ORIGINAL: rhondabrwn
... as a Chinese, she seems to ...
I believe she's not Chinese. But what does it matter what ethnicity someone is?[8D]
... but it doesn't involve any documented legal action, prosecution, or imprisonment.
Just from reading the little bit that I read on line it seems that there was. To be fair, I haven't read the book.
I think there is a lot of political motivation here and her writings should be taken with a substantial grain of salt.
I think it's also true that most of what was written previously and is now more popularly 'known' had lots of political motivation also.
I found the subject interesting because it points out a lot of things that we all need to remember.
1) All groups of people are vulnerable to racism -
on both sides of the racism equation (giving and receiving).[:@][:@][:@]
2) Truth is often glossed over for politics sake, falsly presenting the complex in simple and absolute terms.[:-]
3) Take things with a grain of salt and be ready to re-think things with new information.[8|]
On the idea that there was no espionage, etc. I was taught that and read it in various books. Well, given merely the numbers of people involved that's just
truly amazing. Being older and wiser ([&:]) and knowing a little more about things in general I find it much more credible that there actually was some. So what? It bears not at all on the loyalty and patriotism of Japanese-Americans as a whole. People are individuals. It's just a more real picture of what happened - a more accurate history.
I used to think that the internment was 90% racially motivated. I think differently now, although (as we both noted earlier) there was lots of racism involved and much wrong done to people. So the motivation from the governmental leaders was different than the simple cause 'racism' - it was fear (right or wrong) in an environment of much uncertainty. Does that mean it was the right decision? Certainly not.
Understanding what has happened before - how decisions were reached - can better equip us to deal with things today. Just as an over-simplified example, people today (at least generally) agree that the internment was wrong (putting aside any cases of individuals who for some specific reason were a legitimate wartime securty risk). Many people (probably most, I'm going out on a limb) have associated that with the notion that there was no esionage, etc. whatsoever. I think that mistaken belief leaves people worse equipped to deal with today's situations because as things happen, and they inevitably do, they are at risk of looking at today's situatiuon as being vastly different. If something really bad happens again (re 9/11), people may be more prone to give in to fear and make bad decisions, both about their own actions and about government policies. "Well, it was wrong to do it then but now is different, so we need to do it now." Bad information makes bad decisions more likely.
I found your comments helpful and informative and I felt a responsibility to explain what I was thinking and why I felt the information was important. Please excuse me if it seems like I was on a soapbox or something - not meant that way.
Executive Summary
Accurate Knowledge = Good [:)]
Racism = Bad [:@]