Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Happy Japanese Internment Day! (AKA Michelle Malkin Day)

FEMA Couldn't Have Done It better!

Oh, those were the days back in 1942 when it took only three days to sell your house! Of course, you had to be Japanese and you had to sell it for pennies along with all your other property because people thought you "might" be a threat to national security.


On February 19, 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, an event that spurred one of America's darkest and most anti-American hours: the internment of thousands of Japanese-Americans. 110,000 men, women and children were sent to hastily-built "relocation centers." Numbers later revealed that 65% of those who were forcibly relocated were American citizens.


Living conditions in the camps were anything but stellar:


According to a 1943 War Relocation Authority report, internees were housed in "far paper-covered barracks of simple frame construction without plumbing or cooking facilities of any kind." The spartan facilities met international laws, but still left much to be desired. Many camps were built quickly by civilian contractors during the summer of 1942 based on designs for military barracks, making the buildings poorly equipped for cramped family living. In other areas, the internees had to build the barracks-like structures themselves.*



The Ann Coulter Wannabe, Michelle Malkin (nee Maglalang - ironically a daughter of Filipino immigrants) wrote a book entitled: In Defense of Internment: The Case for 'Racial Profiling' in World War II and the War on Terror. Today must be her "holy day".

I haven't been able to read it yet, but I'll cite an Amazon reviewer:

"This book is a thinly veiled attempt to put President Bush's own internment camps into historical perspective. However all this book does is showcase the authors own ingnorance of history, miltary strategy and logistics. No credible military historian or anyone else with a passing knowlege of military tactics would ever try to justify what Roosevelt did to these loyal American citizens. .. Malkin who based on her editorial columns, is an unabashed defender of George W. Bush and the security state seems to have another goal here. I think the entire purpose of this book is to try to convince people that the governments current internment camps are as necessary as the ones previously used to imprison American citizens of the wrong color in WWII. In that point I am in 100% agreement. This book isn't politically incorrect. It's just idiotic.


Malkin's conservative ideology seems to have a slightly hypocritical bent: like her compatriot, Ann Coulter, she uses gender equality advances to persue her ultra-conservative goals (she probably never watches Pat Robertson's "700 Club"). As of 2004, her husband Jesse Malkin, a Rhodes Scholar and former economist for the RAND Corporation, stays home and raises the two Malkin children.



In other words, Michelle keeps him in internment.







Why, she doesn't look Asian at all!

*This is, of course, a quote from the ultra-liberal Wikipedia:

1 comment:

goprairie said...

just because i don't feel smart enough to comment does not mean i do not agree - thanks for writing about this stuff!