I read the graphic novel They Called Us Enemy by George Takei. The novel reveals the vile truth about the concentration camps made for the Japanese people living in the U.S. Takei shows his parents the struggle of having to choose their identity within the camps. A U.S. citizen or a Japanese human.

Leaving your home for a country that feigns freedom and acceptance. A country that says they despise exclusivity and dissolves borders, walls, and barriers. It only takes one blunder from your origin to be labeled an enemy. With only association linked from your heritage, you are incarcerated with barbed wire. Locked away for months with no contact from the outside world, yes, this is the only way they can monitor you. Nemesis of your state, you are asked these two questions:

Writing “Yes,Yes” is you accepting their indolent apology. Answering “No,No” would renew your label as an enemy. “Yes, No,” “No, Yes,” the probabilities hold all the same answer. Thank you for being quiet or stay quiet. There have been multiple times where minorities all across America experienced injustices with no amends made. Yes America is a lot more different then what it was 100 years ago. But if we are still having discrimination problems a century later, then we are falling behind as a human race.
