The term "survivor" in this context is bull***** The only people who didn't survive the camps died of natural causes.
I don't have a problem with how they fought it. I do have a problem with how they violated the rights of U.S. citizens. This is one of the strangest arguments I've ever seen on this board.tmaggies said:
I am proud of the way our leaders and country fought in WW2. Lord help us next time!
aalan94 said:
The term "survivor" in this context is bull***** The only people who didn't survive the camps died of natural causes.
Mulberrywildman said:aalan94 said:
The term "survivor" in this context is bull***** The only people who didn't survive the camps died of natural causes.
This is the correct response to this thread that completely ends the discussion, outside of the normal virtue signaling by a couple particular posters.
ABATTBQ87 said:Sapper Redux said:Mulberrywildman said:aalan94 said:
The term "survivor" in this context is bull***** The only people who didn't survive the camps died of natural causes.
This is the correct response to this thread that completely ends the discussion, outside of the normal virtue signaling by a couple particular posters.
Amazing how arguing "detaining American citizens for no reason = bad" is virtue signaling to you.
Quit being stupid, you know dang well that there was a reason for the west coast Japanese to be put into camps.
ABATTBQ87 said:Sapper Redux said:Mulberrywildman said:aalan94 said:
The term "survivor" in this context is bull***** The only people who didn't survive the camps died of natural causes.
This is the correct response to this thread that completely ends the discussion, outside of the normal virtue signaling by a couple particular posters.
Amazing how arguing "detaining American citizens for no reason = bad" is virtue signaling to you.
Quit being stupid, you know dang well that there was a reason for the west coast Japanese to be put into camps.
Summon the ghost of that fine democrat FDR and ask him, but here is his Executive order:Sapper Redux said:ABATTBQ87 said:Sapper Redux said:Mulberrywildman said:aalan94 said:
The term "survivor" in this context is bull***** The only people who didn't survive the camps died of natural causes.
This is the correct response to this thread that completely ends the discussion, outside of the normal virtue signaling by a couple particular posters.
Amazing how arguing "detaining American citizens for no reason = bad" is virtue signaling to you.
Quit being stupid, you know dang well that there was a reason for the west coast Japanese to be put into camps.
What's the reason for putting American citizens in camps without trials beyond racism in this case?
CanyonAg77 said:
Exactly, the decision was not made in a vacuum. A few Japanese were disloyal, and the vast majority were living on the area most likely to be invaded
It shouldn't when it comes to protecting the rights of U.S. citizens.Kaa98 said:
It clearly did matter.
It also violated the Constitution. And for those of us who insist that the Constitution is paramount, we shouldn't ignore it, or simply wave our hands about it, when it suits our convenience or when it seems "reasonable" to violate it.Sapper Redux said:
It would absolutely make sense to investigate people with connections to Japan. It makes no sense to just throw American citizens into detention because of their race.
Which is why I prefaced my statement with 'not the same'.Danger Mouse said:
Being allowed to face ostracism in one's community is not comparable in an apples to apples perspective to being round up by the government and placed in internment camps.
I would have no problem had this been consistently applied. Particularly when there were Nazi sympathizers throughout the country.
This is an easy statement to make, especially 80 years later. Yes, the federal government did an immense wrong to these people. I don't know how a society is to take precautions against subversive activity from people who might be inclined to such activity, especially in a time when the nation had just been attacked in those circumstances and there was a palpable anger in all facets of American life.Sapper Redux said:
It would absolutely make sense to investigate people with connections to Japan. It makes no sense to just throw American citizens into detention because of their race.
As it turned out, none.Danger Mouse said:
You did for sure. Which begs the question as to what purpose did it serve as it pertains to the topic at hand?
So why not imprison all Japanese Americans and German-Americans? And Communist Americans? And Italian Americans? Former Bund members?Cinco Ranch Aggie said:
How would we view FDR had this interment of Americans of Japanese ancestry not happened, and then one or a group of them turned out to be the spies this action was intended to prevent? And a bunch of Americans then died as a result of said spy activities? In our current times, I suppose we could pat ourselves on the backs for not being racist.
Japan bombed us and brought us officially into WWII. We know now they had spies operating in Hawaii but I am unsure when we actually became aware of that. It seems reasonable to me to take precautions against further American deaths. Did we take it too far? Absolutely from the armchair 80 years later, but at the time I am sure many thought it a reasonable action.
My grandfather HATED all things Japanese until his death in 2002. I suppose that makes him a racist? Never mind being ripped away from your family, missing the birth of your second daughter, and then having your ship sunk beneath you. He had plenty of reasons to hate them, and I won't judge anyone from that era for it.
Oh, and while not the same, German Americans faced ostracism in their communities. This was what my great grandparents and grandmother went through in Spring, TX
Cinco Ranch Aggie said:
I know I'm speaking of "what-ifs" that never happened. I also stated that what the federal government did to Japanese-Americans was wrong. History records that none of the people that FDR rounded up did anything untoward in this country.
But I'll put it into more modern terms. If there is an American of Muslim heritage (not talking about one of Joe Biden's terrorists he's allowing into this country though non-existent borders) who happens to radicalize and create a situation that will kill 2000 Americans (regardless of their actual heritage) - and this could have been stopped, are you okay with those 2000 casualties so long as we don't violate the Constitution?
Just curious here. There is no good solution to this "what-if?" problem. The Muslim comparison is the closest thing that I can come up with, yet it fails because we are not at all-out war with any Muslim country as we were with Japan. Violating the constitutional rights of citizens was (and is) a terrible thing, but I'd say that violating the rights of those who might have been killed would be equally if not more so terrible.
I don't agree with that at allQuote:
I think we can all agree that if we have fewer guns in the country, we'd have fewer gun deaths. I'm still not going to allow the government to violate the second amendment
ABATTBQ87 said:I don't agree with that at allQuote:
I think we can all agree that if we have fewer guns in the country, we'd have fewer gun deaths. I'm still not going to allow the government to violate the second amendment
You are entitled to your view. Like I said, I see this as a difficult decision, but at the end of the day I am coming down on the side of saving lives over not wronging people based only on their ancestry.Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:Cinco Ranch Aggie said:
I know I'm speaking of "what-ifs" that never happened. I also stated that what the federal government did to Japanese-Americans was wrong. History records that none of the people that FDR rounded up did anything untoward in this country.
But I'll put it into more modern terms. If there is an American of Muslim heritage (not talking about one of Joe Biden's terrorists he's allowing into this country though non-existent borders) who happens to radicalize and create a situation that will kill 2000 Americans (regardless of their actual heritage) - and this could have been stopped, are you okay with those 2000 casualties so long as we don't violate the Constitution?
Just curious here. There is no good solution to this "what-if?" problem. The Muslim comparison is the closest thing that I can come up with, yet it fails because we are not at all-out war with any Muslim country as we were with Japan. Violating the constitutional rights of citizens was (and is) a terrible thing, but I'd say that violating the rights of those who might have been killed would be equally if not more so terrible.
1. I'm not okay with it.
2. I'm still don't regret not violating the Constitution.
I think we can all agree that if we have fewer guns in the country, we'd have fewer gun deaths. I'm still not going to allow the government to violate the second amendment.
Around the world where they don't have a Second Amendment.Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:ABATTBQ87 said:I don't agree with that at allQuote:
I think we can all agree that if we have fewer guns in the country, we'd have fewer gun deaths. I'm still not going to allow the government to violate the second amendment
There is some evidence to support this claim. There would be fewer suicides by gun.
great, more suicides by hanging or overdoses, hooray liberals!Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:ABATTBQ87 said:I don't agree with that at allQuote:
I think we can all agree that if we have fewer guns in the country, we'd have fewer gun deaths. I'm still not going to allow the government to violate the second amendment
There is some evidence to support this claim. There would be fewer suicides by gun.
ABATTBQ87 said:great, more suicides by hanging or overdoses, hooray liberals!Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:ABATTBQ87 said:I don't agree with that at allQuote:
I think we can all agree that if we have fewer guns in the country, we'd have fewer gun deaths. I'm still not going to allow the government to violate the second amendment
There is some evidence to support this claim. There would be fewer suicides by gun.