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Essay On Japanese Internment

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One core value of American culture is this idea of guaranteed rights. These rights, according to our Constitution, are untouchable and granted to all Americans. However, in multiple instances over the years the government has infamously curtailed some of these rights. This usually occurs during times of struggle, like war or depression. Some of these instances are praised and others are highly controversial.
One of the most blatant examples of right restrictions is the interment of the Japanese. During WWII, many Americans had a deep hatred for the Japanese, due to their involvement in Pearl Harbor. Many believed that some of these Japanese citizens could endanger the rest of society. President Franklin Roosevelt established Japanese internment …show more content…

Many citizens argued that the goal of the United States was not to make the world safe for democracy but to protect the investments of the wealthy. President Woodrow Wilson had little patience for such dissent. Shortly after the United States entered the war, Congress enacted the Espionage Act of 1917 and the Sedition Act of 1918. These acts gave postal officials the authority to ban newspapers for anti-war speech, and made speech that was degrading towards the U.S. a federal offense. The government prosecuted over 2,100 people under these acts. The administration’s intent was made clear in 1917 when Attorney General Thomas Watt Gregory, referring to war dissenters, stated: “May God have mercy on them, for they need expect none from an outraged people and an avenging government.” These acts were mercilessly abused by the government officials. While not as blatantly abusive as the Japanese Internment Act was, it still gave the government far too much power in determining the difference between harmful speech and a simple opinion. The government showed considerable regret just a few years after these acts were established. Between 1919 and 1923, the government released from prison every individual who had been convicted of sedition during the war. Over the next half-century, the Supreme Court overruled every one of its World War I decisions, holding in effect that

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