Executive Order 9066, signed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on February 19, 1942, authorized the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II. This order allowed the military to designate certain areas as exclusion zones, leading to the forced relocation and incarceration of around 120,000 Japanese Americans, most of whom were U.S. citizens. The decision was driven by wartime fears and racial prejudice, and it has since been widely condemned as a violation of civil liberties.
Executive order 9066 was to put Japanese Americans in internment camps. It was wrong and harmed these citizens needlessly.
Order 9066 ended in 1984 with Korematsu vs. US
Executive order 9066
Franklin Roosevelt signed this order in 1942.
penis
they were changed
The poem "In Response to Executive Order 9066" is written from the perspective of a young teenage Japanese girl about to be forced into an internment camp. The mood is a mixture of naive cheerfulness, sorrow, and confusion.
You might be thinking of executive order 9066, which was issued in 1942 and ordered Japanese Americans to be sent to internment camps.
executive order 9066
February 19, 1942
chickens... dogs... flowers and cowpoop
The constitutionality of Executive Order 9066 was upheld because the provisions of other orders that required individuals of Japanese ancestry to report to assembly centers and providing for the detention of such persons in assembly and relocation centers were separate.