Question
HISTORY
(1 short sentence each)
PART 1
1) What was the impact of WWII on japanese-americans in the U.S.
2) Do you believe this was constitution why or why not
PART 2
The Yalta conference was held in february 1945 with allied leaders discussing germany and europes post war reorganization
1) which leader are see here at Yalta
2) what was there plan for germany after ww2
(1 short sentence each)
PART 1
1) What was the impact of WWII on japanese-americans in the U.S.
2) Do you believe this was constitution why or why not
PART 2
The Yalta conference was held in february 1945 with allied leaders discussing germany and europes post war reorganization
1) which leader are see here at Yalta
2) what was there plan for germany after ww2
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
**PART 1**
1) The impact of WWII on Japanese-Americans in the U.S. included widespread internment, loss of property, and social stigmatization due to wartime fears of espionage.
2) Many believe this was unconstitutional as it violated the rights of American citizens without due process, driven by racial prejudice rather than legitimate national security concerns.
**PART 2**
1) The leaders present at the Yalta Conference included Franklin D. Roosevelt (United States), Winston Churchill (United Kingdom), and Joseph Stalin (Soviet Union).
2) Their plan for Germany after WWII involved dividing the country into occupation zones controlled by the Allied powers and requiring reparations and demilitarization to prevent future conflict.
1) The impact of WWII on Japanese-Americans in the U.S. included widespread internment, loss of property, and social stigmatization due to wartime fears of espionage.
2) Many believe this was unconstitutional as it violated the rights of American citizens without due process, driven by racial prejudice rather than legitimate national security concerns.
**PART 2**
1) The leaders present at the Yalta Conference included Franklin D. Roosevelt (United States), Winston Churchill (United Kingdom), and Joseph Stalin (Soviet Union).
2) Their plan for Germany after WWII involved dividing the country into occupation zones controlled by the Allied powers and requiring reparations and demilitarization to prevent future conflict.