A year ago, a killer traveled to three Atlanta-area massage businesses and fatally shot eight people. Six of the slain victims were women of Asian descent.
Police said the suspect, a man named Robert Aaron Long, told them that the guilt he felt for watching porn and paying for sexual acts had motivated him to kill. Police said he blamed the victims for his inability to control his impulses.
Long has pleaded guilty to murdering four of the victims and not guilty in the deaths of the four others.
For America’s racial and ethnic minorities, salvation will come through solidarity.
His dehumanization of his mostly Asian victims — his reducing them to fixtures in his wretched life story — came during a spike in anti-Asian crimes. The number of reported anti-Asian hate crimes in the U.S. increased by 339 percent last year compared to the year before. Experts have said this surge was likely due in part to racist stereotypes amplified by former President Donald Trump during the Covid pandemic.
And anti-Asian violence and harassment have continued into 2022.
In New York alone, we’ve seen several highly publicized incidents of anti–Asian hate.
There was the killing of Christina Yuna Lee, the 35-year-old woman found dead in her bathtub last month with more than 40 stab wounds. And Michelle Go, the 40-year-old woman who police say was killed in January by a man who pushed her into an oncoming subway train. And the seven Asian women who were attacked over two hours in New York City this month. And the Asian woman who was spit on and punched 125 times in an attack in Yonkers last week.
These attacks hark back to the murder of Balbir Singh Sodhi, the Sikh American whose killing on Sept. 15, 2001, was the first hate crime murder to follow the 9/11 attacks. In Sodhi’s murder and in so many of the brutal attacks on Asian Americans in recent years, racists rushed to generalize and inflict harm under the guise of patriotism. And as a Black man, I know failing to condemn these attacks is both a moral failure and a strategic one. For America’s racial and ethnic minorities, salvation will come through solidarity.
I’m motivated by others who feel this way. That was the impetus for my post celebrating Mari Matsuda, the Asian American activist and legal scholar who famously spoke out against people trying to drive a wedge between Asian Americans and Black people.








