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Monday, April 23, 2007
Suzanne Fields :: Townhall.com Columnist
When Stereotypes Stalk Tragedy
by Suzanne Fields
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Will Congress pass Obamacare by the end of the year?

Please don't let him be Jewish.

Please don't let him be black.

Please don't let him be Chinese, Japanese or Korean. (Or even Pacific Islander.)

Such were the prayers of men and women across the nation who feared a backlash from stereotypes of a killer, especially a mass murderer of such evil as the shooter at Virginia Tech. When portraits of a villain fill the television screens, it's easy for good people to look to their comfortable prejudices for explanations. Blaming race, religion, ethnicity and culture seems more reasonable than accepting the randomness of one madman.

The Asian American Journalists' Association urged editors and reporters to "avoid using racial identifiers unless there is a compelling or germane reason" (and by urging restraint in the name of Asian journalists neatly identified the killer's ethnicity). The public naturally wants to learn everything it can about someone who commits such a heinous act. Reporters look for every angle to explain motive, raising questions about race along with questions of sociology and psychology. Cho Seung-Hui, age 23, had lived in the United States since he was 8, and had spent those first eight years in his native Seoul. That's simply a fact, and Koreans here and there are particularly sensitive about it.

An editorial in the Korea Herald, a Seoul newspaper, expressed shock and sadness over the murder of 32 students and called the young man "one rotten apple," but certainly not acting on behalf of Koreans or the Korean government. No one had suggested that he did, but the newspaper, perhaps typical, worries that "the shocking incident will taint the good image that the Korean community and the Korean nation have strived to build among Americans."

South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun expressed shock and sent two messages of condolence and consolation to Virginia Tech. Official representatives of the South Korean government said they would work to prevent a backlash and " minimize the impact on the South Korea-U.S. alliance further strengthened by the conclusion of a bilateral free trade deal." Continued...

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About The Author

Suzanne Fields is a columnist with The Washington Times.

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Nazi Gun Laws - Not a Hoax
Purple,

Your own link states that German Jews were not allowed to own any firearms by 1938. They were the targeted minority (along with other select groups), in case you forgot. Gun ownership was restricted to "reliable" people like Nazi Party members.

The salient point is that gun laws infringe upon a citizen's to defend against armed attack. The firearm effectively levels the field between elderly homeowner and young home invader. It levels the field between tyrant and citizen. If Jews had the capability to spill Nazi blood after Kristallnacht to the same degree they did in the Warsaw ghetto, the death toll may have been much lower.

You're right. Not black and white
Purple,

I didn't make it Black and White. I was commenting on how DeWayne Wickham's only mention of race in his column (USA Today 4/24) about potential backlash against Koreans was to cite one alleged case of white folks not patronizing an Asian dry cleaner after the VT massacre. His implication was pretty clear.

My point was that DeWayne is always quick to highlight racism or racial tension in other groups than his own.
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