The relocation of U.S. citizens of Japanese descent during World War II was a violation of which constitutional principal? A) limited government B) freedom of assembly C) expressed powers D) freedom of religion
Is there a D option?
@FreedomAway Are you there?
1790 to 1952: American immigration law does not allow Japanese aliens resident in the United States to become American citizens. The Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution, adopted in 1868, provided that all people born in the United States, including people of Japanese descent, were American citizens. Maybe that will help you. :) http://www.trumanlibrary.org/whistlestop/study_collections/japanese_internment/japanchronoold.htm
I removed D because it was incorrect.
So A?
Alright, then use the information off of this website to get your answer. if this helped please click the "Best Response" button. :)
I don't think that any of those are right, so I just wanted to hear what D was in case you may have mistook it for incorrect. :/
D is Freedom of Religion
no, C is freedom of religion, scroll up. I think you may have erased the wrong one. :)
I edited the question.
Just post all of the option, it doesn't matter if they are incorrect. because 3/4 of them will not be the answer anyways, lol.
Okay, now I think the answer is C, expressed powers. :)
Did that help?
Yes, thank you!!
No problem, dear. :)
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