Ascolta senza pubblicità

Korematsu and the Court of History

Dissed

07-12-2022 • 38 minuti

In 1944, the Supreme Court upheld the wartime internment of Japanese-Americans. It’s the first time the court applied strict scrutiny to racial discrimination by government. Over the protests of three justices, the Court held in Korematsu v. United States that the Roosevelt Administration met that exacting standard. One of the dissenters lamented, “Racial discrimination … has no justifiable part whatever in our democratic way of life.” Nearly 75 years later, the court would explain that ruling “was gravely wrong the day it was decided” and “has been overruled in the court of history.” What is Korematsu’s legacy and how is it casting an influence on the court today?


Thanks to our guests John Q. Barrett and John Yoo.


To learn more, check out KOREMATSU VERSUS US, a documentary short produced by the Federalist Society that explores the facts, conviction, and following cases surrounding Fred Korematsu and the other 120,000 "relocated" immigrants and citizens during World War II at https://fedsoc.org/commentary/videos/korematsu-versus-us


Follow us on Twitter @ehslattery @anastasia_esq @pacificlegal #DissedPod


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Potrebbe piacerti

Americast
Americast
BBC Radio
Romanzo Quirinale
Romanzo Quirinale
Marco Damilano – Chora Media
Pöggscast
Pöggscast
Marian Husmann & Jost Behre
Behind the Greens: Serving with Purpose
Behind the Greens: Serving with Purpose
U.S. Army Recruiting Command
My Rowlett
My Rowlett
City of Rowlett, Texas
170 Escalones
170 Escalones
170 Escalones
Helsinki on the Hill
Helsinki on the Hill
Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe
Lideres Capital Rock
Lideres Capital Rock
Orlando Cisterna
It's In Denver's Nature
It's In Denver's Nature
Denver Community Media
Northants Now
Northants Now
Voiceworks
A Political Hope
A Political Hope
Apolitical Foundation
Beneath the Wing
Beneath the Wing
133rd Airlift Wing