The Tag Project

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      25 May 2011

      Well, it's a little too late, isn't it.

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      U.S. official cites misconduct in Japanese American internment cases

      Acting Solicitor Gen. Neal Katyal says one of his predecessors, Charles Fahy, deliberately hid from the Supreme Court a military report that Japanese Americans were not a threat in World War II.

      Reporting from Washington—

      Acting Solicitor Gen. Neal Katyal, in an extraordinary admission of misconduct, took to task one of his predecessors for hiding evidence and deceiving the Supreme Court in two of the major cases in its history: the World War II rulings that upheld the detention of more than 110,000 Japanese Americans.

      Katyal said Tuesday that Charles Fahy, an appointee of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, deliberately hid from the court a report from the Office of Naval Intelligence that concluded the Japanese Americans on the West Coast did not pose a military threat. The report indicated there was no evidence Japanese Americans were disloyal, were acting as spies or were signaling enemy submarines, as some at the time had suggested. Fahy was defending Roosevelt's Executive Order 9066, which authorized forced removals of Japanese Americans from "military areas" in 1942. The solicitor general, the U.S. government's top courtroom attorney, is viewed as the most important and trusted lawyer to appear before the Supreme Court, and Katyal said he had a "duty of absolute candor in our representations to the court."

      Katyal, 41, who is of Indian American heritage and is the first Asian American to hold the post, said he decided "to set the record straight" Tuesday at a Justice Department event honoring Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders.

      He said that two of the government's civilian lawyers had told Fahy it would be "suppression of evidence" to keep the naval intelligence report from the high court.

      "What does Fahy do? Nothing," Katyal said.

      Instead, Fahy told the justices the government and the military agreed the roundup of Japanese Americans was required as a matter of "military necessity." Roosevelt issued the order on Feb. 19, 1942, about two months after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor, which plunged the U.S. into World War II.

      In 1943, the high court unanimously upheld a curfew imposed on Japanese Americans in the case of Gordon Hirabayashi vs. United States. And in 1944, the court in a 6-3 decision upheld the removal order imposed on Japanese Americans in Fred Korematsu vs. United States. The majority accepted the government's claim that it was a matter of "military urgency."

      Scholars and judges have denounced the World War II rulings as among the worst in the court's history, but neither the high court nor the Justice Department had formally admitted they were mistaken — until now.

      "It seemed obvious to me we had made a mistake. The duty of candor wasn't met," Katyal said.

      Korematsu, who was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Clinton, died in Marin County in 2005 at age 86. On Tuesday, his daughter Karen said she was grateful that Katyal had acknowledged the mistakes of his predecessor.

      "It was a remarkable statement he made," she said. "It proves what my father believed all along — that removing the Japanese Americans was wrong and incarcerating them was unconstitutional."

      Korematsu was sent to a camp in Utah, one of 10 in the country. California had two, Tule Lake and Manzanar.

      Katyal said that last summer he was doing research for several immigration cases when he came upon some ugly, disturbing comments about Asians in 19th century briefs submitted to the Supreme Court. Chinese immigrants were described as "people not suited to our institutions." People from India were described as a "subject race."

      He then looked into the history of the World War II internment cases, including documents revealed in the 1980s. Peter Irons, a professor at UC San Diego, had found reports in old government files that showed the U.S. military did not see Japanese Americans as a threat in 1942. His research led to federal court hearings that set aside the convictions of Korematsu and Hirabayashi. Congress later voted to have the nation apologize and pay reparations to those who were wrongly held.

      Katyal said he decided it was important to publicly acknowledge the mistakes made in the solicitor general's office. Hiding the truth from the justices, he said, "harmed the court, and it harmed 120,000 Japanese Americans. It harmed our reputation as lawyers and as human beings, and it harmed our commitment to those words on the court's building: Equal Justice Under Law."

      Hirabayashi is now 93 and living in Canada. His memory of the World War II years has faded, said his nephew Lane Hirabayashi, a professor of Asian American studies at UCLA. "I know Gordon would be very pleased by this. He didn't know at the time that government prosecutors had distorted evidence. However, he knew in his heart that mass incarceration was unconstitutional," he said.

      "I thought it was good and very long overdue," Irons said of Katyal's statement. "This was a deliberate, knowing lie by Fahy to the Supreme Court. For the government's highest counsel to make that statement now is quite noteworthy and admirable."

      A year ago, Katyal became the acting solicitor general when Elena Kagan was nominated to the Supreme Court. He had made a name for himself in legal circles in 2006 when took on the case of Salim Hamdan, who faced a military trial at the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. He won in the Supreme Court, which struck down the military commissions because they had not been authorized by Congress.

      But that victory in Hamdan vs. Rumsfeld earned him some critics in the Senate — and it may have cost him the chance to win Senate confirmation as solicitor general. This year, President Obama passed over Katyal and nominated Deputy White House Counsel Donald Verrilli Jr. for the post. Katyal said he would step down when the Senate officially confirmed Verrilli.

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      26 Mar 2011

      Asians in the Library

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      Alexandra Wallace, what exactly were you going to gain by posting this video? 

      There has been a lot of hubbub in the Asian American community about this virulent video (I say "Asian" because just about every non-asian person I've talked to had never seen the video, or maybe some of them have "heard" about it) - at first I was pissed when I saw this but then after a while, I decided that this woman was just another misguided, uneducated Blonde Barbie doll. 

      Let me talk about the pissed off part first.  Obviously, I, Wendy F. Maruyama (some folks know my middle name), being the proud Asian American that I am, with all that my parents and grandparents had gone through to provide opportunities for my generation and those thereafter, felt the sting of racism in this video,  especially when Miss Wallace goes through her "ching chong" routine.  I remember Mira Nakashima telling me about the taunts that she suffered, where white kids would take their fingers, slant their eyes upward and taunt "chingchong chinaman".   But this is a college kid from UCLA, one of the top ranked universities "in the world".  and in 2011, no less. Have the American people regressed again?

      I could choose to stew for several days, no let me stew for another year over this, stacking another soapbox upon the one I've already been standing on --- but wait. I thought about my Dad.  Dad has always been the funny guy in our family, not just in our immediate family but the extended one as well.  He has an uncanny ability to diffuse tension by saying something funny.  Not always properly but funny no less and then everyone ends up lauging.   I suspect that in his young life, it was a subconscious survival tactic that somehow made him so popular amongst his farming community back in Rocky Ford Colorado - he was friends with the white sheriff, the fellow Mexican American laborers that he picked cantelope with, and his card-playing buddies.  Having a sense of humor is the one gene I inherited from him that keeps me from getting ulcers and allows me to deal with other stressful issues in my life.

      Jimmy Wong responded to Alexandra's video with a real classy one where he seranades her - I watched this and immediately all the anger completely melts away, and you end up thinking - why get worked up over this blonde bimbo??  My Dad would have done this.

      The AngelieVaudville on You Tube did a complete parody of this video, and it pretty much sums it up.  Oddly, its not much different than the original, the only difference is the Asian actress in a blonde wig, and the hilarious props on the wall behind her.   It amplifies the absurdity and her performance emphasizes Wallace's stupidity to a level that supersedes the original.

      At the end of the day, humor saves lives.

      Anyway, this is the end of my 'rant', "and have a nice day".

       

       

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      6 Mar 2011

      Why relive the past? (2)

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      SB1070.  Need I say more?

      In a land where nearly everyone is from immigrant stock, and the only native peoples of the US are American Native Americans (and I will get to that some other day), here is another law which can be easily misconstrued and pretty soon, anyone who is yellow, black, brown, red, will have to show IDs.  It was bad enough only 25 years ago when I went on a field trip with a group of other artists to Canada via Niagara Falls (we were all artists in residence at Art Park), and coming back into the US, we got stopped, and I had a flashlight shining in my face, and the US Border Patrol asked my companions (all of whom were white) if "she could speak English" and if "she was from China".  I was infuriated, and I told him "listen, I can understand English and why are you asking them questions about me?"   Needless to say, the ride back home was quiet, not sure if they were all in shock that this actually happened, or if they were just mulling over the reality of this thing that just happened.  The thing was, he didn't even bother to ask for my ID at the time and I just can't imagine what might have happened if I did not have my driver's license with me.  I also didn't know how I could even prove that I was a US citizen with only a drivers license. 

      Fast forward to 2010, I just can't imagine driving through Arizona and having to show papers everywhere I went.  And dealing with the questions, even if my great great great grandparents came off the boat, and having to defend my citizenship would be bad enough.  I can imagine that daily routines of even LEGAL immigrants, and American-born people would change - I know that after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, my grandparents and their fellow Japanese American friends avoided walking out at night, they made sure that their activities was during the day, and in the company of sympthetic caucasian friends.  Despite their careful behavior and putting up with constant slurs, they were still incarcerated in the camps.  

      How can SB1070 NOT be about race?  What about European immigrants from, say, Russia? Why aren't they singled out?  Why it must be because they look like "them". 

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      3 Mar 2011

      Why relive the past? (1)

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      WWII is long over.  Why relive the past?  Why do we want to revisit the effects of the bombing of Pearl Harbor, which prompted the removal and incarceration of thousands of innocent Japanese Americans who happened to be "in the wrong place at the wrong time"?

      Because its all about "peace and freedom and justice for all Americans".

      In today's news, it was reported in Salon.com that   "...a protest of a Muslim fundraising event in Orange County last month devolved into chants of "Muhammed was a pervert," "you beat your wife and rape your children," and the like, according to a new video of the demonstration.  The Feb. 13 Islamic Circle of North America event aimed to raise money to fund women's shelters and fight homelessness in the area. 

      Still the ripples of hate, stirred by the events of 9/11, are alive and well, and led by politicians and elected officials, no less. 

       

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      14 Feb 2011

      Welcome to The Tag Project

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      This is my "web-blog"- I plan to continue the blog at e09066.blogspot.com as needed, but the pages above provide the background and the travels of The Tag Project and its accompanying exhibition, E.O.9066.   The best way to navigate this site and to familiarize yourself with The Tag Project is to click on the various links above, below the Title. 

      Thank you for visiting!

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    I teach.
    I make art.
    I cook (poorly).
    I make grad students do things that make them hate me.
    Hopefully they will be thanking me later.

    Here are some links:

    http://wendymaruyama.com/home.html

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