From Southern Poverty Law Center <[email protected]>
Subject SPLC launches Hate Crimes Awareness Month to highlight epidemic of bias incidents
Date October 2, 2023 10:20 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
The news from Jacksonville, Florida, on Aug. 26 was as familiar as it
was horrifying

friend,

The news

[link removed]

from Jacksonville, Florida, on Aug. 26 was as familiar as it was
horrifying: A white gunman who had posted racist writings online takes
a military-style weapon emblazoned with a symbol of hate into a
predominantly Black neighborhood. Three Black people are killed.

The nation has seen this kind of attack against communities of color
and LGBTQ+ people many times in recent years. The Jacksonville
murders, in fact, came just weeks after the fourth anniversary of the
white supremacist attack in El Paso, Texas, where 23 people were
killed in a bias-motivated hate crime. As in numerous other cases, the
El Paso gunman was inspired to kill by racist rhetoric based on the
false "great replacement"

[link removed]

conspiracy theory and what he claimed was a "Hispanic
invasion"

[link removed]

of the U.S. - harmful extremist ideas that are frequently
echoed by mainstream politicians and right-wing media figures.

The massacre was among the worst mass shootings in U.S. history. But
there are thousands of other hate crimes committed each year that
never make national news. Most never get reported at all.

The FBI's most recent hate crime report

[link removed]

- one that counts only a small fraction of the real number
- identified 10,840 hate crime incidents in 2021, the most since
the agency began collecting the data in 1991. More than 60% of those
were carried out because of hatred toward the victim's race.

To highlight this deeply disturbing, ongoing series of hate-fueled
crimes, the Southern Poverty Law Center is designating October as Hate
Crimes Awareness Month
[link removed]

and will conduct an annual campaign to alert the public, advocates,
policymakers and politicians to the problem of hate crimes and press
for action to prevent them.

"More than ever, the mainstreaming of white supremacy and hate
violence today underscores the need for all of us to reject hate
wherever and whenever it occurs," said SPLC President and CEO
Margaret Huang. "But to do that effectively, we must understand
the extremist forces we're up against and the scope of the
crisis.

"The SPLC launched this campaign to encourage difficult but
essential conversations about how we prevent hate from taking root in
the first place, as well as the need for innovative solutions to
promote inclusion across communities. We must stop this cycle of hate
that too often ends with dire consequences for the Black community and
other communities of color, Jewish people and the LGBTQ+
community."

Read More

[link removed]

Sincerely,

Your friends at the Southern Poverty Law Center

Donate

[link removed]



--
Unsubscribe [link removed] | Privacy Policy [link removed] | Contact Us [link removed]

Southern Poverty Law Center
400 Washington Avenue
Montgomery, AL 36104
334.956.8200 //�splcenter.org
[link removed]
Copyright 2023
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis