AsianAmericans and concentration camps in WWII
In the early 1940's, there was evidence of Japanese-American loyalty and innocence, but the information was not always well known. This, coupled with the factors of war hysteria led to the legal upholding of concentration camps in Korematsu v. U.S. (1944). The injustice was clouded, most immediately by the war, and indirectly by racism at home. The sneak attack on Pearl Harbor left a permanent indent on the way Americans viewed the Japanese. Indeed, it was this one act which thrust the isolationist U.S. into the middle of the world's biggest war. The brutal attack, so close to home, was viewed as sneaky and underhanded. This, added to the fact that the Japanese were rumored to have an amazingly effective spy system on Hawaii and the West Coast, led the Japanese-Americans to become highly
There was prejudice against the Japanese-Americans, but this was slightly understandable since the U. They even went quietly to the concentration camps, having faith in the American system. 112,000 Japanese-Americans-60% of which were U. The job of the political leadership of the time was national defense. The Japanese-Americans also had a decent reputation in general, but people were too occupied with the war to worry about it. According to the Munson Report, 98% of Japanese-Americans were loyal to the U. In that view, it was better to contain a possible problem now, before the possible problem got out of control. There were Japanese loyally fighting in the American army. There were also facts going against the Japanese-Americans. The people were scared of the Japanese, and in a democracy, the people have a voice. In short, there were facts, but the overwhelming war mania pertaining to the encompassing war caused a protective hysteria.
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