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    Housing Condition Essay

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    Topic sentence: Japanese Americans faced inadequate housing conditions with unconstructed rooms, open latrines along with shower facilities, and a poor water system. The internees lived in barracks, where large families shared 20 by 20 foot rooms (Ng 35). Smaller families consisting of about 4 members resided in 8 by 20 foot rooms. (Ng 35) Housing was overcrowded not everyone had separate rooms as they had before. Living in one room with a family meant higher chances of spreading and…

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    World War II towards Japanese-Americans. It was December 7th, 1941 when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. There were over two-thousand casualties and the Americans were scarred by what happened. Americans had not witnessed an attack on their soil in a very long time. Fear and shock naturally played their role within the hearts of Americans when this attack occurred. From this event, the Executive Order 9066 was born. This order was issued due to the fear of another Japanese-based terrorist…

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    are not protected under our constitution. Trump’s proposal has mimicked World War II-era Japanese-American internment camps as a model for Muslim immigration registry. Have we learned nothing? The United States apologized for locking up Japanese Americans in 1988 and compensated more than 100,000 people of Japanese descent. In 1942, Franklin Delano Roosevelt authorized the internment of 110,000 Japanese Americans for the duration of World War II. At the time of the order, the nation was in…

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    War has begun. The 28th of July 1914, will be synonymous with pain, anger, and destruction, and we will sit by in Russia and watch it all happen. We will sit at the top of the world and the depths simultaneously, watching from the highest seat, while our good strong men be sent away to die in the millions… If our Tsar asks this of me, I will go, and you; you will be in my heart until my end. I love you, forever and you live in my heart always. Here at the factory, they’ve been preparing for it…

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    executive order, ordering the relocation of all Americans of Japanese ancestry to concentration camps in the interior of the United States. The interior was a better place because it was feared that they might try to contact the Japanese submarines if they were on the coast. They were forced to leave their homes and farms and relocate to camps surrounded by barbed wire and guards. Almost two-thirds of the interns were Nisei, or Japanese Americans born in the United States. It made no difference…

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    unnecessary because many of the Japanese Americans were fighting in the war for the United States. Also this order took away the Constitutional rights of American citizens, the foundation of the United States of America. Lastly one of the main factors President Roosevelt used to order this order was listed under false pretenses and highly exaggerated to the point where Roosevelt felt it necessary to order the Executive Order 9066. During the early years of World War II, Japanese Americans were…

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    Japanese-American Relocation This article gives a broad overview of the time when the Japanese-Americans were relocated. Two months after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. The Executive Order 9066 was signed, ordering all Japanese-American living on the west coast to ten internment camps. Normal family structure was upended in the camp and the living conditions were not the greatest. The Japanese-Americans were allowed back to the west coast in 1945-46. In 1988, Congress gave restitution payments…

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    Japanese-Americans were interned during World War II because after the bombing at Pearl Harbor in 1941, the majority of Americans used their fear of another Japanese attack to display an extreme level of prejudice. On February 19, 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed and issued Executive Order 9066. This order called for the clearing and deportation of all Japanese Americans from military areas. According to Black, it was the Japanese citizens’ responsibility to follow the exclusion…

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    Long/Mr. Young 2nd/3rd Hour Japanese American Internment In 1941, the Japanese flew into the huge U.S. naval base Pearl Harbor and bombed it. The attack killed hundreds of Americans and destroyed several warships. After the attack, the U.S. declared war on Japan and joined the Allied forces in World War II ( The government then took all the Japanese Americans and sent all of them to internment camps. This essay answers the question if the internment of the Japanese Americans was justified. The…

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    February 19, 1942 early World War II, after the bombing of Pearl Harbor president Franklin D. Roosevelt was looking for a way to address the nation's fear with Japanese attacks. Roosevelt came up with the Executive Order 9066 which authorized the relocation of anyone with Japanese ancestry or who descend from Japan. About 120,000 Japanese people were put in one of the ten internment camps that were located in California, Idaho, Utah, Arizona, Wyoming, Colorado, and Arkansas. The ten…

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