Why Do Japanese American Internment

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Since the very first presidential election, presidents in office have faced many difficult challenges. George Washington served as a general in the American Revolution and George W. Bush dealt with the 9/11 terrorist attack. Throughout President Franklin Roosevelt's presidential term, March 1933 to April 1945, he faced many difficult decisions that had to be made in the United States best interest. One of these decisions was based on the internment of Japanese American citizens. Japan attacked Pearl Harbor, Hawaii Territory on December 7, 1941 which lead to the tension between Japanese Americans and the United States. There are many diverse opinions on what President Roosevelt should have done and why. President Roosevelt was not justified in ordering Executive Order 9066 because the Japanese …show more content…

In 1952, the Walter-McCarran Act was passed that allowed Japanese immigrants to become legal US citizens. Japanese Americans came to the United States in hope for a new life and opportunity for themselves and their families, willing to work hard for very low wages. President Roosevelt worried that these Japanese Americans were going to act as spies for the Japanese government and collect information from the American government to use against them. To prevent these issues from occurring Roosevelt decided to place more than 127,000 Japanese American people into internment camps during World War II. Although this was a reasonable concern for American lives, President Roosevelt had no proof that this was actually true. Immigrants from all over the world were eager to come to America, as many of them still are today, to free themselves from religious standards, communist governments, and simply for a fresh start. Fear lead the United States into punishing innocent Japanese Americans; evidence did