The Johnson Reed Act, named after Congressman Albert Johnson and Senator David Reed, was not created to manage a large influx of immigrants. Instead, it was designed to promote exclusionism and maintain America's demographic as white and capitalist. After World War II, the U.S. utilized the ideologies from this act to shape immigration policies, evident in the Displaced Persons Act of 1948. This act favored certain European refugees fleeing communism while discriminating against European Jews who had survived the Holocaust, as they were perceived as sympathetic to communism.

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