WI: Congress doesn't pass the Chinese Exclusion Act

So I was on Wikipedia today, and I notice that today is the 125th anniversary of the passage of the Chinese Exclusion Act, which banned Chinese immigration to the US. It was a response to nativist and racist sentiment towards Chinese immigrants who were being exploited as cheap laborers.

So, what would the US look like today if the burgeoning trusts' desire for cheap labor prevailed over racist sentiments, and the act was not passed?
 
Well, unless you change the underlying culture in which any threat to Whiteness generated a ridiculous panic, you'll get reversion to a similar TL. Even with the Exclusion Act, Congress still passed the Immigration Act of 1924 that placed redudant restrictions on Chinese and other immigrants, because the politicians got all worked up again that too many Asians were slipping through the cracks.

I think the biggest difference actually would have to do with the Act's provision that made already present Chinese immigrants permanent aliens, by excluding them from U.S. citizenship. Remove that, and you have 105,000 people who were segregated in OTL, but could assimilate ITTL. As those people start to have native-born children who are educated alongside white children, the pressure to segregate starts to wilt, just as it did for the once-excluded Italians, Jews, etc., in OTL.
 
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