The Executive Order 9066 was enacted because many Americans, after hearing of the December 7th attack, came to distrust the Japanese Americans, and thought of them as spies, secretly sending information to mainland Japan in exchange for money, etc. The Government used Executive 9066 to "protect" the Japanese, however, the Japanese received poor housing and had the bare necessities. Later on in the war, conditions improved.
If you want a account, read "thin wood walls"
They commissioned and funded art and their work
Answer:
The river NILE made the land fertile through the regions it passed. As we know, Egypt is mostly desert but regions near NILE are good for growing crops.
Mesopotamia also relied on rivers to provide for fertile land, major transportation routes, drinking water and for agricultural purposes.
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Last weekend, people across Hawaii spent 38 minutes thinking they were going to die because a government worker selected the wrong option on a missile alert interface. Multiple images, including several from the governor’s office , later circulated showing an interface similar to the screen the employee would have been using. They all shared the same quality: outdated, confusing, problematic design.
We don’t know if the system in Hawaii was ancient or simply poorly designed, but we know that no user-experience designer worth her salt would create a giant list of links or a drop-down menu for a lifesaving function. It’s the design equivalent of installing a hand-cranked engine on a Tesla or communicating with Alexa via smoke signals.
The incident in Hawaii exposes a problem far larger than a single confusing screen: Government is not good at buying, building and using technology. So maybe the most shocking part of this story is that mistakes like this don’t happen more frequently.
As former government technologists, we’ve worked as contractors and in civil service at federal and local levels, including buying and building out New Orleans’s emergency response systems. Over the past six months, we’ve also conducted in-depth interviews with people in and around government working to improve its technology and modernize its processes.