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Japanese-Americans imprisoned at Texas internment camp in 1940s watch border crisis unfold with heavy hearts

 
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 73184323
United States
06/23/2018 11:02 PM
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Japanese-Americans imprisoned at Texas internment camp in 1940s watch border crisis unfold with heavy hearts
For some Crystal City internees, the parallels that have emerged between today’s immigration crisis and the internment of Japanese-Americans are chilling.

Scores of Japanese-American families were torn apart in the 1940s when the federal government forcibly relocated and incarcerated citizens of Japanese ancestry and immigrants it considered “enemy aliens” in detention camps across the country following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor during World War II. In some cases, children were rounded up with no idea where they were going, how long they were going to be held or whether their parents had been deported to another country.

And as questions continue over how long the migrant families will be separated, some of the Japanese-Americans who were held at Crystal City have been left to agonize over whether the legacy of trauma that followed their mass incarceration — post traumatic stress disorder, anxiety, depression and other mental health disorders — will be handed down to the children who have been detained away from their parents.

“The thought of being torn from their parents and being placed in a separate facility unknown miles away from where their mother is possibly being deported causes so much anxiety,” said Satsuki Ina, a therapist from the San Francisco area who was also held at Crystal City. “I think these children are being damaged.”

Like some of today’s detained children, Ina was separated from her father, who was sent to a camp in North Dakota while she was held in Texas with her mother and brother from 1944 to 1946. Her reaction to her father’s return two years later was indicative of the trauma she had already suffered.

“I cried whenever he came close to me. I had no idea who he was,” Ina said. “Here was somebody who was a total stranger, and I was supposed to call him father.”

[link to www.texastribune.org (secure)]
X1811

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06/23/2018 11:03 PM
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Re: Japanese-Americans imprisoned at Texas internment camp in 1940s watch border crisis unfold with heavy hearts
Those were victims. Not criminals coming to sneak into a country illegally.

FAIL.
All characters and events in this forum --even those based on real people-- are entirely fictional. All celebrity comments are impersonated...poorly. The above post contains coarse language and due to the content it should not be viewed by anyone.
Anonymous Coward
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06/23/2018 11:05 PM
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Re: Japanese-Americans imprisoned at Texas internment camp in 1940s watch border crisis unfold with heavy hearts
Those were victims. Not criminals coming to sneak into a country illegally.

FAIL.
 Quoting: X1811


Exactly!
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 71966874
United Kingdom
06/23/2018 11:42 PM
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Re: Japanese-Americans imprisoned at Texas internment camp in 1940s watch border crisis unfold with heavy hearts
Those were victims. Not criminals coming to sneak into a country illegally.

FAIL.
 Quoting: X1811


Exactly!
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 47495886


Yet "for some Crystal City internees, the parallels that have emerged between today’s immigration crisis and the internment of Japanese-Americans are chilling."
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 75856925
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06/24/2018 12:04 AM
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Re: Japanese-Americans imprisoned at Texas internment camp in 1940s watch border crisis unfold with heavy hearts
Fuck them

Tell them to study what their home country was doing with inside assets, not to mention what they did to Chinese, Filipinos etc etc etc
Anonymous Coward
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06/24/2018 12:19 AM
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Re: Japanese-Americans imprisoned at Texas internment camp in 1940s watch border crisis unfold with heavy hearts
Congrats on your single star.
This is where they're trying to go with the propaganda now? Ridiculous.
Anonymous Coward
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06/24/2018 12:20 AM
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Re: Japanese-Americans imprisoned at Texas internment camp in 1940s watch border crisis unfold with heavy hearts
Those were victims. Not criminals coming to sneak into a country illegally.

FAIL.
 Quoting: X1811


Truth.
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 72770923
United States
06/24/2018 12:21 AM
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Re: Japanese-Americans imprisoned at Texas internment camp in 1940s watch border crisis unfold with heavy hearts
I’ve toured one of those camps in California.

It was heart breaking.
It was heart breaking because those were LAW ABIDING AMERICAN CITIZENS.
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 70623763
Denmark
06/24/2018 12:21 AM
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Re: Japanese-Americans imprisoned at Texas internment camp in 1940s watch border crisis unfold with heavy hearts
For some Crystal City internees, the parallels that have emerged between today’s immigration crisis and the internment of Japanese-Americans are chilling.

Scores of Japanese-American families were torn apart in the 1940s when the federal government forcibly relocated and incarcerated citizens of Japanese ancestry and immigrants it considered “enemy aliens” in detention camps across the country following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor during World War II. In some cases, children were rounded up with no idea where they were going, how long they were going to be held or whether their parents had been deported to another country.

And as questions continue over how long the migrant families will be separated, some of the Japanese-Americans who were held at Crystal City have been left to agonize over whether the legacy of trauma that followed their mass incarceration — post traumatic stress disorder, anxiety, depression and other mental health disorders — will be handed down to the children who have been detained away from their parents.

“The thought of being torn from their parents and being placed in a separate facility unknown miles away from where their mother is possibly being deported causes so much anxiety,” said Satsuki Ina, a therapist from the San Francisco area who was also held at Crystal City. “I think these children are being damaged.”

Like some of today’s detained children, Ina was separated from her father, who was sent to a camp in North Dakota while she was held in Texas with her mother and brother from 1944 to 1946. Her reaction to her father’s return two years later was indicative of the trauma she had already suffered.

“I cried whenever he came close to me. I had no idea who he was,” Ina said. “Here was somebody who was a total stranger, and I was supposed to call him father.”

[link to www.texastribune.org (secure)]
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 73184323


Sad
Anonymous Coward
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06/24/2018 12:24 AM
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Re: Japanese-Americans imprisoned at Texas internment camp in 1940s watch border crisis unfold with heavy hearts
For some Crystal City internees, the parallels that have emerged between today’s immigration crisis and the internment of Japanese-Americans are chilling.

Scores of Japanese-American families were torn apart in the 1940s when the federal government forcibly relocated and incarcerated citizens of Japanese ancestry and immigrants it considered “enemy aliens” in detention camps across the country following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor during World War II. In some cases, children were rounded up with no idea where they were going, how long they were going to be held or whether their parents had been deported to another country.

And as questions continue over how long the migrant families will be separated, some of the Japanese-Americans who were held at Crystal City have been left to agonize over whether the legacy of trauma that followed their mass incarceration — post traumatic stress disorder, anxiety, depression and other mental health disorders — will be handed down to the children who have been detained away from their parents.

“The thought of being torn from their parents and being placed in a separate facility unknown miles away from where their mother is possibly being deported causes so much anxiety,” said Satsuki Ina, a therapist from the San Francisco area who was also held at Crystal City. “I think these children are being damaged.”

Like some of today’s detained children, Ina was separated from her father, who was sent to a camp in North Dakota while she was held in Texas with her mother and brother from 1944 to 1946. Her reaction to her father’s return two years later was indicative of the trauma she had already suffered.

“I cried whenever he came close to me. I had no idea who he was,” Ina said. “Here was somebody who was a total stranger, and I was supposed to call him father.”

[link to www.texastribune.org (secure)]
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 73184323


Sad
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 70623763



There is no parallel.

One group were citizens who already lived here and had broke zero laws.

And the other group are non citizens entering the country illegally and can’t even prove the child they are with is theirs in most cases.

Also- human trafficking wasn’t a crisis at the time at our border.
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 76702891
United States
06/24/2018 12:32 AM
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Re: Japanese-Americans imprisoned at Texas internment camp in 1940s watch border crisis unfold with heavy hearts
For some Crystal City internees, the parallels that have emerged between today’s immigration crisis and the internment of Japanese-Americans are chilling.

Scores of Japanese-American families were torn apart in the 1940s when the federal government forcibly relocated and incarcerated citizens of Japanese ancestry and immigrants it considered “enemy aliens” in detention camps across the country following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor during World War II. In some cases, children were rounded up with no idea where they were going, how long they were going to be held or whether their parents had been deported to another country.

And as questions continue over how long the migrant families will be separated, some of the Japanese-Americans who were held at Crystal City have been left to agonize over whether the legacy of trauma that followed their mass incarceration — post traumatic stress disorder, anxiety, depression and other mental health disorders — will be handed down to the children who have been detained away from their parents.

“The thought of being torn from their parents and being placed in a separate facility unknown miles away from where their mother is possibly being deported causes so much anxiety,” said Satsuki Ina, a therapist from the San Francisco area who was also held at Crystal City. “I think these children are being damaged.”

Like some of today’s detained children, Ina was separated from her father, who was sent to a camp in North Dakota while she was held in Texas with her mother and brother from 1944 to 1946. Her reaction to her father’s return two years later was indicative of the trauma she had already suffered.

“I cried whenever he came close to me. I had no idea who he was,” Ina said. “Here was somebody who was a total stranger, and I was supposed to call him father.”

[link to www.texastribune.org (secure)]
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 73184323


Sad
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 70623763



There is no parallel.

One group were citizens who already lived here and had broke zero laws.

And the other group are non citizens entering the country illegally and can’t even prove the child they are with is theirs in most cases.

Also- human trafficking wasn’t a crisis at the time at our border.
 Quoting: JypsieWind


FDR did the same thing to German and Italian immigrants. Hell, FDR wanted to intern every single ethnic German in America, even ones whose families came over before the Revolution. His generals told him it would spark a civil war.
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 76539238
Canada
06/24/2018 12:53 AM
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Re: Japanese-Americans imprisoned at Texas internment camp in 1940s watch border crisis unfold with heavy hearts
Congrats on your single star.
This is where they're trying to go with the propaganda now? Ridiculous.
 Quoting: HomeOnTheRange


This.

Pure propaganda.





GLP