Moonglow
Diamond Member
Or when the Japanese interment camp people had medical care and food to eat when Americans did not.More money for Ukraine while our own people tent in the snow.
Sounds like the complaints against FDR at the start of WWII.
When the country was still suffering form the great depression, and FDR was sending "lend lease" to Europe.
Yes, people in Japanese internment camps during World War II had access to medical care and food, but conditions were basic:
- Medical care
Each camp had a full-service hospital with inpatient and outpatient services. However, medical staff shortages were common, and the quality of care was barely adequate.
- Food
The government provided food, but it was limited and often inexpensive:
- Meals were served in mess halls and prepared by evacuee cooks.
- The menu included dried fish, pancakes, macaroni, pickled vegetables, wieners, and other government commodity foods.
- Milk and fresh meat were in short supply.
- Incarcerees could earn money to buy extra food and items from camp canteens by working in a variety of jobs.
- Some internees also became self-sufficient by growing crops, raising hogs and poultry, and trading with other camps.
- Meals were served in mess halls and prepared by evacuee cooks.