The California govenment yielded to a desire to take the land away from the Japanese farmers
the fear that Japanese-Americans might betray the U.S.
There were internement camps because Americans were afraid there were Japanese American's were spying for the Japanese so all Japanese even innocent people were forced into camps just because they were from a similar spectrum of background as the pilots who had bombed Pearl Harbor.
because the Japanese attacked Americans on US soil.
the japanese were really mad because of the war so they decided to attack pearl harbor so they could show the americans who is better.
It started it, for the US. First sign of Japanese attacking USA. BIGGEST reason behind the internment camps of Japanese Canadians/ Americans in N.A
they were put into camps were they had to live away from public for safety reason as the USA were paranoid of other attacks. They were not treated badly in these camp but just kept away from the publicThey were put in internment camps because the government thought there were spies. Only those Japanese and Americans of Japanese descent who lived on the West Coast of the United States were interned. The Japanese and Americans of Japanese descent in Hawaii were not incarcerated!
they were put into camps were they had to live away from public for safety reason as the USA were paranoid of other attacks. They were not treated badly in these camp but just kept away from the publicThey were put in internment camps because the government thought there were spies. Only those Japanese and Americans of Japanese descent who lived on the West Coast of the United States were interned. The Japanese and Americans of Japanese descent in Hawaii were not incarcerated!
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.
Japanese and Japanese Americans living on the US west coast were placed in internment camps on the claim that spies and sabatouers could be hiding among them. Since Japanese and Japanese Americans living in Hawaii and in the US east of the Mississippi were not forced into camps, and since no American citizens of German or Italian descent were placed in internment camps, the actual reason is more likely related to racial stereotypes and anti-Japanese hysteria.Read more: Why_were_Internment_camps_set_up_for_Japanese_Americans
I believe it would be the Japanese Americans. The reason being, WWII had occurred between 1039 to 1945. The years between 1940 and 1985.
basically the Japanese-Americans or Japanese immigrants did what they were told and tried to prove they were loyal to America. Though America was still paranoid. Their homes were sold and they got a new life after the war. No causes and effects, Just Life
There was panic and near hysteria after Pearl Harbor. Many people feared a Japanese attack, with troops landing, on the west coast. The Japanese never had any plans to do any such thing, and had only attacked Hawaii to cripple the US Fleet, so the Fleet would be unable to interfere with Japanese conquests on the other side of the Pacific. But this was not understood at the time. Only Japanese living in the west coast states were sent to camps. This was where the bulk of Japanese-Americans were living though. Any living in the central and eastern states were not interned. Hawaii was full of people of Japanese ancestry, and they were not interned either. The reason was to prevent spying and sabotage by Japanese-Americans. A publicly announced reason was to protect the Japanese-Americans from attacks by their fellow (Caucasian) citizens. There may have been a few actual spies among the thousands interned. The concerns over sabotage were very large. The Nazis had just taken over Norway with the help of a "Fifth Column" of Norwegian Nazis, who betrayed their own country and helped the German invaders.