China Overseas Chinese Network, March 5th. According to the US "World Journal" report, after the outbreak, hatred incidents against Asians continued throughout the United States.

San Francisco has a large Asian population, and related incidents occur frequently.

According to data from the online platform "Stop Hatred of Asians and Pacific Islanders", San Francisco is the city with the most anti-Asian hatred cases in the United States.

  The "Stop Hatred of Asian and Pacific Islander Residents" platform started operations in March 2020.

From the outbreak of the epidemic in March to the end of December, there were 2,808 incidents of Asian hatred, discrimination, and violence in the United States during 2020.

Among them, California has 1,226 and San Francisco has 292, which are the states and cities with the most related cases in the United States.

Auckland recorded 55 cases.

  On March 3, California Congressman Ding Youli, San Francisco State University Asian Studies Professor Zhang Huayao, and Community Youth Center Director Wen Jingting held a press conference in the Richmond District of San Francisco, announcing that the state government will invest 1.4 million US dollars in support of "stop hatred The "Asian and Pacific Islanders" platform continues to operate.

  Ding Youli, as chairman of the State Assembly’s Budget Committee, led the appropriation in the state budget.

He pointed out that Asian-Pacific communities were discriminated against before the outbreak began, including small businesses and restaurant businesses that plummeted.

After the epidemic began, related incidents continued to emerge.

He believes that data on hatred incidents of Asian and Pacific Americans is very important, so he decided to continue to allocate funds to support this platform.

  As one of the founders of the platform, Zhang Huayao believes that the problem of racial discrimination needs to be solved "fundamentally", which requires a lot of education.

He also pointed out the importance of "ethnic research" education, to let students learn about diverse ethnicities from an early age, oppose discrimination, and understand each other.

At the same time, he believes that not all incidents are hate "crimes", and hate "incidents" do not necessarily require criminal proceedings, but can be resolved through intermediary agencies and mediation. This is the so-called "remedial justice."

(Li Han)