If they were already in uniform, they fought.
After the attack on Pearl Harbor (December 7, 1941) many people started discriminating against Japanese Americans because the Japanese were the people who bombed Pearl Harbor. People looked at the Japanese Americans as spies and untrustworthy. FDR saw this in people and relocated the Japanese Americans to camps in Wyoming to "protect" them. Mexicans and African Americans were not relocated and looked at as spies. People still discriminated againsts these ethnics groups but not to the lenghts as which they did to the Japanese Americans.
After the event of Pearl Harbor, Americans felt threatened by the Japanese-Americans. The Americans thought the Japanese-Americans on the East coast had contact with their kind in Japan and that they should cut that conact. They immedietly started moving all Japanese-Americans to interment camps all over, but left them the choice of either going to the camps, or going to Japan. Not many moved back to Japan, feeling defient and angry. The Japanese-Americans lived in their camp for under ten years, and then where allowed to leave.
After the bombing the Americans, thinking that the Japanese Americans could be spies, set up some mini camps and sent them there. So to simplify my answer the public had little to no interaction to the Japanese Americans after the bombing. The strange thing is, though, there were no camps in Hawaii during this event.
The Japanese
Executive Order 9066 .
the Japanese bombed pearl harbor and we thought all Japanese were evil
If you are talking about during WWII, it was because the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor and the Americans feared that they were there to kill or bomb them, much like today with people from the Middle East.
The Japanese-Americans didn't get lot or much money in WW2 during Peal Harbor Attack.
After the attack on Pearl Harbor (December 7, 1941) many people started discriminating against Japanese Americans because the Japanese were the people who bombed Pearl Harbor. People looked at the Japanese Americans as spies and untrustworthy. FDR saw this in people and relocated the Japanese Americans to camps in Wyoming to "protect" them. Mexicans and African Americans were not relocated and looked at as spies. People still discriminated againsts these ethnics groups but not to the lenghts as which they did to the Japanese Americans.
After the bombing of Pearl Harbor, many distrusted Japanese Americans and called for them to be arrested. Many were put in internment camps during World War II. This was probably done because some were in position to steal the property of Japanese Americans.
After the event of Pearl Harbor, Americans felt threatened by the Japanese-Americans. The Americans thought the Japanese-Americans on the East coast had contact with their kind in Japan and that they should cut that conact. They immedietly started moving all Japanese-Americans to interment camps all over, but left them the choice of either going to the camps, or going to Japan. Not many moved back to Japan, feeling defient and angry. The Japanese-Americans lived in their camp for under ten years, and then where allowed to leave.
After the bombing the Americans, thinking that the Japanese Americans could be spies, set up some mini camps and sent them there. So to simplify my answer the public had little to no interaction to the Japanese Americans after the bombing. The strange thing is, though, there were no camps in Hawaii during this event.
Japanese internment camps sprung up during World War Two. These camps relocated 110,000 Japanese Americans on the West Coast. The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor was a factor in the development of these camps.
Pearl Harbor was a Naval Operation.
The Japanese
Because our government was in fear of spies after the bombing of pearl harbor. Therefore, no other Japanese Americans could be trusted a little afterwards merely because of this fear.
The Executive Order 9066 is a presidential order that was signed and issued by President Roosevelt on February 19, 1942. It allowed areas to be cleared as military zones and also the deportation of Japanese Americans.