San Francisco Chronicle torched over article decrying  'disinformation' about attacks on Asians



The San Francisco Chronicle was torched online by many who criticized an article focusing on disinformation about attacks on people of Asian descent instead of the brutal attacks themselves.

The Chronicle reported on a study claiming that some social media accounts are trying to push a political agenda by using the attacks on Asians to criticize media coverage and Democratic politicians.

The report claimed that the motivation behind the campaign was to distract Asian-Americans from hate crimes perpetrated by whites.

If you’re wondering why they would do that, consider that San Francisco data from the FBI show white people are largely behind local hate crimes, and a national report by Janelle Wong, a professor of American and Asian American studies at the University of Maryland, College Park, shows white people are largely behind the reported hate crimes throughout the U.S.

Many on social media lambasted the report for what they saw as political bias.

"Most media coverage of this issue is awful. You would be more informed about it if you literally consumed no media and just spoke to people in your local Chinatown association," tweeted journalist Zaid Jilani.

"The problem isn’t the crimes but rather about discussing them? Should Asian Americans not be alerted to be on guard, to guard their most vulnerable, ie the women and elderly who are the preferred targets? They should get no warning? No opportunity to safeguard?" read one response.

"So, its people posting crime statistics on Twitter that are the problem and not the thugs attacking Asians every day in San Francisco? Why don't you ever care about the people getting attacked?" asked one detractor.

"The report claims to be about disinformation but is itself disinformation," responded one critic.

"Maybe stop the violence against Asian Americans before blowing smoke about social media. Just a thought," replied another detractor.

A report at the beginning of the pandemic in March 2020 said that many Asian-Americans were purchasing guns in order to protect themselves from racist attacks. Some in the liberal media have tried to blame former President Donald Trump's rhetoric against China during the pandemic for attacks on Asians.

Here's more about the attacks on Asians:

Rise in AAPI hate crimes has many Asian Americans feeling under attackwww.youtube.com

'Violent and disturbing': Teen girls brutally pummel Asian students on Philly SEPTA train; police say attack based on ethnicity



Disturbing video shows teen girls attacking Asian high school students on a SEPTA train in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Police say the brutal attack was "based on ethnicity."

Around 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, students from Central High School were heading home after class on the Broad Street Line subway. A group of teen girls began verbally abusing some other boys, shouting obscenities. One of the girls punched one of the Asian boys.

A female student of Asian descent attempted to intervene, but then she became the target. The teen girls punched her, slammed her head against the side of the train, and threw her to the ground. The attackers relentlessly pummeled and stomped on her. One of the suspects took off her shoe and battered the victim repeatedly.

The victim was taken to a local hospital, where she was treated for a laceration.

A SEPTA spokesperson called the incident "violent and disturbing."

SEPTA Police Chief Thomas Nestel said all of the victims in the "unprovoked" attack are Asian and all of the suspects are African American.

"This was an attack based on ethnicity and ethnic slurs were used by the attackers," Nestel said on Thursday afternoon.

"She was a hero," Nestel said of the female victim. "She stepped up and told the girls to stop saying what they were saying. She then became a target. Just truly heroic, courageous."

The mother of one of the freshmen high school students – who is of Chinese descent – said the attack was "discrimination." She told KYW-TV via a translator, "We are the city of love, we are not the city of hate, and [my] kid didn't do anything wrong, and [my] kid didn't even know the girls."

Police say the four female suspects in the attack are between the ages of 13 and 16. Nestel said the suspects are likely to face charges of ethnic intimidation, aggravated assault, simple assault, recklessly endangering another person, and terroristic threats. Nestel said he expects the girls who committed the crimes to be arrested soon.

(CAUTION: Graphic content)