firex said:but quite frankly every other person supporting this kind of outright racism and discrimination should also be banned.
It's comments like these that make it seem like you have not bothered to research the topic of this thread at all.
firex said:but quite frankly every other person supporting this kind of outright racism and discrimination should also be banned.
Makura said:It's comments like these that make it seem like you have not bothered to research the topic of this thread at all.
fenekku-gitsune said:I get the idea that, like a lot of arguments that allegedly split between left and right values, both sides are arguing over different matters without realizing it, then pick on each other for the wrong reasons.
Malkin's argument, minus her rage-inducing writing style, is that the Japanese were out to get us and we needed to do something about it. The opposite reaction -- that internment is a terrible idea -- misses the point of this particular argument, and as a result we could go on for 200 more replies and not get anywhere with each other.
As I mentioned earlier, it's not Malkin's argument that really deserves debating here -- it's the implication, however much she tries to deny it, that internment might not be a bad idea for all those brown guys out to get us, which is so much wartime hysteria. It's especially insidious because, unlike WWII, there will be no real fixed end to the War on Terror seen in our lifetimes.
eggplant said:Like Stele said, Malkin is from Philipino heritage. It was the Japanese-Americans who were rounded up and kept inside the "internment camps", not the Philipino-Americans. Don't generalize Asians all into one group... the differences in cultures and histories are tremendous.
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As far as I know, they left other Asian cultures alone. There are even funny old propaganda articles that instruct people on how to tell the difference between a friendly Chinese person and an evil traitorous "Jap".Celicar said:Because it was only people of Japanese descent being put into camps?
Celicar said:Because it was only people of Japanese descent being put into camps?
Riiiiiiiiiight.
border said:As far as I know, they left other Asian cultures alone. There are even funny old propaganda advertisements that instruct people on how to tell the difference between a friendly Chinese person and an evil traitorous "Jap".
Celicar said:I guess we'll just have to agree to disagree because I don't have a link and you don't have a link. I'm not debating the vast majority were Japanese, but I think it's highly unlikely that the US didn't put other asians in the camps also.
What twisted way of thinking makes you think it's A-OK to be interested in a book that flies in the face of 60 years of cold, hard fact that America did something horribly wrong to its own citizens, which only caused harm to the country, not stability or safety? How can you be interested in a book that has been proven, by people who are experts on the subject, to be sloppily researched and supported? The arguments Malkin makes are specious at best, and her attempt to justify the current detention of all manner of alleged terrorists in Guantanamo, some of which have been released years after being detained because it was proven they had no connections at all to any terrorist groups, by comparing it to a past atrocity is nothing short of vile. The circular method of justifying the unjustifiable past by spinning it to compare to the present, and then saying it was justifiable in the past so it's justifiable now, is mind-boggingly stupid.Michelle Malkin, shes cool. I've been a fan of hers, shes got a great blog. I might get this.
Celicar said:I guess we'll just have to agree to disagree because I don't have a link and you don't have a link. I'm not debating the vast majority were Japanese, but I think it's highly unlikely that the US didn't put other asians in the camps also.
Are Asian Americans bitter about this whole ordeal? After all these years? Malkin is asian and she seems to be fine with it. And besides, they got restitutions.
No? She didn't even like the moderator saying the words 'locked up'. She actually used the words 'evacuated and reloacated to camps that were I believe run in a humane way". Dude listen to what she's saying before defending her. She's PLAYING DOWN the internment. So hell she's doing both of those exact things you're saying that she didn't. Listen to the radio show from the 37 minute mark to around 41.1. She's not trying to play down anything
2. She's not trying to portray the internment as "not that bad."
She doesn't even mention racism in her book! If that isn't playing down then nothing is.Next, Eric writes:
"What does Michelle offer to discredit the copiously documented influences of nativism, economic jealousy, racial stereotyping, rumor-mongering, and hysteria on the series of decisions that constituted the program Michelle defends? Nothing. Literally not one single thing. Not a sentence."
Umm, as I write in the very first paragraph of the introduction to my book on p. xiii:
"....If you want to read a book about the history of institutional discrimination against minorities in America, youre out of luck again. Bookstores, library shelves, and classroom are already filled with pedantic tomes, legal analysis, and educational propaganda along these conventional lines".
She completely ignores the well documented statements from Roosevelt *and* his closest millitary advisors that showed that they themselves were as racist as anybody else of the time. She ignores it here, she ignores it in her other blog posts, and she ignored it on the radio show where Muller mentions Roosevelt's comments at minute 30:54 "anyone who has travelled in the far east knows that the mingling of Asiatic blood with European or American blood produces in nine cases out of ten the most unfortunate result".. Malkin's response was merely that nevertheless the millitary reasons were the primary ones. She PLAYS THE RACISM DOWN to zero in her book. She plays it down TO THE EXTREME. She had to be pushed hard by Muller on the radio to even acknowledge that 'some people my have held those kinds of views'.I dont think Eric gets it. My whole book is devoted to debunking the myth that the evacuation policy was borne of such factors rather than bona fide national security concerns. I am well aware that there were nativists and racists on the West Coast, but as I argue in the book, the decision was made by Roosevelt and his closest military advisors in Washington DC, where knowledge of MAGIC resided and where homeland defense, not "nativism, economic jealousy, racial stereotyping, rumor-mongering, and hysteria was the paramount concern.