For over a century, the United States was one of the most influential countries in the world. However, each country has committed a mistake in the past. In our country's history, a group had to endure a terrible injustice: African-American slavery, Native American expulsion, and immigration, women, homosexuals and all others Discrimination against minorities. During World War II, when the government elected to move Japanese residents to camps, the government crossed the border to defend the country and violate human rights. The U.S. government shows more content about the behavior of Japanese Americans and Japanese people.
Unfortunately, Japanese Americans living on the west coast have no time to show what their loyalty is: they are expelled from that area. They were brought to remote areas in the barren areas of the country. The living environment of refugee camps is at best inadequate. Residents are forced to endure extreme cold and extreme heat, narrow living space, poor diet and indoor piping shortage. They have always been under armed military and police surveillance. They are considered prisoners
Another factor in this case is racial discrimination. Even before America entered World War II, Japanese Americans were discriminated by the government. Five days before the presidential command to allow Japanese to withdraw from the West Coast, Lieutenant John L. DeWitt speculated that there is a possibility that Japanese Americans will take action against the United States and " There was no. " Signs of anxiety and confirmation indicate that such behavior is taken (RTAP, 119). If people do not act in the United States, people believe that this can not be avoided, so it will be a situation of non-win for the Japanese and the Americans. People were also deprived of citizenship before the war (RTAP, 121) At the camps they were obliged to give up loyalty by loyal questionnaires.
The detention in Japan and the United States is a camp of many Japanese Americans and their descendants during the Second World War (especially after the Pearl Harbor attack) and is known as "war resettlement camp". In 1942, the US government resettled and detained about 120,000 Japanese American citizens and Japanese descendants in third country settlement camps. The detention continued for about four years and was endorsed by the government and the president. The last relocation camp was closed in January 1946 and World War II ended officially after five months.
The detention of Japanese Americans was forced by the US government to move thousands of Japanese Americans to the camp during the Second World War. This behavior is the culmination of the federal government's long-standing racist and discriminatory treatment of Asian immigrants and their descendants, which began with a restrictive immigration policy in the second half of the 19th century. After the Japanese plane attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, the US Department of War may act as a destroyer in spite of the lack of firm evidence supporting this view I doubted. Several political leaders suggested collecting Japanese Americans, especially people living on the west coast, and placing them in the inland detention center. Power struggle between the US Department of Justice and war stations supporting detention for immigrant innocent civilians
During the Second World War, Japanese American on the West coast made an illegal act at an inland refugee camp. It is wrong to believe that Japanese immigrants and Japanese Americans help Japanese people invade the United States. When they were taken from their home on the west coast their property was generally taken away (or they found it impossible to maintain their property from the camp). During the Vietnam War, the government monitored domestic groups and people who opposed the war.
When is the historic time when civil liberties were postponed during the war? What are the implications of these decisions on American society?