Boojatta
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Wed Apr-30-08 01:35 PM
Original message |
If Japanese-Americans had all been deported from America during WWII... |
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Edited on Wed Apr-30-08 01:36 PM by Boojatta
then would they have a right to return?
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mainegreen
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Wed Apr-30-08 01:37 PM
Response to Original message |
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Even if they weren't officially deported, but fled out of fear.
This should be fun.
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Boojatta
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Wed Apr-30-08 01:44 PM
Response to Reply #1 |
4. Could you explain why? |
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I'm not opposed to your answer, but inevitably some people will give answers that conflict with your answer. If you appeal to some general principle and they merely provide opinions with no basis, then your response will be better than theirs. More importantly, your response will open up avenues for discussing the topic.
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mainegreen
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Wed Apr-30-08 02:21 PM
Response to Reply #4 |
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1) Taking away citizenship without prove of something like treason, is equivalent to stealing property. 2) Your right to live in your land is a right. This is similar to the above argument, but different in the sense that it goes beyond citizenship. You can have an indigenous right, granted to you not by citizenship, but by historical precedence to live somewhere. The longer you can claim historical residence in a land, the stronger that right. Note: this is not a right as defined by law, but a right as defined by justice; more valid IMHO 3) Due process; without it, any actions or implications that occur after are rather suspect. 4) It's the human way to be.
To name a few.
:shrug:
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Boojatta
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Thu May-01-08 11:14 AM
Response to Reply #9 |
10. How about children of deportees? |
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Would they have an automatic right of return or would it depend? For example, I imagine that some people might say that it should depend on whether or not both parents had been deported from America merely because their ancestors were Japanese. I imagine that some people might say that it should depend on whether or not the children were born before their parents were deported.
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datasuspect
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Wed Apr-30-08 01:38 PM
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2. you cannot deport a united states citizen from the united states |
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that would in effect make them a stateless person.
you can imprison them though.
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HiFructosePronSyrup
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Wed Apr-30-08 01:40 PM
Response to Reply #2 |
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Thousands of Mexican-Americans citizens were unlawfully deported in the thirties.
Hell, Ron Paul and other republicans have been running on the issue.
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Boojatta
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Wed Apr-30-08 01:52 PM
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6. What are the odds that a court challenge... |
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would have led to judgment and enforcement of that judgment before the deportation occurred?
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Crunchy Frog
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Wed Apr-30-08 01:46 PM
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piedmont
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Wed Apr-30-08 01:57 PM
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7. Where would they have been deported to? nt |
Boojatta
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Wed Apr-30-08 02:16 PM
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8. Maybe to a place that was governed by "an S.O.B. who is our S.O.B." |
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Edited on Wed Apr-30-08 02:17 PM by Boojatta
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DadOf2LittleAngels
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Thu May-01-08 11:28 AM
Response to Original message |
11. Its not as simple as either side says |
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Lets say Japan warned a bunch of Japanese-Americans living in Hawaii that the attack was coming and urged them to get out of the way. The Japanese on Hawaii left the island and moved to Japan to get out of the way so the US could be attacked should *they* be let back in?
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DU
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Fri Apr 26th 2024, 08:11 PM
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