Summary

Trump announced plans to end birthright citizenship via executive action, despite its constitutional basis in the 14th Amendment.

He also outlined a mass deportation policy, starting with undocumented immigrants who committed crimes and potentially expanding to mixed-status families, who could face deportation as a unit.

Trump said he wants to avoid family separations but left the decision to families.

While doubling down on immigration restrictions, Trump expressed willingness to work with Democrats to create protections for Dreamers under DACA, citing their long-standing integration into U.S. society.

  • @[email protected]
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    fedilink
    143 days ago

    Even bigger question: what then?

    Say you deport a citizen of Mexican origin to Mexico. Can’t they just, you know, go back? They’re citizens, with a passport/id.

    The only alternative is to strip them (at least de facto) of their citizenship, which is literally a Hitler move (https://de.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gesetz_über_den_Widerruf_von_Einbürgerungen_und_die_Aberkennung_der_deutschen_Staatsangehörigkeit, only a German source, unfortunately).

    • Flying Squid
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      93 days ago

      Happened to my grandfather. A Jew born in Germany who emigrated to England in the late 1920s. I have his naturalisation papers from when he became a citizen of the UK in 1936 and his nationality is listed as “stateless.”

    • @bitchkat
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      English
      43 days ago

      You don’t even need to read the article. The title states quite clearly this is about citizenship not residence.

    • @someguy3
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      33 days ago

      Yes they’ll have to revoke citizenship.

      • @stormeuh
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        23 days ago

        Which may be the end goal, use this as a wedge to convince their base that revoking citizenship may be justified in some cases.