Asked by Kaileigh

Which best describes internment camps for Japanese Americans in World War II?

They had well-built houses.
They provided plenty of privacy.
They were built in harsh, remote environments.
They encouraged anti-American attitudes.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
They were built in harsh, remote environments.

Most camps were in arid deserts or remote inland areas, with poorly constructed barracks and little privacy — not well-built homes — and they generally did not foster pro-Japanese/anti-American sentiment among internees.