Poll: An interesting discovery...

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Skuffyshootster

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Jan 13, 2009
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The past week, my government class was given a project. This project involved identifying several decisions made by American presidents concerning problems facing the nation. These included the Cuban Missile Crisis, the deployment of troops in Iraq, and the topic of this thread: The internment of Japanese-Americans during World War 2.

Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066 [http://www.poetryvideos.com/images/evacproc.gif]. What this Order entailed was the relocation of all Japanese-Americans along the West Coast to "internment camps", in an effort to separate them from aircraft manufacturing plants and ports.

These were not, at all, like concentration camps or gulags. Rather, they served the sole purpose of keeping those people away from society. They were provided with housing, food, medical facilities, and they were housed with their families. Still, these were basically prisons, no matter how you look at them. They were given less then 24 hours to gather their belongings, and sold whatever they did not need, including their houses, for disgustingly low prices. Anyone who resisted was thrown in jail. Years later, however, the government payed each person who was sent to the camps a compensation of $20,000, and many of the internees are willing to forgive the government and forget the situation.

____________________________________________________________________________

Ok, enough of the history lesson. The camps themselves are not what I want to talk about. Rather, I want to discuss the disturbing lack of information about them.

Like any project, it required research. Research from 2 books and one website, to be precise.
The librarian provided books about the presidents who were in office at the time, and out of 4 books about FDR, only one had any information concerning the camps. The books were not biographies, but detailed the issues facing the Roosevelt administration, and how they were resolved. Order 9066 was not mentioned in 3 of them.

Are you shocked? Not surprised at all? What's your opinion on the whole situtation?
 

Arkvoodle

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Dec 4, 2008
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The event itself is considered a shameful part of American history so I assume most writers/historians would prefer to pretend it never happened.

Which is just as shameful.
 

Liquid155

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Aug 8, 2008
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Yes, a little. But I didn't vote in the poll as I'm not American and get the feeling that was kinda what you were looking for.
 

MorsePacific

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Nov 5, 2008
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I'm rather unsurprised, since no country really wants their dirty past being brought up, but I was taught about it in history class when I was younger.
 

TheLastCylon

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Apr 14, 2009
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It's a very shameful moment in American history. I'm not surprised there isn't much information on it.
 

InsanityRequiem

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Nov 9, 2009
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I knew quite a bit about them.

And the reason for lack of brought up in history? Because America doesn't want its kids to learn the evil truth that we acted like Nazi Germany. They want us to learn that we're uber good and even more uber awesome and everything we do is right and just and blah blah. Disgusting really.
 

Jamiemitsu

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Oct 25, 2009
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No, not until now. But then again, I am British, so that might just have something to do with it.
 

Hybrid Sight

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Sep 13, 2009
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Doesn't really come as a suprise to me at all. I remember when I learned about it a few years ago in school. Our teacher went through that lesson quite quickly.
 

Artina89

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Oct 27, 2008
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I'm British, but my dad knows quite a lot about it and told me about it. George Carlin also mentioned it in one of his last stand-up shows in an argument as to why rights aren't rights, just a series of temporary priveliges.
 

maddawg IAJI

I prefer the term "Zomguard"
Feb 12, 2009
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I would think that the Military wouldn't want talk of the camps spreading in fear that people would protest. Writers and journalists can't write whatever they want when talking about Military decisions and what there doing.

According to my history teacher , the military peer edits anything that Journalists write about and take certain parts out. These are usally the parts that the Military dosen't want getting out.I don't know how truthful that is, but it would explain the lack of writing.
 

BlindMessiah94

The 94th Blind Messiah
Nov 12, 2009
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It doesn't surprise me that there is little information. Maybe any reference to it was blacklisted. I know we like to think people wouldn't blacklist in a democratic society but it wouldn't be the first time...
 

Wadders

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Aug 16, 2008
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I read about these in a Commando comic when I was about 12. It was about how an old Japanese-American Kendo teacher got locked up in one of these camps, and one of his students went to war, and was given a Katana by the sensei before he got locked up, which he took to war with him, kicking ass and proving himself to his old master.

It was fucking awesome. I miss reading Commando comics...