@cicerone imposter,
cicerone imposter wrote:
You are one confused American - that's if you are an American. The US Constitution protects its citizens - or should have. FYI: Most Japanese-Americans put into concentration camps were US citizens by birth.
I wasn't around when that happened. Don't tell me I am supposed to be a watchdog for the Constitution.
My last post was talking about your pronunciation of the Yiddish word for backside. Why talk about the Japanese-American WWII internments?
Just for your own information. That internment MIGHT have had something to do with the biological warfare that the Japanese were testing in Manchuria, and could have killed many Americans if one Japanese saboteur had any of the organisms to let out on the west coast. Perhaps, Japanese-Americans should blame Japan for the concerns of Americans during WWII, relating to the Japanese-American community possibly being a good hiding place for a Japanese-Japanese saboteur. If Japan wasn't using biological warfare, perhaps the internments would never have happened?
As patriotic Americans, Japanese Americans should realize, in my opinion, that ending their ethnic enclave on the west coast was valuable to the war effort, so no Japanese-Japanese saboteur could hide amongst his co-DNA. Biological weapons kill everyone; Japanese-Americans included.