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May 30, 1942: The Day the United States Sold Its Soul
Every American knows that Dec. 7, 1941 -- the date that Japanese planes attacked the U.S. naval base at Pearl Harbor -- is "a date which will live in infamy." But few Americans remember a second infamous anniversary: May 30.
Three months after the attack on Pearl Harbor, President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued an executive order that gave specified military commanders nearly total discretion to remove people of their choosing from areas deemed to have military significance. Toyosaburo ("Fred") Korematsu, an American citizen of Japanese descent, violated the exclusion order and was arrested on May 30, 1942. Thus began one of the darkest episodes in American constitutional history.
Initially held in a San Francisco jail, Korematsu was later sent to an assembly center, and then to a relocation center described by Supreme Court Justice Owen Roberts as a concentration camp. No question was ever raised regarding Korematsu's loyalty to the United States. He had never been to Japan, did not claim Japanese citizenship, did not read Japanese and spoke the language poorly.
Over the next two years, 120,000 Japanese-Americans, including 70,000 U.S. citizens, were subject first to curfews, then exclusion from their homes and finally relocation to internment camps. None of the 120,000 victims was convicted of espionage or sabotage, or even accused of disloyalty. By war's end, Japanese-American troops had received 18,000 decorations for valor. Remarkably, many of the troops had volunteered for service from within the internment camps. Not until mid-1946 did the last residents of the camps return to their homes.
Korematsu's challenge to his incarceration fell on deaf ears. The Supreme Court, in a 1944 decision written by Justice Hugo Black, invoked national security to absolve the Roosevelt administration of an unconscionable violation of civil liberties. Dissenting Justice Robert H. Jackson cautioned that "guilt is personal and not inheritable." By condoning Korematsu's mistreatment, he wrote, "the court for all time has validated the principle of racial discrimination. ... The principle then lies about like a loaded weapon ready for the hand of any authority that can bring forward a plausible claim of an urgent need."
Not until 1983 did the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians finally acknowledge that the internment program was a "grave injustice" that was "conceived in haste and executed in an atmosphere of fear and anger at Japan." The commission found, unanimously, that Roosevelt's executive order "was not justified by military necessity" but was the product of "race, prejudice, war hysteria and a failure of political leadership."
In 1988, President Ronald Reagan authorized reparations of $20,000 each to thousands of internees, including Korematsu. Then, in 1999, President Bill Clinton awarded Korematsu a presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor. Fred Korematsu died at age 86 on March 30, 2005.
Few Americans would argue that the United States, under attack by Japan, should be forbidden from considering Japanese ancestry combined with evidence of misbehavior to identify potential targets for further investigation. But the Roosevelt administration did not combine nationality with evidence of misbehavior. Japanese ancestry was the sole criterion, and incarceration, not investigation, was the resulting government act. When undefined ethnic profiling, with no basis for assuming that a single suspect had been disloyal, is used to deny liberty to 120,000 innocent persons, we should be outraged.
Regrettably, the Supreme Court was not outraged. By authorizing the president to incarcerate innocent Americans based solely on their lineage, the court set the stage for later presidential power grabs, culminating in President George W. Bush's unprecedented claims of executive authority in the war on terror.
Bush has been more than willing to wield the "loaded weapon" of wartime power based on "urgent need." He has claimed authority to engage in electronic surveillance without a warrant, to convene military tribunals without congressional approval, to establish secret CIA prisons, to declare that all battlefield detainees are enemy combatants, to imprison U.S. citizens without filing charges and to employ interrogation techniques that may have violated our treaty commitments banning torture.
The problem is not that courts today are invoking the Korematsu case to justify executive power. The holding in that case is an anachronism, "overruled in the court of history," even if not officially repudiated by the Supreme Court. But Fred Korematsu's challenge, if it had been upheld, would have stood as a formidable barrier to excessive concentrations of power in the executive branch. Instead, the court condoned Roosevelt's unconstitutional internment policy and passed up its chance to establish legal precedent that might have dissuaded future executive misbehavior.
Robert A. Levy is senior fellow in constitutional studies at the Cato Institute and coauthor of "The Dirty Dozen: How Twelve Supreme Court Cases Radically Expanded Government and Eroded Freedom."
© 2008 Star Tribune
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23 Comments so far
Show AllJust wait until Bush invokes NPSD51 and fills the KBR-built "illegal immigrant deten".....er, I mean, concentration camps with Muslims and any other group he deems dangerous.
About August 15th is my guess.
Agrabusiness stole all the Japanese farms.
World War 2 was a disaster for the world. America emerged as a hegemonic power (sorry, the USSR was NEVER a real threat, they would never have won a war against the US and its allies. No way).
Unfortunately, the US sold its soul in many ways during that war, including the internment fiasco. We also adopted the theories of total war from the air, which played itself out by burning Tokyo and Dresden and horrifically reached its logical conclusion at Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
And, Eisenhower was right about the military industrial complex. It rules us now. Everything America does now is covered in blood, and I don't see any way out of it.
peace
whatfools,
Did you mean "American" farms? I think most Japanese farms are owned by Japanese families. The vast majority of internees (kidnap victims) were American citizens.
It should be noted that the writer of the opinion, Justice Hugo Black, was a stalwart in the Deomcratic Party and a former Ku Klux Klansman.
FDR apparently knew this when he appointed him as Justice.
"One persisting controversy is whether Franklin Delano Roosevelt knew of Black's Klan membership when he appointed him to the Supreme Court. It appears that he did. He wrote to a friend, 'I've felt from the beginning of all this Klan talk that perhaps he did belong to the Klan--but that did not necessarily mean that he might not make a very great Judge on the Supreme Court--On verra!'" (Wikipedia)
Pls note: Eisenhower originally warned against the MILITARY, INDUSTRIAL, CONGRESSIONAL COMPLEX. He was talked into dropping CONGRESSIONAL from his speech.
During WWII it was against the law to profit from war.
Now it seems, profiteering is next to patriotism.
Shame on all of us/US.
Sarah Ruth
When we attack Iran and Bush declares martial law, watch out if you're dark, have a beard or arab-sounding name.
Profiteering is what it is all about. As long as Money can be made while others do the dying......there will be Republicans who are all for it.
Veteran '66-68
And Democrats
A typical error of human and bureaucratic thinking is to judge people grossly, by their type, skin color or origin, and never ever consider individual circumstances. Discretion, selectivity left in the hands of lower level officials is abhorred. So the slightest paranoia at the highest level is translated into mass indiscriminate human injustice at the level of actions. Those that play the levers of power should have full responsibility for the consequences. Some of those levers , that of war, mass arrests and detention, are so deadly in their consequences that they should never be used. Their existence is a testament to the group bigotry and fear inbuilt the human mind, a relic of evolutionary development from tribal and small group existence, and does not provide any proof that there usage serves any positive purpose in human development in the over large modern states of today.
Umm, America had a soul at one point? Gee, I didn't realize. Slavery was written into the Constitution and every inch of territory was stolen in one way or another, usually violently. Seems to me that the country never had a soul to sell.
Another problem is we do not listen to our prophets or learn from history:
Dorothy Day, who spent her youth amongst anarchists and bohemians, in bars and through unhappy love affairs, ended life with a mile high FBI file and a paper trail that testifies that what she wrote, she believed, she did and lived.
On the Sunday after Pearl Harbor, she said:
"There is now all this patriotic indignation about the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and Japanese expansionism in Asia. Yet not a word about American and European colonialism in this same area. We, the British, the French, and others set up spheres of influence…control national states-against the expressed will of these states-and represent imperialism…We dictate to [all] …to where they can expand economically and politically, and we declare what policy they must observe. From our nationalistic and imperialistic point of view, we have every right to concentrate American military forces [Everywhere we chose]…But I waste rhetoric on international politics-the breeding grounds of war over the centuries. The balance of power and other empty slogans inspired by a false and flamboyant nationalism have bred conflict throughout 'civilized' history.
"And it has become too late in human history to tolerate wars which none can win. Nor dare we quibble about just wars…All wars are, by their very nature, evil and destructive. It has become too late for civilized people to accept this evil. We must take a stand. We must renounce war as an instrument of policy…Evil enough when the finest of our youth perish in conflict and even the causes of these conflicts were soon lost to memory. Even more horrible today when cities go up in flames and brilliant scientific minds are searching out ultimate weapons.
"War must cease. There are no victories. The world can bear the burden no longer. Yes, we must make a stand. Even as I speak to you, I may be guilty of what some men call treason. But we must reject war: Yes, we must now make a stand. War is murder, rape, ruin, death; war can end our civilization. I tell you that within a decade we will have weapons capable of ending this world as we have known it."
excerpted WAWA:
http://www.wearewideawake.org/
May 31, 2008: WWDDS? What Would Dorothy Day Say?
Our soul was sold long before this. Just one more example. The psychopaths rule.
An Eagles Karma ePIe May 30th, 2008
Will karma ever find its way to America?
What awaits the eagle empire?
What will be the karma of the eagle?
Will that majestic bird of prey
be tarred and lose it's feathers?
and what will be it's fate in it's next incarnation?
a worm? a bottom feeding leech?
ah yes.....
it will return as......
homo sapiens
The presidency needs to go on a very big power diet---it's so fat and bloated with power, it's grotesque. Certainly, the Founders and Framers would not be able to recognize the presidency of today as the one they created in 1787 in the Constitution.
I think it's a little too cynical, if tempting, to say the US never had a soul. Human beings have souls, and we are imperfect, flawed, and prone to self-aggrandizement and violence. Same with countries, on a much larger scale. The souls of large-scale human communities have been tainted since we moved from hunting and gathering to agriculture.
However: I think that the beginning of the sale (not loss; this was a deliberate Faustian bargain) of America's soul began on April 19, 1898, when Congress voted to embark on the Spanish-American War, the US's first real imperialist adventure. We have never looked back.
Yet, what goes around comes around, and peak oil, global warming, and blowback are all sinking their teeth into America's fat arrogant @$$. Maybe we will recover our collective soul in dealing with these crises. Or maybe the planet will have to start over with a less intemperate species.
Happy Apocalypse.
Sarah Ruth:
Although CDers et al, endlessly cite Eisenhower's farewell speech as an example of his integrity and forthrightness, he wasn't above profitting from that same Military-Congressional-Industrial Complex himself! How do you think he acquired that farm in Gettysburg PA?
The U.S. wasn't alone in this despicable behaviour, Canada did the same thing. Imagine that, U.S. and Canadian citizens rounded up and thrown into concentration camps....think it can't happen again??
If you post on CD, they will come for you, for sure.
See you all in the camps!
This story has not ended yet. Remember Postville, IA, an small town that fell to the military advances known as ICE. Families still do not know where their loved ones are and children are orphaned by the immigration raid. And for what? For doing the jobs that nobody else in America wants? For trying to make a better life for them and their children?
1942?
Surely you mean 1492?
Many are unaware that, before the internment camps were completed, the internees were housed in such places as the horse stables at Santa Anita race track.
Very soon, we will need a new underground railroad. Long live HBS. I wanna be like her.