"Is japanese internment justified" Essays and Research Papers

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    such as our ethnicity‚ intellect‚ or looks to try to find how we are better than some. Hitler did this to the Jews as he wanted the world to have the Aryan race with the Holocaust‚ and America did this to the Japanese during the Japanese internment. The Holocaust and the Japanese internment are very different from one another yet they are both very similar to each other. The Holocaust was the systematic mass slaughter of Jews and other groups deemed inferior by the Nazis. The Holocaust began

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    Japanese Internment: US vs. Canada As they were forced out of their own homes‚ uprooted from the land that they had contributed so dearly into making their own‚ the Japanese found themselves as victims of their own state—Red-flagged for espionage and sabotage in the North American states of Canada and the United States of America (US). These neighboring countries handled the same situation rather differently‚ and despite the many similarities between Japanese internment in the US and Canada during

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    or if you’ll get to come back? Well‚ Japanese Americans didn’t have to imagine it‚ it was their reality. The great majority of these people didn’t do anything to deserve the fate they got. The Japanese-Americans were taken from their homes and put into internments camps all across the United States. After the Bombing of Pearl Harbor President Roosevelt decided to put all Japanese-Americans in Internment Camps because he didn’t trust any of them. In 1942 Japanese-Americans were wrongly taken from their

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    POW Camps During World War II During World War II there were many camps but the most in America were Internment camps and the most in Japan were American POW camps and they both can be compared and contrasted. In Japan in WWII Japanese doctors and military personnel killed‚ tortured and experimented on thousands of American soldiers who flew and fought in Japan this was exercised by dozens of hospitals and military camps (McCurry). As it says the Americans were not treated very fairly over in Japan’s

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    During World War II‚ after Pearl Harbor‚ approximately 120‚000 Japanese-Americans were relocated to internment camps across the United States. They were denied their basic rights due to the war hysteria that swept the nation. After almost 40 years‚ Congress apologized for the unfair treatment that was inflicted. Americans believe that the apology gave an end to the concept of internment camps in the United States. However‚ after the tragic event on September 11‚ 2001‚ the fear of the religion of

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    many Americans became paranoid of espionage from the Japanese. Because of this‚ President Roosevelt issued the internment of all people of Japanese ancestry to provide “national security”. Japanese- Americans were given two days to evacuate‚ and were forced into internment camps (Cooper‚ page 7). Japanese Americans were sent to internment camps because of their nationality‚ and had to undergo many unjust hardships. Although after the internment camps‚ they received compensation‚ it did not erase

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    Internment camps and barbed wire fences. Japan bombed Pearl Harbor and America went into fight or flight‚ they put all Japanese in an internment camp to stop them from having any connections with the Emperor and trying to sabotage America until the war was over. Internment camps and concentrations camps weren’t made for the same thing because‚ Germany was prejudice against the jews and put them in concentration camps out of hate‚ Nazi concentration camps and Jewish internment camps are not essentially

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    Americans were divided about Japanese internment when it was occurring and Americans today are still divided. In the beginning of World War II‚ approximately 120‚000 Japanese Americans were forced to relocate to internment camps. President FDR signed the Executive Order 9066 which made them evacuate the West Coast in which they resided in. This order was signed two months after the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor on December 7th‚ 1941. Some believe that this was necessary to make America more secure

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    The Internment of Japanese Americans by PBS goes into detail about the struggles Japanese-Americans faced during WW11. Japanese-Americans were forced to leave their daily life along the West coast and relocate to internment camps throughout the West side. The cause of their imprisonment was the bombings of Pearl Harbor and the American fear that grew from it. This lead to Executive Order 9066‚ which order people of Japanese descent to be put into camps. “All across the West‚ relocation notices were

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    Melissa Savala Period 4 March 2010 Japanese Internment Essay “Deemed a ‘menace which had to be dealt with‚’ Japanese-Americans were forced into ‘relocation centers.’” After the events of December 7th‚ 1941‚ the west coast of the United States was considered vulnerable to attack by the Japanese. I feel the Japanese internment was wrong‚ because it was based upon fear‚ prejudice‚ and greed. It was also a civil rights violation because the majority of the Japanese detainees were American-born citizens

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