George Takei wrote that the plight of detained immigrants at the U.S. border is Crime Movies | Page 2 of 2 | Adult Movies Onlineworse than the Japanese internment camps he was forced into as a child "in one core, horrifying way." He wasn't separated from his family like the more than 2,000 children suffering due to Trump's zero tolerance policy.
"At least during the internment of Japanese-Americans, I and other children were not stripped from our parents," Takei wrote in an essay for Foreign Policypublished on Tuesday. "We were not pulled screaming from our mothers' arms. We were not left to change the diapers of younger children by ourselves."
On Monday alone, two separate reports exposed just how disturbing conditions at the border are -- ProPublica published audio of children screaming after they were taken from their parents, and the Associated Press reported that detained teenagers had to change toddlers' diapers since they were separated from caretakers. Although Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said the Trump administration doesn't have a "policy of separating families at the border," she also told a White House press briefing that "everyone is subject to prosecution."
Under the Trump Administration's policy, adults crossing the border are treated as criminals who are then sent to different detainment facilities from their children. Under the Obama Administration, children caught crossing the border with their families could stay with at least one parent throughout the detainment process.
SEE ALSO: How to stop feeling helpless when you hear about immigrant children taken from their parentsTakei, along with thousands of other American citizens of Japanese ancestry, was forced into living in confinement after the bombing of Pearl Harbor in 1941. His family had to live in converted horse stables before they were moved to camps in Arkansas and California. Takei has spoken openly about the camps in the past: In one interview, he said there were three levels of barbed wire fences and tanks patrolling the perimeter.
"At least during the internment, my parents were able to place themselves between the horror of what we were facing and my own childish understanding of circumstances," Takei wrote in the searing essay.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Takei has been vocal about taking political action, encouraging his Twitter followers to vote "for the children ripped away from their parents, and for those gunned down in their schools."
He warned that past presidents justified inhumane treatment in the past by scapegoating vulnerable minority groups:
It was a lie, and a big one, but it was one repeated enough, and said with enough conviction, that rest of the country went along with it. We were the murderers, the thugs, the animals then — and since you couldn’t tell the good from the bad, you might as well round up everyone in the name of national security.
Takei also pointed out that this isn't a partisan issue -- after all, it was a Democratic president who signed the executive order allowing the camps to detain 120,000 Japenese-Americans -- but "even people of good heart and conscience can be swept up in the frenzy."
"The United States’ flirtation with authoritarianism is not tied to any political party," Takei said.
Previous:The Perishable Politician
The 'this was my Multiverse of Madness' trend, explainedFurious George by Kim BeemanWatch a Strange, Spooky Documentary About Isak DinesenThat Time I Went to the Russian Cat CircusFeel the Revolutionary Energy in Early Soviet PhotographySteve Clay on the Beginning of Granary BooksElon Musk created a safety mess on X. CEO Linda Yaccarino is using it to cancel appearances.Road Trip, 12 Cadillacs: A Letter from Patrick Leigh FermorWhat social media ads don't tell you about egg freezingThe Answers to Our Hink Pink ContestDolly Parton is starring in a Taco Bell musical on TikTokBest Prime Day robot vacuum deal: 45% off Roborock S7Dolly Parton is starring in a Taco Bell musical on TikTokLeBron James, the Big Three, and Basketball RevolutionBest Prime Day Apple AirPods deals: Save over $60The Invention of the Word “Serendipity”Snapchat's crying filter is going viral on TikTokOne Percent: Geoff Dyer on Photos of Income Inequality“Homesickness”: a Draft of a Poem by Elizabeth BishopWatch a Strange, Spooky Documentary About Isak Dinesen A New Year’s Drive by Brian Cullman Holidays, via The Paris Review by Sadie Stein Our New Year’s Resolution: Spend More Time with the Kids by Dan Piepenbring Our New Year’s Resolution: Travel More by Dan Piepenbring Makeovers by Sadie Stein Punning on Saul Bellow Franzen on Kraus: Footnote 48 by Jonathan Franzen West Side Story by Sadie Stein Franzen on Kraus: Footnote 89 by Jonathan Franzen Anthony Cudahy Tragic, Indeed by Sadie Stein Faulkner’s Cocktail of Choice Art and Literature Are Teeming with Monsters, and Other News The Morning Roundup for January 16, 2014 What We’re Loving: Racetrack Murals, Lovers, A Child’s Christmas in Wales by Sadie Stein This Library's Sign Admits What Book Lovers Seldom Do Trouble Man, Marvin Gaye’s 1972 Moog Canvas Siri Hates Her, and Other News Critics with Sharp Objects, and Other News by Dan Piepenbring This Is Growing Up by Justin Alvarez
1.936s , 8223.296875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Crime Movies | Page 2 of 2 | Adult Movies Online】,Miracle Information Network