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Yep, and the Japanses, when us Americans herded them all up and put them in horrible camps during WWII...
I think some people are mistaking forced segregation with natural tendencies to live around what is familiar. The difference is one is forced the other is choice. People who live in a community of liked minded people ( Suburbanites happy in the suburbs, farmers happy in the country, Christians more content in churches of their denominations, orthodox Jews more comfortable worshiping in orthodox churches. ((This is not the rule, i know people mingle all the time!)) \\) doesn't mean true segregation because these people mingle, marry, work with and so on with other cultures and races. There is little to no hostility towards other races or cultures as a whole.
This is fine, natural even. It is necessary to have a since of community and a strong social bond with familiarities that unite people.
It is when people take things to the extremes, or when it becomes an actual law or policy rather than natural gravitation of comfort zones, is when it becomes a problem. Such as the segregated proms. This was a policy, inflicted onto others. It wasn't natural. people WANTED To mingle but were denied.
That isn't kids hanging out with kids of their own culture, this was a school activity that actively divided groups by social pressure from a dominate culture.
big difference.