Japanese Americans were temporarily imprisoned in 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 effects on the internment of Japanese-Americans was negative psychologically. Shock and fear plagued the Japanese-Americans as a result of the internment camps.
Isolated locations
The government feared the japanese americans could not be trusted
One good example - maybe the best example - was the interment of thousands of loyal, tax paying Japanese-Americans during World War II.
The U.S. government put many Japanese Americans in internment camps
Japanese Americans living in the U.S. and Hawaii.
The government's reasoning behind isolating the Japanese-Americans was because the United States felt that they were not trust worthy after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, and that the Japanese-American's might try to attack the Americans.
The U.S. government acknowledged that the Japanese Americans were treated unfairly.