Resolute Square

The Internment Camps Are Coming

Amee Vanderpool writes, "A new offer from the Texas General Land Office has been made to incoming President Donald Trump, and it proves we are on the verge of reliving some of our darkest days in America."
Published:November 20, 2024
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*Published with the generous permission of Amee Vanderpool. Read more of her excellent work at Shero.

By Amee Vanderpool

Before World War II, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) had identified German, Italian, and Japanese aliens and claimed they were “suspected” of being potential enemy agents. These people, some of them American citizens, were legally kept under surveillance, and following the attack at Pearl Harbor, people from “enemy nations” and all people of Japanese descent were immediately considered suspect and referred to the US Army.

In 1942, Executive Order 9066 was enacted by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Under this order the entire west coast was deemed a military area, and was divided into military zones. Curfews were established that included only Japanese-Americans. Voluntary evacuation of Japanese-Americans from a limited number of areas, totaling about seven percent of the entire Japanese-American population, was begun.

A copy of Executive Order 9066, which resulted in Japanese-American Incarceration in 1942. (Image via The US National Archives)

The issue of human rights had been briefly brought up at Congressional Hearings prior to the issuance of these new laws, but in 1942, no one felt these rights were important enough when compared to securing the United States. On March 29, 1942, Japanese-Americans on the west coast were given a 48-hour evacuation notice, and most of their land and private property was abandoned and never recovered.

From the end of March to August of that year, approximately 112,000 persons were sent to racetracks or fairgrounds, which had been re-labeled as “assembly centers.” People were tagged like cattle and sorted for removal to a more permanent"relocation center" where they would be imprisoned for the remainder of the war.

In these "relocation centers,” also called "internment camps,” four or five families shared tar-papered army-style barracks for nearly three years or more until the end of the war. The people in these camps shared eating facilities and restrooms and had limited opportunity for work or school. Nearly 70,000 of these evacuees were American citizens, who were denied their due process rights as the federal government froze their ability to appeal their circumstances under the guise of “American security.” This was just 80 years ago.

On Tuesday, Texas Governor Gregg Abbott, through the the Texas General Land Office, offered Donald Trump the 1,400-acre Starr County site to build new detention centers to fulfill his promise of mass deportations of undocumented immigrants. Texas Land Commissioner Dawn Buckingham said in the Tuesday letter that her office is “fully prepared” to enter an agreement with any federal agencies involved in deporting individuals from the country “to allow a facility to be built for the processing, detention, and coordination of the largest deportation of violent criminals in the nation’s history.”

(Copy of the letter sent this week, offering up Texas land for the internment camps.)

We are again on the brink of repeating some of the most shameful and abhorrent lessons that America should have learned long ago. While Donald Trump and his Project 2025 implementation team move to enact the fascist promises made during the election, many of Trump’s cronies are already aligning themselves to profit from the impending migrant prison system that will be nothing short of a concentration camp. Due Process Rights will again be frozen, as amnesty and human rights will cease to exist within these militarized zones. Dismissing any warnings about where we are headed by calling these claims hyperbole will cease to matter after Donald Trump assumes his office on January 20, 2025.

Anyone who tries to rely on the age old adage “that could never happen here” will soon be shocked into the reality that it did happen here before, and it is happening again. Trump loyalists are using the full power of their offices to make their plans in full daylight, hiding nothing from the public that they think overwhelmingly supports them.

Their brazen attitudes might be the only advantage we have right now, affording us some advance notice to stop them or shore up any remaining legal protections that human beings, who are not American citizens, might have left. Don’t dismiss the warnings that are in plain sight and are obvious to anyone with a US history book.

Japanese-American internees in Arcadia, California, 1942. The camp was a temporary detention facility for some of the 120,000 Japanese Americans excluded from the West Coast under wartime presidential Executive Order 9066. (Photo by Library of Congress/via Getty Images)

Don’t pretend this is not our burgeoning reality because the fight seems too insurmountable to overcome. Don’t say this is not the same because the people we will round up are not American citizens — we imprisoned American citizens easily in 1942 because a majority of Americans supported it. Don’t look away again. We know how this ends.

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