Author Topic: Three Presidents did it, yet we never hear about it  (Read 1402 times)

Skip8282

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Re: Three Presidents did it, yet we never hear about it
« Reply #25 on: May 27, 2010, 02:19:06 AM »
Finally, ...someone who is at least familiar with the history of his own country.

Skippy, my unwillingness to look up source info for you is not an indication that I've lied or made it all up, it simply means I can't be bothered to spend my time educating you. I'll leave that to anyone else who wants to do that, ...and I'll leave it up to those who actually want to know the truth to do their own research. The rest can continue to stroke their own egos... or any other parts they feel like stroking.  :D


That's it.  Keep showing the world that 160 65 IQ.

He/She is not backing up your bullshit claim, idiot.

Please provide a source to back up your dumbass, nonsense claim that:


btw - Previous admins didn't just deport illegals. they rounded up anyone of hispanic blood American or not and shipped them out.
 

loco

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Re: Three Presidents did it, yet we never hear about it
« Reply #26 on: May 27, 2010, 02:31:27 AM »
Three Presidents did it, yet we never hear about it

I FOUND THIS TO BE VERY INTERESTING.

I WONDER WHY IT WAS NEVER BROUGHT UP.

What did Hoover, Truman, and Eisenhower have in common?

Back during The Great Depression, President Herbert Hoover ordered the deportation of ALL illegal aliens in order to make jobs available to American citizens that desperately needed work..

Harry Truman deported over two million Illegal's after WWII to create jobs for returning veterans'.

And then again in 1954, President Dwight Eisenhower deported 13 million Mexican Nationals! The program was called 'Operation Wetback'. It was done so WWII and Korean Veterans would have a better chance at jobs. It took 2 Years, but they deported them!

Now...if they could deport the illegal's back then - they could sure do it today.

lf you have doubts about the veracity of this information, enter Operation Wetback into your favorite search engine and confirm it for yourself.


Three times?  Dang!  And why do you still have an illegal immigration problem?  Obviously it did not work, but it costs the US lots of money to detain and deport these people just so they can come right back, and many legal immigrants and US citizens were deported too in the process.

"Most high school students in the USA probably don't know that tens of thousands of Mexican-Americans — many of them legal residents or even U.S. citizens — were forcibly sent to Mexico during the depths of the Depression. That's because few history books even mention it."
http://www.usatoday.com/news/education/2006-04-04-history-books_x.htm


Funny how this anti-immigration sentiment, and operations such as the above and such as the new Arizona law seem to surface during a recession.  Angry, desperate people just fabricate a common enemy to blame and to hate, and the politicians use this to their advantage and to divert attention from their own mismanagement of the country.


quadzilla456

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Re: Three Presidents did it, yet we never hear about it
« Reply #28 on: May 27, 2010, 06:28:50 AM »
According to Wikipedia it was 1 million, not 13 million.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Wetback

24KT

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Re: Three Presidents did it, yet we never hear about it
« Reply #29 on: May 29, 2010, 02:39:47 PM »
Three times?  Dang!  And why do you still have an illegal immigration problem?  Obviously it did not work, but it costs the US lots of money to detain and deport these people just so they can come right back, and many legal immigrants and US citizens were deported too in the process.

"Most high school students in the USA probably don't know that tens of thousands of Mexican-Americans — many of them legal residents or even U.S. citizens — were forcibly sent to Mexico during the depths of the Depression. That's because few history books even mention it."
http://www.usatoday.com/news/education/2006-04-04-history-books_x.htm


Funny how this anti-immigration sentiment, and operations such as the above and such as the new Arizona law seem to surface during a recession.  Angry, desperate people just fabricate a common enemy to blame and to hate, and the politicians use this to their advantage and to divert attention from their own mismanagement of the country.

Why merely highlight and include a link? You know most are simply too lazy to click it.

Some stories hard to get in history books

By Kasie Hunt, USA TODAY Updated 4/5/2006 1:36 AM

Most high school students in the USA probably don't know that tens of thousands of Mexican-Americans — many of them legal residents or even U.S. citizens — were forcibly sent to Mexico during the depths of the Depression. That's because few history books even mention it.

Related story: U.S. urged to apologize for deportations

A USA TODAY survey of the nine American history textbooks most commonly used in middle schools and high schools found that four don't mention the deportations at all. Only one devotes more than half a page to the topic.

For social activists, textbooks are the most important vehicle for trying to raise awareness about controversial or sensitive periods in U.S. history — "the issues that I didn't learn in school," says Greg Marutani, who heads the education committee of the Japanese American Citizens League. His group tries to increase awareness among students of the internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II by developing curriculum guides and holding seminars for teachers.

According to the survey, the nine textbooks devote a total of 18 pages to the internment issue, compared with two pages on the coerced Mexican-American emigration.

While textbooks are critical in shaping public understanding of issues, changing textbooks isn't easy.

"Most histories are designed to make people feel good" about their country, says John Womack, a history professor at Harvard University. He says people of Mexican ancestry were coerced into leaving the United States in the 1930s because many small border-state towns, hit with a scarcity of jobs, were "thoroughly racist." But he says it is difficult to put such negative comments into textbooks that states purchase for their schools.

Financial realities also make change difficult. "Once a textbook enters a classroom, it stays there for a number of years," says Gilbert Sewall, director of the American Textbook Council, because schools invest a significant amount of money in a set of books. Sewall says a list of the most popular high school textbooks changes "glacially."

Bureaucracy is another factor slowing the pace. Curriculum guidelines are written by state education departments, and each state maintains its own list of approved textbooks. No single agency can change textbooks. "There has never been a federal mandate on textbook content," Sewall says. "It's a state issue" that would have to be dealt with one state capital at a time.

Even if a state takes an official position on an controversial topic, actually getting the issue into textbooks can be complicated. In January, California formally apologized to Mexican-Americans for the Depression-era deportations. However, high schools in California — unlike middle schools — are not required to select books from a state-approved list.

The federal government provides funding for independent educational projects, which can have a trickle-down effect. In 1988, when Congress formally apologized to Japanese-Americans over internment and paid $20,000 per person in reparations, it also created the Civil Liberties Public Education Fund. The fund dispensed $3.3 million aimed at raising public awareness of the issue.

Dale Shimasaki, executive director of the fund until it expired in 1998, says one law school's curriculum project assembled a legal text on the topic, and a project at the University of Arkansas created a curriculum now required for all of the state's seventh- and eighth-graders.

Shimasaki says a similar project could help Mexican-Americans raise awareness about the deportation issue. "The parallels are very striking and very eerie," he says.

The Japanese American Citizens League's Marutani says both groups still have work to do. "We have achieved what we need to if someone said to a high school grad, 'Can you name some examples where the U.S. government mistreated its citizens?' and they could answer correctly," he says.
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24KT

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Re: Three Presidents did it, yet we never hear about it
« Reply #30 on: May 29, 2010, 02:43:46 PM »
According to Wikipedia it was 1 million, not 13 million.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Wetback

Wikipedia could hardly be considered the definitive or authoritative voice on this or any other issue.



This is part 1 of a 6 part series on what you don't know about Wikipedia
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