The effects on the internment of Japanese-Americans was negative psychologically. Shock and fear plagued the Japanese-Americans as a result of the internment camps.
Japanese Americans were temporarily imprisoned in isolated locations
Japanese Americans living in the U.S. and Hawaii.
The US government felt that the Japanese Americans might spy for Japan and the government sent them to internment camps.
Executive Order 9066
It was a diplomacy.
The U.S. sent Japanese Americans to Internment camps, right after Pearl Harbor, so they could keep an eye on them.
Isolated locations
Japanese Americans were temporarily imprisoned in isolated locations
Japanese Americans were temporarily imprisoned in isolated locations
Japanese Americans were temporarily imprisoned in isolated locations
Isolated locations
The government feared the japanese americans could not be trusted
The effects on the internment of Japanese-Americans was negative psychologically. Shock and fear plagued the Japanese-Americans as a result of the internment camps.
The U.S. government put many Japanese Americans in internment camps
In the year 1942 there was an atmosphere of hysteria, President Roosevelt, encouraged by officials at all levels of the federal government, authorized the internment of tens of thousands of American citizens of Japanese ancestry and resident aliens from Japan
Japanese Americans living in the U.S. and Hawaii.
the fear that Japanese-Americans might betray the U.S.
Japanese Americans and Canadians were put interned due to fears by the government that they would spy for their homeland.