Racial profiling is discrimination against race. Many people think this is wrong, and many people think that is correct. Some people think that this helps to identify those who can do bad things, others may think that it is wrong. Ethnic characterization has become a major problem for many years. Major incidents such as Pearl Harbor attacks and attacks on twin towers have made things even worse. Because people who are not from the United States are considered problems.
Comparison with Pearl Harbor on 11th September 2001 also failed in several respects. First, Pearl Harbor is an attack on military goals. The September 11 attack targeted innocent, unarmed civilians. Comparing the two, this is definitely a big difference. When Pearl Harbor was attacked, they were able to raise the plane to counter the Japanese attackers, and on September 11 attacks they were not in time to prevent the attack. Another difference is that Americans at Pearl Harbor base on December 7 saw that the plane is flying over the sea; they noticed a big meatball beside the site (this is It is the red dot of the national flag of Japan). When people saw these planes coming, they knew what was going on, especially when they knew the Japanese plane they were traveling for. This is another reason it can be classified as a difference between 12/7/41 and 9/11/1
Japanese immigrants were rejected US citizenship during World War II because before the US entry restrictions following September 11 terrorist attacks were afraid of infidelity after attacking Pearl Harbor. As a result, during the Second World War the government intercepted over 100,000 Japanese immigrants and Japanese American citizens as countermeasures against potential Japanese spies, which constituted a racial image. In the late 1990s, race profiling was politicized when police and other law enforcement agencies were censored by disproportionate traffic jams by a few motorists. Researchers at the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) provide extensive evidence for race profiling. Blacks account for only 42% of New Jersey's driving population, but they account for 79% of the state parking lots.