During 1942, the United States government placed over 100,000 persons of Japanese birth or ancestry from their homes on the Pacific coast to poorly constructed relocation centers. I agree with this statement fully, and for many reasons.
During this time the United States were heavily involved in World War 2. Their prime enemy was the Japanese. Every person of Japanese birth or ancestry could, and should be considered dangerous. When the Americans removed the 110,000 Japanese Americans from their homes in 1942, they were only trying to be safe and protect the lives of others. This made the American people feel a lot safer during the time of war.
Another reason why the United States had the right to do this was because all they were doing was taking them away t
The actual relocation camps that the American government placed the Japanese in were actually not all that bad. The relocation centers were located in Utah, Wyoming, Arizona, and some other Western states. In the centers the Japanese were put to work but not for nothing. They were being paid. Sometimes American soldiers would search the Japanese workers just incase they had any weapons or anything that could harm anyone. These were just precautionary measures. Even in the centers the Japanese ran their own "camp" government and set up schools and newspapers. Life in the relocation centers was not even comparable to life in the concentration camps in Germany.
The American government is the most powerful in the world so no one has the right to tell them what not
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