Instead of focusing on the tragic deaths of nearly a dozen people committed by the Monterey Park shooter at a Lunar New Year celebration on Saturday, right-wing media have spent their coverage emphasizing that the shooter's Asian heritage proves that white supremacy is not a threat.
On January 22, a Lunar New Year celebration in Monterey Park, California, was the target of a mass shooting, with 11 people killed and many others injured by the shooter. This tragedy comes on the heels of an alarming increase in hate crimes against Asian communities during the COVID-19 pandemic, including the shooting of eight people at spas in Atlanta, Georgia. Former President Donald Trump also notably used inflammatory rhetoric against Asian people, repeatedly referring to COVID-19 as “kung flu” and “the China virus.” Experts have linked his language with a notable surge in anti-Asian attacks and violence.
With their own long-standing history of anti-Asian bigotry and racism, right-wing media quickly used reporting of the Monterey Park shooter’s Asian heritage to dismiss the threats of white supremacy and anti-Asian racism. Right-wing outlets and figures argued that the shooter’s background threw “the ‘white supremacy’ narrative out the window” and that any efforts to link the shooting to racism were the products of leftist propaganda. While the shooter in this instance may not have been white, that does not negate the harrowing reality of increasing anti-Asian hate crimes or the real-world danger of white supremacist violence.
Here are examples of right-wing media using the Monterey Park shooter’s heritage to suggest that white supremacy and anti-Asian racism are not a threat: