Racism is a kind of "epidemic" that has spread to every corner of American society, and no "therapy" or "vaccine" has been found for centuries. Not long ago, during the trial of the Freud case, another black male was shot to death by police in Minnesota, which once again ignited public anger. In the United States, this overlap is hardly a coincidence. The recurring incidents of vicious ethnic violence have made it difficult for American society to breathe and continue to torture the conscience of this country.
Those vicious ethnic incidents that have entered the sight of the United States are just the tip of the iceberg. Underneath are more general systemic injustices. Over the past year or so, the sudden outbreak of the epidemic has allowed more people to see this behemoth buried under water. A large amount of data shows that American minorities such as African Americans and Hispanics have suffered disproportionately from the epidemic. Behind this is the general imbalance in the possession of economic and social resources of different ethnic groups in the United States. Celia Maxwellbo, Associate Dean of African Americans at Howard University School of Medicine, sighed: "Look at our ethnic group. This is a desert of food, transportation, and education... We don’t have all the social factors that are conducive to health. ."


