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Alexander Hamilton had visionary ways of governing, and transforming ways to create the American political landscape. He believed in Democracy, for the people and to the people.
Shinto was a religion that the Japanese believed in before Buddhism.
Certainly the Japanese Naval leaders believed they could cripple the US Naval fleet but they messed up when they failed to bomb the aircraft carriers in Pearl Harbor. They also did not realize the Americans had other ships elsewhere and could also rebuild or build new ships. The Japanese thought Americans were wusses and dopes. They did not understand their enemy.
The Japanese, like their German allies believed that Americans in general were soft and not used to the hardships of soldiering. That the American's higher standards of living had spoiled them, and they would easily be defeated.
The Japanese believed that they could beat America. They were wrong.
Japanese were interned in WW2 not WW1. German & Austria-Hungarian citizens were interned in WW1. German & Italian citizens were interned in WW2. It is a common international practice to intern the citizens of enemy nations during times of war. The real question was if American citizens of Japanese ancestry (or Japanese citizens with US 'green cards') should be interned by the American government because of the threat of disloyality. The US government believed that the Japanese-American population was more likely to be disloyal than the German-American or Italian-American population. Also these others were much too large to intern.
he believed the american declaring independence was the cause.
Fredrick Olmsted
The Executive Order 9066 sent over 100,000 American Japanese to internment camps. The American Japanese people lost their homes, businesses, possessions and legal freedom. FDR issued this order because American foolishly believed they were spies for Japan. Later on the Supreme Court ruled this order as being unconstitutional. Canada did the same thing to the Canadian Japanese.
“Even strong American brands like Motorola are falsely believed to be Japanese,” said Jesse Chen, GenX2Z practice lead, “probably because the name sounds Japanese.” Forty two percent of students surveyed thought Motorola was Japanese compared to 37.9 percent who said it was American. reference: http://www.marketresearchworld.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1258
After the attacks on Pearl Harbor, many white Americans began to distrust Japanese Americans and their patriotic loyalties. Also, the Japanese Navy's location was unknown at the time, and thus many believed that a Japanese attack on the west coast could have occurred at any time. Many white Americans believed that Japanese Americans could provide intelligence for the Imperial Japanese forces, and that if the Japanese Navy were to attack the west coast, Japanese Americans would join the invaders and help fight against the United States. Many white Americans believed that the internment was justified, and the US Supreme Court agreed. In Korematsu v. United States, the Supreme Court ok'd the internment of Japanese Americans, citing public safety and protection against espionage to be a valid reason for internment and the taking of civil rights and liberties from Japanese Americans.
The United States government evacuated Japanese American citizens to 'camps' further inland due to the fact that they believed that some of the Japanese American citizens were spying on American military facilities, such as shipping yards. It it interesting to note that German citizens on the east-coast were not evacuated further inland. Some historians today believe it may have been due to racism to Asians.