They could add one for the 442nd, but that would expose what the Democrats did to the Japanese here and their descendants. Better to just erase history altogether.
Dunno about the States, but up here we ALSO incarcerated people with German citizenship. Including German Jews. But that's not much talked about, is it?
And from TODAY'S perspective? No, I DO NOT take the loyalty of a new immigrant for granted. Yeah, you could back then, MAYBE. But I sure as hell don't see anything wrong in hairy-eyeballing someone who still has their "home country's" citizenship ...
The reason I bring up 442 is because Democrats imprisoned and stole from people based on their homeland and their parents' homeland. The 442 were natural born citizens who were forced to fight in a war that had nothing to do with them or be put in a cage. This was before critical race theory and Soros judges. Imagine what they could do now.
I mean a lot of people were forced to fight since there was still a draft back then. I’d argue that the 442nd were forced to undertake missions that were of higher risk since their losses were deemed more acceptable due to the fact that they were primarily made up of Japanese-Americans. Which is why they are the most decorated unit in the US Army, since they kept surviving missions that should have wiped them out.
They could add one for the 442nd, but that would expose what the Democrats did to the Japanese here and their descendants. Better to just erase history altogether.
Dunno about the States, but up here we ALSO incarcerated people with German citizenship. Including German Jews. But that's not much talked about, is it?
And from TODAY'S perspective? No, I DO NOT take the loyalty of a new immigrant for granted. Yeah, you could back then, MAYBE. But I sure as hell don't see anything wrong in hairy-eyeballing someone who still has their "home country's" citizenship ...
The reason I bring up 442 is because Democrats imprisoned and stole from people based on their homeland and their parents' homeland. The 442 were natural born citizens who were forced to fight in a war that had nothing to do with them or be put in a cage. This was before critical race theory and Soros judges. Imagine what they could do now.
I mean a lot of people were forced to fight since there was still a draft back then. I’d argue that the 442nd were forced to undertake missions that were of higher risk since their losses were deemed more acceptable due to the fact that they were primarily made up of Japanese-Americans. Which is why they are the most decorated unit in the US Army, since they kept surviving missions that should have wiped them out.