Internment in a sentence as a noun

And you should name and shame your current "internment" office, for being total assholes. My 2.

Courts were also in favor of putting Japanese people in internment camps at one point. It doesn't make them right.

It really feels like the data equivalent of an internment camp. Put it all in one place so the authorities can control it and us, or just open fire.

Are they working to put Eich in an internment camp based on his beliefs? The word "bigotry" is a very big stick to swing against two people who could be killed in many parts of the world based on who they are.

In Canada we remember with shame the WW2 Japanese internment camps. Gitmo will be this generations great shame.

That said, 'internment camp' sounds far too weak. From what I've read, every piece of property they couldn't carry was taken, and they were rounded up and forced to live in horse-stalls for the duration of the war.

The US also put Japanese Americans in internment camps. Its ridiculous to single out the Swiss as shameful in WW2, looking at norms 70 years ago would make all people "shameful" in some way.

While the present has bad spots, we've lived through the gilded age, japanese internment, slavery, trail of tears, etc. Good things and bad things are always happening.

You go to the internment camp, never to be seen again. If the above scenario sounds unrealistic to you, you haven't studied history well enough.

No. Whereas the Japanese American internment was certainly bad, it doesn't compare to holocaust.

For example, one could argue that internment of people of Japanese background during WW2 was evil. However, there possibly is an argument that some of them may have had mixed loyalties, and that acted as justification.

>we've lived through the gilded age, japanese internment, slavery, trail of tears, etc. Having overcome stuff in the past is not a guarantee of othercoming other stuff in the future.

The moral compass that led us to slavery, the ******** of the Native Americans, and Japanese internment camps? The idea that the USA was formerly moral but has given it up lately isn't really supported by history.

Remember, we're a country where Bureau of Prohibition agents ransacked peoples' physical property looking for alcohol in the 1930's, a country that put Japanese-Americans in internment in the 1940's, a country where the President had to call the national guard down to Alabama to get the governor to comply with a federal court order. You think that reading through Facebook posts or asking the British government to detain someone in an airport for 9 hours is what marks the end of America?

Internment definitions

noun

confinement during wartime

noun

the act of confining someone in a prison (or as if in a prison)

See also: imprisonment

noun

placing private property in the custody of an officer of the law

See also: impoundment impounding poundage