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World War II: The Bombing Of Pearl Harbor

Decent Essays

The bombing of Pearl Harbor by the Japanese Navy in 1942 was a very significant event. It paved the way for the United States of America to enter World War II. Along with that, a controversial decision was made shortly after; the issuing of Executive Order 9066. Due to increasing tensions towards the US citizens and the Japanese, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, authorized this order, and in turn, forced the internment of the Japanese. Even before this event, the Japanese and white citizens were already in a state of social turmoil, and it only made things worse when Pearl Harbor was bombed. Along with the Japanese, races such as, African and Latinos were also discriminated before World War 2 took place, but Japanese were impacted the most. …show more content…

A lot of white people saw the Japanese as labor and business rivals, more specifically, white farmers. According to the document (America Betrayed) They felt as if the Japanese were underselling them and offering high prices for land. Along with this, farmers firmly believed that they can do whatever the Japanese were doing, so there was no use to keep them. The farmers could’ve used the Pearl Harbor bombing as a decoy in order to eliminate some labor competition, because many immigrants worked a lot for cheap around this time period, so they had a higher chance of getting hired. This opinion of Japanese workers is also seen in an editorial (Japanese Cheap Labor), where it is stated that the Japanese are absorbing American industries, and that they’re unreliable.There was economic tension with the Japanese and Americans even before the war. Due to already economic issues between American citizens and Japanese, this was a reason to why Roosevelt gave the green light to Japanese internment, the Americans were in fear of their jobs and felt the need to eliminate some competition, unfortunately the Japanese were the ones they attacked. While economic issues played a role into the president agreeing to Executive Order 9066, the main reason this took place was because of social and racial attitudes towards the Japanese in America …show more content…

Americans had a history of discrimination towards immigrants and the bombing of Pearl Harbor, was a way for Americans to kick out a race they didn’t like. For example, an image (Japs Keep Moving), depicts a white woman pointing to a big sign on top of a building that reads, “Japs Keep Moving - This Is A White Man’s Neighborhood.”, along with a little sign on the window that says, “Japs Keep Out”. This image was taken before World War II even began, and this shows many white people’s attitude towards the Japanese even before the bombing. Another instance of discrimination can come from Henry McLemore, who made an article for the Seattle Times (This is War!). This was an article made after Pearl Harbor took place and McLemore states, “If making one million innocent Japanese uncomfortable would prevent one scheming Japanese from costing the life of one American boy, then let the million innocents suffer.”. This is a very bold and harsh statement made and this shows how discriminant the Americans were towards the Japanese. Also this shows a lot of nativism beliefs the Americans had at this time, they wouldn’t accept immigrants and thought they weren’t their equal, but far below it. Even the Chinese were racist towards the Japanese, for example this poster in Chinatown (San Francisco Chinatown Welcome), warns people not buy any Japanese products otherwise you’re helping the

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