That's irrelevant. The root cause of running a concentration camp is unimportant; they're human beings and deserve to be treated with dignity.
As it stands, the US is failing to hold them to the standards we hold even incarcerated prisoners, and they haven't been convicted of any crime. That's outrageous.
Treating some humans under one's jurisdiction as more "human" because they are citizens is a severe anti-pattern.
"The Japanese internment wasn't that big of a deal" is certainly a claim a person can make, but I don't feel compelled to continue discoursing with someone who does.
As it stands, the US is failing to hold them to the standards we hold even incarcerated prisoners, and they haven't been convicted of any crime. That's outrageous.
Treating some humans under one's jurisdiction as more "human" because they are citizens is a severe anti-pattern.