QUESTION IMAGE
Question
#007 the u.s. declares war on japan american history b custom wenneker el(a-f) se 2 why did most japanese americans accept internment? they felt safer living far away from other americans. they knew it was pointless to protest it. they thought it was constitutional. they wanted to prove their loyalty by obeying the order.
During World War II, Japanese Americans faced internment. Many accepted it to demonstrate their loyalty to the U.S., hoping to counteract suspicions of disloyalty due to their Japanese heritage. The option "They wanted to prove their loyalty by obeying the order" aligns with this context. Other options are inconsistent: feeling safer away from Americans is inaccurate, protesting being pointless isn't the main reason, and the internment was unconstitutional (so thinking it was constitutional is wrong).
Snap & solve any problem in the app
Get step-by-step solutions on Sovi AI
Photo-based solutions with guided steps
Explore more problems and detailed explanations
D. They wanted to prove their loyalty by obeying the order.