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Examples
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Yet this knowledge did not stop them from representing to the Court in Hirabayashi that the "principal danger" that military officials had "apprehended" was "a Japanese invasion" which "might have threatened the very integrity of our nation."
Is That Legal?: The Biggest Lie of the Greatest Generation 2008
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What's more, the lawyers who signed the government's brief in Hirabayashi knew this.
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Yet this knowledge did not stop them from representing to the Court in Hirabayashi that the "principal danger" that military officials had "apprehended" was "a Japanese invasion" which "might have threatened the very integrity of our nation."
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What's more, the lawyers who signed the government's brief in Hirabayashi knew this.
Is That Legal?: The Biggest Lie of the Greatest Generation 2008
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What's more, the lawyers who signed the government's brief in Hirabayashi knew this.
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Yet this knowledge did not stop them from representing to the Court in Hirabayashi that the "principal danger" that military officials had "apprehended" was "a Japanese invasion" which "might have threatened the very integrity of our nation."
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The article's title left little doubt about Rostow's view of the Supreme Court's decisions in Hirabayashi v. United States (1943) and Korematsu v. United States (1944): "The Japanese American Cases – A Disaster."
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Endo does not call into question the defenses of government action Chief Justice Stone and Justice Black had constructed in Hirabayashi and Korematsu.
Is That Legal?: Patrick Gudridge: Honoring Mitsuye Endo, Remembering Her Case 2006
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Even if the origi-nal version of the Final Report and the suppressed intelligence memo-randa had been made available in Hirabayashi, and even if the original Ko-rematsu brief footnote had appeared in the Hirabayahsi litigation, there is overwhelming evidence that the Supreme Court would have applied the same techniques of segmentation and selective interpretation in order to affirm the convictions and not interfere with the internment machine.
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The article's title left little doubt about Rostow's view of the Supreme Court's decisions in Hirabayashi v. United States (1943) and Korematsu v. United States (1944): "The Japanese American Cases – A Disaster."
Is That Legal?: The Japanese American Cases -- A Bigger Disaster Than We Realized 2006
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