ORIGINAL: Mike Scholl
While the whole treatment of Japanese Americans in WWII is deplorable; let's not
throw up any "red herrings". California was the site of a high percentage of the
US's military A/C production in 1942, most of the oil that feuled the Pacific War was
pumped there. and it was the "home base" and primary repair facility of ships that
were damaged in the Pacific. A lot of potential sabotage targets. It wasn't about
"stealing land" from a bunch of shop owners and gardeners..., it was irrational
paranoia coupled with plentiful "strategic sites" that got the Japanese Americans
moved to the middle of nowhere.
Red herring my butt....try talking to some of the Japanese-Americans around here (Southern California) who were directly effected, and do a little research on the nature of the land that was taken from them. So tell me again why the Japanese-Americans living on Hawaii were not interned?
Quote from an article on the period:
Envy over economic success combined with distrust over cultural separateness and long-standing anti-Asian racism turned into disaster when the Empire of Japan attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. Lobbyists from western states, many representing competing economic interests or nativist groups, pressured Congress and the President to remove persons of Japanese descent from the west coast, both foreign born (issei – meaning “first generation” of Japanese in the U.S.) and American citizens (nisei – the second generation of Japanese in America, U.S. citizens by birthright.)....
Bottom-line, be sure to look beyond/beneath the "popular history" versions of such events - the realities, motivations, etc. oft-times prove to be far more complex....