+1 |
It’s possible to be a racist and also to be mentally ill. But being mentally ill doesn’t excuse racism and it doesn’t make it okay to single out Asian women for mass murder. |
It also doesn’t explain anything. “Mental illness” is a such a vague, amorphous blob word encompassing those of us with plain old generalized anxiety along with violent sociopaths. “Mental illness” isn’t really a common reason for people to go ape sht and murder people. A history of domestic violence, on the other hand - that’s a huge risk factor for more violence. |
An expert wouldn't talk like the PhD person. An expert wouldn't insist their opinion was fact. Might they speculate about a likelihood? Sure. But they would be honest about it being a speculation based on historical context and available facts. The only fact that ties this to race is the identify of two-thirds of the victims (including the one who survived). But because this happened in places that provide massage and sexual services, it's equally tied to that. These two things are connected because of traffickers and business owners who run many of these businesses being Asian or hiring or trafficking Asian women (I don't know the numbers but enough that it's a known thing these businesses exist). If you don't like that some of these businesses are operated and staffed by Asian people, or feel women are being exploited, you are free to work to shut them down and fight trafficking. An investigation should work to factor these variables out to determine if this was a hate crime. Thus far there hasn't been anything obvious indicating the perpetrator hates Asian people. There is some evidence he was angry about sex services. Maybe something related to race will be found still. Most of the skeptics here seem to agree that it's entirely possibly this will end up being a hate crime, but there isn't evidence so far. Others are insisting it's a hate crime no matter what. I'm not sure what the motivation is. It's a horrific tragedy and speaks to the need for gun control above all. If this guy had had a 3 day waiting period maybe none of this would have happened. |
Well said. Agree with all of this. |
You were sounding a lot like Hannah Arendt in her insistence we need not read too much into Nazi's heinous crimes, that these people were mostly performing their 9-5 jobs as they were told, reporting to their bosses - not that they were anti-semites. I've bolded your statements above. And then you said, "I said nothing of the kind and neither did anyone else anywhere, ever." That's when I first mentioned Arendt to show you the parallel in your thinking. You insisted no one has EVER held your view with respect to the nazis. One of the greatest 20th-century Jewish political philosophers Hannah Arendt did. She wrote a book to prove her point. Not surprisingly, she had a Nazi lover. And then there are other things: "And who here even considered the class implications of low income sex workers forced into illegal activities to pay the rent while dealing with abusive men?" And incredibly you went on, "Very little discussion about violence against prostitutes." So, it's not the race in this case. It seems you want to explore the prostitution angle to see what role this had in the Georgia killing. Your point is clear. It was the prostitutes' fault, they brought the violence onto themselves. And in Nazi Germany, it wasn't anti-Semitism, to begin with. You seem to suggest we need to be more open-minded to see what Jews must have done to deserve their fate. You didn't explicitly say these things. But it is clear you are victim-blaming and victim-shaming. |
It's obvious that you do not have a PhD. PhDs trade in facts and opinion. And there are many, many relevant historical facts that tie the mass murder of Asian women to a long history of the objectification and sexualization of Asian women. The purpose of someone with a PhD is to provide a depth and breadth of information and informed analysis. |
I don't want to wade to far into the specific debate going on in this particular thread, but I think this piece on the history of fetishization of "Asian" women (in quotes, because "Asian" is such a broad, ill-defined term when people I think mean by it "Chinese/Korean/Vietnamese/Cambodian/Laotian/Japanese origin women who are petite and relatively light-skinned") is relevant: https://www.vox.com/22338807/asian-fetish-racism-atlanta-shooting
Maybe the mass murderer was a mentally ill sex-addict. Why he thought that the best way to deal with his addiction was to kill people and why he associated his specific victims with his addiction cannot possibly be disentangled from the history of sexual fetishization of women from certain parts of the Asian continent and the view of them as being simultaneously subservient and hyper-sexual. |
I'm sorry. An real expert with a PhD would not claim something is fact based on historical facts alone. |
Mental lllness is a HUGE risk factor when it comes to crimes. This article says 25% of the people arrested have a serious mental illness and the mentally ill are 9X more likely to go to prison than a mental hospital. That's probably an underestimate since even serious mental illnesses often don't get diagnosed. And mental illness is also associated with many other adverse outcomes such as drug abuse, homelessness, unemployment, physical illness, poverty and high school dropouts. And domestic violence too. https://www.psycom.net/how-to-reduce-mental-illness-in-prisons Some of the most infamous mass murders in the US were definitely or probably committed by mentally ill people who were not receiving adequate treatment. Why don't you know about what a significant factor mental illness plays in virtually every social problem in the United States? Because every time someone brings it up, the pundits and the politicians refuse to even consider the mental illness factor and DCUM posters follow dutifully along. Every time. No matter the issue. |
I consider myself to be pretty sensitive to issues of racism. But I think it is important to be careful about attributing the crime to racial hatred before we know more.
First, there is a better and more obvious motive: sex. Either that he wanted to kill sex workers due to his internal sexual conflict, or perhaps he had a dispute with them arising from an encounter there. Second, there is another important issue: that these women may have been victims of sex trafficking. And if so, they are the victims of two crimes and that there is another set of criminals who should be brought to justice. It's going to be tough if we mistakenly turn the human traffickers into the victims of a hate crime. If it turns out that the motive isn't racial, we will have done an injustice by diverting attention away from other important issues, and it will be used to discredit future allegations of hate crimes. We still hear about the Duke Lacrosse scandal after fifteen years, because the prosecutor jumped the gun and the public wasn't sufficiently skeptical. |
Because right now, race sells. It's *all* you're allowed to see and if you delve any deeper, you're instantly accused of being a racist. |
Are there stats on mass killings where courts have certified mental illness as the direct cause of the killings? I am guessing there aren't many certified cases. Plenty of mentally ill people do not engage in mass killings. |
I did not find this article helpful to figuring out if this was a hate crime or a mental health issue. There are few types of businesses in the U.S. that have sexual services as a side service. Of the ones that are, a large number are Asian staffed and likely Asian run. If someone wants that service, it's not necessarily because they fetishize Asian women, though that might be true for some customers. It could be because that's who offers the service. If you don't like the association, take it up with the business owners and local governments to stop the practice and stop trafficking. At least some of the trafficking starts in Asia. |
Wasn't Duke's a hoax to begin with? Is someone claiming the killings were a hoax? |