It’s high time the words “racist misogyny” entered the conversation about the Atlanta spa shootings.
On Tuesday evening, police say, 21-year-old Robert Aaron Long walked into three different massage parlors in the Atlanta area and fatally shot a total of eight people, including six women of Asian descent.
Slowly, names of the victims are being released: Delaina Yaun, 33, of Acworth; Paul Andre Michels, 54, of Atlanta; Xiaojie Tan, 49, of Kennesaw; and Daoyou Feng, 44. Other victims have not yet been identified.
Long told investigators he had “sexual addiction” issues and had targeted the spas in an attempt to remove that “temptation,” Cherokee County Sheriff’s Office spokesperson Capt. Jay Baker said in a press briefing on Wednesday.
To the utter bafflement of many on social media, police said that it was “too early” to determine if racism was at play. (It certainly didn’t help matters that Baker had summed up the previous night’s events as “a really bad day” for the suspected shooter.)
“A temptation he wanted to eliminate” is how Baker described Long’s thought process that night. A temptation that led him specifically to Asian-owned and operated massage parlors. We can’t overlook that the shootings occurred at places like Young’s Asian Massage, not some generic Massage Envy he spotted off the side of the road.
“I don’t care that the shooter told police his attack wasn’t ‘racially-motivated,’” tweeted feminist author Jessica Valenti. “The fetishisation of Asian women is racist. Believing women are responsible & to blame for your sexual ‘temptations’ is misogynist. This was a racist misogynist crime.”
In the course of just under an hour, the shooter ended eight lives, apparently placing the need to “eliminate” sexual temptation from his life above the humanity of Asian women.
Depressingly, that’s not altogether surprising. A 2018 report from the American Psychological Association detailed how Asian American women are objectified and hypersexualised in media and popular culture, depicted as “faceless, quiet and invisible, or as sexual objects.” These stereotypes, the researchers gathered, contribute to experiences of marginalisation, invisibility and oppression.
And Asian women have been disproportionately affected by the skyrocketing number of hate crimes reported against Asian Americans during the coronavirus pandemic as well.
A report on hate incidents released Tuesday by the reporting forum Stop AAPI Hate found that among the 3,800 incidents that were reported over the course of roughly a year during the pandemic, 68% of those were reported by women.
Russell Jeung, a professor of Asian American studies at San Francisco State University, recently told NBC Asian America that it’s not just racism but sexism ― namely, the belief that Asian women are subservient and weak ― that’s played a part in many of these incidents.
“There is an intersectional dynamic going on that others may perceive both Asians and women and Asian women as easier targets,” he said.
As the coronavirus worsened, Asian American women have heard taunts of “Chinese coronavirus bitch” or “Where is your corona mask, you Asian bitch?” while running errands or walking down the street. The racist rhetoric surrounding the coronavirus ― fuelled by President Donald Trump’s xenophobic tweets and his use of phrases like “China virus” ― coincided with a surge in harassment.
But the reality is, experiencing direct misogynistic racism isn’t particularly new for many Asian American women.
“The hypersexualisation of Asian women plays a huge part in the violence we face,” said Christine Liwag Dixon, a writer and the content director at Samahan, a Filipino American online community.
“I’ve had men corner me on the street and call me a string of racial slurs, while one of them said ‘Me love you long time,’ standing so close to me that I could feel his breath on my neck,” she told HuffPost. “I’ve been offered money for a ‘happy ending massage.’ I’ve been hit on because I’m Asian and told it’s a ‘compliment.’”
The hypersexualisation ― and in the process, dehumanisation ― of Asian women plays out in far-reaching, insidious ways. There’s an over-prevalence of Asian women in violent porn categories ― and Asians and Pacific Islanders are disproportionately trafficked into sex work in America.
In the US, 41-61% of Asian women report experiencing physical and/or sexual violence during their lifetime. (Women are more likely to be targeted if they’re economically disadvantaged, if they’re exploited by their employer or if they lack full citizenship.)
“The fact that the perception of Asian women as sex objects isn’t seen as racism is exactly why incidents like the shooting in Georgia aren’t seen as hate crimes,” Liwag Dixon said.