The Johnson-Reed Act Was Bad: 1 In 3 White Men In Dallas, Texas

634 Words3 Pages

Why the Johnson-Reed Act Was Bad: 1 in 3 white men in Dallas, Texas were a part of the infamous Ku Klux Klan that was known for treating black people but also people of different ethnicities like crap. The Klan wanted to help keep America white and to help the Johnson-Reed act be made. Specific parts of the world were given more visas compared to others. The time from the early 1900s to now has changed but, we still face racism during modern times and that's thanks to laws like the Reed Act which supported white supremacy. Although the Reed Act was a racist law passed, we should not forget about it and we should learn from it to build a better future. Following this, the Reed Act permitted 160,000 to 350,000 people visas a year. According to the National Immigration Forum “In the year of 1919 before the Reed Act was made a high number of around 556,000 immigrants were recorded to come into America but, 13 years later in 1932 the number dropped to 35,576.” They also say “The visas were mostly given to the Western and Northern European …show more content…

Ruffly, around 3% of each nationality was acutely allowed in. This proves that during the early 1900s, white supremacists wanted only white people to be in the US. Although the law worked the way the white supremacists wanted it to, the law eventually ended in 1965. According to Henry Gannet, the average percentage of foreign-born people in each state was around twenty percent, while some states like Massachusetts had 30%. The states with the lowest amounts were Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee. All of these states had under one percent of foreign-born residents living in