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Independent topical source of current affairs, opinion and issues, featuring stories making news in Canada from immigrants, newcomers, minorities & ethnic communities' point of view and interests.

Asian Invasion: Land Owners and Hastings Park

asian invasion: Vancouver resident Kai Nagata u2019s grandfather was held at Hastings Park pictured above before he was transferred to a long-term Archives of for foreign money in Vancouver real estate that aired in a 1989 segment produced by BCTV will sound familiar to people paying attention to today u2019s conversations about the same issue. credit Global 1 of 4 2 of 4A message was recently scribbled across an overpass in Delta, according to Georgia Asian. Stop the Asian invasion, it reads. By that time, merchants were well-established at locations along Carrall Street pictured above in 1897 but the new laws put them at a distinct disadvantage to white land owners. credit James Matthews / Vancouver cartoon published in a Vancouver newspaper in 1907 illustrated white residents u2019 unhappiness with how they perceived the living conditions of Chinese Fraser the Second World War, Japanese Canadians saw the government confiscate and auction their property while they were held in internment camps. Last summer, in Nanaimo, a real-estate advertisement that included Chinese writing was spray-painted over with a swastika and the words Go away. And according to members of Vancouver's various Chinese and Asian communities, there are other, more numerous but less-visible examples. These are visible manifestations of a racism that has grown out of British Columbians' frustration with real-estate prices that have surpassed the affordability of many long-time residents. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.