Internment.
No, during wartime special acts against civilians and citizens are consider war measure acts and change one's constitutional rights.
Because america was in war with japenese and once the americans captured the japenese,they putted them into concentration camps _________________________ Japanese Americans were easier to identify than German Americans, so they could be interned easier. The US had a history of racism, especialli against Orientals, 1882 the Asian Exculsion act took away citizenship and all right of ownership from all Oriental Americans, the internent was just another part of the process.
Fear. After a huge number of Japanese immigrated to the US, people felt threatened because of farm and labor competition. A wave of anti-Jap prejudice spread, mostly in California. After Pearl Harbor, some people suspected Japanese-Americans were spies sending intelligence to Japan. Officials were concerned that the Japanese, especially the ethnic, would be more loyal to their homeland than to America. The Niihau Incident, immediately after Pearl Harbor, involved a Japanese and two Hawaiian-born ethnic Japanese on the island of Ni'ihau violently freeing a downed and captured Japanese naval airman, attacking their fellow Ni'ihau islanders in the process. Source: Wikipedia
the process of modern exploration and european colonization of the americans
They were not considered part of the political process, so none attended.
The thinking was that among the population of Japanese Americans on the west coast there had to be spies, so the government collected everyone and put them in the camps. The people lost farms, homes, and businesses in the process. It wasn't right that the government did this.
due process
No, during wartime special acts against civilians and citizens are consider war measure acts and change one's constitutional rights.
Transduction is the process by which DNA is transferred from one bacterium to another by a Virus
Because america was in war with japenese and once the americans captured the japenese,they putted them into concentration camps _________________________ Japanese Americans were easier to identify than German Americans, so they could be interned easier. The US had a history of racism, especialli against Orientals, 1882 the Asian Exculsion act took away citizenship and all right of ownership from all Oriental Americans, the internent was just another part of the process.
Each cell specializes to perform a relatively restricted range of functions through a process that is known as differentiation. Cells can replicate independently.
substantive due process
Fear. After a huge number of Japanese immigrated to the US, people felt threatened because of farm and labor competition. A wave of anti-Jap prejudice spread, mostly in California. After Pearl Harbor, some people suspected Japanese-Americans were spies sending intelligence to Japan. Officials were concerned that the Japanese, especially the ethnic, would be more loyal to their homeland than to America. The Niihau Incident, immediately after Pearl Harbor, involved a Japanese and two Hawaiian-born ethnic Japanese on the island of Ni'ihau violently freeing a downed and captured Japanese naval airman, attacking their fellow Ni'ihau islanders in the process. Source: Wikipedia
the process of modern exploration and european colonization of the americans
The reason then is very similar to post-9/11. America was hit at Pearl Harbor, on our "home" soil - though off-mainland. Americans were terrified Japanese living in the US or Japanese-Americans would aid and abet Japanese living in Japan, letting another attack happen on US soil. Bush reacted in a similar way toward "terrorists" after 9/11---"put them all" at Guatanamo Bay without due process because their countrymen had attacked the US on home soil.
Yes the Japanese still have their tea ceremonies to this day as a spiritual awakening process.
Yes, the Japanese art form of kintsugi involves repairing broken pottery with lacquer mixed with powdered gold, silver, or platinum. This practice values the beauty of imperfection and honors the history of the object, rather than disguising or discarding it.