Do we really need to relearn the lessons of Japanese American internment?
/In 1942, I was arrested and convicted for being a
Japanese American trying to live here in the Bay Area. The day after my
arrest a newspaper headline declared, "Jap Spy Arrested in San
Leandro."As my case was being reconsidered by the courts, again as a
result of the efforts of many people across the country, Congress
created a commission to study the exclusion and incarceration of
Japanese Americans. The commission found that no Japanese American had
been involved in espionage or sabotage and that no military necessity
existed to imprison us. Based on the commission's findings and of
military historians who reconsidered the original records from the war,
Congress passed the Civil Liberties Act of 1988, declaring that the
internment of Japanese Americans was unjustified. Finally, it seemed
that the burden of being accused of being an "enemy race" had been
lifted from our shoulders. But now the old accusations are back Fox
News media personality Michelle Malkin claims that some Japanese
Americans were spies during World War II. Based upon her suspicions,
Malkin claims the internment of all Japanese Americans was not such a
bad idea after all. She goes on to claim that racial profiling of Arab
Americans today is justified by the need to fight terrorism. According
to Malkin, it is OK to take away an entire ethnic group's civil rights
because some individuals are suspect. Malkin argues for reviving the
old notion of guilt by association. [more ]