Pretty different. I don't know of even rudimentary starvation of Japanese Americans in the Internment Camps, and there was no campaign of total extermination of Japanese Americans on the entire continent.
WEELLLL, in the interest of absolute fairness (which is MUCH more than your typical Stormfag deserves), there are indeed confirmed cases of abuse in the internment camps and some cases of minor starvation. But your point still remains, it was very much the exception and not the rule.
And more importantly, we still trusted Japanese-Americans enough to give them guns and go fight our enemies. And their unit proved that apparently the desire to wipe out a katana, scream "BANZAI!!" and charge a machine gun is apparently inherent in the Japanese, because the 442nd is both the most decorated and most damaged US unit in the war.
But I imagine you would have a hard time finding Jews wielding weapons for the Nazi's. Because the second you gave them the guns, they would turn around and start trying to shoot said Nazi's with no real thought to whether or not they would be walking out alive. Because dragging a few Nazi's to hell with them would be preferable.
there are indeed confirmed cases of abuse in the internment camps and some cases of minor starvation.
If you put a group of people in an incarceration camp even under good conditions, you should always expect abuse, but yeah, it's not to the level of "if we feed the rescued prisoners 1,000 calories a day, we will kill them".
But I imagine you would have a hard time finding Jews wielding weapons for the Nazi's.
There were, occasionally, instances of Jewish Generals serving in the Army, but I think for the most part it was because their identity was kept relatively hidden anyway. They didn't have Jewish regiments.
WEELLLL, in the interest of absolute fairness (which is MUCH more than your typical Stormfag deserves), there are indeed confirmed cases of abuse in the internment camps and some cases of minor starvation. But your point still remains, it was very much the exception and not the rule.
And more importantly, we still trusted Japanese-Americans enough to give them guns and go fight our enemies. And their unit proved that apparently the desire to wipe out a katana, scream "BANZAI!!" and charge a machine gun is apparently inherent in the Japanese, because the 442nd is both the most decorated and most damaged US unit in the war.
But I imagine you would have a hard time finding Jews wielding weapons for the Nazi's. Because the second you gave them the guns, they would turn around and start trying to shoot said Nazi's with no real thought to whether or not they would be walking out alive. Because dragging a few Nazi's to hell with them would be preferable.
If you put a group of people in an incarceration camp even under good conditions, you should always expect abuse, but yeah, it's not to the level of "if we feed the rescued prisoners 1,000 calories a day, we will kill them".
There were, occasionally, instances of Jewish Generals serving in the Army, but I think for the most part it was because their identity was kept relatively hidden anyway. They didn't have Jewish regiments.