Los Angeles Times

Mass shootings, white supremacy and reader anger

Who is racist? The people spewing ugliness or the person who points it out?

- GUSTAVO ARELLANO

Racist. Bigot. Idiot. Hater.

Anti-white. Prejudiced. Stupid. Evil.

Those were some of the nicer things conservati­ves called me recently — all because I feel white supremacis­ts are a danger to American society who increasing­ly target Latinos.

That was the opening premise of my May 25 column about the massacre in Uvalde, Texas, where an 18-year-old man gunned down 19 fourth-graders and two teachers. I wrote that when I heard the news about a mass shooting of Latino schoolchil­dren in the Lone Star State, I immediatel­y figured the killer was a white supremacis­t.

Stockton. Charleston, S.C. Pittsburgh. Fearing a racist attack didn’t seem like such a stretch.

The United States was just a week removed from 10 Black people being shot to death in Buffalo, N.Y., by a man who authoritie­s say published a manifesto that stated, among other racist rants, that Latinos are a “problem whites will have to deal with.” Uvalde is in a state where another white supremacis­t drove to El Paso three years ago with the expressed purpose of murdering Latinos and summarily killed 23 of them at a Walmart.

We live in an era where a laughable conspiracy theory — elites are using Latinos to replace whites — has gone from society’s fringe to a talking point spewed by conservati­ve media and Republican politician­s alike, with an implicit call to action to stop this Reconquist­a.

Presuming that racial

[Arellano, hate might drive someone to kill Latinos wasn’t illogical. I pointedly didn’t say I thought the culprit was a white person but rather a white supremacis­t — someone motivated not by his race but by his racism. Because I don’t believe race predispose­s anyone toward criminalit­y, but I do believe noxious ideologies can.

Most readers got that nuance. Hundreds of others didn’t.

Conservati­ve media such as the New York Post and Breitbart zeroed in on my shock that the Uvalde killer was a Latino instead of the white supremacis­t I imagined he would be. Fox News contributo­r Tammy Bruce tweeted about one of those stories while adding “identity politics rots from the inside out,” then promptly blocked me.

They at least made the pretense of being polite.

Via social media and email, bilious readers shared stats and articles that purported to show minority groups commit more mass shootings than white people. Others said I should’ve assumed that the killer was a Latino because of our supposed propensity to kill.

That same line of thinking bubbled up from folks who asked why I didn’t cast my ire at narco-violence in Mexico — never mind that the killings that cartels commit are categorica­lly different from mass shootings in the United States. Or that the United States fuels a large part of that mayhem through American weaponry smuggled south of the border and Americans who consume the drugs that go north.

Unsurprisi­ngly, those hundreds of critics said I was the racist for bringing up white supremacy at all. People were so riled up that they even blasted my concluding thought that mass shootings are “a pathology found almost nowhere else on Earth ... as American as apple pie,” decrying me for besmirchin­g the dessert’s honor.

I’m used to angry letters — it comes with the job of being a columnist. But the reaction to my Uvalde column disturbed me in a way I haven’t felt in years.

Readers also told me to move on from always thinking about race. I actually rarely do. But as hate continues to become louder and more powerful and deadlier, I need to. We live in a country where too many whites don’t want to look in the proverbial mirror and consider, maybe for a second, that white supremacy is a problem in this country and needs to be confronted.

Especially by whites.

Minorities have long had to apologize for the bad apples in our groups, the ones bigots use to make blanket pronouncem­ents to deem us dangerous. Such stereotype­s led to decades of legal and de facto discrimina­tion, segregatio­n and violence rooted in white supremacy — all done in the name of protecting whites from people of color.

Today, as official and unofficial attempts at racial reckonings continue, many whites won’t stomach scrutiny of that past and want to do everything possible to ignore it. Racism is a thing of yellowed newspaper clippings and on-screen dramatizat­ions to them instead of something still too prevalent. People who openly align with white supremacy and then commit slaughter in its name are dismissed as solely mentally ill instead of a symptom of something more deep-rooted.

This type of colorblind­ness is a cult in the right almost as bad as its worship of guns. That’s why so many parents and politician­s rail against the teaching of ethnic studies in public schools, or about the implementa­tion of critical race theory in curriculum — even when its implementa­tion is more imagined than real.

That’s why they don’t want to hear that white supremacy caused the very damage to minorities that whites always feared minorities would do to them — and that the toxicity is more widespread than ever.

My column even mentioned that you don’t have to be white to commit these kinds of mass killings. Readers not only convenient­ly skipped over this fact — they took insult to the very idea that whites can.

White fragility, heal thyself.

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 ?? Eric Gay Associated Press ?? A MAN delivers flowers and candles to a memorial for the victims of the school shooting in Uvalde, Texas.
Eric Gay Associated Press A MAN delivers flowers and candles to a memorial for the victims of the school shooting in Uvalde, Texas.

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