WI: No Japanese-American Internment

His conclusion - which I believe has quite some credibility - was that anti-Japanese sentiment increased as casualties mounted. As the original request was for me to find evidence on whether or not anti-Japanese sentiment increased or not during the war, I'll submit that as my evidence. Apologies for not having anything more concrete, I'm sure you can ask Calbear for that - or through myself, if so necessary.

Seriously? You've been vehemently spamming this thread with all sorts of assertions and repeatedly challenging other posters who have politely provided you with actual historical evidence and all you can provide in support of your position is ”a grownup told me so" and "ask a mod to tell you why I'm right"?

Do you have a personality disorder or are you just a twelve year old?
 
I think that the genocidal rhetoric against Japan and the Japanese during WW2 is often misinterpreted by young people who assume that white Americans at the time were more or less synonymous with racist misogynists. If that were the case, the Americans really would have crushed the Japanese polity, not let off the establishment with a slap on the wrist and demilitarization.

The reality is that many things that were said, weren't meant.
 
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