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FREE ESSAY ON FRUSTRATIONS WITH JAPAN

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Japan's Modern Myths
This paper discusses Japan as viewed in 'Japan's Modern Myths: Ideology in the Late Meiji Period' by Carol Gluck. -- 849 words; MLA

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FRUSTRATIONS WITH JAPAN

December 8, 1941 was a solemn day. The day after Japan dropped the bomb on Pearl
Harbor, the people of the United States mourned. If ever there was a time when Americans
wanted to enter World War II, it was then. The United Sates had been deceived by the
Empire of
Japan, with whom they thought they were at peace. Franklin Roosevelt's speech to
Congress,
asking for permission to declare war on Japan, shows the resentment and despair of the
American
people. 
After the bombing of Pearl Harbor, many Americans felt a lot of resentment against
Japan,
and the Japanese. Much of this resentment arose because Japan gave the United States a
false
hope of peace between the two countries. Also, from the evidence, it appeared that the
attack
was premeditated. Because of the distance between Japan and Hawaii, it was found that
the
attack had been planned days, possibly weeks beforehand (Roosevelt, 170). During the
time
before the attack, the Japanese had deceived the United States into believing they were
at peace
with one another. 
Because of the bombing by Japan, the American people were mourning the loss of their
soldiers' lives. They also were angry with the destruction of the naval and military
forces, along
with the attacks on Hong Kong, Guam, the Philippine Islands, Wake Island, and Midway
Island
all within hours of each other. The American people, along with the government, wanted
nothing
more than to destroy Japan, and win the war.
In the Monica Sone document, I belief that the frustrations that the Americans were
feeling are expressed in their entirety. The American people were so angry with the
Japanese
people, and so afraid that the Japanese would attack again, that the Americans basically
rejected
anyone that looked Japanese. To the Americans, regardless of whether you were native
born, if
you looked Japanese you were the enemy. The American government did not want to take
chances, so they gathered all the people of Japanese decent and made them live under
military
law. They even had to live in military camps. How horrible for all those innocent people
to be
assumed the enemy when they had lived as Americans their whole lives.
In the Monica Sone document, it is evident that, at first, the government was looking to
only interview the important people in the Japanese community to ensure none of them
were
spies. However, things got out of control and the United States government declared that
all
people of Japanese decent give up their property and move into assembly centers, in order
to
isolate them from the rest of the American people. This shows how terribly desperate the
American people felt after the Pearl Harbor bombing.
Looking at Franklin Roosevelt's speech and Monica Sone's document memoire, it is
evident how desperate the American people were to save their country and destroy Japan.
They
would go to such extremes to save what they believed to be right and just. There are
many
similarities between the two documents, but they are showed in an opposite manner. In
Roosevelt's speech you see the American determination to defeat Japan and win the war. In
the
Monica Sone document you see the desperation of the American people to protect their
country,
and their resentment of the Japanese people. Both represent the feelings of the
Americans, but
unfortunately, the Monica Sone document shows what extreme measures the American people
were willing to go to protect what they believed to be right.


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