German view on World War II "In Germany, they came for the communist first, they did not talk because they were not communists, then they came to the Jews and then they I came to a member, I did not speak because I was not a partner, then they came to a Catholic, because I was not a Catholic, did not talk - MartinNiemöller After the World War I, the world A serious economic depression has occurred in most areas of the country.
This book focuses on the atrocities of the two world wars - one was committed by Germans and one by Americans. The author examines how the US military handles all kinds of crimes and explains atrocities from the perspective of Germany and the United States. These two events were contextualized within several frameworks: the International War Law, the war crimes in World War II, and the overall memory of Germany and the United States in World War II. Americans, Germans, and War Crimes Justice: Law, Memory, and "Good War" provide a new perspective on the complex and delicate theme of World War II war crimes and justice
German-American detention refers to the detention of German citizens and German and American citizens in the United States during the First World War and the Second World War. The legal basis of detention during World War II was presidential announcement 2526, which was enacted by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt under the authority of the Aliens and Incitement Act. When the United States entered World War I, Germans were automatically classified as "enemy aliens". Two of the four major camps during the First World War were in Hot Springs, Georgia and Oglethorpe Fort, Georgia. A. Mitchell Palmer Attorney General attaches as follows. "All foreigners being detained by the government are considered enemies and their property is treated accordingly."
The term "enemy alien" refers to a country that is in war with Canada, or a person related to that state. During World War I, this includes immigrants from Germany, the Austrian-Hungarian Empire, the Ottoman Empire, Bulgaria, and during the Second World War people are from Japanese, German, Italian did. Inmates also confiscated their property, but most of them were not refunded at the end of the war. During detention, they are working on large scale workforce - even part of the golf course in Banff National Park - and building roads, tidying up shrubs, trimming, and cutting and digging work I was asked to engage. Their wages are less than half of the daily wages of other workers.