"What did the internment of japanese americans mean" Essays and Research Papers

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    Japanese Internment

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    Despite the question of morality raised by the japanese internment camps‚ the United States government was completely justified in the relocation of the japanese-American citizens given the situation the entire country was placed in during World War II. Critics of the japanese interment must take into consideration the dire position the United States was caught in after the bombing of Pearl Harbor had recently taken place. A number of Japanese-Americans located on the west coast were later discovered

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    Japanese Internment

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    The decision to imprison Japanese Americans was a popular one in 1942. It was supported not only by the government‚ but it was also called for by the press and the people. In the wake of the bombing of Pearl Harbor‚ Hawaii‚ on December 7‚ 1941‚ Japan was the enemy. Many Americans believed that people of Japanese Ancestry were potential spies and saboteurs‚ intent on helping their mother country to win World War II. "The Japanese race is an enemy race‚" General John DeWitt‚ head of the Western

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    Japanese Internment

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    The decision to begin a Japanese internment was initiated because of the distrust people felt towards Japanese after the attack on Pearl Harbor. This was their first military involvement in the war‚ and before Pearl Harbor the war probably seemed like something far away that wouldn’t include the United States in battle. When the first affects of Pearl Harbor started to wear off‚ people become wary of the Japanese. Naturally‚ the Americans felt a distrust towards them after the government from their

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    Ethics of Identity: Japanese-American Internment Since 1893‚ when Fredrick Jackson Turner announced that the American identity was not a byproduct of the first colonists‚ but that it emerged out of the wilderness and only grew with the surfacing of the frontier‚ America has placed a great emphasis on the notion of a national identity. However‚ the paradox of the American identity is that although the United States is a melting pot of many different traditions‚ motives‚ and ideals‚ there are nevertheless

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    Holocaust. The number of Japanese-Americans who were killed in the internment camps is unknown but over 127‚00 were put into the labor camps and about 7% of them died from hunger‚ dehydration or other unnatural causes such as executions. Japanese-Americans and Jews were both excluded of citizenship for either their nationality or religion. Jews were put in these concentration camps from 1933 to around 1945 by Hitler and the German army. Japanese-Americans were put in the internment camps around the year

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    FYI (This is a biased written paper written if one were to defend Japanese Internment) The Necessity of Japanese Internment Much controversy has been sparked due to the internment of the Japanese people. Many ask whether it was justified to internment them. It is a very delicate issue that has two sides‚ those who are against the internment of the Japanese-Americans and those who are for it. With World War II raging in the East‚ America was still‚ for the most part‚ very inactive in the war.

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    the United States internment camps were extremely overcrowded and provided very poor living conditions. According to the reports published by the War Relocation Authority‚ the administering agency in 1943‚ Japanese Americans were housed in tar paper covered barracks with guard towers and barbed wire fences for boundary. Moreover‚ not only were these boundaries just boundaries. They were guarded by military police with rifles‚ and numerous Japanese Americans in these internment camps were killed

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    The Japanese internment that occurred during the 1940s under President Franklin Delano Roosevelt was partially a result of the profiling of Japanese people as spies or untrustworthy similar to the assumptions made about characteristics a woman would have that would make her more likely to be accused of witchcraft. The Internment of Japanese Americans and citizens during World War II exhibits starkingly similar parallels to the witch hunts Arthur Miller examined in his play The Crucible due to the

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    removal of 100‚000 Japanese Americans from their homes and into internment camps. The causes of internment were war hysteria‚ race prejudice and a failure of political leadership. Japanese Americans were subject to harsh conditions‚ unnecessary deaths and lack of education. “Approximately 700 U.C. students withdrew from school in 1942.” Grace Obata Amemiya was a U.C. Berkley student hoping to receive her diploma. But when her and her family were forced to move to an internment camp‚ those hopes were

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    Japanese Internment Camps

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    The Internment of Japanese Americans The internment of Japanese Americans is an example of how one historical event can influence the start of another. The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor created fear throughout the nation. Newspaper articles depicted Americans of Japanese descent as untrustworthy and a danger to the nation. They warned that Japanese Americans were serving as spies for their mother country. As hysteria grew‚ eventually all persons of Japanese descent living on the West Coast‚ including

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