I do not think actions like this can be justified. The internment of Japanese-American citizens was one of the biggest mistakes made by the federal government in the 20th century.
Executive Order 9066 called for the internment of Japanese-American citizens shortly after the attack on Pearl Harbor by the Japanese empire. Even though this attack came from Japan, it is wrong to assume that all Japanese-American citizens supported the action. Roughly 2/3rd of the people who were put in internment camps were born in the United States and were citizens. Violating the rights of citizens who have done nothing wrong is never good to do.
A democratic government is supposed to protect individual liberties and rights, not violate them on purpose.
Answer:
The Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Board of Education, pronounced in 1954, was one of the major milestones during African Americans' fight for their civil rights in the 1900s. Through this ruling, the Supreme Court established that the schools in the south of the country should be desegregated, that is, that black and white children had an equal right of access to education, without any racial distinction, and that the doctrine of "Separate but equal" was inherently discriminatory as it offered services of different quality depending on whether the person was white or black.
This ruling was one of the first demonstrations at the federal level against segregation in the south of the country, prompting the Civil Rights Movement to continue fighting for equality.
A/ the belief that nations could prevent future conflicts through self- determination is your answer.
Note:
nations could prevent future conflicts: "...and particularly that it be <em>made safe for every peace-loving nation</em>... wishes to live its own life, determine its own institutions, be <em>assured of justice and fair dealing</em> by the other peoples of the world as <em>against force and selfish aggression</em>." (emphasizes added)
hope this helps
They weren;t for the most part. The shock of defeat made Japan so humiliated in itself that they temporarily ceased to have a military.