When US 1971 became bankrupt because it couldn't pay for all the costly wars it itself had started as well as its space and arms race with Russia, it violated the 1944 Bretton Woods agreement - which was already favoring US to an extent that the French called it "an exorbitant privilege". That meant that US criminally took dictatorial power over the dollar and its printing without having to bother of any pegs. As a consequence US became the only country in the world who could prosper despite constant trasde deficit. It simply printed the US dollars it needed and had the world paying the difference through the world dollar. The strong dollar now got all its strength from the world outside US because it continued to be the world currencey as was initially planned, but now without an anchor and wjtb Feds total dictatorship. Without any pegging the dollar now rests only on trust that is already starting to crumble because of China's success. Moreover, because US is in an accelerating tempo relying on money printing this has cumulative negative effects, e.g. real inflation which hits the middle and lower classes the hardest because of the amount of dollars printed but channeled via the undemocratic Feds system to a tiny part of the the wealthiest upper class population. So when consumers around the world realiize that the best tech comes from China this will sooner of later reflect on the dollar. US knows it and therefore desperately wants to destroy for China so it could continue sucking the world while keeping its hegemony. This is why you should avoid US! The sooner the bubble bursts the better!
Under World Trade Organization rules, China could impose “higher provisional tariff” of up to 25 per cent on e.g. old fashioned large petrol-powered vehicles from Europe. Chinese companies allege that EU has “abused its investigation power to arbitrarily expand the scope of investigation and even snoop into China’s new energy vehicle technology”.
It is better to say that this is a big survey of the core competitiveness of China’s new energy vehicle companies.  “Chinese companies have reported that the EU asked them to provide battery formulas during its anti-subsidy investigation,” it added.
The European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, demanded that parties turn over “core business secrets”, including production capacity projections for the next five years, factory output, lists of fixed assets and any plans to increase production capacity, according to Yuyuantantian’s social media post.
It said investigators also wanted information on parts and raw materials – including names of providers – labour costs, equipment depreciations, pricing strategies, sales terms and the contact information of customers in the EU.
Shareholder meeting minutes, copies of joint-venture agreements and financial details were also demanded, the report said.
“Rather than saying that this is an anti-subsidy investigation, it is better to say that this is a big survey of the core competitiveness of China’s new energy vehicle companies,” it said.
At the meeting, Chinese and European car companies “all opposed” the EU’s tariffs.
To
 understand US extreme disinformation and smear campaign against China 
you need to educate yourself about US dollar theft 1971 and how this the
 world's biggest embezzlement fraud ever, is growing by the day because 
China's success challenges US dollar hegemony.  
 Whatever
 comes from China, and no matter how much people in the West love it, 
West's political dictatorship*, led by the authoritarian dollar thieve 
dictator (since 1971) US, uses everything to stop it with the most 
hypocritical and ludicrous "threat" motivations. And all of this to 
protect the dangerous and now, because of China's high tech supremacy, 
also desperate criminal rogue state dollar embezzler US, which uses its 
stolen dollar dictatorship (since it in 1971 violated the Bretton Woods 
agreement), to print one trillion dollar out of thin air (bill paid by 
the rest of the world) every 100 days just to keep itself running 
despite continuous trade deficit etc. 
*
 Democracy in any meaningful sense is now completely destroyed in the 
West and replaced with coteries of politicians who decide among 
themselves what is in the best interest of their de facto leader US, 
which they have to bow for as "the leader of the free world", because 
not licking US ass means they're out. US has repeatedly been one of the 
worst Human Rights violators to a point where undemocratic and 
theocratic US Supreme court has abandoned them "when it's in the best 
interest of US", and the equally undemocratic Federal reserve is the 
world dictator over the dollar hegemony! And when Chinese meritocracy 
produces leaders like Xi who has the people's supprt on a level 
completely out of reach for Western "democratic" leaders, then Xi is 
called an "authoritarian dictator"!
US spread of hateful Sinophobia to cover 
up its own crime and failure, is easy considering the already existing 
anti-Chinese racism created in the West first in the UK's opium wars and
 US' racist "Yellow peril" laws more than 100 years ago!
And
 it's all wrapped under the insidious and so misdirected connotations 
about the modern China labelled "the Communist party dictatorship" which
 could possibly pose a threat in the future if not now".  
Peter 
Klevius is 100% convinced the hate would continue even if China changed 
to a Western system of "one party at the time democracy" - especially if
 China would keep its well functioning meritocracy politics. After all, 
China could change sometime in the future, right!
$-freeloader
 and techno loser US' anti-China smear campaign has long since reached 
sports - here's one of the latest effects of it from the enormous pile.
And is this BBC's contribution to sports Sinophobia?
The
 only match in women's World Cup 2023 made impossible to see on Freeview
 because of extreme picture distortion was when China played! 
    
 
 US used to abuse China and Chinese - now dollar freeloader US licks and threats!
Peter Klevius wrote:
          
        
Nicolle Wallace and Donald 
Trump would both fail in Chinese meritocracy - is that why they both
 hate China for no sane reason at all!
 China
 hating EU neo-fascist women adore militant Ursula von der Leyen and 
want her to become next Nato Fuhrer attacking China. This program has 
been repeated for days by Euronews after Macron's China visit.
 
 MSNBC Nicolle Wallace: Xi Jinping is one of the world’s most heinous authoritarians!
This
 caricature of a journalist - or rather algorithmed talk-machine - 
seemingly also somehow puts Xi in the same category as Trump who 
actually is much closer to Nicolle herself.
First of all Nicolle 
Wallace ought to consider the horrifying situation US has put itself and
 the world in because the chickens from the criminal dollar theft back 
in 1971- are coming home to roost - which fact now with China's success 
puts US in a situtation to give up its dirty game - or start trying to 
shoot itself out!
Peter Klevius: Nicolle Wallace's heinous 
"assessment" of the world's not only most powerful man in the most 
powerful country, but also the by far most successful and trusted 
leader, with a support from the people that exceeds everything US 
politicians can dream of. Ever! And the way he got this position is as 
far you can get from authoritarian, because he is a product of Chinese 
meritocracy, which means that he at every stage has had a huge majority 
of the people backing him. Dear Nicolle, just consider that Trump and 
you would never have become a leader based on political merits. Ever! 
Moreover,
 do consider how Xi had to bow for his people's Confucian respect for 
the elderly and, unlike in the West, protect them from Covid 2020, 
despite this meaning less growth, and then 2022 bowed again when the 
people demanded opening up!
Xi Jinping is not only the world's 
most powerful and liked leader, he is also the most vulnerable for 
criticism from the people - which is precisely his and the Chinese 
political meritocracy's hallmark. And should stand as the most important
 lecture for US. This, dear Nicolle, is not even close to "autharian"! 
Ever!
And when stupidly and ignorantly demonizing China for 
"censorship", try first to take a closer look at how US is censoring, 
spying, militarizing and demonizing over the world thanks to its dollar 
web dictatorship, and then consider what you would do as a Chinese 
leadership if you were constantly negatively bombarded by the world's 
biggest Goebbelian platforms, steered by CIA's attempts to saw 
discontent and hate among your own people. Wouldn't you try to protect 
your country from such evil - especially when knowing that your country 
performs much better than the demonizer! Add to this how Chinese people -
 unless, of course, they spit on their own country of origin ethnicity -
 because of US hate- and warmongering have become the target of 
appalling racism and hate crimes - which the media blinks.
Xi 
Jinping is as far you can get from Mao - just look at China's progress 
since he came to power in 2012! And the only "communist" in his ruling 
is what every Western country admits ought to be the most important 
political goal, namely a fairer distribution - which Xi has achieved on a
 level never EVER seen before on the planet! This is Xi's "communism" 
and seriously that part of Marxism that no one sane person can oppose.
Also
 consider the extreme contempt US shows against the majority of the 
world that doesn't believe in the ridiculous oxymoron "monotheism", and 
how this medieval darkness is presented as "civilized".
So 
Nicolle, to get some perspective inside your dark head: What if the 
Chinese had been Jews or "blacks"? Can you even think that far by 
yourself?
A modern high tech society 
needs Confucianism much more than evil god-religions. But see what 
hapened in the darkness of US - Confucianism was forbidden and kicked 
out, just as US kicked out Chinese more than 100 years ago (see below), 
while islamism is welcome in US universities and in US military state 
terrorism campaigns. Shame on US! 
Says anti-Maoist Peter Klevius
 who can't see anything of Xi and his modern China resembling Mao and 
his destructive peasantry Communism - which was a product of evil 
Western interference (see below). 
While Western journalists have
 turned into political demonizers of easy targets while saying nothing 
about real issues - such as e.g. US dollar theft 1971- and how it now 
has made US a dangerous (d)evil feeding on the dollar hegemony and 
warmongering.
Harry S. Truman on 24 June 1941 (two days after
 the Nazi-German invasion of Russia) 'If we see that Germany is winning,
 we should help Russia, and if Russia is winning, we should help 
Germany, so that as many as possible perish on both sides.' 
Unlike
 the wayward teenager US, China, the world's oldest civilization, and 
now again by far the largest economy, has been fostered through constant
 mongol attacks to build a double-sided wall, i.e. one that not only 
protects China but also protects others against China. US should take 
note. 
March 10, 2023
A Very Brief History of Capitalism, Empire, and the Yellow Peril
by David Rovics
David
 Rovics: Unlike the propagandists that publish most of the textbooks 
that we brainwash our children with in the US, reality-based historians 
have oft observed that the history of civilization is a history of the 
ongoing conflict between the haves and the have-nots, the rich and the 
poor, the ruling class and those they would like to rule.  One of the 
main factors that continually makes this conflict a very dynamic one 
that is forever unfolding in new ways is the obvious inequity of the 
whole thing, with a small class of rulers, owners, and landlords always 
trying to control a very large majority of subjects, workers and 
tenants.  In order to maintain such a state of constant inequality, 
particularly in severely unequal societies/empires like the United 
States, strategies of divide and rule are always in play, whether we’re 
talking about maintaining domestic tranquility, or running the global 
American empire.
From the time of British colonization of the 
Americas, the colonial rulers and later the sovereign US rulers of this 
land have sought to keep the bulk of the population — the tenant 
farmers, the small landowners, the urban workers and renters, the 
immigrant and the native-born, the enslaved and the free — at each 
other’s throats, and thus distracted with fratricidal conflict, rather 
than united in opposition to their common oppressors.  The ways society 
is divided and the ways the rulers seek to exploit those divisions 
locally and globally evolves over time, just as other things evolve, 
such as technology, and different forms of organization, such as 
corporations, unions, parliaments, and developments such as the massive 
US military industrial complex.
In light of these realities, it’s
 not hard to understand scenes like President Biden going to Alabama to 
remember those killed by white supremacists in a church bombing in 1963,
 while having nothing to say about state-sanctioned pogroms being 
committed by organized mobs of people against Palestinians — towns being
 burned to the ground by mobs sanctioned by one of the biggest 
recipients of US military aid on the planet.  In light of these 
realities, we can understand why the US Attorney General is once again 
in Ukraine, 
talking about prosecuting Russian war crimes in the 
International Criminal Court, while saying nothing about prosecuting war
 crimes committed by Americans, Saudis, or Israelis.  In light of these 
realities, we can see why the State Department can justify the 
double-standard involved with publicly attacking the Chinese government 
for allegedly considering selling arms to Russia on the same day as they
 announce the sales of the US’s most advanced fighter jets to Taiwan.
Turning
 on the news in the US today means hearing a constant drumbeat of 
anti-Russian and anti-Chinese rhetoric that is completely detached from 
any sense of history, and which involves less and less effort at 
maintaining any semblance of objectivity.
Hearing our leaders 
demonize Vladimir Putin and the Chinese Communist Party, one might think
 the leaders of the free world have only had it out for the Russians and
 the Chinese since Putin or Xi came to power.  Or if not then, perhaps 
since both countries had revolutions, in 1917 and 1949, respectively.  
The historical reality is far more insidious.
The powers-that-be 
in the US have been actively vilifying Russian and Chinese migrants, 
while tremendously profiting from their labor, since the 19th century, 
just as the US military and State Department has been actively working 
to weaken and control Russia and China for most of the 19th, 20th, and 
21st centuries.  
Don’t be fooled by the rhetoric about specific 
Russian or Chinese leaders or governments.  US policies towards Russia, 
China, and towards Russian and Chinese people has nothing to do with 
that.  It has to do with methods of divide and rule at home, and abroad,
 with geopolitical concerns around how to effectively dominate the 
world.
History, from the 19th century right up to today, 
illustrates what I’m talking about.  Unfortunately, I’m pretty sure this
 is history that is entirely lost on the likes of Joe Biden, Antony 
Blinken, Merrick Garland, or the supposedly, fashionably 
“anti-globalist” leaders of the Republican Party, either.  I’ll 
highlight a little bit of this history.
In the 19th century the 
US authorities and business owners actively solicited migration of 
workers from Europe as well as from China, Japan, and elsewhere.  In the
 case of Chinese and Japanese migration, it was more about guest worker 
programs — families not welcome.  So when we talk about the US having a 
whites-only immigration policy back then, this didn’t include those who 
were brought in from China to build the railroads, and then deported 
afterwards, which is what happened, on a huge scale.  
Asian 
workers were super-exploited, facing discrimination of all kinds, and 
frequent massacres at the hands of desperate mobs of their fellow 
workers, many of whom had swallowed the nonsense propaganda about the 
Chinese as people who would always be willing to work for half the going
 wage.  Several different Exclusion Acts were passed, aimed specifically
 at Asians, that prevented workers from bringing their families over, 
and/or forced workers to go back to Asia after the corporate barons had 
no more need of their labor.  Exclusion laws against Asian emigration 
were in place until 1943.
Meanwhile in China itself, the US 
military participated in the Opium Wars, along with the British, the 
French, and the Russians, among others, which involved imperial European
 and American troops burning entire Chinese cities, killing tens of 
thousands of people, and forcing the Chinese government of the time to 
import addictive opium from the British-run farms in British-occupied 
India.  This invasion which forced China to open the gates to what 
became a nationwide epidemic of opium addiction is what the British and 
the American authorities referred to as the “opening” of China to “free 
trade.”  The deadly Opium Wars were known as “trade wars.”
On the
 east coast in particular, as the US was flooded with migrants from 
Ireland to Russia and most everywhere in between throughout the 19th 
century — actively solicited by the kingpins of American industry — 
those migrating from eastern and southern Europe in particular developed
 a reputation for being especially subversive.  This reputation, of 
course, was actively promoted by the powers-that-be, as one more avenue 
for creating division among the source of their profits, and their class
 enemy, the working class.
In reality, the horrific conditions of
 the factories, mines and mills of 19th-century America made radicals 
out of most people who weren’t killed off by those conditions, 
regardless of their race, gender, or national origin.  But certainly the
 ranks of the organized workers and rebels was indeed full of Italians, 
Germans, and Russians, along with everybody else.  So other exclusion 
laws were passed to target eastern and southern Europeans, which were 
not lifted until 1944.  These laws meant that throughout the 1920s, 
1930’s, and well into the 1940’s, Germans and Russians — Jews included —
 were barred from migrating to the US directly.  Germans, Russians 
(Jewish or non-Jewish), along with Italians, were especially singled out
 by those in power and their media mouthpieces as undesirable 
subversives.  The prejudice against these groups was only amplified by 
events such as the Russian Revolution.
Meanwhile in Russia 
itself, as World War 1 was coming to an end, after the Bolsheviks had 
seized power, the US, the UK, and many other allied countries 
participated in an invasion of the Soviet Union with hundreds of 
thousands of soldiers, aimed at supporting the Czarist forces that were 
attempting to take power back from the Red Army, an effort which failed.
After
 the Chinese Revolution in 1949, the US and many other participating 
forces from other countries invaded Korea, which was basically in the 
course of having a popular national revolution against the dictator 
which the Japanese Empire had put into power, a dictator which the US 
backed.  China supported the revolutionary forces in Korea, against the 
US-supported dictator.  In the course of three years of active conflict,
 hundreds of thousands of Chinese soldiers were killed, along with tens 
of thousands of US soldiers.
The US empire has hundreds of 
military bases around the world, which have strategically, intentionally
 surrounded both Russia and China.  The US is the only country with such
 military bases around the world, that can transport large numbers of 
troops wherever it wants to.  The notion that the US authorities are 
concerned with the lives of Ukrainians, Taiwanese, or people in Xinjiang
 is just as laughable as the notion that the US authorities are 
concerned with the lives of Palestinians, Yemenis, or Guatemalans.  We 
hear about the former and not the latter groups for purely cold, 
geopolitical, strategic reasons.  Anyone who thinks otherwise is 
engaging in a futile exercise to put a human face on an entirely inhuman
 set of imperial calculations — a set of calculations which has its 
roots in centuries past.
I am a descendant of Russian Jewish 
migrants who were subject to every form of discrimination, before they 
left Minsk, and later in the northeastern United States.  I am raising a
 family with a Japanese woman, and our children look visibly Asian.  One
 doesn’t need to have any personal involvement in the history of abuse 
of Russian or Asian migrants in this country, or the history of US 
imperialism in Europe or Asia, to be worried about what the future might
 look like, as the leadership of both parties in this country paint a 
rising China as somehow threatening to the US, and we hear more and more
 about Chinese expansionist intentions, Chinese coal plants causing 
climate change, Chinese surveillance apps stealing our data, Chinese 
subsidies to Chinese industries undermining American industry, Chinese 
workers undercutting American workers, Chinese spies among us in 
academia and in Silicon Valley, seeking to steal our secrets, and even 
Chinese viruses.
One of the many things about Biden’s trip to 
Alabama, and all his new-found rhetoric about racial equality, at least 
when it comes to discrimination against Black Americans, is that out of 
the other side of his mouth he is telling us to fear the Russians and 
the Chinese out there in Russia and China, as well as the ones among us 
who may fail to demonstrate the requisite loyalty to the American Way, 
and loathing of their respective governments and everything they stand 
for.  This is how the politicians talk before the wars and the lynchings
 begin.
The Yellow Peril
The anti-China Immigration Act of 1917 established the Asiatic Barred Zone from which the U.S. admitted no immigrants.
Under
 nativist political pressure, the Immigration Act of 1917 established an
 Asian Barred Zone of countries from which immigration to the U.S. was 
forbidden. The Cable Act of 1922 (Married Women's Independent 
Nationality Act) guaranteed citizenship to independent women unless they
 were married to a nonwhite alien ineligible for naturalization.[67] 
Asian men and women were excluded from American citizenship.[68][69]
In
 practice, the Cable Act of 1922 reversed some racial exclusions, and 
granted independent woman citizenship exclusively to women married to 
white men. Analogously, the Cable Act allowed the government to revoke 
the citizenship of an American white woman married an Asian man. The law
 was formally challenged before the Supreme Court, with the case of 
Takao Ozawa v. United States (1922), whereby a Japanese–American man 
tried to demonstrate that the Japanese people are a white race eligible 
for naturalized American citizenship. The Court ruled that the Japanese 
are not white people; two years later, the National Origins Quota of 
1924 specifically excluded the Japanese from entering the US and from 
American citizenship.
The religious racialism of The Yellow Peril 
(1911, 3rd ed.), by G. G. Rupert, proposed that Russia would unite the 
Oriental races to invade, conquer, and subjugate Christian civilization 
in the Western world.
The eugenic racialism proposed in The Rising 
Tide of Color Against White World-Supremacy (1920), by Lothrop Stoddard,
 presents either China or Japan as uniting the Oriental races to invade,
 conquer, and subjugate the white civilizations of the Western world.
Ethnic national character
To
 "preserve the ideal of American homogeneity", the Emergency Quota Act 
of 1921 (numeric limits) and the Immigration Act of 1924 (fewer southern
 and eastern Europeans) restricted admission to the United States 
according to the skin color and the race of the immigrant.[70] In 
practice, the Emergency Quota Act used outdated census data to determine
 the number of colored immigrants to admit to the U.S. To protect WASP 
ethnic supremacy (social, economic, political) in the 20th century, the 
Immigration Act of 1924 used the twenty-year-old census of 1890, because
 its 19th-century demographic-group percentages favored more admissions 
of WASP immigrants from western and northern Europe, and fewer 
admissions of colored immigrants from Asia and southern and eastern 
Europe.[71]
To ensure that the immigration of colored peoples did
 not change the WASP national character of the United States, the 
National Origins Formula (1921–1965) meant to maintain the status quo 
percentages of "ethnic populations" in lesser proportion to the existing
 white populations; thus, the yearly quota allowed only 150,000 People 
of Color into the U.S.A. In the event, the national-origins Formula was 
voided and repealed with the Immigration and Nationality Act of 
1965.[72]
Eugenic apocalypse
Eugenicists used the Yellow Peril
 to misrepresent the U.S. as an exclusively WASP nation threatened by 
miscegenation with the Asian Other by expressing their racism with 
biological language (infection, disease, decay) and imagery of 
penetration (wounds and sores) of the white body.[73]: 237–238  In The 
Yellow Peril; or, Orient vs. Occident (1911), the end time evangelist G.
 G. Rupert said that Russia would unite the colored races to facilitate 
the Oriental invasion, conquest, and subjugation of the West; said white
 supremacy is in the Christian eschatology of verse 16:12 in the Book of
 Revelation: "Then the sixth angel poured out his bowl on the great 
Euphrates River, and it dried up so that the kings from the east could 
march their armies toward the west without hindrance".[74] As an 
Old-Testament Christian, Rupert believed the racialist doctrine of 
British Israelism, and said that the Yellow Peril from China, India, 
Japan, and Korea, were attacking Britain and the US, but that the 
Christian God himself would halt the Asian conquest of the Western 
world.[75]
In The Rising Tide of Color Against White 
World-Supremacy (1920), the eugenicist Lothrop Stoddard said that either
 China or Japan would unite the colored peoples of Asia and lead them to
 destroy white supremacy in the Western world, and that the Asian 
conquest of the world began with the Japanese victory in the 
Russo–Japanese War (1905). As a white supremacist, Stoddard presented 
his racism with Biblical language and catastrophic imagery depicting a 
rising tide of colored people meaning to invade, conquer, and subjugate 
the white race.[76]
Political opposition
In that cultural 
vein, the phrase "yellow peril" was common editorial usage in the 
newspapers of publisher William Randolph Hearst.[77] In the 1930s, 
Hearst's newspapers conducted a campaign of vilification (personal and 
political) against Elaine Black, an American Communist, whom he 
denounced as a libertine "Tiger Woman" for her interracial cohabitation 
with the Japanese-American Communist Karl Yoneda.[78] In 1931, 
interracial marriage was illegal in California, but, in 1935, Black and 
Yoneda married in Seattle, Washington, where such marriages were 
legal.[78]
Socially acceptable Asian
In the 1930s, Yellow 
Peril stereotypes were common to US culture, exemplified by the 
cinematic versions of the Asian detectives Charlie Chan (Warner Oland) 
and Mr. Moto (Peter Lorre), originally literary detectives in novels and
 comic strips. White actors portrayed the Asian men and made the 
fictional characters socially acceptable in mainstream American cinema, 
especially when the villains were secret agents of Imperial 
Japan.[79]: 159 
American proponents of the Japanese Yellow Peril
 were the military-industrial interests of the China Lobby (right-wing 
intellectuals, businessmen, Christian missionaries) who advocated 
financing and supporting the warlord Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, a 
Methodist convert whom they represented as the Christian Chinese savior 
of China, then embroiled in the Chinese Civil War (1927–1937, 
1946–1950). After the Japanese invaded China in 1937, the China Lobby 
successfully pressured the U.S. government to aid Chiang Kai-shek's 
faction. The news media's reportage (print, radio, cinema) of the Second
 Sino-Japanese War (1937–45) favored China, which politically 
facilitated the American financing and equipping of the anticommunist 
Kuomintang, the Chiang Kai-shek faction in the civil war against the 
Communist faction led by Mao Tse-tung.[79]: 159 
Pragmatic racialism
In
 1941, after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the Roosevelt 
administration formally declared China an ally of the U.S., and the news
 media modified their use of Yellow Peril ideology to include China to 
the West, criticizing contemporary anti-Chinese laws as 
counterproductive to the war effort against Imperial 
Japan.[79]: 165–166  The wartime zeitgeist and the geopolitics of the 
U.S. government presumed that defeat of the Imperial Japan would be 
followed by postwar China developing into a capitalist economy under the
 strongman leadership of the Christian Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek and
 the Kuomintang (Chinese Nationalist Party).
In his relations 
with the American government and his China Lobby sponsors, Chiang 
requested the repeal of American anti-Chinese laws; to achieve the 
repeals, Chiang threatened to exclude the American business community 
from the "China Market", the economic fantasy that the China Lobby 
promised to the American business community.[79]: 171–172  In 1943, the 
Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 was repealed, but, because the National 
Origins Act of 1924 was contemporary law, the repeal was a symbolic 
gesture of American solidarity with the people of China.
Science 
fiction writer William F. Wu said that American adventure, crime, and 
detective pulp magazines in the 1930s had many Yellow Peril characters, 
loosely based on Fu Manchu; although "most [Yellow Peril characters] 
were of Chinese descent", the geopolitics of the time led white people 
to see Japan as a threat to the United States. In The Yellow Peril: 
Chinese Americans in American fiction, 1850–1940 (1982), Wu said that 
fear of Asians dates from the European Middle Ages, from the 
13th-century Mongol invasion of Europe. Most Europeans had never seen an
 Asian man or woman, and the great differences in language, custom, and 
physique accounted for European paranoia about the nonwhite peoples from
 the Eastern world.[80]
21st century
The American academic 
Frank H. Wu said that anti-Chinese sentiment incited by people such as 
Steve Bannon and Peter Thiel is recycling anti-Asian hatred from the 
19th century into a "new Yellow Peril" that is common to White populist 
politics that do not distinguish between Asian foreigners and 
Asian-American U.S. citizens.[81] That American cultural anxiety about 
the geopolitical ascent of the People's Republic of China originates in 
the fact that, for the first time in centuries, the Western world, led 
by the U.S., is challenged by a people whom Westerners viewed as 
culturally backward and racially inferior only a generation earlier.[82]
 That the U.S. perceives China as "the enemy", because their economic 
success voids the myth of white supremacy upon which the West claims 
cultural superiority over the East.[83] Moreover, the COVID-19 pandemic 
has facilitated and increased the occurrence of xenophobia and 
anti-Chinese racism, which the academic Chantal Chung said has "deep 
roots in yellow peril ideology".[84]
Australia
The White Australia
 policy arose from the growth of anti-Asian (particularly Chinese) 
sentiments that peaked in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. 
Pictured: The Melbourne Punch (c. May 1888)
In the late 19th and 
early 20th centuries, fear of the Yellow Peril was a cultural feature of
 the white peoples who sought to establish a country and a society in 
the Australian continent. The racialist fear of the nonwhite Asian Other
 was a thematic preoccupation common to invasion literature novels, such
 as The Yellow Wave: A Romance of the Asiatic Invasion of Australia 
(1895), The Colored Conquest (1904), The Awakening to China (1909), and 
the Fools' Harvest (1939). Such fantasy literature featured an Asian 
invasion of "the empty north" of Australia, which was populated by the 
Aboriginal Australians, the nonwhite, native Other with whom the white 
emigrants competed for living space.[85] In the novel White or Yellow?: A
 Story of the Race War of A.D. 1908 (1887), the journalist and labor 
leader William Lane said that a horde of Chinese people legally arrived 
to Australia and overran white society and monopolized the industries 
for exploiting the natural resources of the Australian "empty 
north".[85]
The Yellow Peril was used to justify the White Australia 
Policy, which excluded dark-skinned Melanesians from immigration to 
Australia.
White nation
As Australian invasion literature of 
the 19th-century, the future history novel White or Yellow? (1887) 
presents William Lane's nationalist racialism and left-wing politics 
that portrayed Australia under threat by the Yellow Peril. In the near 
future, British capitalists manipulate the Australian legal system and 
then legislate the mass immigration of Chinese workers to Australia, 
regardless of the socioeconomic consequences to White Australian 
society. Consequent to the British manipulation of Australia's economy, 
the resulting social conflicts (racial, financial, cultural, sexual) 
escalate into a race war for control of Australia.
The Yellow 
Peril racism in the narrative of the novel White or Yellow? justifies 
White Australians' killing Chinese workers as a defensive, existential 
response for control of Australia.[53]: 26–27  Lang's story of White 
racial replacement appeals to the fears that labor and trade union 
leaders exploited to oppose the legal immigration of Chinese workers, 
whom they misrepresented as racial, economic, and moral threats to White
 Australia. That Asian libertinism threatens White Christian 
civilization, which theme Lang represents with miscegenation (mixing of 
the races). The fear of racial replacement was presented as an 
apolitical call to White racial unity in among Australians.[53]: 24 
Culturally,
 Yellow Peril invasion novels expressed themes of the White man's sexual
 fear of the supposed voracious sexuality of Asian men and women. The 
stories feature Western women in sexual peril, usually rape-by-seduction
 facilitated with the sensual and moral release of smoked opium.[85] In 
the patriarchal world of invasion literature, interracial sexual 
relations were "a fate worse than death" for a white woman, afterwards, 
she was a sexual untouchable to white men.[85] In the 1890s, that 
moralistic theme was the anti-Chinese message of the feminist and labor 
organizer Rose Summerfield who voiced the White woman's sexual fear of 
the Yellow Peril, by warning society of the Chinese man's unnaturally 
lustful gaze upon the pulchritude of Australian women.[53]: 24 
Racial equality thwarted
In
 1901, the Australian federal government adopted the White Australia 
policy that had been informally initiated with the Immigration 
Restriction Act 1901, which generally excluded Asians, but in particular
 excluded the Chinese and the Melanesian peoples. Historian C. E. W. 
Bean said that the White Australia policy was "a vehement effort to 
maintain a high, Western standard of economy, society, and culture 
(necessitating, at that stage, however it might be camouflaged, the 
rigid exclusion of Oriental peoples)" from Australia.[86] In 1913, 
appealing to the irrational fear of the Yellow Peril, the film Australia
 Calls (1913) depicted a "Mongolian" invasion of Australia, which 
eventually is defeated by ordinary Australians with underground, 
political resistance and guerrilla warfare, and not by the army of the 
Australian federal government.[87]
In 1919, at the Paris Peace 
Conference (28 June 1919), supported by Britain and the U.S., Australian
 Prime Minister Billy Hughes vehemently opposed Imperial Japan's request
 for the inclusion of the Racial Equality Proposal to Article 21 of the 
Covenant of the League of Nations (13 February 1919):
    The 
equality of nations being a basic principle of the League of Nations, 
the High Contracting Parties agree to accord, as soon as possible, to 
all alien nationals of states, members of the League, equal and just 
treatment in every respect, making no distinction, either in law or in 
fact, on account of their race or nationality.[88]
Aware that the
 British delegation opposed the racial equality clause in Article 21 of 
the Covenant, conference chairman U.S. President Woodrow Wilson acted to
 prevent de jure racial equality among the nations of the world, with 
his unilateral requirement of a unanimous vote by the countries in the 
League of Nations. On 11 April 1919, most countries in the conference 
voted to include the Racial Equality Proposal to Article 21 of the 
Covenant of the League of Nations; only the British and American 
delegations opposed the racial equality clause. Moreover, to maintain 
the White Australia policy, the Australian government sided with Britain
 and voted against Japan's formal request that the Racial Equality 
Proposal be included to Article 21 of the covenant of the League of 
Nations; that defeat in international relations greatly influenced 
Imperial Japan to militarily confront the Western world.[89]
France
Colonial empire
In
 the late 19th century, French imperialist politicians invoked the Péril
 jaune (Yellow Peril) in their negative comparisons of France's low 
birth-rate and the high birth-rates of Asian countries.[90] From that 
racist claim arose an artificial, cultural fear among the French 
population that immigrant-worker Asians soon would "flood" France, which
 could be successfully countered only by increased fecundity of French 
women. Then, France would possess enough soldiers to thwart the eventual
 flood of immigrants from Asia.[90] From that racialist perspective, the
 French press sided with Imperial Russia during the Russo-Japanese War 
(1904–1905), by representing the Russians as heroes defending the white 
race against the Japanese Yellow Peril.[91]
French postcard captioned
 "Make way for the yellows" shows Japanese imperialism running over four
 great nations of Europe—Russia, Britain, France, and Germany
French Indochina: In the oriental French Empire, the country and people of Vietnam were renamed French Indochina. (1913)
In
 the early 20th century, in 1904, the French journalist René Pinon 
reported that the Yellow Peril were a cultural, geopolitical, and 
existential threat to white civilization in the Western world:
   
 The "Yellow Peril" has entered already into the imagination of the 
people, just as represented in the famous drawing [Peoples of Europe, 
Guard Your Most Sacred Possessions,1895] of the Emperor Wilhelm II: In a
 setting of conflagration and carnage, Japanese and Chinese hordes 
spread out over all Europe, crushing under their feet the ruins of our 
capital cities and destroying our civilizations, grown anemic due to the
 enjoyment of luxuries, and corrupted by the vanity of spirit.
   
 Hence, little by little, there emerges the idea that even if a day must
 come (and that day does not seem near) the European peoples will cease 
to be their own enemies and even economic rivals, there will be a 
struggle ahead to face and there will rise a new peril, the yellow man.
   
 The civilized world has always organized itself before and against a 
common adversary: for the Roman world, it was the barbarian; for the 
Christian world, it was Islam; for the world of tomorrow, it may well be
 the yellow man. And so we have the reappearance of this necessary 
concept, without which peoples do not know themselves, just as the "Me" 
only takes conscience of itself in opposition to the "non-Me": The 
Enemy.[32]: 124 
Despite the claimed Christian idealism of the 
civilizing mission, from the start of colonization in 1858, the French 
exploited the natural resources of Vietnam as inexhaustible and the 
Vietnamese people as beasts of burden.[92]: 67–68  In the aftermath of 
the Second World War, the First Indochina War (1946–1954) justified 
recolonization of Vietnam as a defense of the white West against the 
péril jaune — specifically that the Communist Party of Vietnam were 
puppets of the People's Republic of China, which is part of the 
"international communist conspiracy" to conquer the world.[93] 
Therefore, French anticommunism utilized orientalism to dehumanize the 
Vietnamese into "the nonwhite Other"; which yellow-peril racism allowed 
atrocities against Viet Minh prisoners of war during la sale guerre 
("dirty war").[92]: 74  In that time, yellow-peril racism remained one 
of the ideological bases for the existence of French Indochina, thus the
 French news media's racialist misrepresentations of Viet Minh 
guerrillas being part of the innombrables masses jaunes (innumerable 
yellow hordes); being one of many vagues hurlantes (roaring waves) of 
masses fanatisées (fanatical hordes).[94]
Contemporary France
In
 Behind the Bamboo Hedge: The Impact of Homeland Politics in the 
Parisian Vietnamese Community (1991) Gisèle Luce Bousquet said that the 
péril jaune, which traditionally colored French perceptions of Asians, 
especially of Vietnamese people, remains a cultural prejudice of 
contemporary France;[95] hence the French perceive and resent the 
Vietnamese people of France as academic overachievers who take jobs from
 "native French" people.[95]
In 2015, the cover of the January 
issue of Fluide Glacial magazine featured a cartoon, Yellow Peril: Is it
 Already Too Late?, which depicts a Chinese-occupied Paris where a sad 
Frenchman is pulling a rickshaw, transporting a Chinese man, in 19th c. 
French colonial uniform, accompanied by a barely dressed, blonde French 
woman.[96][97] The editor of Fluide Glacial, Yan Lindingre, defended the
 magazine cover and the subject as satire and mockery of French fears of
 China's economic threat to France.[97] In an editorial addressing the 
Chinese government's complaint, Lindingre said, "I have just ordered an 
extra billion copies printed, and will send them to you via chartered 
flight. This will help us balance our trade deficit, and give you a good
 laugh".[97]
Italy
In the 20th century, from their 
perspective, as nonwhite nations in a world order dominated by the white
 nations, the geopolitics of Ethiopia–Japan relations allowed Imperial 
Japan and Ethiopia to avoid imperialist European colonization of their 
countries and nations. Before the Second Italo-Ethiopian War 
(1934–1936), Imperial Japan had given diplomatic and military support to
 Ethiopia against invasion by Fascist Italy, which implied military 
assistance. In response to that Asian anti-imperialism, Benito Mussolini
 ordered a Yellow Peril propaganda campaign by the Italian press, which 
represented Imperial Japan as the military, cultural, and existential 
threat to the Western world, by way of the dangerous "yellow race–black 
race" alliance meant to unite Asians and Africans against the white 
people of the world.[98]
In 1935, Mussolini warned of the 
Japanese Yellow Peril, specifically the racial threat of Asia and Africa
 uniting against Europe.[98] In the summer of 1935, the National Fascist
 Party (1922–43) often staged anti–Japanese political protests 
throughout Italy.[99] Nonetheless, as right-wing imperial powers, Japan 
and Italy pragmatically agreed to disagree; in exchange for Italian 
diplomatic recognition of Manchukuo (1932–45), the Japanese puppet state
 in China, Imperial Japan would not aid Ethiopia against Italian 
invasion and so Italy would end the anti–Japanese Yellow Peril 
propaganda in the national press of Italy.[99]
Mexico
Two men in 
sombreros riding in a donkey-cart with a line of feet sticking out the 
back. They are riding down a dirt street away from the camera, with a 
line of buildings on the right. Dated 15 May 1911.
In Revolutionary 
Mexico (1910–20) a wagonload of Asian corpses is en route to a common 
grave after fear of the Yellow Peril fear provoked a three-day massacre 
(11–15 May 1911) of 308 Asian people (303 Chinese, 5 Japanese) in the 
city of Torreón, Coahuila, in northern Mexico.
During the Mexican
 Revolution (1910–20), Chinese-Mexicans were subjected to racist abuse, 
like before the revolt, for not being Christians, specifically Roman 
Catholic, for not being racially Mexican, and for not soldiering and 
fighting in the Revolution against the thirty-five-year dictatorship 
(1876–1911) of General Porfirio DÃaz.[100]: 44 
The notable 
atrocity against Asian people was the three-day Torreón massacre (13–15 
May 1911) in northern Mexico, wherein the military forces of Francisco 
I. Madero killed 308 Asian people (303 Chinese, 5 Japanese), because 
they were deemed a cultural threat to the Mexican way of life. The 
massacre of Chinese- and Japanese-Mexicans at the city of Torreón, 
Coahuila, was not the only such atrocity perpetrated in the Revolution. 
Elsewhere, in 1913, after the Constitutional Army captured the city of 
Tamasopo, San Luis Potosà state, the soldiers and the town-folk expelled
 the Chinese community by sacking and burning the Chinatown.[100]: 44 
During
 and after the Mexican Revolution, the Roman Catholic prejudices of 
Yellow Peril ideology facilitated racial discrimination and violence 
against Chinese Mexicans, usually for "stealing jobs" from native 
Mexicans. Anti–Chinese nativist propaganda misrepresented the Chinese 
people as unhygienic, prone to immorality (miscegenation, gambling, 
opium-smoking) and spreading diseases that would biologically corrupt 
and degenerate La Raza (the Mexican race) and generally undermining the 
Mexican patriarchy.[101]
Moreover, from the racialist 
perspective, besides stealing work from Mexican men, Chinese men were 
stealing Mexican women from the native Mexican men who were away 
fighting the Revolution to overthrow and expel the dictator Porfirio 
DÃaz and his foreign sponsors from Mexico.[102] In the 1930s, 
approximately 70 per cent of the Chinese and the Chinese–Mexican 
population was expelled from the Mexican United States by the 
bureaucratic ethnic culling of the Mexican population.[103]
Turkey
In
 1908, at the end of the Ottoman Empire (1299–1922) the Young Turk 
Revolution ascended the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP) to power, 
which the 1913 Ottoman coup d'état reinforced with the Raid on the 
Sublime Porte. In admiration and emulation that the modernization of 
Japan during the Meiji Restoration (1868) was realised without the 
Japanese people losing their national identity, the CUP intended to 
modernize Turkey into the "Japan of the Near East".[104] To that end, 
the CUP considered allying Turkey with Japan in a geopolitical effort to
 unite the peoples of the Eastern world to fight a racial war of 
extermination against the White colonial empires of the 
West.[105]: 54–55  Politically, the cultural, nationalist, and 
geopolitical affinities of Turkey and Japan were possible because, in 
Turkish culture, the "yellow" color of "Eastern gold" symbolizes the 
innate moral superiority of the East over the West.[105]: 53–54 
Fear
 of the Yellow Peril occurs against the Chinese communities of Turkey, 
usually as political retaliation against the PRC government's 
repressions and human-rights abuses against the Muslim Uighur people in 
the Xinjiang province of China.[106] At an anti–PRC political protest in
 Istanbul, a South Korean woman tourist faced violence, despite 
identifying herself: "I am not Chinese, I am Korean".[106] In response 
that Yellow Peril racism in Turkey, Devlet Bahçeli, leader of the 
extreme right-wing Nationalist Movement Party, rhetorically asked: "How 
does one distinguish, between Chinese and Koreans? Both have slanted 
eyes".[106]
South Africa
The Randlord's (mine owners') exploitive 
employment of Chinese labor contributed to the Liberal Party victory in 
the 1906 elections. (Punch magazine, 1903)
In 1904, after the 
conclusion of the Second Boer War, the Unionist Government of the 
Britain authorized the immigration to South Africa of approximately 
63,000 Chinese laborers to work the gold mines in the Witwatersrand 
basin.
On 26 March 1904, approximately 80,000 people attended a 
social protest against the use of Chinese laborers in the Transvaal held
 in Hyde Park, London, to publicize the exploitation of Chinese South 
Africans.[107]: 107  The Parliamentary Committee of the Trade Union 
Congress then passed a resolution declaring:
    That this 
meeting, consisting of all classes of citizens of London, emphatically 
protests against the action of the Government in granting permission to 
import into South Africa indentured Chinese labor under conditions of 
slavery, and calls upon them to protect this new colony from the greed 
of capitalists and the Empire from degradation.[108]
The mass 
immigration of indentured Chinese laborers to mine South African gold 
for wages lower than acceptable to the native white men, contributed to 
the 1906 electoral loss of the financially conservative British Unionist
 government that then governed South Africa.[107]: 103 
After 
1910, most Chinese miners were repatriated to China because of the great
 opposition to them, as "colored people" in white South Africa, 
analogous to anti-Chinese laws in the US during the early 20th 
century.[109][110] In the event, despite the racial violence between 
white South African miners and Chinese miners, the Unionist government 
achieved the economic recovery of South Africa after the Second Boer War
 by rendering the gold mines of the Witwatersrand Basin the most 
productive in the world.[107]: 103 
New Zealand
In the late 
19th and the early 20th centuries, populist Prime Minister Richard 
Seddon compared the Chinese people to monkeys, and so used the Yellow 
Peril to promote racialist politics in New Zealand. In 1879, in his 
first political speech, Seddon said that New Zealand did not wish her 
shores "deluged with Asiatic Tartars. I would sooner address white men 
than these Chinese. You can't talk to them, you can't reason with them. 
All you can get from them is 'No savvy'".[111]
Moreover, in 1905,
 in the city of Wellington, the white supremacist Lionel Terry murdered 
Joe Kum Yung, an old Chinese man, in protest against Asian immigration 
to New Zealand. Laws promulgated to limit Chinese immigration included a
 heavy poll tax, introduced in 1881 and lowered in 1937, after Imperial 
Japan's invasion and occupation of China. In 1944, the poll tax was 
abolished, and the New Zealand government formally apologized to the 
Chinese populace of New Zealand.
The
 Chinese Exclusion Act was a United States federal law signed by 
President Chester A. Arthur on May 6, 1882, prohibiting all immigration 
of Chinese laborers for 10 years. The law excluded merchants, teachers, 
students, travelers, and diplomats.[1] The Chinese Exclusion Act was the
 first and only major U.S. law ever implemented to prevent all members 
of a specific national group from immigrating to the United States.
Passage
 of the law was preceded by growing anti-Chinese sentiment and 
anti-Chinese violence, as well as various policies targeting Chinese 
migrants.[3] The act followed the Angell Treaty of 1880, a set of 
revisions to the U.S.–China Burlingame Treaty of 1868 that allowed the 
U.S. to suspend Chinese immigration. The act was initially intended to 
last for 10 years, but was renewed and strengthened in 1892 with the 
Geary Act and made permanent in 1902. These laws attempted to stop all 
Chinese immigration into the United States for ten years, with 
exceptions for diplomats, teachers, students, merchants, and travelers. 
They were widely evaded.
The law remained in force until the 
passage of the Magnuson Act in 1943, which repealed the exclusion and 
allowed 105 Chinese immigrants to enter the United States each year. 
Chinese immigration later increased with the passage of the Immigration 
and Nationality Act of 1952, which abolished direct racial barriers, and
 later by the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, which abolished 
the National Origins Formula.
The first significant Chinese 
immigration to North America began with the California Gold Rush of 
1848–1855 and it continued with subsequent large labor projects, such as
 the building of the first transcontinental railroad. During the early 
stages of the gold rush, when surface gold was plentiful, the Chinese 
were tolerated by white people, if not well received.[6] However, as 
gold became harder to find and competition increased, animosity toward 
the Chinese and other foreigners increased. After being forcibly driven 
from mining by a mixture of state legislators and other miners (the 
Foreign Miner's Tax), the immigrant Chinese began to settle in enclaves 
in cities, mainly San Francisco, and took up low-wage labor, such as 
restaurant and laundry work.[7] With the post-Civil War economy in 
decline by the 1870s, anti-Chinese animosity became politicized by labor
 leader Denis Kearney and his Workingman's Party[8] as well as by 
California governor John Bigler, both of whom blamed Chinese "coolies" 
for depressed wage levels. Public opinion and law in California began to
 demonize Chinese workers and immigrants in any role, with the latter 
half of the 1800s seeing a series of ever more restrictive laws being 
placed on Chinese labor, behavior and even living conditions. While many
 of these legislative efforts were quickly overturned by the State 
Supreme Court,[9] many more anti-Chinese laws continued to be passed in 
both California and nationally.
In the early 1850s, there was 
resistance to the idea of excluding Chinese migrant workers from 
immigration because they provided essential tax revenue which helped 
fill the fiscal gap of California.[10] The Xianfeng Emperor, who ruled 
China at the time, was supportive of the exclusion, citing his concerns 
that Chinese immigration to America would lead to a loss of labor for 
China.[11] But toward the end of the decade, the financial situation 
improved and subsequently, attempts to legislate Chinese exclusion 
became successful on the state level.[10] In 1858, the California 
Legislature passed a law that made it illegal for any person "of the 
Chinese or Mongolian races" to enter the state; however, this law was 
struck down by an unpublished opinion of the State Supreme Court in 
1862.[12]
The Chinese immigrant workers provided cheap labor and 
did not use any of the government infrastructure (schools, hospitals, 
etc.) because the Chinese migrant population was predominantly made up 
of healthy male adults.[10] In January 1868, the Senate ratified the 
Burlingame Treaty with China, allowing an unrestricted flow of Chinese 
into the country.[13] As time passed and more and more Chinese migrants 
arrived in the United States and California in particular, violence 
would often break out in cities such as Los Angeles. The North Adams 
strike of 1870, broken by the replacement of all workers by 75 Chinese 
men was the trigger that sparked widespread working-class protest across
 the country, shaped legislative debate in Congress, and helped make 
Chinese immigration a sustained national issue.[citation needed]
Numerous
 strikes ensued, notably Beaver Falls Cutlery Company in Pennsylvania 
and others[14][15] After the economy soured in the Panic of 1873, 
Chinese immigrants were blamed for depressing workmen's wages.[13] At 
one point, Chinese men represented nearly a quarter of all wage-earning 
workers in California,[16] and by 1878 Congress felt compelled to try to
 ban immigration from China in legislation that was later vetoed by 
President Rutherford B. Hayes. The title of the August 27, 1873, San 
Francisco Chronicle article, "The Chinese Invasion! They Are Coming, 
900,000 Strong", was traced by The Atlantic as one of the roots of the 
2019 anti-immigration "invasion" rhetoric.[17]
In 1879, however, 
California adopted a new Constitution which explicitly authorized the 
state government to determine which individuals were allowed to reside 
in the state, and banned the Chinese from employment by corporations and
 state, county or municipal governments.[18] Three years later, after 
China had agreed to treaty revisions, Congress tried again to exclude 
working class Chinese laborers; Senator John F. Miller of California 
introduced another Chinese Exclusion Act that blocked entry of Chinese 
laborers for a twenty-year period.[19] The bill passed the Senate and 
House by overwhelming margins, but this as well was vetoed by President 
Chester A. Arthur, who concluded the 20-year ban to be a breach of the 
renegotiated treaty of 1880. That treaty allowed only a "reasonable" 
suspension of immigration. Eastern newspapers praised the veto, while it
 was condemned in the Western states. Congress was unable to override 
the veto, but passed a new bill reducing the immigration ban to ten 
years.[19][20] The House of Representatives voted 201–37, with 51 
abstentions, to pass the act.[21] Although he still objected to this 
denial of entry to Chinese laborers, President Arthur acceded to the 
compromise measure, signing the Chinese Exclusion Act into law on May 6,
 1882.[19][20]
Anti-Chinese Wall cartoon in Puck
After the act
 was passed, most Chinese workers were faced with a dilemma: stay in the
 United States alone or return to China to reunite with their 
families.[22][4] Although widespread dislike for the Chinese persisted 
well after the law itself was passed, of note is that some capitalists 
and entrepreneurs resisted their exclusion because they accepted lower 
wages.[23]
Content
For the first time, federal law proscribed 
entry of an ethnic working group on the premise that it endangered the 
good order of certain localities. The earlier Page Act of 1875 had 
prohibited immigration of Asian forced laborers and sex workers, and the
 Naturalization Act of 1790 prohibited naturalization of non-white 
subjects. 
The Chinese Exclusion Act excluded Chinese laborers, 
meaning "skilled and unskilled laborers and Chinese employed in mining",
 from entering the country for ten years under penalty of imprisonment 
and deportation.[24][25]
Front page of The San Francisco Call from November 20, 1901, discussing the Chinese Exclusion Convention
The
 Chinese Exclusion Act required the few non-laborers who sought entry to
 obtain certification from the Chinese government that they were 
qualified to emigrate. However, this group found it increasingly 
difficult to prove that they were not laborers[25] because the 1882 Act 
defined excludables as "skilled and unskilled laborers and Chinese 
employed in mining". Thus very few Chinese could enter the country under
 the 1882 law. Diplomatic officials and other officers on business, 
along with their house servants, for the Chinese government were also 
allowed entry as long as they had the proper certification verifying 
their credentials.[26]
The Chinese Exclusion Act also affected 
the Chinese who had already settled in the United States. Any Chinese 
who left the United States had to obtain certifications for reentry, and
 the act made Chinese immigrants permanent aliens by excluding them from
 U.S. citizenship.[24][25] After the act's passage, Chinese men in the 
U.S. had little chance of ever reuniting with their wives, or of 
starting families in their new abodes.[24]
Amendments made in 
1884 tightened the provisions that allowed previous immigrants to leave 
and return and clarified that the law applied to ethnic Chinese 
regardless of their country of origin.[27] The 1888 Scott Act expanded 
upon the Chinese Exclusion Act, prohibiting reentry into the U.S. after 
leaving.[28] Only teachers, students, government officials, tourists, 
and merchants were exempt.[21]
Constitutionality of the Chinese 
Exclusion Act and the Scott Act was upheld by the Supreme Court in Chae 
Chan Ping v. United States (1889); the Supreme Court declared that "the 
power of exclusion of foreigners [is] an incident of sovereignty 
belonging to the government of the United States as a part of those 
sovereign powers delegated by the constitution". The act was renewed for
 ten years by the 1892 Geary Act, and again with no terminal date in 
1902.[25] When the act was extended in 1902, it required "each Chinese 
resident to register and obtain a certificate of residence. Without a 
certificate, he or she faced deportation."[25]
Between 1882 and 
1905, about 10,000 Chinese appealed against negative immigration 
decisions to federal court, usually via a petition for habeas 
corpus.[29] In most of these cases, the courts ruled in favor of the 
petitioner.[29] Except in cases of bias or negligence, these petitions 
were barred by an act that passed Congress in 1894 and was upheld by the
 U.S. Supreme Court in U.S. vs Lem Moon Sing (1895). In United States v.
 Ju Toy (1905), the U.S. Supreme Court reaffirmed that the port 
inspectors and the Secretary of Commerce had final authority on who 
could be admitted. Ju Toy's petition was thus barred despite the fact 
that the district court found that he was a U.S. citizen. The Supreme 
Court determined that refusing entry at a port does not require due 
process and is legally equivalent to refusing entry at a land crossing. 
All these developments, along with the extension of the act in 1902, 
triggered a boycott of U.S. goods in China between 1904 and 1906.[30] 
There was one 1885 case in San Francisco, however, in which Treasury 
Department officials in Washington overturned a decision to deny entry 
to two Chinese students.[31]
One of the critics of the Chinese 
Exclusion Act was the anti-slavery/anti-imperialist Republican senator 
George Frisbie Hoar of Massachusetts who described the act as "nothing 
less than the legalization of racial discrimination".[32]
The 
laws were driven largely by racial concerns; immigration of persons of 
other races was not yet limited.[33] On the other hand, most people and 
unions strongly supported the Chinese Exclusion Act, including the U.S. 
Federation of Labor and Knights of Labor, a labor union, who supported 
it because it believed that industrialists were using Chinese workers as
 a wedge to keep wages low.[34] Among labor and leftist organizations, 
the Industrial Workers of the World were the sole exception to this 
pattern. The IWW openly opposed the Chinese Exclusion Act from its 
inception in 1905.
For all practical purposes, the Chinese 
Exclusion Act, along with the restrictions that followed it, froze the 
Chinese community in place in 1882. Limited immigration from China 
continued until the repeal of the act in 1943. From 1910 to 1940, the 
Angel Island Immigration Station on what is now Angel Island State Park 
in San Francisco Bay served as the processing center for most of the 
56,113 Chinese immigrants who are recorded as immigrating or returning 
from China; upwards of 30% more who arrived there were returned to 
China.[36] The Chinese population in the U.S. declined from 
approximately 105,000 in 1880, to 89,000 in 1900, and to 61,000 in 
1920.[21]
The act exempted merchants, and restaurant owners could
 apply for merchant visas beginning in 1915 after a federal court 
ruling. This led to the rapid growth of Chinese restaurants in the 1910s
 and 1920s as restaurant owners could leave and reenter along with 
family members from China.[37]
Later, the Immigration Act of 1924
 restricted immigration even further, excluding all classes of Chinese 
immigrants and extending restrictions to other Asian immigrant 
groups.[24] Until these restrictions were relaxed in the middle of the 
twentieth century, Chinese immigrants were forced to live a life 
separated from their families, and to build ethnic enclaves in which 
they could survive on their own (Chinatown).[24] The Chinese Exclusion 
Act did not address the problems that whites were facing; in fact, the 
Chinese were quickly and eagerly replaced by the Japanese, who assumed 
the role of the Chinese in society. Unlike the Chinese, some Japanese 
were even able to climb the rungs of society by setting up businesses or
 becoming truck farmers.[38] However, the Japanese were later targeted 
in the act of 1924, which banned immigration from east Asia entirely.
In
 1891, the Chinese government refused to accept U.S. senator Henry W. 
Blair as U.S. minister to China due to his abusive remarks regarding 
China during negotiations of the Chinese Exclusion Act.[39]
The U.S. Christian George F. Pentecost spoke out against Western imperialism in China, saying:[40]
   
 I personally feel convinced that it would be a good thing for America 
if the embargo on Chinese immigration were removed. I think that the 
annual admission of 100,000 into this country would be a good thing for 
the country. And if the same thing were done in the Philippines those 
islands would be a veritable Garden of Eden in twenty-five years. The 
presence of Chinese workmen in this country would, in my opinion, do a 
very great deal toward solving our labor problems. There is no 
comparison between the Chinaman, even of the lowest coolie class, and 
the man who comes here from Southeastern Europe, from Russia, or from 
Southern Italy. The Chinese are thoroughly good workers. That is why the
 laborers here hate them. I think, too, that the emigration to America 
would help the Chinese. At least he would come into contact with some 
real Christian people in America. The Chinaman lives in squalor because 
he is poor. If he had some prosperity his squalor would cease.
The "Driving Out" period
Following
 the passing of the Chinese Exclusion Act, a period known as the 
"Driving Out" era was born. In this period, anti-Chinese Americans 
physically forced Chinese communities to flee to other areas. Large 
scale violence in Western states included the Rock Springs massacre 
(1885) and the Hells Canyon massacre (1887).[41]
Rock Springs massacre of 1885
Main article: Rock Springs massacre
The
 massacre was named for the town where it took place, Rock Springs, 
Wyoming, in Sweetwater County, where white miners were jealous of the 
Chinese for their employment. White miners expressed their jealous 
frustration by robbing, bullying, shooting, and stabbing the Chinese in 
Chinatown. The Chinese tried to flee but many were burned alive in their
 homes, starved to death in hidden refuge, or exposed to carnivorous 
animal predators in the mountains. Some were rescued by a passing train,
 but by the end of the event at least twenty-eight lives had been 
taken.[42] In an attempt to appease the situation, the government 
intervened by sending federal troops to protect the Chinese. However, 
only compensations for destroyed property were paid. No one was arrested
 nor held accountable for the atrocities committed during the riot.[42]
Hells Canyon massacre of 1887
Main article: Hells Canyon Massacre
The
 massacre was named for the location where it took place, along the 
Snake River in Hells Canyon near the mouth of Deep Creek. The area 
contained many rocky cliffs and white rapids that together posed 
significant danger to human safety. 34 Chinese miners were killed at the
 site. The miners were employed by the Sam Yup company, one of the six 
largest Chinese companies at the time, which worked in this area since 
October 1886. The actual events are still unclear due to unreliable law 
enforcement at the time, biased news reporting, and lack of serious 
official investigations. However, it is speculated that the dead Chinese
 miners were not victims of natural causes, but rather victims of gun 
shot wounds during a robbery committed by a gang of seven armed horse 
thieves.[43] Gold worth $4,000–$5,000 was thought to have been stolen 
from the miners. The gold was never recovered nor further investigated.
The aftermath
Shortly
 following the incident, the Sam Yup company of San Francisco hired Lee 
Loi who later hired Joseph K. Vincent, then U.S. Commissioner, to lead 
an investigation. Vincent submitted his investigative report to the 
Chinese consulate who tried unsuccessfully to obtain justice for the 
Chinese miners. At around the same time, other compensation reports were
 also unsuccessfully filed for earlier crimes inflicted on the Chinese. 
In the end, on October 19, 1888, Congress agreed to greatly 
under-compensate for the massacre and ignore the claims for the earlier 
crimes. Even though the amount was greatly underpaid, it was still a 
small victory to the Chinese who had low expectations for relief or 
acknowledgement.[43]
Issues of the act
The Chinese Exclusion 
Act lasted for about thirty years,[44] and it caused the U.S. economy to
 suffer a great loss.[44] Some sources cite the act as a sign of 
injustice and unfair treatment to the Chinese workers because their jobs
 were mostly menial.[45]
Impact on education in the U.S.
Recruitment
 of foreign students to U.S. colleges and universities was an important 
component in the expansion of U.S. influence. International education 
programs allowed students to learn from the examples provided at elite 
universities and to bring their newfound skill sets back to their home 
countries. As such, international education has historically been seen 
as a vehicle for improving diplomatic relations and promoting trade. The
 US Exclusion Act, however, forced Chinese students attempting to enter 
the country to provide proof that they were not trying to bypass 
regulations.[46] Laws and regulations that stemmed from the act made for
 less than ideal situations for Chinese students, leading to criticisms 
of U.S. society.[46] Policies and attitudes toward Chinese U.S.s in the 
US worked against foreign policy interests by limiting the ability of 
the U.S. to participate in international education initiatives.[47]
The
 Chinese Exclusion Act was repealed by the 1943 Magnuson Act when China 
had become an ally of the U.S. against Japan in World War II, as the 
U.S. needed to embody an image of fairness and justice. The Magnuson Act
 permitted Chinese nationals already residing in the country to become 
naturalized citizens and stop hiding from the threat of deportation. The
 act also allowed Chinese people to send remittances to people of 
Chinese descent living in mainland China, Macao, Hong Kong, and Taiwan 
and other countries or territories, especially if the funding is not 
tied to criminal activity. However, the Magnuson Act only allowed a 
national quota of 105 Chinese immigrants per year and did not repeal the
 restrictions on immigration from the other Asian countries. The 
crackdown on Chinese immigrants reached a new level in its last decade, 
from 1956 to 1965, with the Chinese Confession Program launched by the 
Immigration and Naturalization Service, that encouraged Chinese who had 
committed immigration fraud to confess, so as to be eligible for some 
leniency in treatment.[citation needed] Large-scale Chinese immigration 
did not occur until the passage of the Immigration and Nationality Act 
of 1965.
The first Chinese immigrants who entered the United 
States under the Magnuson Act were college students who sought to escape
 the warfare in China during World War II and study in the U.S. The 
establishment of the People's Republic of China and its entry into the 
Korean War against the U.S., however, created a new threat in the minds 
of some U.S. politicians: U.S.-educated Chinese students bringing U.S. 
knowledge back to "Red China". Many Chinese college students were almost
 forcibly naturalized, even though they continued to face significant 
prejudice, discrimination, and bullying. One of the most prolific of 
these students was Tsou Tang, who would go on to become the leading 
expert on China and Sino-U.S. relations during the Cold War.[48]
Although
 the Chinese Exclusion Act was repealed in 1943, the law in California 
prohibiting non-whites from marrying whites was not struck down until 
1948, in which the California Supreme Court ruled the ban of interracial
 marriage within the state unconstitutional in Perez v. Sharp.[49][50] 
Some other states had such laws until 1967, when the U.S. Supreme Court 
unanimously ruled in Loving v. Virginia that anti-miscegenation laws 
across the nation are unconstitutional.
Even today,[when?] 
although all its constituent sections have long been repealed, Chapter 7
 of Title 8 of the United States Code is headed "Exclusion of 
Chinese".[51] It is the only chapter of the 15 chapters in Title 8 
(Aliens and Nationality) that is completely focused on a specific 
nationality or ethnic group. Like the following Chapter 8, "The Cooly 
Trade", it consists entirely of statutes that are noted as "Repealed" or
 "Omitted".