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The WWII Japanese situation was a black mark on the
history of the US. Apparently the Japanese
Americans were exceptionally loyal to the US. The excuse was that we were at war, in particular
with Japan. The fear was that Japanese in the US
would work for Japan. We knew that putting all Japanese, at least those
in the West, in camps was an ugly situation.
And, when the war was over, the camps were
emptied. In the camps, life should have been as good
as possible with lots of food, good shelter,
good schooling, good medical care, etc.
I don't know if that was the case.
They were not criminals. But a lot of
Japanese in the US lost their homes,
belongings, businesses, etc. It was
ugly. Hopefully they didn't suffer
serious medical problems or lose their
lives. What happens in war is different
from what happens in peace.
Indeed, one of the issues about
'the war on terror' is, is it
war or peace in the US? If
it is peace in the US, are the
terrorists in the US
just criminals in the
US legal system or enemy soldiers?
If the war on terror is war in the
US, are we going to suspend the
Constitution until all the terrorists,
many tens of millions of radical
Muslims, have been 'defeated'? What will the US do about Muslims
in the US? Try to judge if they
are 'radical' Muslims?
Watch them in the mosques?
Follow them around?
Deport them? Put them in camps
as for the Japanese in WWII? Treat
them just as criminals in the
US criminal system? E.g., what is going on in Gitmo
is not really the US criminal
legal system. It's a bad situation.
But 9/11 was a bad situation, and
so was the role of the camps in
Afghanistan and the
IED's in Afghanistan,
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First off, things don't "happen", people do them. Secondly, the actions of people determine peace or war, not the other way around. Thirdly, the "War On Terror" is a rhetorical device, and depending on the thickness of your skin, an exercise in hipocrisy or comedy.
all the terrorists, many tens of millions of radical Muslims
Wait, what???
what is going on in Gitmo is not really the US criminal legal system. It's a bad situation. But 9/11 was a bad situation
9/11 was a tragedy and a horrible crime, but what made it the bad situation you are referring to were the, how do I put this, nazi cunts who abused it for their ends. I also assume building 7 collapsed out of sheer sympathy with the whole situation being so bad? And of course, this logic applies to the attackers as well. Killing thousands of people wasn't ideal, but the situation was "bad", you know.