Nope we are not gassing them or starving them. More akin to the relocation centers we used for the Japanese in WW2. Try to avoid the dramatics please.
ah yes....the place President Reagan ( the pinko) apologised for back in 1988 ? Manzanar - Wikipedia
here ya go:
Civil Liberties Act of 1988
Enacted by the 100th United States CongressCitations Public law Pub.L. 100–383Statutes at Large 102 Stat. 904Legislative history
- Introduced in the House as "Civil Liberties Act of 1987" (H.R. 442) by Tom Foley (D-WA) on January 6, 1987
- Committee consideration by House Judiciary, Senate Governmental
- Passed the House on September 17, 1987 (243–141)
- Passed the Senate on April 20, 1988 (69–27, in lieu of S. 1009)
- Reported by the joint conference committee on July 26, 1988; agreed to by the Senate on July 27, 1988 (voice vote) and by the House on August 4, 1988 (257–156)
- Signed into law by President Ronald Reagan onAugust 10, 1988
The Civil Liberties Act of 1988 (Pub.L. 100–383, title I, August 10, 1988, 102 Stat. 904, 50a U.S.C. § 1989b et seq.) is a United States federal law that granted reparations to Japanese Americans who had been interned by the United States government during World War II. The act was sponsored by California's DemocraticCongressman Norman Mineta, an internee as a child, and Wyoming's Republican Senator Alan K. Simpson, who first met Mineta while visiting an internment camp. The third co-sponsor was California Senator Pete Wilson. The bill was supported by the majority of Democrats in Congress, while the majority of Republicans voted against it. The act was signed into law by President Ronald Reagan.
The act granted each surviving internee about US$20,000 in compensation (or, $40,000 after inflation-adjustment in 2016 dollars), with payments beginning in 1990. The legislation stated that government actions were based on "race prejudice, war hysteria, and a failure of political leadership" as opposed to legitimate security reasons.[1] A total of 82,219 received redress checks.[2]