Hong: What's the story, man? How how the hell did you two end up in there together?
Young Jun: Whiskey Hong. Whiskey and sticky and all the rest can wait.

Chief Atwood: Argent O'Hara, stand down.
Big Bill: So this is what we do? Separate mothers from their children.
Chief Atwood: We enforce the law. There were more than a dozen Chinese squatting in a domicile that made for four.
Big Bill: These are not criminals, for fucks sake; they're just regular families.
Chief Atwood: What about this situation seems regular to you, Sergeant, because what I see are a bunch of people crammed together like vermin spreading disease. And it is my job, as it is yours, to clean this mess up.
Big Bill: That boy was two or three years old. What happens to him when his mother is put on a boat?
Chief Atwood: He'll get taken to a nice Christian orphanage. And then, when his mother goes back to China, she goes with a clear message to those who haven't left yet that there is nothing for them here.

I always thought I'd find something better out there. But I was wrong. We have no power outside our own bull.

Father Jun

This deportation center marks a bold new era in our city, one in which we will no longer tolerate the damage being done to our society by the lawless encroachment of the Chinese. Murder, prostitution, and slave labor have gone unchecked for too long. Through the efforts of my office and the San Francisco Police Department, we will put these criminals and interlopers where they belong. Not on our streets. But on boats. Back to whence they came. As mayor, I will work hand in hand with the governor to ensure that the Exclusion Act passes. Together we will restore America to her former glory. And bring prosperity to the honest, hard-working citizens who built this great country of ours.

Walter Buckley

Warrior Season 3 Episode 5 Quotes

This deportation center marks a bold new era in our city, one in which we will no longer tolerate the damage being done to our society by the lawless encroachment of the Chinese. Murder, prostitution, and slave labor have gone unchecked for too long. Through the efforts of my office and the San Francisco Police Department, we will put these criminals and interlopers where they belong. Not on our streets. But on boats. Back to whence they came. As mayor, I will work hand in hand with the governor to ensure that the Exclusion Act passes. Together we will restore America to her former glory. And bring prosperity to the honest, hard-working citizens who built this great country of ours.

Walter Buckley

I always thought I'd find something better out there. But I was wrong. We have no power outside our own bull.

Father Jun