Several Governments limited civil and individuals rights such as freedom of press and speech.
The US specifically created internment
camps for Japanese and Japanese descent citizens and subjected them to detention and seizure of property without due process.
It is also against war morality principles to bomb civilians as it happened with the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Answer:
Among the options given on the question the correct answers are option B and E.
Explanation: The four freedom speech given by President Franklin D Roosevelt is a mark of opposing American isolation policy before engaging in the world war ll. In his speech he supported his position to get involved in the war to maintain the American principles,
Because America has always fought to uphold human rights and correct injustices against them. Because, in the world war l United States got engaged in the war later as the situation forced them to get involved. At the beginning United states did not join the war.
On the other hand, America joined any war when they saw any threat coming to them which would limit the freedom of American citizens.Even if the dominating power in the world become the oppressive power America would fight against them to preserve their rights.
<span>The correct answer is A. B. The Civil Rights Act of 1965 outlawed discriminatory elements in voting, such as explicit racial discrimination and prerequisites in education. C. The National Origins Act of 1929 severely restricted immigration with explicit discrimination of countries; this act is not in effect anymore nowadays; D. The Immigration Act of 1965 was reformed in A. the Immigration Act of 1990 (so it is technically non-existent, as it was integrated). A. The Immigration Act of 1990 increased the quotas for legal immigration, specified and expanded further details regarding deportation, exclusion, asylum privileges, revised the Visa program, non-immigrant programs and much more, being the fundamental basis to determine who is allowed to enter the country.</span>