Answer: About 10 weeks after the U.S. entered World War II, President Franklin D. Roosevelt on February 19, 1942 signed Executive Order 9066. The order authorized the Secretary of War and the armed forces to remove people of Japanese ancestry from what they designated as military areas and surrounding communities in the United States. These areas were legally off limits to Japanese aliens and Japanese-American citizens.
The order set in motion the mass transportation and relocation of more than 120,000 Japanese people to sites the government called detention camps that were set up and occupied in about 14 weeks. Most of the people who were relocated lived on the West Coast and two-thirds were American citizens. In accordance with the order, the military transported them to some 26 sites in seven western states, including remote locations in Washington, Idaho, Utah, and Arizona.
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C) there is the land surrounding the country on all sides
The answer would be Monroe Doctrine. That was the US policy that said foreign nations would not be allowed to continue with imperialism or colonizing undeveloped nations. Not that they could really enforce that.
The Dawes Act ''encourage assimilation of native Americans into the mainstream of American culture''
The act was authorized in 1887 by the President and was amended 1891, 1898 and 1906.
This was in response to the 'Indian Problem' and was eventually responsible for encroaching on Indian lands and the deaths of many people.
The whole idea of the act was to break up Indian tribes and open the land for white settlers.
To this day, it is considered one of the most controversial acts in United States history.
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