THE WEBSITE IS .ORG, HTML, AND YOU CAN CONTACT WEB PAGE BUILDER. GOVERNMENT SITE
After Pearl Harbor, the Federal government took the unprecedented step of
ordering some 110,000 Japanese aliens and American citizens of Japanese descent
living along the West Coast out of their homes and into ten inland internment
camps. In addition, all Japanese-American men of draft age, except those
already in the armed forces, were classified as 4-C, enemy aliens, forbidden to
serve their country. (website #1). Then, in early 1943, Washington reversed its policy on military service. The
Japanese government had been making effective propaganda in Asia out of the
internment of Japanese Americans in the U.S.; the camps appeared to confirm
their depiction of the war as a racial conflict. To respond to the Japanese
propaganda, and under pressure from Japanese American and civil liberties
organizations, President Roosevelt authorized the enlistment of
Japanese-American men into the U.S. Armed Forces (website #1) we were absolutist bombed by surprise making us very angry because we didn't want to be in war but by the end they have destroyed all of pearl harbor and president Roosevelt, declared WAR!!!
After Pearl Harbor, the Federal government took the unprecedented step of
ordering some 110,000 Japanese aliens and American citizens of Japanese descent
living along the West Coast out of their homes and into ten inland internment
camps. In addition, all Japanese-American men of draft age, except those
already in the armed forces, were classified as 4-C, enemy aliens, forbidden to
serve their country. (website #1). Then, in early 1943, Washington reversed its policy on military service. The
Japanese government had been making effective propaganda in Asia out of the
internment of Japanese Americans in the U.S.; the camps appeared to confirm
their depiction of the war as a racial conflict. To respond to the Japanese
propaganda, and under pressure from Japanese American and civil liberties
organizations, President Roosevelt authorized the enlistment of
Japanese-American men into the U.S. Armed Forces (website #1) we were absolutist bombed by surprise making us very angry because we didn't want to be in war but by the end they have destroyed all of pearl harbor and president Roosevelt, declared WAR!!!
ITS A .COM, REFERENCES PEOPLE, YOU CANT CONTACT WE PAGE BUILDER.
Unfortunately, the poor initial planning Army-wide was exacerbated by the
general replacement policy in effect. Simply put, once a soldier was
separated from his unit by wounds or illness, there was little chance
of him returning to that unit. Instead, he was sent to a replacement
depot, a repo-depot in Army slang. From the depot he would then be
reassigned as needed to whatever unit had a shortfall in his
particular MOS (military occupation specialty).
This meant that a (website #2)
soldier could spend months of training, forming close bonds with
comrades, the basis for unit cohesion, and then in his first day of
combat could be separated from them, never to fight with them again.
This system of individual replacement caused many soldiers to
disguise illness and wounds so they could stay with their units.
Other soldiers, in hospital, went AWOL (absent-without-leave) so as
to rejoin their units. It wasn't until 1945 that the individual
replacement system was modified to allow a majority of sick and
wounded soldiers to rejoin their unit after recovering. (website #2)
Unfortunately, the poor initial planning Army-wide was exacerbated by the
general replacement policy in effect. Simply put, once a soldier was
separated from his unit by wounds or illness, there was little chance
of him returning to that unit. Instead, he was sent to a replacement
depot, a repo-depot in Army slang. From the depot he would then be
reassigned as needed to whatever unit had a shortfall in his
particular MOS (military occupation specialty).
This meant that a (website #2)
soldier could spend months of training, forming close bonds with
comrades, the basis for unit cohesion, and then in his first day of
combat could be separated from them, never to fight with them again.
This system of individual replacement caused many soldiers to
disguise illness and wounds so they could stay with their units.
Other soldiers, in hospital, went AWOL (absent-without-leave) so as
to rejoin their units. It wasn't until 1945 that the individual
replacement system was modified to allow a majority of sick and
wounded soldiers to rejoin their unit after recovering. (website #2)
YOU CAN REFERENCE WE PAGE BUILDER, LINKS PEOPLE THAT HAVE ADDED TO THIS SITE, .COM
Many people died in this war, but was for a very good cause many men sacrificed their life for not only you but for me... thanks to those men that volunteered we are who we are because of them. (Website #3) I think that, over the course of the war, about 12,000,000 men served in the us armed forces. Why did Australians volunteer? There is no simple answer to this question. In the early days many saw it as a chance to go on an 'adventure' outside Australia, although many undoubtedly also had patriotic motives as well. As the war progressed, however and the published lists of the dead and wounded grew even longer, men probably joined for more sober reasons. Some may have been shamed by the earlier departure of relatives and friends; some may simply have reached the age when they could legally join up; and yet others may have regarded the need to win the war as ever more pressing than it was in the heady days of 1914 when everyone thought it would be 'over by Christmas'. (website #3) many soldiers went to wear thinking they were coming back for Christmas but.... they actually didn't they were stuck in war and many men died. and didn't return for Christmas.
Many people died in this war, but was for a very good cause many men sacrificed their life for not only you but for me... thanks to those men that volunteered we are who we are because of them. (Website #3) I think that, over the course of the war, about 12,000,000 men served in the us armed forces. Why did Australians volunteer? There is no simple answer to this question. In the early days many saw it as a chance to go on an 'adventure' outside Australia, although many undoubtedly also had patriotic motives as well. As the war progressed, however and the published lists of the dead and wounded grew even longer, men probably joined for more sober reasons. Some may have been shamed by the earlier departure of relatives and friends; some may simply have reached the age when they could legally join up; and yet others may have regarded the need to win the war as ever more pressing than it was in the heady days of 1914 when everyone thought it would be 'over by Christmas'. (website #3) many soldiers went to wear thinking they were coming back for Christmas but.... they actually didn't they were stuck in war and many men died. and didn't return for Christmas.