Why Internment Camps Were Wrong: Have you ever thought about what the Japanese population during world war ll felt like, or what they went through when they were forced into internment camps? Well back then or maybe even now people didn’t think about how horrible it would have been for all of those people in the camps, or they just didn’t care. No one should have to go through such an awful experience like that, it was wrong what the U.S. did. In Camp Harmony, it shows just a glimpse of how bad it was for some camps. They were put into camps in the middle of nowhere. Their so-called “house” was poorly built, they had very thin walls, the house always leaked whenever it rained, they had to make their own furniture, the food wasn’t very good, and there was a fence keeping them in. Many people died trying to get out of the camps. Many innocent people were taken into these camps, a lot were even arrested. They were told to leave …show more content…
There were signs in neighborhoods saying “Japs weren’t welcome anymore”. Many were not even able to rebuild the lives they had before. Even if you just looked Japanese, you were sent into one of the internment camps, no questions asked. The U.S. thought they were protecting themselves by putting them in the internment camps, but when doing that they were wrong. All those people they put in the camps were innocent. The U.S. was wrong, they weren’t the enemy. I believe the internment camps were not right. The U.S. had no right in putting so many people into those camps, killing innocent victims. The government should have handled the situation better, by not putting people's lives in danger. After world war ll the U.S. did eventually apologize to them and realize their mistake. But actions speak louder than words. The U.S. is going to have to do a lot more than just apologize to them considering all the damage they’ve done to all those