We The People Case Analysis

Words: 800
Pages: 4

The United State of America, the exceptional. The bricks of modern day politics are laid upon the layers set by the previous generations. At the bottom of this foundation is We The People. In the case of Korematsu Vs United State, it is determined that the people were not the Japanese Americans in World War II. In order to protect the safety of American, America interned Japanese American. Faced with the War on Terror and a large number of undocumented immigrants, the precedents sets by Korematsu and other Japanese internment cases will allow our leaders to choose the next exception to the constitution in order to protect our nation. It was right for the government to send Japanese Americans on the West Coast to internment camps. It was right because the Japanese bomb pearl harbor, therefore anyone of Japanese descendent posed a danger to national security. According to the Solicitor General during Korematsu V. United State, there were national unity among all Japaneses. So if Japanese in Japan hate America, American Japanese must hate America. Even if there were truly loyal Japanese, …show more content…
It is right because Mexicans are currently breaking the laws and coming over illegally. It does not matter that parents are risking their lives to bring their children over for a better future nor does it matter that the people who were brought here as baby have no choice nor does it matter that they have worked all their lives here and have been good Americans; Mexicans are bad for this country and they must be deported. If some Mexicans are convicted of crimes because the system discriminated against them by means of racial profiling, all Mexicans must hate America. Even if Mexicans do not pose a threat now, they will pose a threat later. The government will have all the right they need to remove and barred all Mexicans from the country because they are might pose a threat to the