Some do. My schooling made clear we were the good guys [relative] in that conflict. Sure we didn’t talk about the “premature antifascist” designation, but we did get told of the inhumanity of the Japanese internment camps and how some Americans of Japanese decent (and even some Japanese immigrants) still wanted to fight Japan for our country. We also had acknowledgements that the Navajo code talkers were vital and had every reason not to want to aid us.
Other things we learned about that people assume we didn’t include: the fact that our founding fathers were largely slave owners, that some of them were abolitionists and the fact that slavery was known to be evil at the time, the trail of tears, the fact that Nat Turner’s rebellion inspired John Brown (though there was discussion on the ethics of their killing of children), the fact that we’ve broken nearly every treaty we’ve made with native Americans, and the fact that we overthrew multiple republics for cheap bananas.
The 90s history books made it seem like the Japanese concentration camps were a temporary vacation. Once everything was cleared up, they would be able to go home.
What they didn’t mention was the conditions on the camps were horrible. They didn’t include the propaganda against Japanese Americans. When the Japanese Americans went home, their homes and business were often destroyed. Trying to live like normal Americans was basically impossible by the amount of racism they received. Land of the free I guess.
You guys also ignore the concentration camps on your side.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Executive_Order_9066
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Takei
EDIT : The brits also ignore their concentration camps… in south africa… the ORIGINAL concentration camps.
Some do. My schooling made clear we were the good guys [relative] in that conflict. Sure we didn’t talk about the “premature antifascist” designation, but we did get told of the inhumanity of the Japanese internment camps and how some Americans of Japanese decent (and even some Japanese immigrants) still wanted to fight Japan for our country. We also had acknowledgements that the Navajo code talkers were vital and had every reason not to want to aid us.
Other things we learned about that people assume we didn’t include: the fact that our founding fathers were largely slave owners, that some of them were abolitionists and the fact that slavery was known to be evil at the time, the trail of tears, the fact that Nat Turner’s rebellion inspired John Brown (though there was discussion on the ethics of their killing of children), the fact that we’ve broken nearly every treaty we’ve made with native Americans, and the fact that we overthrew multiple republics for cheap bananas.
The 90s history books made it seem like the Japanese concentration camps were a temporary vacation. Once everything was cleared up, they would be able to go home.
What they didn’t mention was the conditions on the camps were horrible. They didn’t include the propaganda against Japanese Americans. When the Japanese Americans went home, their homes and business were often destroyed. Trying to live like normal Americans was basically impossible by the amount of racism they received. Land of the free I guess.
What? The “land of the free”? Whoever told you that is your enemy