Julia Louis-Dreyfus gave a strong message about refugees in her SAG acceptance speech

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President Donald Trump and his week of executive orders did not go unnoticed at the 2017 Screen Actors Guild awards this Sunday.

Julia Louis-Dreyfus won the first award of the night for Outstanding Performance by Female Actor in a Comedy Series for her show Veep and immediately celebrated the win with an impassioned message of acceptance for refugees around the world trying to flee from desperate situations. 

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"Whether the Russians did or did not hack the voting of tonight's SAG awards, I look out on the million or million and a half people in this room and I say, this award is legitimate and I won," she jokingly began, mimicking the president's speech. "I am the winner. The winner is me. Landslide."

But her joke only set the stage for her to get personal about the executive order President Trump signed on Friday, which drastically cuts the number of refugees the U.S. will accept and bars citizens of seven Islamic-majority countries from entering America.

"I want you all to know that I'm the daughter of an immigrant," Dreyfus said. "My father fled religious persecution in Nazi-occupied France. I'm an American patriot [and I] love this country. Because I love this country, I am horrified by its blemishes and this immigrant ban is a blemish and it's un-American."

The gathered actors applauded her strong take against Trump's measures. She then read a statement from the Writer's Guild of America, noting she agreed with it.

"Our guilds are unions of storytellers who have always welcomed those from the nations of varying beliefs with just you share their creativity with America," she read. "We are grateful for them. We stand with them and we will fight for them. Thank you very much. Thank you."

Louis-Dreyfus' statement came only hours after she shared similar objections to what many consider to be a ban on Muslims on her Twitter account. 

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