ON FEBRUARY 28, 1882, Sen. John F. Miller of California introduced a bill to exclude Chinese immigrant laborers from the country. For two hours, the former Union general presented his case. The Chinese, Miller said, posed an imminent danger, in part because they came from a “degraded and inferior race.” Other senators jumped in, calling them “rats,” “beasts,” and “swine.” Oriental civilization, they claimed, was incompatible with the United States and threatened to corrupt the nation.
Chinese immigrants also posed an economic danger to white workers, Miller said, through their “machine-like” ways and “muscles of iron.” The U.S. laborer, whether on the farm, the shoe bench, or the factory floor, simply could not compete with these low-paid counterparts. A vote for Chinese exclusion was thus a vote for both American…
