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Hate is on the Rise in America, and It is Far from Accidental

There are startling trends emerging in the United States, as well as the rest of the world, in the year 2025. A couple of such dangerous trends are in the realm of racial as well as LGBT+ persecution. Hate crimes against racial, sexual, and gender minorities have been on the rise for years.

As seen in the following charts, hate crimes against the LGBT+ community, especially against transgender people, have been on a rapid rise since 2014.

According to the Federal Bureau of Investigation,

“A hate crime is a traditional offense like murder, arson, or vandalism with an added element of bias. For the purposes of collecting statistics, the FBI has defined a hate crime as a criminal offense against a person or property motivated in whole or in part by an offender’s bias against race, religion, disability, sexual orientation, ethnicity, gender, or gender identity.”

These statistics are alarming but they are not an anomaly or a random occurrence. As the economy worsens, corporate America seeks to scapegoat, or pin the blame on, other groups. Monopolies have always maintained a ‘divide and conquer’ strategy when it comes to lessening the threat of strikes, protests, and other uprisings by the working and oppressed peoples. Generally the more liberal elements of corporate America will co-opt the struggle of the LGBT+ population. This problem is recognized by a significant portion of the LGBT+ population where they protest the use of Pride Month by corporations, especially the military contractors, to help cleanse their image. On the other side of the ‘divide and conquer’ strategy is the exploitation of backwards biases of conservative and often evangelical reaction.

In its most extreme form, persecution of LGBT+ and racial minorities comes from the far-right and particularly the fascist wing of corporate America.

Today, under the Donald Trump regime, far-right populism is mobilizing for a complete assault on the civil liberties of these oppressed minorities. In President Trump’s last term, he packed the Supreme Court with fellow right-wing conservatives such as Neil Gorsuch who has a poor record on LGBT+ issues as seen here.

In Trump’s current term, there seems to be stronger hostilities against the LGBT+ community with Trump vowing to end ‘gender lunacy’ before entering office and a subsequent signing of an executive order declaring there to be only two genders. Trump’s unelected, but effective, co-President billionaire Elon Musk is also using his wealth to crack down on what they call ‘DEI hires’ which is a very thinly veiled rhetoric against minorities by way of allowing employers to hire based on their socio-political biases.

Though the US cannot be considered to be officially a fascist state, it would seem economic crisis-fueled scapegoating is an indication of the direction we are heading. We must remember that under fascist states such as Nazi Germany, violence against Jewish, Romani, Slavic, and LGBT+ minorities was not an immediate reality. Rather, it started with scapegoating, hateful rhetoric, and little to no accountability against attacks by far-right paramilitaries and terrorists. The anti-Semitism in Nazi Germany started by blaming the Jewish population for Germany’s defeat in WWI and the subsequent Great Depression.

If we are to prevent similar crimes against humanity, we must study and learn from the patterns of Hitler’s Germany.

Originally published by People’s LGBT+ United Society (PLUS) – peopleslgbt.org

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