I quoted a sign put up by a white American woman in front of her house as my title for the blog post. From the woman's perspective, she was standing on her own intersectionality of race, gender, and nationality. Her race was "white", her gender was "female", and her nationality was "American". The "Japs" were nothing like her. From her confident gesture pointing at the sign that she put up, it is safe to infer that she believed that "Japs" were of an inferior race, they posed a danger to her household, and also to her country. From the reading, there were plenty phrases from the internment age that spoke the same language as the woman. “The Japanese is an enemy race", "the racial strains are undiluted", "Japs will always be Japs". These "perpetual foreigners" of the United States were discriminated against long before the world war, and these stereotypes escalated to its full potential during the internment. White America insisted the Japanese to be loyal to his American roots, yet internment made the Japanese American become more culturally unified and even owing race pride to the Emperor. Would American build an internment camp for German Americans? Are we looking at a discrimination that is built from a skin tone and facial difference? If so, does it still exist nowadays for Asian Americans?