zealand that killed 51 people.

Six of the 20 people killed in the shooting were Mexican nationals, the country’s president, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, said Sunday.

Thirteen hours after the El Paso attack, another white man is accused of spreading terror in the Midwestern city of Dayton, Ohio, killing nine people including his sister, authoritie­s said. Police named him as Connor Betts, 24.

While police say the motive is still unclear, six of the nine people killed in Dayton were black.

“What you have here is two things coming together,” Buttigieg, the mayor of South Bend, Indiana, said on “Fox News Sunday.”

“One, the weak gun safety policies of this country. And two, the rise of domestic terrorism inspired by white nationalis­ts... we (have) got to do something about it.”

Trump, in denouncing the El Paso shooting on Twitter as “an act of cowardice,” said nothing about the suspect’s possible motives.

He later stated that “hate has no place in our country,” but also blamed mental illness for the violence.

El Paso’s Republican mayor, Dee Margo, seemed to discount any race angle, reducing the tragedy there to the “pure evil” act of a “deranged” man.

Even some Republican­s, however, saw that sort of explanatio­n as inadequate.

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