Answer: In the days after the Pearl Harbor attack by the Japanese on December 7, 1941, suspicion fell on Japanese American communities in the western United States. The U.S. Department of the Treasury froze the assets of all citizens and resident aliens who were born in Japan, and the Department of Justice arrested some 1,500 religious and community leaders as potentially dangerous enemy aliens. Because many of the largest populations of Japanese Americans were in close proximity to vital war assets along the Pacific coast, U.S. military commanders petitioned Secretary of War Henry Stimson to intervene. The result was Roosevelt’s Executive Order 9066.
Explanation: In 1948 Pres. Harry S. Truman signed the Evacuation Claims Act, which gave internees the opportunity to submit claims for property lost as a result of relocation. Pres. Gerald Ford formally rescinded Executive Order 9066 on February 16, 1976. In 1988 Congress passed the Civil Liberties Act, which stated that a “grave injustice” had been done to Japanese American citizens and resident aliens during World War II. It also established a fund that paid some $1.6 billion in reparations to formerly interned Japanese Americans or their heirs.
Rain was unpredictable, and the soil was difficult to plow.
Answer:
D. Rule of law
Explanation:
Both the Ten Commandments and republicanism influenced "the rule of law" founding belief. This is because the Ten Commandments are based on ten rules that serve to guide the conduct of the Israelites. This is similar to Republicanism which is based on incorporating the rule of law into the system of government that suddenly overruled without legal backings.
<span>Assuming that this is referring to the same list of options that was posted before with this question, <span>the correct response would be "Burma and Vietnam," since Burma actually changed to Myanmar. </span></span>
Presidents have done much to help the cause of civil rights
in America. President Harry S. Truman
ended segregation both in the military as well as the government. John F. Kennedy and even Lyndon Johnson did
much to enforce the law to allow Black students to study with whites as well
called out the National Guards to help Black Americans register and vote.