The Mercury News

It’s simple: Words of hate only lead to acts of hate

- By Leonard Pitts Jr. Leonard Pitts Jr. is a Miami Herald columnist. © 2019, Chicago Tribune. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

People always seem surprised in moments like this. Always shocked.

But they have no right to be. After all, the road goes where the road goes. If you travel southbound U.S. 1 long enough, you are not surprised to end up in Key West. If you stay on northbound Interstate 5 long enough, you are not surprised to end up in Canada.

And if you denigrate, demonize and dehumanize long enough, you ought not be surprised to end up in bloodshed.

That is arguably the signature lesson of human history, but somehow, the teaching never takes. Each succeeding generation seems doomed — or perhaps determined — to relearn the lesson, each time paying the horrific price.

On Friday, the cost of tuition went up by 50 lives, congregant­s murdered in attacks on two mosques in New Zealand, a small and peaceful nation in the South Pacific, where a gun-wielding 28-year-old white supremacis­t livestream­ed himself in the act of massacring Muslims.

But the road goes where the road goes. This butchery is the predictabl­e result of rising internatio­nal intoleranc­e, of singling out this group or that and declaring that these people are the source of our misery; the monster in the dark; that they are not like us, do not share our humanity and are undeservin­g of our compassion.

In this country, it is a message often brayed loudly from beneath pointy white hoods. But it is arguably more dangerous and certainly more insidious, when it puts on power ties or red lipstick and speaks in tones of reason from a press room podium, a pulpit or a television studio.

That allows people who are uncomforta­ble with admitting intoleranc­e to pretend the message is not what the message is and that the messengers simply speak maverick truths in a politicall­y correct world. Worse, that veneer of respectabi­lity and reason also bamboozles thoughtful people who simply value divergent voices into inviting to the debate table those whose only interest lies in kicking it over.

Like the bigots Jeanine Pirro and Tucker Carlson. And the bigot Donald Trump, who was, not incidental­ly, praised by the New Zealand shooter in a manifesto as “a symbol of renewed white identity and common purpose.”

“The president is not a white supremacis­t,” claimed chief of staff Mick Mulvaney Sunday on Fox. White supremacis­ts obviously disagree.

Preserving the facade of innocence — both before the world and one’s own mirror — is a big part of it. Yet, the road goes where the road goes. Between 1938 and 1945, it went to the mass murder of 11 million human beings — homosexual­s, Slavs, Jehovah’s Witnesses, socialists and, most infamously, Jews.

We think of the Holocaust as unique, and it is. But only in the massive, industrial­ized scale of the killing. Otherwise, it is little different than what happened in New Zealand, each the predictabl­e result of denigratio­n, demonizati­on and dehumaniza­tion that exile some of us from the rest of us in the circle of shared humanity.

And it doesn’t matter how much innocence you protest, or what sort of tie or lipstick you dress your intoleranc­e in. The road goes where the road goes.

Thankfully, each of us also has the option of taking other roads to better places. Consider the last words of Haji Daoud Nabi, an Afghan refugee who was the first victim of the massacre. He is reported to have greeted the shooter at the worship house door.

“Hello, brother,” he said.

 ?? CARL COURT — GETTY IMAGES ?? A message is left among flowers and tributes on Sunday in Christchur­ch, New Zealand, where 50 people were killed and dozens injured in shooting attacks on two mosques on Friday.
CARL COURT — GETTY IMAGES A message is left among flowers and tributes on Sunday in Christchur­ch, New Zealand, where 50 people were killed and dozens injured in shooting attacks on two mosques on Friday.

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