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concentration camps in america
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<blockquote data-quote="Night Templar" data-source="post: 80569" data-attributes="member: 4744"><p><strong><span style="color: #ff4d4d">Of course there were, nothing new about that. Best as I can recall, it was some type of action take by the Feds, to address the issue of spies on the west coast, mainly, whether their were spies for the Japanese, I don't doubt but a lot of American citizens were packed up, bag and baggage, and "relocated". "Something about a "threat to national security at war time", supposedly. I have found the whole matter rather "un-American" and I am sure there were "rights" that were violated in the typical "knee jerk" over reaction to the fear of an invasion on the west coast by the armies/navies of Japan. Let's not forget that some also American citizens of German heritage got the same kind of treatment, though not as "punitive" but based often times just on their last name as the determining factor for "relocation". Sad but true that often times the rights sworn to and promised by our "founding fathers", just were simply forgotten based on the phrase "national security" being enforced. As for "concentration camps", I doubt many , if any, fit the term used to describe to what was cited as created by the German government to deal with not just the Jews but anyone that didn't fit into the concept of what were seen as not fittinf into thhe concepts of what "true Germans" were, based on such things as physical apperance, medical/psychiatric history, criminal activities, convicted or not, general ancestors, again, proven or not, and the list goes including the use of names as one criteria for forced imprisonment. What was created by the S.S., mainly, I find would be used correctly as "concentration camps" but not what was created in the US. The term and the reasons for their creation were world apart.</span></strong></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Night Templar, post: 80569, member: 4744"] [B][COLOR=#ff4d4d]Of course there were, nothing new about that. Best as I can recall, it was some type of action take by the Feds, to address the issue of spies on the west coast, mainly, whether their were spies for the Japanese, I don't doubt but a lot of American citizens were packed up, bag and baggage, and "relocated". "Something about a "threat to national security at war time", supposedly. I have found the whole matter rather "un-American" and I am sure there were "rights" that were violated in the typical "knee jerk" over reaction to the fear of an invasion on the west coast by the armies/navies of Japan. Let's not forget that some also American citizens of German heritage got the same kind of treatment, though not as "punitive" but based often times just on their last name as the determining factor for "relocation". Sad but true that often times the rights sworn to and promised by our "founding fathers", just were simply forgotten based on the phrase "national security" being enforced. As for "concentration camps", I doubt many , if any, fit the term used to describe to what was cited as created by the German government to deal with not just the Jews but anyone that didn't fit into the concept of what were seen as not fittinf into thhe concepts of what "true Germans" were, based on such things as physical apperance, medical/psychiatric history, criminal activities, convicted or not, general ancestors, again, proven or not, and the list goes including the use of names as one criteria for forced imprisonment. What was created by the S.S., mainly, I find would be used correctly as "concentration camps" but not what was created in the US. The term and the reasons for their creation were world apart.[/COLOR][/B] [/QUOTE]
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