1917 – The U.S. Congress passed the Immigration Act of 1917 (Asiatic Barred Zone Act) with an overwhelming majority. The action overrode President Woodrow Wilson’s December 14, 1916 veto.


by AmericaNation Team

The Immigration Act of 1917 drastically reduced US immigration by expanding the prohibitions of the Chinese exclusion laws of the late 1800s. The law created an “Asiatic barred zone” provision prohibiting immigration from British India, most of Southeast Asia, the Pacific Islands, and the Middle East. In addition, the law required a basic literacy test for all immigrants and barred homosexuals, “idiots,” the “insane,” alcoholics, “anarchists,” and several other categories from immigrating.
DETAILS AND EFFECTS OF THE IMMIGRATION ACT OF 1917
From the late 1800s to the early 1900s, no nation welcomed more immigrants into its borders than the United States. In 1907 alone, a record 1.3 million immigrants entered the U.S. through New York’s Ellis Island. However, the Immigration Act of 1917, a product of the pre-World War I isolationism movement, would drastically change that.
Also known as the Asiatic Barred Zone Act, the Immigration Act of 1917, barred immigrants from a large part of the world loosely defined as “Any country not owned by the U.S. adjacent to the continent of Asia.” In practice the barred zone provision excluded immigrants from Afghanistan, the Arabian Peninsula, Asiatic Russia, India, Malaysia, Myanmar, and the Polynesian Islands. However, both Japan and the Philippines were excluded from the barred zone. The law also allowed exceptions for students, certain professionals, such as teachers and doctors, and their wives and children.
Other provisions of the law increase the “head tax” immigrants were required to pay on entry to $8.00 per person and eliminated a provision in an earlier law that had excused Mexican farm and railroad workers from paying the head tax.
The law also barred all immigrants over the age of 16 who were illiterate or deemed to be “mentally defective” or physically handicapped.
The term “mentally defective” was interpreted to effectively exclude homosexual immigrants who admitted their sexual orientation. U.S. immigration laws continued to ban homosexuals until passage of the Immigration Act of 1990, sponsored by Democratic Senator Edward M. Kennedy.
The law defined literacy as being able to read a simple 30 to 40 word passage written in the immigrant’s native language. Persons who claimed they were entering the U.S. to avoid religious persecution in their country of origin were not required to take the literacy test.

americanaion.one/us- Immigration- Act- of -1917/

Al Roker SMACKS DOWN climate deniers -a repost


Television Personality and Weatherman Al Roker on Climate Change: 'Climate change IS causing bigger storms. That's what's going on.'

We really couldn’t agree more, but Republicans just DON’T get it.

That’s why we need everyone (yes, EVERYONE) to sign on and say they agree with Al Roker — because climate change is happening NOW!

Sign your name immediately if you agree:

Tweet AL if YOU Agree-With-Roker

Thanks for your time,

DCA

AARP ~ Defend the lives of Americans over 50 ~ Sign the petition


action.aarp.org

Congress: Protect Americans age 50+

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Millions of Americans age 50+ are already facing the one-two punch of the coronavirus pandemic and the economic crisis.

Tell Congress: Protect nursing home residents, fight hunger by improving the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), and stop the Social Security COVID cut.

RECIPIENTS

  • Your Senators

Please defend and improve the lives of Americans over 50 by addressing three critical issues immediately: protecting nursing home residents, fighting hunger by improving the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), and stopping the Social Security COVID cut.

Nursing homes

COVID-19 infections are on the rise in nursing homes and other long-term care facilities, and residents and staff remain in danger. Congress should ensure care facilities have additional funding specifically for testing, personal protective equipment, and other items and services that protect the health and safety of residents and staff. Congress must also ensure transparency on confirmed cases and deaths, and make virtual visitation available and facilitated for residents. Finally, Congress must also reject blanket immunity for long-term care facilities related to COVID-19 that would let these care facilities off the hook for abuse, neglect, and death.

SNAP

Congress should fight hunger and increase the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits. Americans age 50+ make up a significant portion of households receiving SNAP benefits, which are especially important because many older Americans face challenges to employment, live on fixed incomes, live alone, and have limited financial resources to pay for necessities like food, housing, and essential medicine. Please work to temporarily increase the SNAP maximum benefit and the minimum monthly benefit to help ensure people can afford the food they need to stay healthy.

Social Security COVID cut

People turning age 60 in 2020 could see their Social Security benefits slashed simply because their lifetime benefits will be based on this year’s average wage index, which is much lower due to the economic slowdown. Americans age 50+ are already on edge about their financial and retirement security. An additional loss of Social Security benefits will put millions of AARP members at greater risk and could cut their lifetime benefits for average workers by $45,000. Workers have paid into Social Security with every paycheck. It’s a hard-earned benefit and a promise that must be kept. Please, protect people born in the year 1960 and stop the Social Security COVID cut!

Source: AARP

Dorothy Counts … Black History – Do you see a relative in any of these photos


On the morning of September 4, 1957, fifteen-year-old Dorothy Counts set out on a harrowing path toward Harding High, where-as the first African American to attend the all-white school – she was greeted by a jeering swarm of boys who spat, threw trash, and yelled epithets at her as she entered the building.

  • Charlotte Observer photographer Don Sturkey captured the ugly incident on film, and in the days that followed, the searing image appeared not just in the local paper but in newspapers around the world.

    People everywhere were transfixed by the girl in the photograph who stood tall, her five-foot-ten-inch frame towering nobly above the mob that trailed her. There, in black and white, was evidence of the brutality of racism, a sinister force that had led children to torment another child while adults stood by. While the images display a lot of evils: prejudice, ignorance, racism, sexism, inequality, it also captures true strength, determination, courage and inspiration.

    Here she is, age 70, still absolutely elegant and poised.