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In reply to the discussion: It was seventy years ago today that America sent Japanese Americans to our own concentration camps. [View all]marasinghe
(1,253 posts)12. while their sons fought, & died, with extraordinary valor, in the US Army ....
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/442nd_Infantry_Regiment_(United_States)
From the Wiki' article:
".... The 442nd Regimental Combat Team ( Japanese: 第442連隊戦闘団 ) of the United States Army, was composed of Japanese-American enlisted men and mostly Caucasian officers .... The families of many of its soldiers were subject to internment. The 442nd was a self-sufficient force, and fought with uncommon distinction in Italy, southern France, and Germany. The unit became the most highlydecorated regiment in the history of the United States Armed Forces, including 21 Medal of Honor recipients ...."
(bold/italics mine)
From the Wiki' article:
".... The 442nd Regimental Combat Team ( Japanese: 第442連隊戦闘団 ) of the United States Army, was composed of Japanese-American enlisted men and mostly Caucasian officers .... The families of many of its soldiers were subject to internment. The 442nd was a self-sufficient force, and fought with uncommon distinction in Italy, southern France, and Germany. The unit became the most highlydecorated regiment in the history of the United States Armed Forces, including 21 Medal of Honor recipients ...."
(bold/italics mine)
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It was seventy years ago today that America sent Japanese Americans to our own concentration camps. [View all]
Stinky The Clown
Feb 2012
OP
"Internment camp" is to "concentration camp" as "enhanced interrogation" is to "torture."
Posteritatis
Feb 2012
#44
just came back from Dachau and you're confusing that kind of camp with a death camp
CreekDog
Mar 2012
#84
I keep trying to explain the difference between these camps as they explained them to us
CreekDog
Mar 2012
#86
We're just arguing over terminology --but you made a mistake in describing Dachau
CreekDog
Mar 2012
#88
I notice there is no link for Roosevelt calling them "concentration camps"
former9thward
Feb 2012
#57
The term is probably technically correct, but in the popular mind it's associated with the Nazis
RZM
Feb 2012
#17
Concentration camp is such a much more straight-forward description than the sanitized
indepat
Feb 2012
#34
Some years ago I worked with a woman who spent her childhood in one of the camps
Stinky The Clown
Feb 2012
#11
while their sons fought, & died, with extraordinary valor, in the US Army ....
marasinghe
Feb 2012
#12
But Italians and Germans had to actually DO something suspicious to be interned
Lydia Leftcoast
Feb 2012
#28
One life taken in those camps, whatever YOU choose to call them, was too much.
blue neen
Feb 2012
#49
Who is saying they are equal to "The holocaust" (quotes yours) or what happened to NA?
uppityperson
Feb 2012
#64
yep. I recently spoke to a former internment camp resident. He described how
Liberal_in_LA
Feb 2012
#61