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Half of Asians Americans and Pacific Islanders faced hate in 2024, study finds

Half of Asians Americans and Pacific Islanders faced hate in 2024, study finds

The Guardian02-06-2025
Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders faced chilling levels of hate in 2024, a new survey has found, reflecting the impact of a divisive presidential election year that included historic representation and rampant anti-immigrant rhetoric.
The report by Stop AAPI Hate, shared exclusively with the Guardian ahead of its release, shines a light on underreported incidents largely overlooked in government data and national news media. The coalition conducted its second annual survey with Norc at the University of Chicago, a nonpartisan research organization. Fifty-three percent of respondents said they experienced a race-based hate act in 2024, a small rise from 49% in 2023. Incidents ranged from bullying at school and workplace discrimination to harassment and physical violence.
Four out of every 10 people who faced a hate act said they did not tell anyone, including friends or family. Of those who experienced a potentially unlawful hate act, including explicit threats, physical harm or institutional discrimination, 66% did not report the incident to authorities, often due to the belief that the act wasn't significant enough or that reporting wouldn't make a difference.
Grace Meng, a New York Democrat who chairs the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus, said the coalition's report helps fill a critical data gap, which she regarded as the largest barrier to government leaders taking action. Awareness of anti-Asian bigotry had increased since a wave of high profile hate crimes during the Covid pandemic, Meng said, but since the general election, perpetrators seem empowered to openly express bigotry.
The coalition's survey of nearly 1,600 Asian American and Pacific Islander adults took place from 7-15 January, days before Donald Trump's inauguration. Over 80% of respondents expressed concern about the racial climate.
'Honestly, after this president was elected, many of us were nervous again,' Meng told the Guardian.
Just over four months into Trump's second term, Meng is ringing the bell on a slew of anti-immigrant actions from Marco Rubio last week announcing he will carry out revocations of Chinese students' visas, to Trump's attacks on birthright citizenship since his first day in office, and widespread funding cuts for a host of institutions.
Meng said she expects the administration's rhetoric and actions against immigrant communities to translate into more anti-Asian hate and violence this year.
In addition to the annual survey, Stop AAPI Hate manages a reporting center to gather data about incidents targeting Asian American and Pacific Islander communities. Stephanie Chan, director of data and research at Stop AAPI Hate, said perpetrators appear to have drawn inspiration from Trump's comments on the campaign trail and echoed his sentiments across the US at schools, public transit stations, restaurants and more.
Some perpetrators have approached Asian Americans and said Trump would have them deported or arrested once he was back in office, according to the center. In one reported incident the day after the election, an Asian girl at school was handed a piece of paper scribbled green that read 'green card' and 'dog-eater', an apparent reference to baseless slurs by Trump and other Republicans that Haitian immigrants in an Ohio city were eating pets.
At a big-box store in Washington state this year, a woman said someone called her a 'Chinese peasant' – similar to comments made by Vice-President JD Vance – and said she should go back to her country.
Chan also noted that the prominence of Kamala Harris and second lady Usha Vance in the political spotlight has placed a target on south Asian communities.
'South Asians are now in these prominent places of leadership in the business world and in the political world now, and there's this sense that, 'Oh, now they're taking over,'' Chan said. 'And so there has been that backlash to the rise in prominence and leadership in the country, in various sectors, by south Asian people.'
Stop AAPI Hate and other nonprofits recently filed a class-action lawsuit against the justice department over what they allege is an unlawful termination of over $810m in public safety grants previously awarded to hundreds of organizations.
The group, which was formed in 2020 amid a spike of pandemic-era bigotry, lost a $2m grant it had earmarked for violence prevention, survivor support and the reporting center's data work.
A copy of the DoJ's brief termination letter obtained by the Guardian says the grant 'demonstrates that it no longer effectuates department priorities'. A justice department spokesperson declined to comment on the litigation.
'We have a very, very strong indication of what the Trump administration is trying to do,' said Cynthia Choi, co-founder of Stop AAPI Hate, which includes trying to stop any institution from getting in the way of his anti-immigrant agenda, including nonprofits, universities, law firms and the courts.
Choi noted some upsides from the 2024 survey, which found that 82% said they were optimistic about their community's ability to combat racism – about the same percentage of people who expressed concern about the racial climate. Two-thirds of respondents said they participated in activities to reduce or resist racism, with Democrats, south-east Asians and those who had experienced hate more likely to get involved. Over 85% of respondents said they believed in the importance of cross-racial solidarity.
'We are organizing and really leaning into the fact that we have to fight back collectively, consistently and with determination, because the more that we allow Trump and the administration to roll back our rights, you know, there'll be a point where there will be nothing that we can do about it,' Choi said. 'That's the part that is, I think, most frightening.'
'We know from history that overnight, democracies can become very fragile, and we know that overnight, once we lose our ability to speak out, to defend, to protect, we'll have nothing left.'
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HALF a century ago serial killer David Berkowitz began his reign of terror in New York city - shooting random women at point blank range. Today the question remains, why did the man - calling himself The Son of Sam - go on this murderous rampage? 11 11 Berkowitz, 72, who is serving a life sentence for six murders and seven attempted murders, decided to confess all in a series of taped interviews in 1980. Now journalist Jack D Jones has revealed the contents of those interviews in a new Netflix documentary titled Conversations with a Killer: The Son of Sam Tapes. Jones, who covered prison and had spoken to many inmates, became obsessed with Berkowitz - even visiting him at weekends during his free time. Having sat across from one of America's most notorious serial killers for hours on end, the reporter believes Berkowitz took 'gratification' from seeing victims' families grieve and, in his twisted mind, wanted to be 'a hero'. 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Having stabbed two young women in December 1975, both of whom survived the vicious attacks, he switched to using a .44 caliber handgun. From his first shooting in July 1976 to a final failed plan to commit a massacre in August 1977, fear spread across the Big Apple. Both young men and women stopped going out at night as the police appeared powerless to stop a killer who struck at will. When Berkowitz was apprehended, police officers found bizarre messages scrawled in red all over the walls of his spartan apartment. He was a modern Jack the Ripper character with a gun Jack D Jones To the world, this loner was a dangerous 'nut job'. But that is not the impression Berkowitz gave when Jack first met him. 'Berkowitz comes over, bounds round the table and to my surprise he stuck his hand out and says 'hi, I'm David,'" Jack recalls. 'He's the last person you'd expect to be a serial killer.' Intrigued, Jack wanted to know what his motivation was for ending the lives of so many young people. Over the weeks he says 'we formed an ongoing relationship' and slowly Berkowitz opened up about his past. Making of a murderer Berkowitz was adopted by the childless Pearl and Nathan Berkowitz, with his birth mother Betty Broder not wanting to keep a child she'd had with a married man. He told Jack: 'My parents were very nice, fair, kind, loving people, everything positive.' But he admits to being 'very mean' to his devoted adoptive mother, saying: 'I used to rip up her clothes, tear a hole in her blouse or something.' Berkowitz also used to set fires in stairwells. Berkowitz comes over, bounds round the table and to my surprise he stuck his hand out and says 'hi, I'm David.' He's the last person you'd expect to be a serial killer Jack D Jones His dad Nathan thought that rather than telling Berkowitz that his mother had given him up, he would lie and say she had died in childbirth. That, though, made the youngster feel guilty about the death of his birth mum. Then his adoptive mother Pearl died from cancer when Berkowitz was aged just 14 - and in 1974 he tracked down his birth mother. He disapproved of Betty having him out of wedlock and thinking he "was an accident", adding: 'It's like a volcano erupting.' Twisted logic Berkowitz resented others seemingly following a similar path to his mother. Often his targets would be couples making out in parked cars late at night - and in his depraved mind, 'It felt like I was getting revenge." But there might be another reason. While serving in the US Army in South Korea, Berkowitz started experimenting with drugs, including the hallucinogenic LSD. Friends felt he changed after this, and he became more of a loner on leaving the forces in 1974. It has been suggested that the Robert De Niro movie Taxi Driver, about a vigilante New Yorker, released in February 1976, could have inspired him. But Berkowitz had already stabbed two women by this point and told Jack: 'The movies didn't cause it, but they did reassure me.' Cowardly killer 11 11 Berkowitz did, however, buy himself a .44 Bulldog gun because he found it hard to kill someone with a knife. The coward didn't like to make eye contact with his victims. Jack says: 'He told me he was seeking out women he could kill. He said he had to view his victims as what he wanted them to be. 'When his intended victims asked him if he needed any help or would smile, he couldn't do it.' There were occasions where he ended up helping people he had initially targeted. He told Jack: 'I was always upholding the image of a good upstanding citizen.' In his spare time Berkowitz, who worked various dead end jobs, had helped fire trucks get to blazes. Jack says: 'His whole life he'd been practising keeping this horrible side of himself inside. David Berkowitz was looking to be a hero.' But the psychotic side of his personality took over. Donna Lauria, 18, was his first victim to die, gunned down as she got out of a car in the Bronx in July 1976. Berkowitz said: 'I had so much anger, one killing wasn't going to quench it.' Late at night he would trawl the city planning his next murder, mainly choosing couples sat in cars. After 20-year-old secretary Stacy Moskowitz was shot in the head in July 1977 her funeral was shown on television. Her boyfriend Robert Violante survived the attack but was shot in the eye, leaving him permanently blinded. Jack recalls: 'He remembered the grieving process everybody was going through. He seemed to get gratification from it.' Stacy was to be his final victim. Snared by parking ticket A parking ticket led detectives to Berkowitz, who a neighbour described as 'that nut'. They became even more suspicious on learning Berkowitz had shot a dog belonging to Sam Carr for barking. With the police closing in, Berkowitz headed to the wealthy Hamptons on the coast near New York with the intention of massacring holiday makers with an automatic weapon. But the terrible weather stopped him. Berkowitz admits on tape: 'When it started to rain and there was no one around, I got in the car and went home.' After his arrest he claimed he committed murder because Sam the Demon 'made me do it'. Berkowitz was declared mentally fit to stand trial and pleaded guilty to all of the shootings, and was sentenced to 25 years to life. In his interview with Jack, though, he admitted to making up the voice in his head line because he had to 'convince myself that I'm not the one that's doing this'. He confessed: 'It was all just a sham, to be frank with you.' Even though Berkowitz will be forever known as the Son of Sam, he does not think there was anyone called Sam behind his bloody crimes. Jack thinks that this loner was desperate for attention, concluding: 'He achieved what he wanted. A lifetime of notoriety.' It could be argued that another documentary about Berkowitz will just give him what he wants. But with his next parole hearing due in May 2026, it should also convince everyone how truly dangerous this serial killer is. Conversations with a Killer: The Son of Sam Tapes is streaming on Netflix now. 11 11 11 11

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