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Posted: 2017-01-25T20:59:28Z | Updated: 2017-01-26T17:24:14Z National Park Has Expertly Timed Tweets As Trump Plots Anti-Muslim Policy | HuffPost

National Park Has Expertly Timed Tweets As Trump Plots Anti-Muslim Policy

They want to remind you about the incarceration of Japanese Americans during WWII.
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A day after the Badlands National Park account began tweeting out climate change facts — only to have the tweets later disappear — another national park account was tweeting in a way that many interpreted as a reaction to President Donald Trump ’s new policies. 

The Death Valley National Park Service has been tweeting not only about climate science, but also about the World War II imprisonment of Japanese Americans. 

A park spokeswoman told HuffPost on Thursday that there was “no particular reason” for the tweets relating to Japanese Americans. However, numerous Twitter users and media outlets noticed that the timing seemed perfect, just as Trump prepares to issue an executive order that would restrict the entry of refugees and other immigrants  from a number of Muslim-majority countries due to racist fears.

On Tuesday, the Death Valley NPS account announced that “we will look into” the findings of a study about the impact of climate change on wildlife.

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Then on Wednesday, they began tweeting in memory of the Japanese Americans who were temporarily held in a facility at the Death Valley National Monument headquarters during WWII.

The 65 people were first incarcerated at the Manzanar Relocation Center , but were moved to Death Valley following a riot.

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Twitter
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Twitter

”There was no particular reason for the timing of yesterday’s tweets about Japanese internment camps,” park spokeswoman Abby Wines told HuffPost in an email. “One of our rangers has been doing ranger talks about this topic in Death Valley since 2012 and she has done prior Facebook and Twitter posts about it.”

The history of imprisoning Japanese Americans during World War II — and the role that Death Valley played — is a perfectly reasonable thing for the Death Valley NPS to address at any time. But whether or not it was intentional on the part of the park, the tweets appeared especially relevant in light of Trump’s anti-Muslim, anti-immigrant rhetoric and policies.

Natasha Varner of Densho: The Japanese American Legacy Project , said she definitely sees a connection between historical wrongs and Trump’s proposed policies.

“It is critical that we remember Japanese American incarceration as President Trump moves toward enacting laws that target individuals based on nationality, race, and religion,” Varner told The Huffington Post in an email. “We’ve gone down that road before and it ended in the unconstitutional incarceration of 120,000 innocent men, women, and children.”

And while Varner commended the Death Valley NPS for bringing attention to that dark period of U.S. history, she added, “The fact that tweeting historical facts is now considered a radical act should give us all pause about the state of affairs in our country.”

This story has been updated with comments from a Death Valley National Park spokeswoman.

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Before You Go

Death Valley Super Bloom 2016
(01 of09)
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A visitor walks through a field of Desert Gold wildflowers as they carpet Death Valley, California in a rare super bloom, March 4, 2016. (credit:ROBYN BECK via Getty Images)
(02 of09)
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Death Valley, one of the hottest and driest places on Earth, is carpeted with thousands of colorful wildflowers. The "super bloom" is happening this year for the first time in a decade because of three rainstorms that hit back in October, spurring on wildflower growth. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
(03 of09)
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A Desert Five-spot 'Eremalche rotundifolia' in Death Valley National Park, in Death Valley, California, March 3, 2016. (credit:ROBYN BECK via Getty Images)
(04 of09)
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Desert sunflowers cover the desert in the Badwater Basin area off Highway 178 in Death Valley National Park. (credit:Mark Boster via Getty Images)
(05 of09)
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A pair of visitors tip-toe through a field of Desert Sunflowers during rare 'super bloom' of wildflowers in Death Valley National Park March 4, 2016. (credit:Mark Boster via Getty Images)
(06 of09)
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Yellow wildflowers line the highway through Death Valley National Park, in Death Valley, California, March 4, 2016. (credit:ROBYN BECK via Getty Images)
(07 of09)
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Geraea canescens and Phacelia crenulata offer a color wash across the desert floor during rare 'super bloom' of wildflowers off Highway 190 in Death Valley National Park March 4, 2016. (credit:Mark Boster via Getty Images)
(08 of09)
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This photo shows blooming wildflower Purple Phacelia in Death Valley National Park. Patient sightseers who get out of their cars can see many more species. More than 20 species of wildflower bloom in the park at various elevations. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
(09 of09)
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The usually barren landscape around the popular Sea Level sign along Hwy 190 in Death Valley National Park is now a little more colorful thanks to a rare 'super bloom' of wildflowers March 4, 2016. (credit:Mark Boster via Getty Images)