
Multiple states aim to limit Chinese property ownership on security grounds
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| This year is the centenary of the passage in the United States of the Johnson-Reed Act of 1924, which limited the number of immigrants allowed entry into the US by national origin quotas providing visas to 2 percent of the number of people of each nationality in the country as of the 1890 national census. The act, which was about as white as a law could get, completely excluded immigrants from Asia as well as created new quotas to keep the US as white as possible. And, while much of America sees that as a shameful law in a dim and distant past, there are fears that the bias against East Asians, particularly Chinese, is repeating itself today in the form of exclusions in the name of national and military security, with lawmakers on both national and state levels justifying laws against Chinese property ownership. Much of it stems from hysteria over Chinese ownership of the social platform TikTok, with the flames fanned by opportunistic lawmakers and xenophobic news media amid US fears over China's role as a rising geopolitical power. Former president Donald Trump raised temperatures by calling the Covid-19 coronavirus the “Chinese virus” and pushing the US Justice Department into a hunt for Chinese spies that mainly resulted in the harassment of Chinese-born scientists working in American laboratories and universities… Click to continue reading this story. This is among the stories/excerpts we choose to make widely available. If you wish to get the full Asia Sentinel experience and access more exclusive content, please do subscribe to us for US$10/month or US$100/year. | |
