Petamocto said:
The Germans made mass decisions based on race and not individual guilt/innocence, and so did we. If you want to call me immature, ignorant of history, or even retarded because I pointed that out, then that's quite alright. I stated there was a difference because we did not kill them all.
There were three decisions made:
1. Do we think all people are guilty because they are the same race?
2. Do we contain them all just to be safe?
3. Do we kill them all just to be really safe?
We made 2/3 of the same decisions the Germans did. Granted the last one is the "biggy", but it hardly puts us in a position to point fingers and act high and mighty because we "only" rounded up thousands of innocent people based on their race and it's a bit hypocritical.
As per the purpose of my original post, if people did not have the courage to stand up and admit that what we did was horribly wrong we would probably be rounding up Muslims right now and putting them in camps.
Superficially the two "things" appear quite similar; however, you fail.
In Europe, anti-semitism was rampant, and there was no good reason for it. "They" were just Jews, they owned all the businesses, they were in league with the Bolshevists, etc. All that garbage. It went from outright persecution and went from there.
For us, in late November 1941, Japanese Canadians were just another group of immigrants, along with the Chinese, Ukrainians and others. Then, waking up on 8 December, Japan was suddenly an enemy, and looking around, we "realised" that there were hundreds (thousands?) of "enemy aliens" in Canada. Having citizenship of Japan, they were citizens of an enemy state. Yes, hindsight is 20/20 and all that, but we felt that these enemy aliens (along with Germans and Italians) had to be watched, whatever.
So, question one: we didn't consider them guilty or innocent. They were citizens of an enemy nation, ergo, they were the enemy.
Question 2: the Germans didn't lock up the Jews, Gypsies, Homosexuals, etc, because they wanted to be safe.
Question 3: they didn't kill them to be safe.
So, none of the questions apply. The apologists of history will want us to believe that we mistreated the "yellow" people, dropping the bomb on them and all, just because we are mean white people. Yet "they" forget that we firebombed our cousins by the millions, because they were the enemy in a full-up and declared war.
Were we right to do what we did? Sure. So, it's not hypocritical at all, because the situations were completely different. We didn't make even 1/3 of the same decisions as the Germans. What we did wasn't horribly wrong, or even midly wrong. Given the same circumstances and some knowledge, I would advocate doing the same. And given that the people who attacked us way back in 2001 were from a variety of nations, it is a false premise to assume that I would advocate rounding up Muslims. I do advocate the use of nuclear weapons on known insurgent areas, but that's just me. (And probably a good reason why I'm not the guy in charge of putting my finger on the button).
But I refuse to consider what we (as Canadians) did as wrong, given that Canada was at war with Japan, a formal war, and we took enemy aliens and interned them: we had no other choice.