amy: are other guest is mike ishii. in 2019 after five japanese-american elders and survivors of u.s. concentration camps demonstrated outside the fort sill army post in oklahoma, where the trump administration planned to indefinitely detain 1400 immigrant and refugee children. >> our elders have stated publicly they are willing to be arrested in defense of the childr -- >> can you describe what is happening now. >> they are wanting to remove us. we have been removed too many times. if that is what it comes to -- >> why don't you people understand? >> we will stay here. >> what do you people understand? >> we understand the history of this country and we are not going to let it happen again. amy: mike ishii you are there with others. you are protesting again against family detention. talk about the background, your own family attained during world war ii and why you are so concerned about this biden shift. >> thank you, amy. it is nice to be back here again. the japanese-american community is still healing the multigene