Everything you need to know about the Muslim Registry.

The Trump administration has threatened to create a registry of Muslims as well as a ban of Muslims entering the United States.

Here is a video from a Trump spokespokesperson yesterday (November 20, 2016) on CNN. "So What! They're Muslim."



1. We all know what to do. Thank you to Liza Donnelly for depicting the clear path of action.

Want to sign up here?

2. The actor George Takai, whose family was part of the Japanese registry the American government formed during World War II, has spoken out loudly against Trump's plan for a Muslim Registry.

He points out the Registry led to the government putting Japanese Americans in internment camps, one of the most shameful acts in American history.

He sent out this letter today:

Just a few weeks after my fifth birthday, in the spring of 1942, my parents got my younger brother, my baby sister, and me up very early, hurriedly dressed us, and quickly started to pack.

When my brother and I looked out the window of our living room, we saw two soldiers marching up the driveway, bayonets fixed to their rifles. They banged on our front door and ordered us out of the house. We could take only what we could carry with us.

We were loaded on to train cars with other Japanese-American families, with guards stationed at both ends of each car as though we were criminals, and sent two-thirds of the way across the country to an internment camp in the swamps of Arkansas.

For nearly three years, barbed wire, sentry towers, and armed guards marked home. Mass showers, lousy meals in crowded mess halls, and a searchlight following me as I ran from our barracks to the latrine in the middle of the night -- in case I was trying to escape -- became normal.

So when I hear Donald Trump's transition advisors talk about building a registry of Muslims and his surrogates using the internment of Japanese-Americans as their model, I am outraged -- because I remember the tears streaming down my mother's face as we were torn away from our home. And I am resolved to raise my voice and say, loudly and clearly, that this is not who we are.

My mother was born in Sacramento, my father grew up in San Francisco, and my siblings and I were born in Los Angeles. We were American citizens, as proud of our country as we were of our Japanese heritage. But in the fear and mass hysteria of wartime, none of that mattered. When our government allowed hatred and racism to overtake our values, nothing else mattered.

We cannot allow our country to be led down that dark path ever again.

I am committed to fighting for our values, our democracy, and the moral character of our nation. And I am committed to standing with the Democratic Party against bigotry and oppression for the next four years and beyond, no matter what form it takes. I hope you will do the same. Add your name today to stand with me:

http://my.democrats.org/Next
Thank you,

George

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#NotInMyName #NotInOurName

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November 21, 2016

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