Japanese Internment during WW II

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  • Опубликовано: 14 окт 2024
  • After America was attacked by Japan at Pearl Harbor, President Franklin Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066 consigning 120,000 people of Japanese ancestry to internment camps. Fred Korematsu challenged the internment all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. In "Korematsu v. United States" (1944), the Court sided with the government.
    In 1988, Congress passed and President Ronald Reagan signed legislation which apologized for the internment on behalf of the U.S. government. The legislation said that government actions were based on "race prejudice, war hysteria, and a failure of political leadership". The U.S. government eventually disbursed more than $1.6 billion in reparations to Japanese Americans.

Комментарии • 796

  • @joshtj44
    @joshtj44 5 лет назад +74

    The lesson here is that the constitution can be overridden and we all can be rounded up. This won't be the last time.

    • @Inlinetodie
      @Inlinetodie 3 года назад +1

      I have visited these camps...ruclips.net/video/BQtPIbRUAmE/видео.html

    • @davidd4696
      @davidd4696 3 года назад +2

      @Cameron Krolik Waco?

    • @andrewperkovich8184
      @andrewperkovich8184 3 года назад +1

      Yeah look at jan 6. It almost happened in a very explicit way

    • @briane173
      @briane173 2 года назад +1

      One reason why attention must be paid to who we're appointing to the courts at every level, and what sort of backstops are available in the judicial system to beat back precedents that were wrongly decided. Korematsu and his attorneys found one - Coram Nobis - and we should all be grateful he kept at it until he won it.

    • @willevensen7130
      @willevensen7130 Год назад

      @@andrewperkovich8184 that shit wasn’t going anywhere stfu 😂

  • @marinaito2545
    @marinaito2545 10 лет назад +49

    My great aunt and her family were interred during WWII. They lost everything. Yet as a child I never heard her once say anything bitter about the country she chose to live in after marrying a nisei. Truly a shameful chapter in US history, and kudos to my aunt for staying strong and positive until her death.

    • @heatherwanamaker8000
      @heatherwanamaker8000 2 года назад

      God bless her

    • @ericnadaoka9038
      @ericnadaoka9038 Год назад +1

      I am a Sansei. My family had similar feelings to their internment as did your great aunt. Their love for the United States was very strong.

    • @stanallport6746
      @stanallport6746 5 месяцев назад

      contract that experience with all the families that lost sons brothers fathers to the draft and death...your family was very fortunate to be protected from the draft

  • @kellyrayburn4093
    @kellyrayburn4093 10 лет назад +151

    I understand that we were at war, but there are rules even in war. These were loyal American citizens. They were horrified at what Japan did at Pearl Harbor; and they were ashamed at the nature of the sneak attack.
    I'm glad they received $20,000 each later on. At least they received *some* compensation. But I think it should have been more. What the government did during this time was abominable, wrong, and a crime according to the Constitution. I don't care what any Supreme Court says. I know what is right, and this was just plain *WRONG*.
    So what if other countries were doing the same or worse? If we adopt the ways of the enemy, we become as bad as the enemy. I am and always have been absolutely outraged at the way these people were treated.

    • @kristimas13
      @kristimas13 9 лет назад +11

      According to my grandmother, some refused the money out of the idea that it would be like accepting an inadequate apology. It was a shameful time for the US.

    • @AITF045
      @AITF045 9 лет назад +3

      I feel like it was very wrong indeed. However, my grandparents, despite being judged simply because of their race, don't hate America for what it did. They simply put the past behind them and moved on.

    • @alvinyork9263
      @alvinyork9263 9 лет назад +1

      Kristi Horita The japanese are experts at inadequate apologies.

    • @kellyrayburn4093
      @kellyrayburn4093 9 лет назад +5

      alvin york So that gives us the right to do the same? These people should have been given no less than $500,000 USD each for compensation of having their civil rights violated. But I guess back then we could punish people for the sins of the father. Fucking hypocrites!!!!!!!!!

    • @kellyrayburn4093
      @kellyrayburn4093 7 лет назад +5

      To the commenter who's post was marked as spam, I tried to remove the spam flag but was unable to. That comment said, "But you believe Islam is a religion of peace."
      From what I read, (in their own Koran) these terrorists are radical Islam. Islam itself doesn't propound violence except in self defense. "Kill the infedel if he is coming to harm you. Else let him be." People read "Kill the infedel" in a vacuum and thereby twist the meaning. Christians do the same thing. They read "Repent and be baptized" and take *that* in a vacuum. You have to read the whole passage and one or two preceding and one or two following passages to get the true meaning.

  • @yijiawang1161
    @yijiawang1161 8 лет назад +30

    People who do not look at history will certainly repeat it. This was one of the darkest and embarrassed moments of our history.

    • @dasteufelhund
      @dasteufelhund 8 лет назад

      Japan certainly did not heed lessons of history. Darkest embarrassing moment? Hardly. This decision was only logical and a natural course of action/reaction from provocation of war.

    • @rorentin
      @rorentin 8 лет назад +6

      But why the civilians that were living on the US since they had nothing to do with the war, they weren't directly in the war, they were living.

    • @dasteufelhund
      @dasteufelhund 8 лет назад

      +Kongo-Dess
      Because Japan, Russia and Germany were known to employ covert tactic. "They had nothing to do with the war"was merely a false/pseudo claim/compassion aimed at public with little to no historical clue.

    • @mtutoriales
      @mtutoriales 5 лет назад

      @Mike Collins That was the same day if the Pearl Harbor attack, do you know about any events that happened after this? No, right?

    • @mtutoriales
      @mtutoriales 5 лет назад +2

      @@dasteufelhund But many of them were American BORN, and some others were 2nd generation...

  • @dmsleeker
    @dmsleeker 2 года назад +8

    I grew up in New Mexico during the 60s and 70s but wasn't taught anything about these camps in school. I learned about them from two Japanese American classmates. Both of their parents were taken to these camps but neither set of their parents held any ill will after they were released. I found that remarkable.

  • @akawhut
    @akawhut 8 лет назад +52

    I didn't even hear abozt this, until I read Marvels Civil War this year. How is this so rarely talked about?

    • @GarageLeaguessb
      @GarageLeaguessb 8 лет назад +19

      +akawhut because liberals love their FDR

    • @AllPureSkill
      @AllPureSkill 8 лет назад +1

      +akawhut how old are you?

    • @Marrok48
      @Marrok48 8 лет назад

      +akawhut No one wants to say they fucked up.

    • @ModalGroove
      @ModalGroove 8 лет назад +7

      Because socialists/democrats love prison camps

    • @buddyb49
      @buddyb49 8 лет назад +6

      I learned about it in both middle and high school

  • @amyc956
    @amyc956 9 лет назад +34

    This is an excerpt of a longer video. Can anyone identify the original source? I'd like to find the whole thing.

    • @judymlam
      @judymlam 4 года назад +1

      ruclips.net/video/F_fC3kSuxVI/видео.html

    • @Inlinetodie
      @Inlinetodie 3 года назад

      I went to the camps...ruclips.net/video/BQtPIbRUAmE/видео.html

    • @AxoNugz
      @AxoNugz 6 месяцев назад

      Korematsu and Civil Liberties

  • @DirectorBird
    @DirectorBird 7 лет назад +51

    Commander Roosevelt, the time has come, execute order 9066.

    • @ActivelyCursed
      @ActivelyCursed 4 года назад

      XD

    • @Inlinetodie
      @Inlinetodie 3 года назад

      I have visited these camps...ruclips.net/video/BQtPIbRUAmE/видео.html

    • @JustANervousWreck
      @JustANervousWreck 3 года назад

      He was part of the New World Order, he was taking commands from the high one. Beware of the anticrisp

  • @amazighqueen5334
    @amazighqueen5334 8 лет назад +65

    Why weren't German Americans and Italians treated like this,

    • @uncloudedskyy
      @uncloudedskyy 7 лет назад +30

      to a degree it was racism, believing the entire Japanese race were untrustworthy and sneaky, where as the Americans believed the Germans and Italians simply were conned by their leaders not as a racial thing

    • @hollandmeester2451
      @hollandmeester2451 7 лет назад +9

      Because Germans and Italians DID NOT attack Pearl Harbour. But do not talk bad about Americans who held the Japanese in camps. 26,000 US-Japanese men entered the US-army. Talk bad about the Japanese who held American-POWs in camps, they were starved, beaten and shot dead.....

    • @irishmarshmallow
      @irishmarshmallow 7 лет назад +2

      Trisha Love In the beginning the president intended to have Germans, Italians, and Japanese peoples living by military zones to be affected by this. It was when he put it in the hands of leaders of the military that it was aimed exclusively at Japanese peoples. The internment was unfortunate, but with this action it made it even worse. This documentary isnt complete with the details and neither is my explanation, but there is a 11 part interview of a japanese american woman who was 18 when she entered the camps. Its not only extremely educational but also insightful. I'd highly suggest it! (:

    • @irishmarshmallow
      @irishmarshmallow 7 лет назад +1

      Dutch Master Technically some were interned due to the order being aimed towards axis powers and not just the Japanese peoples :)

    • @amazighqueen5334
      @amazighqueen5334 7 лет назад

      Madison McNulty what's the name?

  • @jonanderson4767
    @jonanderson4767 9 лет назад +152

    It is amazing that Americans still manage to sing "land of the free" with a straight face.

    • @irwinsteel322
      @irwinsteel322 9 лет назад +4

      Jon Anderson I agree with you - I also get a bad feeling when I hear "...for the land of the free..."
      When the government tells you from birth that you´re living in the greatest country with most freedom of all and this is repeated through you life, then, of course you start believing it. The US government is among the biggest in the world and American citizens are under constant surveillance. But, as long as you don´t cause any trouble and stay in line, you pretty much left alone.

    • @jonanderson4767
      @jonanderson4767 9 лет назад

      Irwin Steel But, what I find really disturbing is that while Europe fought the nazi´s, the US government was actually building these camps for internment of their own countrymen. They were forced out of their neighborhoods and everything they owned was taken away. It is absolutely disgusting. I understand why American citizens are hoarding guns and ammo.
      Also, do the American children learn about this in schools today, or is this hidden from their history books?

    • @peterson7082
      @peterson7082 8 лет назад

      +Jon Anderson It's not per say hidden, but it's never really mentioned. The Trail of tears is taught, the exaggerated Eisenhower death camps are mentioned. It's more so forgotten about. The East coast Japanese Americans typically lived normal lives.

    • @joaquinpraveenvishnu8509
      @joaquinpraveenvishnu8509 6 лет назад

      Jon Anderson + and felt unfair when OJ was acquitted.

    • @HiredGunGames
      @HiredGunGames 5 лет назад +7

      This was done by a Democrat. Educate yourself.

  • @calster31
    @calster31 9 лет назад +12

    I'm 50 years old and I only learned of this about a year ago while reading a book about Native American Concentration Camps....or.....Reservations. I went through the whole US school system so why don't I know of these things. Am I ignorant or was I made and kept ignorant by the system? IDK.... Mr. Korematsu said..... ' this is not just for Japanese-American citizens, but for all American citizens". He didn't say "some" or "most". He said "ALL" ! Nobody is immune.

    • @alvinyork9263
      @alvinyork9263 9 лет назад

      Patricia Williams Dear Patrica, The reason you have heard so little about theinternment is that the vast majority of thoes interned were children and these children are the American citizens you hear about. They got birthright citizenship only because they were born here. Most of the adults were aliens, citizens of Japan. When Japan declared war on the US they became enemy aliens , and enemy aliens were interned by all countries at war. Also the numbers of adults were small when one considers that we drafted 16 million.

    • @JulianneHannes
      @JulianneHannes 9 лет назад

      I was lucky my elementary school brought in a Japanese American speaker to talk about his childhood in one of the placement camps.

    • @krupp88metal10
      @krupp88metal10 8 лет назад

      dang, where do you live, California? The liberal school teachers tend to only teach there ideology. We learned about the trail of tears in boy scouts I'm 38.

    • @queenquinn8340
      @queenquinn8340 5 лет назад

      You was probably skipping class

    • @jamesbrown5262
      @jamesbrown5262 5 лет назад

      I learned this in school, maybe you should have paid attention

  • @nerdface9080
    @nerdface9080 9 лет назад +16

    These were AMERICANS. American citizens. They did it once and they could do it again. Don't underestimate the system.

  • @teomankem9171
    @teomankem9171 7 лет назад +5

    Great video, seems to cut off at the end. Does anyone know the name of the full episode/documentary where this came from?

    • @AxoNugz
      @AxoNugz 6 месяцев назад

      Korematsu and Civil Liberties

  • @delonalana4743
    @delonalana4743 8 лет назад +10

    Thank you for upload this. The original source is "Korematsu and Civil Liberties."

    • @patrickbyers5144
      @patrickbyers5144 7 лет назад

      Thank you for this! Wish he would add this to description... This video is really well made.

    • @patrickbyers5144
      @patrickbyers5144 7 лет назад +1

      www.annenbergclassroom.org/page/korematsu-civil-liberties
      That is the full video.

    • @Inlinetodie
      @Inlinetodie 3 года назад

      I have visited these camps...ruclips.net/video/BQtPIbRUAmE/видео.html

  • @judemac5602
    @judemac5602 8 лет назад +5

    What is the excerpted from? Would like to see the whole documentary.

    • @clairek8699
      @clairek8699 8 лет назад +3

      +Jude Mac it was eserptid from justin Bieber never say never full documentary/biography video on disc

  • @dansysoman3391
    @dansysoman3391 4 года назад +5

    Fear and ignorance is the fuel of racism. We are all people. We all can care for one another no matter our race.

  • @zzereal
    @zzereal 7 лет назад +2

    I'm writing a research paper over the Japanese Internment for my history class and am using this video as a source...Do you perhaps have or remember the name of the documentary...? Thank you!

    • @Robert-eg2oy
      @Robert-eg2oy 4 месяца назад

      The 130,000 Japanese living in Hawaii at the time were never interred, why ?

  • @PlantMom1111
    @PlantMom1111 11 лет назад +4

    Thank you much for uploading gave me much help on my essay : )

    • @Inlinetodie
      @Inlinetodie 3 года назад

      I have visited these camps...ruclips.net/video/BQtPIbRUAmE/видео.html

  • @samwindmill8264
    @samwindmill8264 2 года назад +8

    It's so beyond tragic that a man who was otherwise, quite possibly, the greatest president of the last century, stooped this low. Whenever I think about this, it makes me feel a profound sense of shame as an American. Don't bother trying to tell this to the people who think any mention of this country's shameful history with regards to race amounts to "critical race theory", and therefore *must* be deemed VERBOTEN! in schools.

    • @brianbuckley5219
      @brianbuckley5219 Год назад

      He also tried to pack the court in 1938 and thereby sunder the separation of powers and checks and balances, did not initially support anti-lynching legislation even though his wife pushed him to, and did virtually nothing to stop the Holocaust even though it was known what was going on in the camps. Great he wasn't.

  • @hansrutzigen754
    @hansrutzigen754 5 лет назад +3

    Starting in 1942 the internees could leave the camps, but they could not move back into the Exclusion Zone. During the course of the war some 19,000 Japanese and Japanese American internees moved to Chicago. This fact is well documented but not well known.

    • @Inlinetodie
      @Inlinetodie 3 года назад

      I have visited these camps...ruclips.net/video/BQtPIbRUAmE/видео.html

  • @mrnaugles1930
    @mrnaugles1930 7 лет назад +2

    There were so many people in the United States who were of German descent, yet Japanese people seem to have been singled out because they were different from the majority of people in the United States. The treatment of Japanese people in Canada was even worse, where their property was seized and then sold at auction to pay the costs of running the Canadian internment camps.
    Reagan was right to offer the Japanese Internment families remuneration. The Manzanar museum is so important in the way it documents and educates to help people understand the importance of actively maintaining our democracy and collectively standing up for people who are treated unjustly.

    • @mrnaugles1930
      @mrnaugles1930 7 лет назад

      To the person that sent this claim, I respectfully disagree. Here is the claim they sent:
      That is not true. There were thousands of traitors in those camps. Look at the cover photo on the book "WWII JAPANESE RELOCATION CAMPS & THE WRA: A PRUDENT, EMERGENCY, WAR-TIME MEASURE." There were nationalist Japanese groups in the camps who refused to renounce loyalty to the emperor, and had already stated that they would commit sabotage. Thousands of them requested repatriation back to Japan and some were sent back even during the war on the MS Gripsholm.?
      I respectfully disagree because the exhibit at Manzanar helped me understand that the Japanese American Interns had been treated very unjustly by our government when our government stripped them of all their possessions and imprisoned them without any trial, without any due process. Your statement that "thousands refused to renounce loyalty to the Japanese Emperor" and "stated they would commit sabotage" is incorrect. The exhibit at Manzanar does a nice job of helping visitors understand the choices and documents presented to the interned Japanese prisoners. I can understand those prisoners' quandry and I seriously doubt that they presented any real risk to our country. Are you saying there were "thousands" of Japanese traitors and there were zero German traitors? Where are the equivalent internment camps for Germans in the United States? There are none to be found, because our government's internment of US Citizens who happened to be Japanese, the internment of Japanese was racist and the lack of camps for internment of Germans proves the internment was racist.

  • @nicholefish4758
    @nicholefish4758 5 лет назад +3

    has anyone found the full length video where this clip came from?

  • @miguelmendez4807
    @miguelmendez4807 4 года назад +35

    "Land of the free" 🤦🏻‍♂️

    • @sixsixer6125
      @sixsixer6125 2 года назад +1

      Never has never will be! When will everyone wake up!

    • @hyyypr
      @hyyypr Год назад +5

      @@sixsixer6125 people complaining about their country make me laugh. If you don’t want to be here get out brotha. But nope. You still want your iced caramel latte.

    • @TheArmadon
      @TheArmadon Год назад

      I mean slavery still exists and is allowed in many countries. Clearly the USA isn't perfect but we have paved the way for equality from our beginning. The events in this video were horrific violations of Constitutional rights and We the People must ensure this never happens agian.

    • @mikejones4526
      @mikejones4526 Год назад

      Exactly we did the same shit as the nazis did just without the mass killings wow I seen a doc a long time ago on pbs when I was in my early 30’s and it’s super sad

    • @skyeckogaming3354
      @skyeckogaming3354 8 месяцев назад

      @@mikejones4526without mass killings… ever heard of the Native Americans and how we took all of their land and killed millions of them?

  • @tig3rs3y3queer
    @tig3rs3y3queer 7 лет назад +1

    i want to use this as a source for my paper but there is no citations, does anyone know what this video is called? i need the director and release date

  • @vjm3
    @vjm3 9 лет назад +7

    Thank you Mike Shinoda for exposing this otherwise obscure blemish of American history for my eyes to see. I was born in 1985 and through all of my schooling I've never once heard a word about this sort of thing happening.
    Absolutely embarrassing.

    • @octiffanylee1
      @octiffanylee1 9 лет назад +1

      vjm3 I was born 1996, and I learned about this pretty thoroughly in school. Maybe they just added it recently in California.

    • @P2Reflectschannel-hh2zl
      @P2Reflectschannel-hh2zl Год назад

      I attended public schools in the 1970s and 1980s in a typical conservative suburb. I learned all about this, including an entire chapter in my "standard issue" 6th grade Social Studies textbook. Your claim is bizarre.

  • @WhoElseWillIHaveIceCreamWith
    @WhoElseWillIHaveIceCreamWith Год назад

    Does anyone know the name of the full episode/documentary where this came from?

  • @dreamerbest515
    @dreamerbest515 3 года назад

    what was the motivation factor for creating the video documenty

  • @TSMK900
    @TSMK900 10 лет назад +3

    This is what the US supreme court judge said regarding whether or not if the Muslims could be detained like this:
    "You are kidding yourself if you think the same thing will not happen again," "In times of war, the laws fall silent." - Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia told University of Hawaii law students earlier this month.
    Source:
    america.aljazeera.com/articles/2014/2/18/japanese-americaninternmentremembrancemuslimpatriottsa.html
    When the 50's-60's came. People were fearful of the "communists" and accused others of being communists.
    In this day and age, "communist" has been replaced with "Islamist", "terrorist", "fundamentalist", "radical" etc.
    We have fallen for the same traps again and again and we will do so again especially with the muslims.

  • @Normacly
    @Normacly 11 лет назад +2

    The 442nd Regimental Combat Team of the United States Army was a regimental size fighting unit composed almost entirely of American soldiers of Japanese descent who fought in World War II, despite the fact many of their families were subject to internment. The 442nd is considered to be the most decorated infantry regiment in the history of the United States Army. The 442nd was awarded eight Presidential Unit Citations and twenty-one members were awarded the Medal of Honor for World War II.

  • @TheAzaura
    @TheAzaura 12 лет назад

    What is the name of the documentary this comes from?

  • @Zephlos
    @Zephlos 11 лет назад +15

    "German-Americans and Italian-Americans was never interned."
    Umm over 17,000 Americans of German AND Italian decent were "relocated"
    While the person you corrected IS incorrect as well. You should look into your facts before you start shouting "racist" at people.

    • @LankDank
      @LankDank 4 года назад

      Zephlos Kal'Shanor that’s all people do these days, most don’t even realize that Japan did do Pearl Harbor

    • @knightforce83
      @knightforce83 4 года назад +2

      I do agree with you...
      However I do not agree that should have relocated the Japanese Americans. In my opinion they should have kept them at there homes because a lot of them were not making threats they were just trying to live there daily lives in piece.
      Hope you understand my side of the disagreement. 🙃

    • @ksmith5325
      @ksmith5325 4 года назад

      In Los Angeles. Japanese Americans lived in San Pedro and Palos Verdes literally overlooking the Long Beach Naval Base. This was deemed too dangerous. Also the US basically stole Japanese from Central and Sound America

  • @happyelle87
    @happyelle87 10 лет назад +4

    This might be happening to any group of people in the USA today. This video gives me chills. I am upset for the people who had to go through this. It scares me how the the president and the supreme court can be above the law and abuse their power during time of war. This case reminds me of the NSA surveilance which Snowden revealed that it acted above the constitution.

  • @tiffanielandolt2521
    @tiffanielandolt2521 10 лет назад

    Where is this excerpt from? Tv show/movie?

  • @legoismalife
    @legoismalife 11 лет назад

    Really god vid. Help with my project a bit, but where did this come from? Send me the link or give me MLA format citation so I can put this to good use.

  • @corwinbrooks1144
    @corwinbrooks1144 5 лет назад +1

    Anyone know where this video comes from? I want to use it for an essay but I can't find any details to help me source it.

    • @Inlinetodie
      @Inlinetodie 3 года назад

      I have visited these camps...ruclips.net/video/BQtPIbRUAmE/видео.html

  • @NoJokes11B
    @NoJokes11B 7 лет назад +1

    Another embarrassment is the lack of attention the 442nd RCT receives. Men volunteered from these camps to go fight in Europe to prove their loyalty. They became the most decorated combat unit (of its size) in US military history!

  • @swoosh50
    @swoosh50 8 лет назад +7

    Remember, folks this a democratic PRESIDENT who did this.

    • @cMckone93
      @cMckone93 8 лет назад

      +swoosh50 and?

    • @swoosh50
      @swoosh50 8 лет назад +4

      +cMckone93 Democrats are fucking hypocrites

    • @jdogjcat100
      @jdogjcat100 8 лет назад

      This was 70 years ago, the beliefs of everyone at that time were heavily Democratic and racist. Democratic beliefs may have changed after the 1960s, and after this. I know people who were put into these camps when they were children, they've told me that they're afraid that the same thing might happen to other people of different ethnicities if Trump becomes president. Frankly, I don't think it will but history repeats, people are scared, and when they are scared they look for someone to blame.

    • @swoosh50
      @swoosh50 8 лет назад

      +Jordan G (jdogjcat) No that have not changed. Believe me

    • @maxvo6226
      @maxvo6226 8 лет назад

      I am not defending what FDR did, but judging people's beliefs based on what their ancestors believed is not fair to members of the modern democratic party. The stances of a party can change over time. For example, during the time of the civil war, Abraham Lincoln and the rest of the republican party were VERY liberal, whereas they are now conservative today. Besides, blaming modern democrats for this is irrational, as what Trump wants to do with Islamic peoples and denying Judge Gonzales the supreme court seat because he is Mexican is much closer to what FDR did in the past than what either democratic potential nominee wants to do today.

  • @thomashorter
    @thomashorter 5 лет назад +3

    11,000 germans and 2,000 Italians were put in camps as well. Not saying any of it is right or just... just doing a fact check. They were of course much more harsh on the Japanese... but to say they didn't do it to Germans and Italians is a bit misleading...

  • @youtuber5305
    @youtuber5305 2 года назад +1

    The "single-bullet theory" was proposed by the Warren Commission which was headed by a man who would have thought that it was logical to believe that a person without a police record would be more likely to commit a crime in the future than a person with a police record.
    Concerning the incarceration of Japanese-Americans during World War II, according to the Wikipedia article on Earl Warren:
    - Warren further argued that the complete lack of disloyal acts among Japanese Americans in California to date indicated that they intended to commit such acts in the future.

  • @christinecarver8933
    @christinecarver8933 11 лет назад +1

    Hello there! Thanks for posting this video. I used this for a presentation in class because it was so informative. However, I was wondering if you knew where you got the video or if you had more information about it so that I could cite where the video came from for the paper that I have to write. Thanks a bunch!

    • @davecuster1746
      @davecuster1746 5 лет назад +1

      Christine Carver sorry you got an F on your paper can't believe everything you see on line

  • @wolfmother8719
    @wolfmother8719 12 лет назад

    Can anyone tell me the name of this documentary?

  • @shrabanidutta8180
    @shrabanidutta8180 7 лет назад

    whos the director of this film

  • @kevinanderson1325
    @kevinanderson1325 7 лет назад +2

    I wish people actually knew more about this period of our history. How do you prove a negative? You see there were Japanese that were absolutely without a doubt disloyal. Not anything like the majority of Japanese living in this country were disloyal, but there were some. In fact the most disloyal were placed in Tule Lake interment camp. Nevertheless, some disloyal Japanese in internment camps persecuted other Japanese for not being loyal to Japan. An EXTREMELY messy and difficult situation. I have several books full of decrypted communications from the west coast. There really were spies. I know you don't hear about these things in our tidied up history books, but they were there. Yes there were disloyal Japanese, Very few, but how many would it have taken to do tremendous damage. Then again, how would loyal Japanese be protected? War is a horrible, dreadful thing. I am a bit of a WWII historian, and I just can't believe the horror and brutality of what went on! Madness, absolute madness! As bad as the internment was, it can't hold a candle to what was going on in other places at that time!

  • @AkoSiJhioh
    @AkoSiJhioh 11 лет назад +3

    I'm not even Japanese, but this makes me very angry.

  • @Falcon_ek
    @Falcon_ek 9 лет назад +2

    This is aweful, and how could they keep this from us? I have never heard about it in middle school or high school. It's not until I went to college that I learned about MANY things that were unknown to us, and that is because I took classes on America history and ethnic studies...

    • @JulianneHannes
      @JulianneHannes 9 лет назад

      What state are you in, it was in my school ciriculum (briefly, but it was there)

    • @martyrmessiah3903
      @martyrmessiah3903 4 года назад

      American HisStory and ethnic studies is based on masonic-authored-up, fraudulent documents as deception.

    • @Inlinetodie
      @Inlinetodie 3 года назад

      I have visited these camps...ruclips.net/video/BQtPIbRUAmE/видео.html

  • @ARIANATORREZ666
    @ARIANATORREZ666 12 лет назад +3

    PROUD TO BE JAPANESE AND HALF GERMAN!

  • @retafmil
    @retafmil  12 лет назад

    According to Wikipedia, "During WWII, Japanese-Americans and Japanese-Canadians were interned in camps." But not deported, apparently.

    • @Inlinetodie
      @Inlinetodie 3 года назад

      I have visited these camps...ruclips.net/video/BQtPIbRUAmE/видео.html

  • @nicolehessling1
    @nicolehessling1 3 года назад +1

    This happened to my neighbors family. What a disgrace. Its awful. Could you imagine? You are being imprisoned for being born a certain nationality. There should have been compensation at the very least. This should have never happened.

    • @Aryan_Nation
      @Aryan_Nation 2 года назад

      Pearl Harbor should’ve never happened! I guess you forgot about that!

    • @heatherwanamaker8000
      @heatherwanamaker8000 2 года назад

      I agree.

    • @nicolehessling1
      @nicolehessling1 2 года назад +1

      @@Aryan_Nation the Japanese citizens already living here had nothing to do with Pearl Harbor.

  • @raphaelfritzler7799
    @raphaelfritzler7799 4 года назад +1

    Remember this everyone, when another war comes about. May all beings be happy and free. 🙏

  • @darktruth2358
    @darktruth2358 4 года назад +2

    FDR "guided the country through the Great Depression"... or enacted policies that grossly prolonged it?

    • @Inlinetodie
      @Inlinetodie 3 года назад

      I have visited these camps...ruclips.net/video/BQtPIbRUAmE/видео.html

  • @59Gretsch
    @59Gretsch 6 лет назад +1

    There is no point in american history which is so void of facts which promted the move of Japanese out of the military zones on the Westcoast. When I read the book "case for internment" it was so eye opening, it made me finally realize, there is an actual effort to tear down the country through the use of one sided history...... and it is all critical. Most people have no idea our Govt had wire taps in the Japanese embasy and they had absolute proof they had recruited many Japanese to undermine our ports and installation. We had tens of thousands of Japanese who were not citizens, tens of thousands of Japanese which belonged to extreme Japanese societies within the country which swore an oath to their God Emperor. When Pearl harbor was bombed, who guided the planes? Japanese, when planes went down, who aided the pilots to escape? Random Japanese on a neighboring Island. Much more complicated than we were taught.

  • @sissydaisy2011
    @sissydaisy2011 11 лет назад +2

    Japanese Americans DID volunteer to go into the military. Before the internment and after Pearl Harbor, the US Army wouldn't allow them to just walk in and sign up because of all of the hysteria and fear going around. However, in 1942 the US military accepted men into many branches, all of them volunteers, and most of them fought in Europe against Hitler and Mossolini. Others joined the Red Cross. There's no doubt that they would have fought against Japan but they were never given the chance.

  • @Randomjackpot
    @Randomjackpot 13 лет назад +1

    What was done to these American citizens, depriving them of due process, stripping them of their posessions and throwing them into camps is absolutely abhorrent. FDR is the most despicable president ever for this atrocious act.

  • @EKowallis
    @EKowallis 3 года назад

    Voluntary departure?
    Every time the government has taken away Constitutional rights but saying it's for the good of the people has ended in disgust and shame. When will we learn?

  • @山下清-n9z
    @山下清-n9z 10 лет назад +29

    This is America.

    • @joey8062
      @joey8062 10 лет назад +2

      I live in this country and I agree.

    • @skyedoesstuff8849
      @skyedoesstuff8849 10 лет назад +5

      there is a good and bad part of every country...

    • @willgeary6086
      @willgeary6086 10 лет назад

      Joe Geary also the Idiot guard who shot the man in the stomach did not do so on orders but his stupidity.

    • @iamsick5204
      @iamsick5204 7 лет назад +3

      Still infinity better than a Japanese camp

    • @Alpha_beef
      @Alpha_beef 6 лет назад +1

      Childish Gambino?

  • @jamesbrown5262
    @jamesbrown5262 5 лет назад

    This woman is wrong Italians and Germans were also placed internment camps, just not as large of a scale.

  • @matthewmccaig3037
    @matthewmccaig3037 8 лет назад +1

    Many thanks for putting this up - now more then ever is it important to remember the effects that widespread irrationality and racism can have on our fellow people and fellow american citizens. Oh and quick note - if you're going to comment, pleeeease use correct spelling haha can't stand when someone takes a stance and incorrectly spells something..all the credibility goes out the door..just saying. Oh and - yes - i'm sure I spelled something wrong in this so feel free to call my a hypocrite. I'm sure I deserve it - Much love

    • @marcushunter5824
      @marcushunter5824 8 лет назад

      +Matthew McCaig Nobody was placed into internment camps because of "Racism", you knob. Japan attacked us at Pearl Harbor, killing thousands of innocent Americans and declared war on us. Then killed thousands more during the course of the war.
      Italians and Germans, ie white people, were put into internement camps as well. Was that "racism"?

    • @marcushunter5824
      @marcushunter5824 8 лет назад

      +Matthew McCaig These people were interned as a national security measure. A concept that comes from thousands of years worth of knowledge about what happens during times of war. Not "cuz racism".
      It was for the safety of not only other Americans, but the Japanese themselves. People do crazy things out of anger, and fear, especially during war.
      After the war was over these people were compensated, you should actually research it instead of allowing yourself to be race-baited and made to despise America...We've already been through this bleeding heart guilt fest (for having the gall to protect ourselves after being attacked and a war waged against us) and reparations amounting to at least 1.2 BILLION dollars were paid out to Japanese in the US.
      Nobody talks about that, either. But let's keep stoking the racial issues in this country using selected bits and pieces of American history. Why not... Whites haven't been completely dispossessed of their own country, yet.
      PS - Did I spell well enough for you?

    • @matthewmccaig3037
      @matthewmccaig3037 8 лет назад

      +Marcus Hunter ahahahah this made my day - I forgot I commented on this. Also "knob" is a wonderful word and we dont use it enough - hats off to you, seriously not being sarcastic lol

  • @williamwalberto
    @williamwalberto 7 лет назад

    We talked about this in class I'm American and this was horrible

  • @jdogjcat100
    @jdogjcat100 8 лет назад

    My great aunts were taken from their homes when they were between the ages of 3 and 11 to be put in camps in Arizona.

  • @cleekmaker00
    @cleekmaker00 12 лет назад +1

    OMG... wrong person! My sincere apologies to you; my comment wasn't directed to you, but to Mark Pontius.

  • @telefunkenyou47
    @telefunkenyou47 8 лет назад +1

    The 442nd infantry regiment also receives little mention and goes hand in hand with the internment. Without the 442nd we may very well be speaking German.

  • @raymondalverez5999
    @raymondalverez5999 Год назад +1

    Maybe politicians can also survive in camps similar to their co-Americans. This time so far we are not at war.

  • @dadafan5921
    @dadafan5921 5 лет назад

    The 442nd Regimental Combat Team of the United States Army was the stellar end of a bell shaped curve that had at its other end spies, traitors, saboteurs. What was done to the innocents was horrible, tragic, and to me, heartbreaking. FDR did what he felt he had to do. We nearly lost the war that December morning. Later, Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto said he did not know why he withheld the third wave of attack. My point is this: removing the subversive that might have even indirectly further harmed our side was an imperative. Except for the freak development of atomic weapons our country faced the loss of millions to conclusively win the war. Against that loss (which I'm certain FDR knew he faced) the internment was necessary. The sabotage of one aircraft carrier would have meant how many lives lost? 120,000 dead rather than interred? I don't know...

    • @archiesantosdiaz
      @archiesantosdiaz 2 года назад

      no rational reason for this dada fan. if this happened to you and your family, would you call it imperative? and you know you're an american? this can not be justified.

  • @sz42781
    @sz42781 7 лет назад

    Thanks hirohito

  • @SexiiChickaMamasita
    @SexiiChickaMamasita 12 лет назад

    Did you ever find out the source(s)? I'm doing my history IA and I want to use this

  • @chilko8244
    @chilko8244 8 лет назад +1

    I'm just watching this for my NHD project

  • @frankmensing4348
    @frankmensing4348 8 лет назад +7

    Although sad, this is kind of inevitable in war. Sure, they could have been treated better. Still, you have to remember that regardless of racism, having hundreds of thousands of people of Japanese descent free in your country, while you are at war with Japan, is a huge risk.

    • @Quinntus79
      @Quinntus79 7 лет назад +4

      I see your point, but if that's the case Americans don't really have a right to due process but rather privileges that the government can do away with at anytime using war as an excuse. These were American citizens that the US government imprisoned without charging them with a crime or giving them a trial.

    • @Mariofan2479
      @Mariofan2479 6 лет назад

      @Quinntus79 Did you not see the documentary? The Supreme Court Ruled in favor of the US. That in time of War, it is in the protection of citizens that they can discriminate in the way they did. It is racist, but idk if it has been changed

    • @thegrandwazooofheliopolis4344
      @thegrandwazooofheliopolis4344 6 лет назад

      Ohio Girl yeah but the Germans didn't attack Pearl Harbor and invade the Aleutian Islands. Not that I agree with FDR, on really anything, and this was absolutely despicable, no one is defending racism here. Can we drop the race shit already?

    • @thegrandwazooofheliopolis4344
      @thegrandwazooofheliopolis4344 6 лет назад

      Ohio Girl I'm not denying it! FDR was a democrat. Blame them.
      We just weren't in direct war until the Japanese drew us in. Hell, we didn't even know as a society what was going on in Germany to the degree and severity of what was really taking place. We were ambushed by the Japanese. Huge difference. Again, as stated, I don't agree with FDR's decision. Was it racially driven, yes. For a good reason. . . .debatable. But don't call me dumb when you seem to support the same party and ideologies that allowed this to happen in the first place. Typically liberal. Call people names. I suppose you have ignorant, racist, misogynist, and xenophobic on deck too, huh?
      I'll suggest a book: "The Gathering Storm."
      Read it. It's and excellent account of history leading up to and during WW2. Good day to you.

    • @thegrandwazooofheliopolis4344
      @thegrandwazooofheliopolis4344 6 лет назад

      Ohio Girl ha. The democratic party is no different today. If anything, it's worse than it was back then. And yes, racism is all in our heads.

  • @gilnahnu
    @gilnahnu 7 месяцев назад

    This is such a horrible time ☹️ Poor people

  • @nermahk
    @nermahk Год назад

    had to watch this for history class

  • @Robert-eg2oy
    @Robert-eg2oy 4 месяца назад

    The 130,000 Japanese living in Hawaii at the time were never interred, why ?

  • @TheRealAdamP
    @TheRealAdamP 4 года назад +1

    Today we still have younger people who use the term "Jap" because they think its cool slang.

    • @brayden2920
      @brayden2920 3 года назад +1

      Yeah. I’m Japanese and my 2nd uncle was in the concentration camps and I have been called a “jap” and “chink” by people in school and have heard racist comment towards me since I was in elementary school and I’m a junior rn

    • @catalinadog157
      @catalinadog157 3 года назад

      I think people use it because people don't realize the true meaning of it, they think it's short for Japanese

  • @daverjax
    @daverjax 4 года назад +1

    I'd Pray EVERY AMERICAN Sees THIS and Remind Themselves. THIS ATTROCITY WAS DONE BY THE SELF SAME PARTY THAT HAS BEEN TALKING ABOUT SENDING "DEPLOREABLES" TO "RE EDUCATION CENTERS" THose WHO FORGET the Mistakes of the PAST, Are FOREVER DOOMED to Repeat them.

  • @picksixtodahouse
    @picksixtodahouse 8 лет назад +3

    This is why the second amendment is so important. Without it, all of your other right go out the window

    • @irishmarshmallow
      @irishmarshmallow 7 лет назад

      picksixtodahouse is your name pixie sticks because thats a cool name if it is my eyesight is very poor rn but that would be super cool

  • @lesatseaside
    @lesatseaside 12 лет назад +1

    And some gullible people laugh when concerns are expressed about FEMA camps being set up for future events such as this...

  • @alvinyork9263
    @alvinyork9263 11 лет назад +1

    You are right deenz, There are many books written by Japanese that acknowledge large japanese espionage rings in the U.S.. Ezio Horie
    a japanese officer on the imperial general staff said that the internment and relocation effectivly destroyed their espionage capabilities in the U.S. Research black dragon society in california

  • @maria610421
    @maria610421 11 лет назад

    Truth is stranger than fiction, in these times

  • @RuneMasterKnight
    @RuneMasterKnight 9 лет назад +6

    this is not the first time America made concentration camps after the Spanish American war in the Philippine America put Filipinos in camps. also why did the gov. did not do this to German or Italian Americans?

    • @pouroddacloudcloud9544
      @pouroddacloudcloud9544 9 лет назад +1

      True but they did put restrictions on Italians, like it was illegal for them to own specific radios with specific frequencies

    • @djones9122
      @djones9122 8 лет назад +1

      +Pouroddacloud Cloud all you critics unless you lived in that time shut up stupid

    • @pouroddacloudcloud9544
      @pouroddacloudcloud9544 8 лет назад

      Donna Jones if I lived in the period I would be in an intermemt camp

    • @user-gu1hl2kx2k
      @user-gu1hl2kx2k 8 лет назад

      +RuneMasterKnight Italians can dont have to change their look to blend in

    • @irishmarshmallow
      @irishmarshmallow 7 лет назад +1

      RuneMasterKnight I've been seeing this question pop up a lot, and instead of using slurs like some of my peers on here im gonna give you my knowledge in hopes that you better from it. Executive Order 9066 did not exclusively state just Japanese Americans, but engulfed German Americans and Italian Americans as well. When handed down to the heads of military at the time, however, they decided that the Japanese were the main concern in this situation and made it almost apply exclusively to them. There is record of internment of German/Italian Americans, but it was very insignificant. The only spies found for the axis powers happened to be German/Italian Americans as well, which sparks debate over the topic of their internment as well. There were no Japanese peoples convicted of treason during the war. :) I hope that helped!

  • @ashdobbs7492
    @ashdobbs7492 3 года назад

    my grandparents had Japanese neighbors in the early 40's. when they were sent away for safekeeping they asked my grandparents to watch their house and possessions. after a couple of weeks they didn't come back so grandpa claimed their property. we still have many things that proudly we still have. there is a chest with cutlery and dishes and many tapestries and pearl inlaid mirror with comb and makeup kit among other things. my brother and I recently threw away the photo albums and other insignificant things but a lot of it is in good condition still. I was wondering how much it may be worth, may be more because of its historical value

    • @tinkerbellaella6464
      @tinkerbellaella6464 3 года назад +3

      Wtf. Your grandparents stole their property.

    • @zachthorp6131
      @zachthorp6131 3 года назад +1

      The more misery involved in the loss, the higher value you get. Throwing those pictures away is like throwing away the certificate of authenticity for an expensive antique. Try tracking down the family descendants and see if they'd help you out with more pictures so you can get a better price for their stuff.

    • @ashdobbs7492
      @ashdobbs7492 3 года назад

      @@zachthorp6131 that would be too much trouble its not worth that much it turns out. hardly worth storing all this crap for so long

  • @lucyk2371
    @lucyk2371 Год назад

    Unfortunately hindsight is 20/20. This happened after Pearl Harbor. They had intel that there were extensive communications between japanese/american citizens and the japanese empire which allowed them to do this. They did not know how to stop this communication any other way. I hate that this happened and it was wrong. I just dont think they knew of any other way of coping. Has anyone seen the movie "Empire of the Sun"? The U.S. was not the only country ro do this. At least they were treated some better than other countries and given some compensation. Im not saying it was the right thing to do. Im just saying that they were living in a different world than we are. I don't believe that they had the manpower to divert from the war to monitor all communications. They were wrong certainly but in times of war it's a tough call.

  • @markkhak1857
    @markkhak1857 12 лет назад +1

    "THAT'S HIM!"

  • @Macker571
    @Macker571 7 лет назад

    What movie is this from?

  • @Robert-eg2oy
    @Robert-eg2oy 4 месяца назад

    Why weren’t the Japanese in Hawaii interred ?

  • @alvinyork9263
    @alvinyork9263 11 лет назад

    I will attempt to answer your questions. There was not threat of invasion on our east coast as the german surface navy had already been destroyed by the Brits before the U.S. entered the war. All the german navy had left were submarines. You need aircraft carriers, transports, battleships etc. they had none That is one reason ,I can give you several more if you would like.

  • @puterboy2
    @puterboy2 9 лет назад +4

    From what I have seen, and I live in Arizona where a camp existed in Poston, it seems to me that these camps were a vacation resort compared to the Nazi camps, which of course were more horrible than the ones here.

    • @puterboy2
      @puterboy2 9 лет назад

      vann tedd
      Well, I suppose the only act of brutality were shooting internees who tried to escape or act disorderly, but at least they weren't trying to do a mass extinction of the Japanese race. Aside from a few events like the atomic bomb, we were more human than the Nazis.

    • @beatrixrode1082
      @beatrixrode1082 9 лет назад +13

      +Jake Rutigliano Hahaha Americans are hilarious - always think you so much better than other nations - you're with the Imperial Brits and the communist Russians are the reason for most of the suffering going on in the world post 1945. You really believe the bull shit propaganda about the Zionists in the German concentration camps. Roosevelt was looking for an excuse to get America involved in WW2 just as Churchill with Britain. By looking at Vietnam, Afganisthan, 9/11, Iraq, Iran - you still believed that America fought the "good" war in ww2. There was No reason to have put the Japanese Americans in concentration camps. - you did know the war was fight in Europe and not on American soil?

    • @Hmonks
      @Hmonks 8 лет назад +4

      +Jake Rutigliano so what your saying that this act on its on American migrants was ok because it wasn't to hideous compared to what the Jew have experiance, really get out of here.

    • @ahmadalisabyas1
      @ahmadalisabyas1 8 лет назад +4

      +Jake Rutigliano then you go live there and do all that work just because you look like the enemie

    • @MrTweetyhack
      @MrTweetyhack 6 лет назад

      How about we put you on vacation?

  • @1uheepwizard
    @1uheepwizard 8 лет назад +2

    looks like weed growing at 6:54

  • @ThunderBreaker23
    @ThunderBreaker23 12 лет назад

    I do agree that FDR was very wrong for passing order 9066 but he was not the most despicable president ever, he did help america come out of the Great depression which other president couldn't do.

  • @forgetfulfunctor1
    @forgetfulfunctor1 7 лет назад

    This was a shame, as was the entire war. But I don't see what we could've done else. I agree with both the majority and minority opinions of the supreme court :(

  • @raymondalverez5999
    @raymondalverez5999 Год назад

    So much for Justice for all❤

  • @dre5394
    @dre5394 7 лет назад

    Kenji - Fort Minor.
    Listen to it.

  • @1kinut800
    @1kinut800 8 лет назад

    Set a precedence, which now can be used still.

    • @staceystrukel1917
      @staceystrukel1917 7 лет назад

      1 FKT that was not the first fucking time! Read a history book.

  • @Chairman-Xena
    @Chairman-Xena 7 лет назад

    Im not trying to justify what fdr or the us government did but they did pay reparations to the majority of internees

  • @dayman888
    @dayman888 6 лет назад

    Thanks Roosevelt.

    • @LukeLovesRose
      @LukeLovesRose 6 лет назад

      He knew about Pearl Harbor too. But he and his weasel warmonger friend, Churchill wanted to get us in the war.

  • @aaarong4870
    @aaarong4870 12 лет назад

    why would they do that just because there was a lot of them and i guess they didn't think that the Italian Americans or German Americans there was not enough people to be a thret

  • @zabercrombie24
    @zabercrombie24 12 лет назад

    Will are country ever learn from its mistakes?

  • @johnnynguyen9594
    @johnnynguyen9594 7 лет назад +5

    There are two things we never talked about when I was in History class in High School:
    1. The Japanese Internment Camps
    2. The Vietnam War

    • @vianjelos
      @vianjelos 5 лет назад +1

      The american education system likes to gloss over a lot of wars that make us look bad. It took a black history teacher to tell us that Lincoln didnt free the slaves because he disliked slavery but because he wanted leverage over the confederacy...he litteraly said if he could unite the country by freeing some slaves and not others he would do that, if he could do.it by freeing all slaves he would do that too and if he could free none to save the union, he would do that also. Lincoln himself didnt care for Slavery, but he certainly cared more about the stability of the US and its unity then he did about slaves rights. Also they never teach that the "Civil war" was actually a revolutionary war not a civil war since the south was trying to form its own nation, not take over the US government.

  • @minnowpd
    @minnowpd 3 года назад

    Japanese Americans in Hawaii were exempt. Their labor was needed .

  • @TheGreatAlannnnnn
    @TheGreatAlannnnnn 10 лет назад

    Do you think that Japanese in Japan know about this?

    • @animebro14
      @animebro14 9 лет назад

      i wonder if they also know about how americans treated black people.

    • @Gryffindor_-gv3jm
      @Gryffindor_-gv3jm 5 лет назад

      I wonder if they know what the Japanese did to Korea and China

  • @tomm3869
    @tomm3869 8 лет назад +1

    Never again.

  • @ezaiahsnmellan1023
    @ezaiahsnmellan1023 10 лет назад +1

    I don't like politics, but shit like this makes me wanna get in there just to tell people how stupid they were :

  • @unFayemous
    @unFayemous 10 лет назад

    I am so disgusted by this right now...

    • @Gryffindor_-gv3jm
      @Gryffindor_-gv3jm 5 лет назад

      unFayemous dude we were scared of them! After Pearl Harbor, their was Japanese spies in California, it was kinda right because it was a time of war! And look what their ancestors did in Asia.