The US government felt that the Japanese Americans might spy for Japan and the government sent them to internment camps.
Japanese Americans living in the U.S. and Hawaii.
Americans thought Japanese Americans were helping japan during ww2
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.
Korematsu v. United States
The Japanese were removed from the west coast because the US government wanted to make sure that none of the Japanese that lived in the west coast could sabotage a base/ bases so the Japanese could invade the west coast. Even though I don't agree with this, I do believe that it was necessary for the time. The Japanese got fair treatment in the camps, they DID NOT get treated badly like what the Nazis did.
The U.S. government acknowledged that the Japanese Americans were treated unfairly.
The U.S. government acknowledged that the Japanese Americans were treated unfairly.
The government feared the japanese americans could not be trusted
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.
Democratic
Americans thought Japanese Americans were helping japan during ww2
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.
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