Hundreds of U.S. Groups Join Forces to Stand Against 'Dangerous Tide of Hatred, Violence'
It is incumbent on every public figure, elected politician, and media outlet to stand up against the “dangerous tide of hatred, violence, and suspicion” taking hold in the United States, over 700 prominent organizations and people declared in a full-page ad in Thursday’s New York Times.
“We grieve the many lives that have been lost or painfully transformed in recent weeks through extreme acts of violence. And we are appalled by the surge of divisive rhetoric that sows the seeds of more violence to come,” reads the ad, which was organized by the National Domestic Workers Alliance, United We Dream, Center for Community Change, Demos, NARAL Pro-Choice America, Arab-American Association of New York, MPower Change, SEIU, Color of Change, and MoveOn.org.
Signatories warn that, in particular, violence is aimed at “Arab and Muslim Americans, women and the places we seek health care, Black people, immigrants and refugees, or people just going about their daily lives.”
“We call upon our politicians, leaders and the media to stop the spread of hate and division,” the statement declares. “And we pledge to stand with any community that is targeted by hateful rhetoric and violence.”
The ad marks the launch of campaign against racism, bigotry, and violence, and many are expressing support on social media using the hashtag #WeAreBetterThanThis.
“In a week where Donald Trump says Muslims must be barred from America, and within weeks of horrific attacks, it’s a real ray of hope to see such a diverse array of Americans standing together to say clearly that we are better than this,” said Ai-jen Poo, executive director of the National Domestic Workers Alliance, in a statement released Thursday.
The ad comes amid signs that Muslim—as well as Sikh—communities across the United States are facing a spike in attacks. In December alone, a pig’s head was left at a Philadelphia mosque, a Sikh temple was damaged and sprayed with Islamophobic graffiti, and a Florida Islamic center was vandalized. Meanwhile, authorities in Seattle are investigating the recent death of Hamza Warsame, a 16-year-old Somali student, after public outcry at what some say could have been a hate killing.
These harrowing incidents follow others in November, including a mass shooting at a Black Lives Matter protest in Minneapolis, and the killing of three people at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado Springs. Meanwhile, white supremacist hate groups—from the Ku Klux Klan to Stormfront—appear to be gaining power in the country, in part because Trump is providing them political cover.
SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT