Today, Explained - Racism, misogyny, and the shootings in Georgia
Episode Date: March 18, 2021Eight people were killed in shootings at three Atlanta-area spas. Most of the victims were women. Six were Asian American. Georgia state Sen. Michelle Au explains how her community is coping, and auth...or Kate Manne explores the intersection of racism and misogyny. Transcript at vox.com/todayexplained. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This episode is about a mass shooting,
racism, and misogyny.
On Tuesday evening, Georgia's Cherokee County was on alert.
At Bell's Ferry Road in Woodstock, you can see several police cars on both sides of the roadway.
Traffic appears to be at a standstill on one side.
There was a shooting at a spa in Ackworth, a town just north of Atlanta.
Less than an hour later, there were two more shootings at spas in Atlanta.
We have two crime scenes here.
It's clear.
Yellow crime scene tape in front of two places.
Officers are outside the aromatherapy spa.
You can see a lot of police cars there and crime scene tape.
And then we're going to pan over here to the gold spa.
Police arrested the suspect later that night.
Officers later captured 21-year-old Robert Aaron Long, 150 miles south of Atlanta.
In total, eight people were killed.
Six were women of Asian descent.
Some of the victims' names,
they include Delaina Ashley Yown, 33 years old,
Paul Andre Michaels, 54,
Xiao Jie Yan, and Dao You Feng, just 44 years old.
The day before the shooting, on the floor of the Georgia state legislature,
Senator Michelle Au, who represents the state's 48th district, said this.
Georgia should not consider itself immune from this epidemic.
And to be clear, the epidemic I'm referring to is not
COVID-19, but racism towards Asian Americans. In the last year, 32 incidents of hate crimes
towards our AAPI community here in Atlanta have been reported. Today, she stepped away
from a legislative session for a few minutes to talk with us. Yeah, the timing of my remarks is,
in some ways, it's in some ways remarkable just how proximate it was to me speaking about this issue.
But in another way, any time I spoke about Asian American discrimination and violence, especially in this last year, there would have been something that happened pretty soon after.
We need attention to this issue as a preventative just as much as we need to shine light on incidents that have already taken place. It doesn't feel good to be right about some things, and it doesn't feel good to be right about this, but I'm hoping that we can channel this attention now towards the change that we need to see. This crime, these shootings happened in the Atlanta area, not far from the district that
you represent. Can you talk a little bit about what it is like for the Asian American community
living in the Atlanta area? Yeah, so I've talked with many members of my community, and my community
skews heavily Asian American Pacific Islander. I'll just tell you that my Senate district, which is District 48, is more than 24% AAPI as of 2010.
And we're still awaiting the latest census to show us what those numbers are now, but I assume it's going to be even higher than that.
So in my communities, what I'm hearing is that people are terrified, right? They feel unsafe. They're concerned about doing even the simplest things outside not enough attention has been paid to this issue.
And even when these issues get reported or brought up, that people don't notice and don't listen and don't care. is frankly living in fear and has been living in fear for at least the past year since the advent
of the coronavirus has turned a lot of attention towards our Asian community in a way that is
frankly discriminatory and paints with a broad brush. Yeah. And, you know, as a lawmaker,
I know you're trying to bring more attention to this issue because you just spoke on the floor
of the Georgia State Senate about it. But after something so high profile that's gotten local attention, that's gotten national
attention, that's even gotten international attention, what action do you think needs
to be taken at this point?
I want to start with the basics because I think that we have really been behind in how
we are addressing discrimination and violence in the AAPI community.
So the first thing I would like to do is to do what we're doing right now,
which is to raise awareness, because I think that many people in our community,
especially people who live outside the AAPI community,
aren't even aware that this is going on.
And the reason I know this is because after I gave my speech on the Senate floor,
many other legislators came up to me saying,
oh, thanks for saying that. I didn't know
this was going on. So even to people who are so invested in current events in the state of the
state, we're not aware that these incidents were taking place. So I think raising awareness is the
very first thing that we can do. The second thing I would like to work on, and this is going to be
work that has to be done both from the legislative level and with community partners, is making it easier for people to report these incidents as they happen.
And I think I've said in the past that it's difficult to fix a problem when you can't measure the problem.
Right. And we know that these incidents, when they're not so big and flashy like this, when they don't command as much
attention, tend to be vastly underreported, right? And there's a lot of reasons for that.
In the AAPI community, especially one that has many new immigrants, new Americans,
there are significant language barriers that people don't feel comfortable reporting to someone who
doesn't speak their language. They don't want to engage with law enforcement. There's an apprehension of law enforcement itself,
sometimes with respect to immigration status,
that there's a reasonable fear and apprehension
for engaging government entities and that type of thing.
And also people feel from watching the media
and watching what has been happening
that even if they do report, nothing happens
because this has been going on, as we noted, for a year. And we've been talking about it,
at least in our communities, for a year or more. And no one has seen any significant change,
and no one has felt any safer. And if anything, people feel more unsafe because these incidents
are actually escalating. So what I would like to start seeing and what I would like to start
working on with our community partners is in-language outreach in our communities, having community partners actually go into the community,
emphasize the importance of people reporting these events, having easier ways for them to report,
emphasizing, you know, the measures we're taking based on this information to promote change,
because otherwise there does seem to be a sense of hopelessness about what the point is. Senator, I'm glad you brought up law enforcement because
there's been a lot of scrutiny on Captain Jay Baker. He's a spokesman for the Cherokee County
Sheriff's Office, and he talked about the suspect in custody in a press conference.
Let me go in a little bit detail. So the suspect did take responsibility for the shootings.
He said that early on once we began the interviews with him.
He claims that these and as the chief said, this is still early, but he does claim that it was not racially motivated.
He apparently has an issue, what he considers a sex fiction and sees these locations as something that allows him to go to these places.
And it's a temptation for him that he wanted to eliminate.
And he got a lot of criticism for saying...
He understood the gravity of it.
And he was pretty much fed up at the end of his rope.
And yesterday was a really bad day for him.
And this is what he did.
And since then, there's been a lot more scrutiny on the captain and people have found some anti-Asian Facebook posts from him.
And given what you said about trust, what's your message to law enforcement right now?
I think that what we've been hearing is exactly why people don't report crimes. Because when they see that this is what happens,
even when a murderer admits to killing a people,
and this is how gently and, you know,
gingerly you're treated by the people
who are supposed to be protecting the community,
not protecting the criminal,
then it feeds into the exact reasons
that people don't trust law enforcement. I want to be very prudent in how we're interpreting some
of the information we're getting, particularly about the Facebook page of the captain and these
types of things. I want to get a little bit more confirmation and not run with it as absolute fact. However, I will say that the fact that this Facebook page existed at all,
rather it was his or someone else's, and the fact that these products existed at all, you know,
the t-shirts that people are showing that had anti-Asian sentiments and just very crass types
of broadly racist stereotypes, is part of a larger culture of why Asian American discrimination has been tolerated for so long.
Because I think that it's a type of racism that people are more comfortable with for some reason,
that we accept it in a way that we don't accept other types of racism.
It's somehow more palatable to us. So having someone who is in power, who is in law enforcement, be able to so blithely
discount the lives of the victims and to excuse in a pretty broad way the motivations of the
shooter, of the murderer, is really shocking to see and it's disappointing.
What do you think the community, the greater Atlanta community,
the greater Asian American community needs right now to heal?
What I think we need in the immediacy is that we need support for the families of those who
have been affected. And we are still gathering information about the victims and their
families, but they are going to need support, right? These were all low wage earners. They're
working in these spas for what we presume is not very much money. We don't know who they were
supporting, but they're going to need financial help. So as we get that information, I would like
to see our community organizers and the larger Atlanta
and Metro Atlanta community really try to chip in and support these families through what must be
an incredibly difficult time. I'm sure they are also having a very bad day. So let's do that first.
The second thing that I'd like to see is a little bit more speaking out on these issues from people who aren't necessarily
in the AAPI community, right? When you have a community that has been historically
overlooked and had their issues dismissed in a big way, right? These problems are not new.
None of this is new, right? That what helps
perhaps the most is to have other voices, other champions, other allies speak to those same issues
and amplify them, right? Because clearly that's what we need in this moment. If people aren't
listening to just us talking, we need to talk louder and we need other people to be saying the
same thing. Well, Senator Au, thank you so much for making time for us today.
Thank you. I appreciate it.
Coming up, why attacks like this aren't about racism or misogyny.
They're about both.
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Kate Mann, you're the author of a book that's called Entitled, How Male Privilege Hurts Women.
And there's been a lot of speculation about the motive behind this attack. The police
say the shooter denies having a racial bias and he claims some kind of sex-based motive.
Is that a real distinction to you? No. Gender and race always intersect. One of the crucial
things to bear in mind, too, is that we really need to understand these kinds of
heinous crimes from the perspective of the victims rather than the perpetrators. And
certainly from the perspective of the Asian American women who were clearly targeted in this
crime with six out of the eight murdered people being Asian American women, the idea of separating
out their gender from their race in that way makes very little sense. They were targeted clearly as
Asian American women and perhaps also as people who were perceived, rightly or wrongly, as sex
workers. So let's talk about Asian women in particular and how they're viewed in this society.
How might that have made them targets here?
So obviously, we want to be careful at this point of speculation.
But one thing that we do know based on the, shall we say, memorable press conference given by the county sheriff's office where this
crime occurred, we were told that the shooter targeted these women because they were a source
of temptation to him, that he felt that he had a quote-unquote sex addiction and that these women were kind of an illicit source of this temptation he had to visit the various establishments where they were workers. American women are often stereotyped, objectified, fetishized by white men, such as the shooter
Robert Long, in ways that position them as particularly sexually submissive, perhaps
sexually desirable, and otherwise kind of exoticized, fetishized, and othered.
So, while this is by no means meant to be a diagnosis of the shooter's mindset,
I think this is important context to bear in mind the ways in which Asian women are routinely
seen as the other for the purposes of kind of sexual conquest by white men.
What do you call this phenomenon of men dealing with their own discomfort by using
violence? I mean, so setting aside the kind of spurious idea of a sex addiction, which seems
very exonerating, a piece of exonerating ideology in this context, it is unfortunately routine for the most entitled and particularly this is unfortunately true
of white men that when white men feel that a woman has brought them shame which could be for
a variety of reasons it could be that she's left him and so he feels ashamed it could be that
he feels she's not sexually available enough and so he feels ashamed. It could be that he feels she's not sexually
available enough and so he feels ashamed in the case of so-called incels. Or it could be as here,
because she's seen as too sexually available and so he feels ashamed. And unfortunately,
I mean, we all can feel shame, but unfortunately, when the most entitled people feel shame, they often are tempted to do what Eric Erickson called destroying the eyes of the world.
So they want to destroy the eyes of someone who would look at them in a way that would make them feel ashamed or make them feel inadequate in the gaze of others. And we see that borne out in the fact
that there are these horrifying crimes of intimate partner homicide, of family annihilation,
of incels lashing out violently against women they perceive as not sexually admiring them.
And here, we have a variant on that kind of case, seemingly,
at least according to the official narrative right now, of a man lashing out at women who
made him feel ashamed because he wanted them and they were sexually available to him in his mind.
You wrote recently about how individual cases of violence get a lot of attention,
but it can be harder to think about
the broader state of misogynistic violence. And as more details about this attack come to light,
what should people try to keep in mind about sexism and racism here?
Yeah, I mean, I think as well as keeping in mind their intersection, I think it's important to bear in mind that
the murder of women by men is unfortunately ubiquitous. And often it targets the most
vulnerable women, as we saw in this case. We know, though, that between two and three women
are murdered every day on average in the US by a former or current intimate
partner. We also know that there is a veritable epidemic of the murder of trans women, particularly
trans women of color. And so bearing in mind that the cases that make the news are often
the quote unquote kind of splashier cases where you have a stranger to the victims.
It's just worth bearing in mind that we don't hear all the stories.
And this isn't to take away one iota from the horrific tragedy that the victims that we do hear about have faced and that their families are undergoing.
It's to say that we can think about also enlarging
and extending our focus to encompass all of the victims
of male violence, some of whom their stories are never told.
Kate Mann is a feminist philosopher and professor at Cornell University.
I'm Halima Shah, filling in for Sean Romsferm.
It's Today Explained.
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