Many were. As an example, the 442nd Infantry Regiment is the most decorated unit in the history of the United States Armed Forces, with 21 Medal of Honor recipients. It was composed entirely of Japanese Americans, many of whom had family members in internment camps.
Loyal is not a verb and does not have a past tense. Loyal is an adjective, a word that describes a noun.
more loyal, most loyal
"Loyal" is an adjective and does not have past tense or past participle!
The plural of loyal is loyals.
loyal = Ua kupaʻa
About 120,000 Japanese-Americans, 3/4 LOYAL Americans (Nisei).
Americans thought Japanese Americans were helping japan during ww2
Among other ways they joined units like the 442nd Regimental Combat Team.
FDR (Franklin Delano Roosevelt) signed a executive order that would put the Japanese Americans (most were loyal to the US, actually) in the internment camps.
One good example - maybe the best example - was the interment of thousands of loyal, tax paying Japanese-Americans during World War II.
because in America, Japanese americanspeople were thought of helping the Japanese armys as being spies. The Americans were going to put them all in jail, America would not let the Japanese Americans fight or anything, not even help. Then a large group of Japanese Americns stood up and they said "we want to fight for our land so that we can prove to the Americans we are loyal to our country, America."
the most loyal are the African Americans
african americans
Because they were a different race. We were also at war with Germany and Italy, but German and Italian-Americans weren't imprisoned. (alternate answer) During WW II, when the US was at war with Imperial Japan, it was feared that Japanese Americans would be more loyal to their ethnic group, the Japanese, than they were to the country in which they were living, America, hence they might become saboteurs (or as they would be called today, terrorists). Note that there was no evidence for this fear, and the internment of the Japanese Americans is today recognized as a terrible injustice.
Japanese Americans is the correct name for Japanese Americans
Japanese Americans born in America are American citizens. The term Japanese Americans means that they are of Japanese decent but live in the US.
It was feared that they would be loyal to Japan, rather than the United States; and aid Japan as spies and saboteurs again the American war effort. In fact the vast majority of Japanese Americans actually favoured the American cause.