Denaturalization Laws are Commonplace
A common refrain among nationalists, populists, and other varieties of right-wingers is the lament that once “these people” have arrived in a Western nation they are impossible to dislodge. Many well-meaning nationalists come to believe that immigrants become so quickly entrenched, naturalized and settled that there is no feasible way, legal or otherwise, to remove them from White countries. That citizenship grants are permanent, and that even if nationalists took over the halls of state power it would be an uphill political battle to reform “the system” to allow for large-scale repatriation.
This could not be further from the truth, at least not in most Western nations.
Laws allowing for broad, specific, and sweeping denaturalization exist in most Western countries. In many countries, like Britain, these laws can be enforced by the executive branch of government, while in others, such as the United States, the courts make the rulings. Either way, denaturalization is a common feature of legal systems in most White countries and a feature that nationalists could leverage to great effect as we continue winning political battles.
RTWT
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