Judging the 1940s -- judge gardner
* EDITOR’S NOTE: As part of our Countdown to 2000, Robert Gardner will
write special Saturday columns recalling the decade we have just covered.
This week he looks back at the 1940s.
The 1940s started out as though they were going to be a continuation of
the ‘30s -- just more of that dreary Depression. Well, that came to an
end in a hurry. On Dec. 7, 1941, “a day that will live in infamy,” the
Depression came to a crashing halt, and we leaped into a wartime economy.
Jobs were to be had at Douglas Aircraft and the Kaiser shipyards. The
only trouble was that those jobs had to be essential, or the draft board
wanted your services.
Pearl Harbor was a brilliant military feat but a stupid practical
decision on the part of the Japanese. It awakened the most powerful
nation on earth and started a war that could only have one ending.
Of course, quite a few of us found ourselves in situations in which the
Great Depression looked rosy by comparison.
At home, the wives left behind struggled with food stamps and gas
rationing, which must have been the worst example of government
interference with normal economic practices imaginable. Our wives were
told that there were no steaks in the meat market because the steaks were
sent overseas to our fighting men. I was overseas for two years and never
saw a steak. They all went to high-priced restaurants. But enough of the
nuts and bolts of wartime life, and on to one of the great injustices of
our time.
Historians have been in some accord that the three great injustices
attributable to the American people are the near extermination of the
Native American Indian, slavery of blacks and the Mexican War. However,
that handy little lineup must now be changed with the elimination of the
Mexican War and the substitution of our treatment of Americans of
Japanese ancestry during our war with Japan.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Office of Naval Intelligence
had joint jurisdiction of any disloyalty on the part of Japanese. As of
Dec. 8, 1941, those two were in agreement that all Japanese suspects were
in custody. The rest of the Japanese colony in the United States,
particularly in California, was composed of loyal American citizens who
offered not the slightest danger to this country. However, our government
ignored the recommendations of the FBI and ONI, and an order went out to
put all Japanese into concentration camps -- Japan born or American born.
There had always been a strong anti-Japanese feeling in California,
partly because of plain old racial bias and partly because of jealousy of
the Japanese as farmers simply because they worked harder than white
American farmers. But now the drums of anti-Japanese hatred beat even
louder because of Pearl Harbor. The result was that the government gave
in and ordered that all persons of Japanese ancestry be placed in
concentration camps for the duration of the war.
To me, this action takes the place of the Mexican War and is entitled to
third place, after the eradication of the Native American Indians and
slavery as the third great injustice on the part of our nation.
And it all took place during the ‘40s.
* JUDGE GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and former judge. His
regular column runs Tuesdays.
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