Ernest 'Hemingway' Oppetit

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In 1942, shortly after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, swayed by the military and by public opinion, signed an executive order forcing 120,000 Americans of Japanese descent into remote camps, caged in by barbed wire and armed guards. Two-thirds of those imprisoned had been born in the United States. When the order was rescinded three years later, most had lost their homes, farms, businesses, and communities.
Tools and Weapons: The Promise and The Peril of the Digital Age
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