After the bombing of Pearl Harbor, Americans looked at Japanese with a racist view blaming them all for this. After the incident, rumors spread that they had hidden ties with other Japanese. The United States took defensive measures and asked for a solution. President Roosevelt put in play the Executive order number 9066; this forced Japanese Americans to evacuate the whole west coast. Our government messed up by hurrying into this order and violating the rights of all these normal people. Our government did not need to banish all Japanese Americans to these camps because of their race. The Japanese Americans had all the same rights as other U.S citizens but were in camps. This was very much unfair and no rights were given to them during this time of internment. There was much talk about the Japanese being our enemy but actually "more than two-thirds of the Japanese who were interned in the spring of 1942 were citizens of the United States (Ross). This made sense to Americans that all Japanese Americans were threats to our states. There was not much said about the Japanese from the Americans but blames of terrorism towards the whole race. There were rumors spreading that there were Japanese Americans communicating with the enemy giving them intelligence. Since there was so much discredit to the Japs, the United States sent Curtis B. Munson to check things out. Munson stated that "there is no Japanese problem on the west coast a remarkable, even extraordinary degree of loyalty among this generally suspect ethnic group" (Chronology). Munson said there was no need to keep all the Japanese in their camps. The government did not acknowledge his findings and just kept it a secret. The vast public then just continued believing that all Japanese were sworn enemies. This injustice and racism affected the lives of thousands of Japanese. All the government needed to do was let Munson's report go public and put an end to the prejudice acts. The rights of Japanese Americans were forcefully taken as they went to these internment camps. In the case of Hirabayashi and Korematsu vs. United States, "the defendants argued that their Fifth Amendment rights were violated by the U.S. government because of their ancestry (Ross). The regular execution of laws and civil rights were stripped and there was nothing that could be done at the time. None of the Japanese Americans were given a trial or were able to be seen in a United States court. This was the removal of the fourth amendment for all of the Japs. The Japanese could not believe that the founding fathers of our nation made laws but were taken from the Japanese for their ethnicity. They were not able to challenge their legality of imprisonment