The Oklahoman

Hate is an American disease of all colors

- David Mastio

With each new outrageous example of police misconduct, the calls to do something about the culture of policing get justifiably louder, but one of the primary tools reform advocates push could be ineffective: Diversifyi­ng police officers and leadership isn’t a silver bullet.

The latest example comes from Windsor, Virginia, where two police officers pepper-sprayed and handcuffed a Black Latino Army lieutenant, Caron Nazario, after they pulled him over in December. Windsor is a small town near Hampton Roads, which has a significant military footprint.

The lead officer in the incident, Joe Gutierrez, was fired over the weekend after local officials reviewed video in the wake of a civil suit filed by Nazario.

Having a minority officer on the scene in Nazario’s case didn’t change the outcome. That same reality is on display in the Derek Chauvin trial in Minneapoli­s. Of the three other officers facing charges related to the killing of George Floyd, two are minorities: Alexander Kueng is Black, and Tou Thao is Asian.

Hiring diverse officers obviously didn’t end the abusive police culture.

The fact that diversity isn’t a solution to hate isn’t limited to police abuse cases. Diversity is at the core of our national hate-crime statistics as tracked by the FBI. In 2019, the latest year for which the FBI has released statistics, 10% of hate crimes were committed by Hispanics, 24% were by Blacks and about 7% by groups with multiple ethnicitie­s.

The FBI statistics are no aberration. “In New York City, where anti-Asian hate crime soared nearly ninefold in 2020 over the year before, only two of the 20 people arrested last year in connection with these attacks were white, according to New York Police Department data analyzed by the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism. Eleven were African Americans, six were white Hispanics and one was a Black Hispanic,” Masood Farivar reported for Voice of America.

If we’re going to reform the police and defeat hate in America, Americans of all races and ethnicitie­s have to do better.

That, of course, does not absolve whites of a particular responsibi­lity to change. Back during 2016, the last year of the Obama administra­tion, whites accounted for the plurality of hate crimes, 46.3%, according to the FBI, but not a majority. That changed over the course of the Trump administra­tion. White hate crimes jumped by more than 6 percentage points by 2019, to 52.5%. That trend is an embarrassm­ent in a nation where we should be getting better.

Hate is an American disease, and all Americans are going to have to work together to defeat it.

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