Listen up, folks. When I was a boy, politicians who were sworn to uphold the Constitution failed us, choosing instead to imprison my entire community of 120,000, most of us citizens. When we came out of the camps, we could have given up on America entirely. /1
But despite all we had been through those four years, we still believed in the promise of America. We didn’t seek vengeance, didn’t renounce our citizenship, didn’t call for those who had done this to us to be stripped of their power. We did something else entirely. /2
We doubled down. We worked harder than ever to ensure that America would live up to her values, so that something like what happened to us would not happen to others. We chose engagement over bitterness. Many of us are still fighting to keep our story alive and taught. /3
Today it is tempting to look at those who have betrayed their oaths and say they deserve no place at the table. I understand that sentiment entirely. I felt the same about FDR, the Democrat who put us in the camps, and Earl Warren, the Republican who called for our internment. /4
But democracies only work if we commit ourselves to its highest principles, even and perhaps especially when they are betrayed by our leaders. The country can and will go off the rails, but it is incredibly important that we the people don’t follow the fools off the tracks. /5
After these past four years, where we have teetered again toward dictatorship and the loss of our precious democratic rights, we must now resist the urge to throw it all out because one side has so grievously erred. That is a recipe for chaos and disintegration of our union. /6
We have been through harder times, more challenging obstacles, more dangerous and violent chaos. I have lived such times. We are many steps away from the precipice still, and we can restore America if we do not let ourselves be dragged down with into the muck of others. /7
For people like me, a gay Japanese American, for whom the laws and the Constitution have always come with an asterisk, America has never been equal or fair. Many in the majority are feeling for the first time how disconcerting it can be for leaders to abrogate their oaths. /8
Take it as a moment for empathy. American democracy is only as strong as its people make it. If we give up on its ideals simply because others have, we will lose something very precious, perhaps for all time. To cherish it is to safeguard it. Take it from an old internee.

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More from @GeorgeTakei

21 Nov
A thread.

When this current nightmare is past us, we must not forget that it happened. I have known an America that descended into fascism before, when my entire community on the West Coast, 120,000 of us, were rounded up because leaders made people afraid. We have... /1
to work very hard to ensure history does not repeat, because it will want to. The next time a demagogue comes, with fear and racism as his weapons, we must spot the danger earlier, not grow complacent, not say “both sides are bad.” That is a road to ruin. We must... /2
recommit ourselves, right here and now, to defending our fragile democracy against the forces that rot it from within: misinformation, white supremacy, cult-like adoration of leaders, attacks on expertise and science. We must all become watchers at our posts..../3
Read 4 tweets
27 Oct
The system by which an original minority of privileged, white slave holders could hold on to power in America is known as the Electoral College. And it continues to poison our democracy today. But change is coming. Inexorably, and resoundingly, coming. /1
Very soon, that same Electoral College math, which has handed the White House and the Supreme Court to the political descendants of that original privileged minority, will begin to turn against them, and brutally. Texas looms large. Florida is shifting. /2
Within four years, and perhaps even in 2020, Texas will join the blue state majority and forge an impenetrable electoral one, with 271 electoral college votes out the gate. The GOP knows this, and so it has scrambled to seize what it can, like a robber fleeing a home. /3
Read 6 tweets
22 Oct
With the confirmation of Amy Coney Barrett one step closer today, many are wondering what any of us can do, with Roe v. Wade under threat as never before. I have a few thoughts, which I’ll share in this thread. /1
For many years now, we have seen how conservatives and anti-abortion radicals have trained their sights not only on overturning Roe, but on severely limiting local access to reproductive services, in some cases effectively eliminating it as an option altogether. /2
The right has long understood that politics is local, and that if they want to achieve the kinds of restrictions they envision, they would need to take over state houses, governorships and courthouses around the country. In this they were very effective. / 3
Read 6 tweets
28 Sep
Deep diving a bit, the NYT follow up report notes that Trump has reduced his income by claiming all manner of “consulting fees” as expenses. But the investigation discovered a striking match. /1
Trump’s private records show that his company paid a very specific $747,622 in fees to an unnamed consultant for hotel projects in Hawaii and Vancouver, British Columbia. /2
Guess who owns that company? Ivanka Trump’s public disclosure forms — which she filed when joining the White House staff in 2017 — reveal she had received an IDENTICAL amount through a consulting company she co-owned. /3
Read 4 tweets
14 Sep
I have heard many say that never in their lives have they experienced such fear, that the America they know might be gone for good. Here’s why I have hoped with my head high and my eyes focused ahead. /1 #MondayMotivation #50DaysLeft
When I was just 5 years old, soldiers marched up to our home in Los Angeles and ordered us out. We had done nothing wrong, our crime was looking like the people who had bombed Pearl Harbor. The laws and the Constitution failed to protect us. /2
No one dared stand up for us then. Politicians on both sides, from FDR in the White House to Earl Warren in Sacramento, took advantage of the fear and racism for their own political gain. We lost our home. Our friends lost businesses. We all lost our freedom. /3
Read 10 tweets
16 Aug
People love to say that the USPS operates at a loss. Supporters urge us to go buy stamps. But this won't solve anything. The losses are driven by those trying to dismantle the USPS. In 2006, Congress passed a law that imposed extraordinary costs on the U.S. Postal Service. / 1
The Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act required the USPS to create a $72 billion fund to pay for the cost of its post-retirement health care costs, and they had to do it for 75 years into the future. This burden applies to no other federal agency or private corporation. /2
If the costs of this mandate were removed from the USPS financial statements, it would have reported operating profits in each of the last six years, according to the Institute for Policy Studies. /3
Read 4 tweets

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