Keith MacKinnon

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Local ordinances regulated where they could and could not live. Labor unions routinely barred them from employment in many industries. Proprietors of businesses could, at will, ban them from entering their premises. Public facilities were sometimes closed to them. State laws prohibited their parents from owning real estate. In many states they were not free to marry across racial lines. Their national government prohibited their parents from becoming citizens.
Keith MacKinnon
USA
Facing the Mountain: A True Story of Japanese American Heroes in World War II
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