In a letter to the edtior of the Post-Intelligencer, a writer warned of a previous letter writer's connections and also of the danger of being lulled into a false sense of security.
A letter writer to the Seattle Post-Intelligencer decried the complaints of Japanese Americans and said that they don't understand the anger and temper of the American people.
A letter writer of Japanese descent wrote to the Seattle P-I asking for understanding of Japanese Americans since they were limited in what they could do but that they were doing their bit for the war effort.
A letter writer to the Seattle Post-Intelligencer protested the employment of Japanese red caps at Seattle's train stations, saying that they should not know the schedule of the incoming and outgoing trains because he believed them to be disloyal.
Buckets of sand left on every floor of an apartment building in San Francisco to fight fires were suddenly filled with water instead, and the culprit was a Japanese houseboy who said he thought that water was better than sand in fighting fires.